FROM THE ARCHIVE
New recognition reform bill is not 'anti-Indian'
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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2003 Connecticut's two senators introduced a bill to reform the Bureau of Indian Affairs' federal recognition process. The Tribal Recognition and Indian Bureau Enhancement (TRIBE) Act would codify the BIA's existing regulations into law. It would also increase funding for recognition from $900,000 to $10 million. Get the Story:
Senators Renew Their Call For BIA Overhaul (The Hartford Courant 2/27)
Senators renew BIA reform bill (The Norwich Bulletin 2/27)
Senators Once More Seeking Tribal Recognition Reform (The New London Day 2/27) Related Stories:
Lack of evidence addressed in recognition bill (02/19)
Sweeping recognition reform bill offered (02/07)
At BIA, no recognition of new tribes (2/5)
Trust programs see historic increase (2/4)
Troubled Indian programs prompt GAO criticism (01/31)
BIA recognition still hard to prove for some (01/22)
McCaleb latest in long line of DOI departures (11/25)
McCaleb changed, yes, but little else did (11/22)
McCaleb delivers aggressive recognition plan (10/03)
BIA role in recognition decisions under review (06/13)
Dropping performance blamed on weak leadership (04/08)
BIA Budget: Doing more with less (3/26)
Bush budget cuts funds for new tribes (3/20)
McCaleb takes on recognition (3/15)
Inside the BIA, plenty of drama (3/4)
Ashcroft urged to charge BIA officials (3/1)
Solutions sought for 'hijacked' recognition (11/9)
Gover: Recognition study 'cooked' (11/1)
Reforming federal recognition (10/26)
Gover takes on recognition (10/25)
McCaleb to listen 'closely' to recognition experts (8/9)
McCaleb decision sure to draw scrutiny (7/31)
BIA pushed to provide 'answers' on tribes (7/26)
McCaleb endorses BIA on recognition (6/14)
Gover's 'activist' legacy escapes McCaleb (6/13)
BIA has small goal for big problem (5/22)
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