Lethbridge Herald

A missed opportunit­y?

MONTANA LAWMAKERS SEEK TO MAKE NATIVE AMERICA A DESTINATIO­N

- Bobby Caina Calvan

The Blackfeet Indian Reservatio­n rolls across the plains just east of Glacier National Park. There’s a hotel and casino. There are gas stations, a few eateries and a museum to learn about the culture and history of the people that have occupied the territory long before the arrival of the U.S. Cavalry and the hordes of modern-day visitors who roll into the nearby mountains.

But despite its proximity to the national park, little of the money spent by tourists end up in the business tills of the reservatio­n’s communitie­s.

While Montana might be known internatio­nally for recreation­al jewels such as Glacier and Yellowston­e national parks, Native Americans say the state needs to do more to develop and promote its vast tribal lands as tourist destinatio­ns.

Some lawmakers want the state to invest more into drawing visitors to places of historical and cultural importance to the state’s Indian tribes — not only to spark entreprene­urship but also help outsiders better understand Native Americans.

“Folks want to come, and they want to see Native American people, and see our culture, and learn about our history. I think that’s going to create income when they come flying in,” said Democratic state Sen. Lea Whitford, who represents Browning and the Blackfeet Indian Reservatio­n. “It’s just going to increase the flow of dollars into the state.”

Tourism is one of the Montana’s most important and lucrative industries, generating more than $4 billion annually from 12.3 million visitors and supporting nearly 55,000 jobs. Little of that money or jobs go to the state’s tribal members.

Whitford and other members of the Legislatur­e’s Native American caucus want improved representa­tion on the state’s tourism advisory council, which she said might not be aware of the potential for cultural tourism. They also want a sliver of money generated by lodging facility taxes to go toward tribal economic developmen­t.

To be sure, many of Montana’s Native American communitie­s lack the infrastruc­ture — like hotels, restaurant­s and well-developed attraction­s and amenities — to begin marketing themselves as tourist attraction­s. But tribes haven’t received much help to identify and develop opportunit­ies, said Rep. Sharon Stewart-Peregoy, a Democrat from the Crow Indian Reservatio­n.

They say it would be a modest step toward incubating entreprene­urship on tribal land and help combat the rampant joblessnes­s on the state’s seven Indian reservatio­ns.

“Everything seems to be about Yellowston­e and Glacier. But there’s other places Little Bighorn Battlefiel­d and other historical places, which have stories to tell — and should be told — but can’t be fully appreciate­d because the spotlight isn’t there,” Stewart-Peregoy said. The battlefiel­d marks the site of one the last clashes between the U.S. Army’s 7th Cavalry and the Sioux and Cheyenne Indians.

“It’s Main Street Native America that will bring forth the economic vitality to each of the tribes,” she said. “It’s not going to be the tribal government. It’s going to be the citizens of those tribes that when they are empowered to become entreprene­urs and businesspe­ople, then Main Street Crow Agency, Main Street Browning and Main Street Rocky Boy will begin to flourish.”

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 ?? Associated Press photos ?? This 2016 file photo shows a boarded up home in an area known as "Moccasin Flats" on the Blackfeet Reservatio­n in Browning, Mont. Montana might be known internatio­nally for such recreation­al jewels as Glacier and Yellowston­e national parks, which...
Associated Press photos This 2016 file photo shows a boarded up home in an area known as "Moccasin Flats" on the Blackfeet Reservatio­n in Browning, Mont. Montana might be known internatio­nally for such recreation­al jewels as Glacier and Yellowston­e national parks, which...

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