Indianz.Com > News > Gaylord News: Indian Country sees large influx of funds from COVID-19 rescue package

Tribes to get record funding from American Rescue Plan
Friday, March 26, 2021
Gaylord News
WASHINGTON — Tribes in Oklahoma are both hopeful and anxious as they wait for the funds and spending rules from the American Rescue Plan that President Joe Biden signed on March 11.
Native American tribes nationwide will receive more than $31 billion as part of the
American Rescue Plan, the largest one-time investment to Native American communities in history. However, the amount of money set to be given to Oklahoma tribes on an individual basis is largely unknown and likely will be until further tribal consultation has occurred.
Nonetheless, some tribes in Oklahoma hope the plan will pull them out of the fight against COVID-19 and return to normal.
“I think (spending will) be less (focused) on the PPE and testing and (more focused on) the economy (being) decimated and making things kind of get back to somewhat of a new normal,” said James Weigant, COVID Task Force coordinator for the Osage Nation. “But at the same time, you’re hearing rumors of a fourth wave in Europe, and you know, the other shoe could drop, and we’re back into the trenches again.”
Out of the $31 billion tribes will receive, $20 billion will focus on combating COVID-19 and stabilizing safety nets in tribal communities. Additionally, $1 billion will be split evenly among the 574 federally recognized tribes, portioning about $1.7 million to each tribe, including the 38 federally recognized tribes in Oklahoma, said Libby Washburn, special assistant to Biden. The remaining $19 billion will be distributed to each tribe using an undisclosed formula developed by the U.S. Treasury.
Another portion of that money is from Housing and Urban Development, in which Oklahoma tribes will receive about $65 million under the Indian Housing Block Grant program, Washburn said.
Under a separate program from HUD — the Indian Community Development Block Grant program — there is a $280 million pot from which tribes nationwide can seek grants. Housing infrastructure has been an ongoing issue for many tribes in Oklahoma throughout the pandemic, and Washburn expects Oklahoma tribes to take advantage of these programs.
The Osage Nation, like other tribes, is developing an early and broad spending plan that remains difficult to finalize without further guidance from the federal government, but they’re focusing on key areas, one of them being infrastructure.
“We’re trying to identify some of those areas,” Weigant said. “It’s still a draft and work in progress … but infrastructure is a big part of that.”
Note: This story originally appeared on Cronkite News. It is published via a Creative Commons license. Cronkite News is produced by the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University.
Search
Filed Under
Tags
More Headlines
Native America Calling: Gathering of MCs and Merciless Savages
Native America Calling: Exploring the toll of climate change on Alaska Native villages
‘Very welcoming and enthusiastic’: Lumbee Tribe awaits word from Washington about federal status
Cronkite News: Trump gives new life to aging coal-fired power plants
Native America Calling: Tribes in the arid southwest face water management uncertainty
NAFOA: 5 Things You Need to Know this Week (April 21, 2025)
Chuck Hoskin: Cherokee Nation makes progress for clean water
Native America Calling: Tribes resist fast-tracked Line 5 oil pipeline
Native America Calling: Celebrating Native poetry
Secretary Burgum observes ancestral Native footprints in New Mexico
Cronkite News: Native collective fosters creativity among youth
Arizona Mirror: Alert system in the works for missing endangered relatives
Native America Calling: Tribes challenge states on remaining roadblocks to gaming
New Mexico In Depth: ‘Turquoise Alert’ system established for missing relatives
Montana Free Press: Indigenous Peoples Day closer to reality in Montana
More Headlines
Native America Calling: Exploring the toll of climate change on Alaska Native villages
‘Very welcoming and enthusiastic’: Lumbee Tribe awaits word from Washington about federal status
Cronkite News: Trump gives new life to aging coal-fired power plants
Native America Calling: Tribes in the arid southwest face water management uncertainty
NAFOA: 5 Things You Need to Know this Week (April 21, 2025)
Chuck Hoskin: Cherokee Nation makes progress for clean water
Native America Calling: Tribes resist fast-tracked Line 5 oil pipeline
Native America Calling: Celebrating Native poetry
Secretary Burgum observes ancestral Native footprints in New Mexico
Cronkite News: Native collective fosters creativity among youth
Arizona Mirror: Alert system in the works for missing endangered relatives
Native America Calling: Tribes challenge states on remaining roadblocks to gaming
New Mexico In Depth: ‘Turquoise Alert’ system established for missing relatives
Montana Free Press: Indigenous Peoples Day closer to reality in Montana
More Headlines