Indianz.Com > News > Cronkite News: Supreme Court agrees to hear Indian Child Welfare Act case
Supreme Court to hear Indian Child Welfare Act case involving Navajo child
Tuesday, March 1, 2022
Cronkite News
WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court agreed Monday to hear a challenge to the Indian Child Welfare Act filed by a white Texas couple that was almost denied the chance to adopt a Native American boy who was set to be placed with a Navajo family.
Jennifer and Chad Brackeen argue that the act, which requires child welfare agencies to give preference to Indigenous families when placing Indigenous children, unconstitutionally discriminates on the basis of race and is not always in the best interest of the child.
But supporters – including 26 states that filed petitions to uphold the law – commonly call the ICWA the “gold standard” of child welfare policy, that allows Native children to stay as close to their families and culture as possible when they have to be removed from their parents’ custody.
“It’s helped countless numbers of Native children be able to stay in connection with their families and with their culture and have the ability as they grow older to have those relationships that they otherwise might not have,” said David Simmons, director of government affairs and advocacy for the National Indian Child Welfare Association.
The Brackeens are among seven individuals and three states – Texas, Indiana and Louisiana – that sued to change the 1978 law that they claim is not only discriminatory but exceeds Congress’ authority and unlawfully requires states to enforce it. “This is something that hurts Native American children and Native American parents and takes their rights away,” said Timothy Sandefur, the vice president for litigation at the Goldwater Institute, which has filed a brief in support of the opponents. “Tribal governments like ICWA because it gives tribal governments a lot of power, but it takes that freedom away from the kids themselves and from their parents,” Sandefur said. In Arizona, Native American children accounted for 1,113 of the 13,581 children in the foster care system in fiscal 2021, or 8.2%, according to data from the Arizona Department of Child Safety. Nationally, Native children made up 2% of children in the foster care system in fiscal 2020, according to the Children’s Bureau in the Department of Health and Human Services."US Supreme Court will Hear Challenge to ICWA": Statement from the Protect ICWA Campaign on the U.S. Supreme's decision to hear a case that will determine the future of the Indian Child Welfare Act. @NativeChildren @NCAI1944 @IndianAffairs @NDNrights #ProtectICWA #SupremeCourt pic.twitter.com/tWbCwx8VS1
— indianz.com (@indianz) February 28, 2022
A district court ruled for the Brackeens. But a sharply divided 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals later upheld the law, while ruling that some questions about whether it “commandeered” state officials are unconstitutional. Both sides appealed. The Brackeens’ case is just one of four dealing with the ICWA that the Supreme Court combined Monday when it said it will consider the question of whether the law is discriminatory and whether it is congressional overreach into state affairs. Besides the Navajo Nation, the suit has been joined by the Cherokee Nation, the Oneida Nation, the Quinault Indian Nation and the Morongo Band of Mission Indians. The Interior Department has also been joined by 26 states – which the 5th Circuit noted “are home to a large majority of federally recognized tribes” – and the District of Columbia in efforts to preserve the law. Simmons disputed opponents’ claim that the law forces states to act, saying the cooperation between states, tribes and the federal government required by ICWA is actually a benefit. “Child welfare is a service that needs more people,” Simmons said. “It needs more agreement, more collaboration. You can’t do that by cutting people out, you’re only going to make it worse. And that’s what ICWA does, it encourages those collaborations, public, private, and otherwise.” Sandefur disagreed with the 5th Circuit’s ruling, saying ICWA “ treats people differently based on their biological eligibility for membership in a tribe,” which he argued crosses the line into a race-based law. If the Supreme Court can find at least one provision of ICWA unconstitutional, it will open the law up for a comprehensive review by Congress, Sandefur said. “It would require Congress to take steps to fix these constitutional problems … so it would require them to go back and amend the law in order to eliminate the race based restrictions and to fix these federalism problems,” he said.We must #ProtectICWA.
— Cherokee Nation (@CherokeeNation) February 28, 2022
#ICWA #ProtectNativeChildren #SCOTUS pic.twitter.com/Rset4nn8Ve
5th Circuit Court of Appeals Decision En Banc
Brackeen v. Haaland [325 pages] (April 6, 2021)Per Curiam [Summary 7 pages] (April 6, 2021)
Judge James Dennis [Opinion 153 pages] (April 6, 2021)
Judge Stuart Kyle Duncan [Opinion 122 pages] (April 6, 2021)
Judge Priscilla R. Owen [Concurring in part/Dissenting in part 9 pages](April 6, 2021)
Judge Jacques L. Wiener, Jr. [Dissenting in part 8 pages] (April 6, 2021)
Judge Catharina Haynes [Concurring 2 pages] (April 6, 2021)
Judge Stephen A. Higginson [Concurring in Part 4 pages] (April 6, 2021)
Judge Gregg Costa [Concurring in part / Dissenting in part 20 pages] (April 6, 2021)
Prior 5th Circuit Court of Appeals Decision
Brackeen v.
Bernhardt (August 9, 2019) Brackeen v. Bernhardt Partial Dissent (August 16, 2019)
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.
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