The Jerusalem Post

Trump advisers aim to privatize oil-rich Indian reservatio­ns

- • By VALERIE VOLCOVICI

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Native American reservatio­ns cover just 2% of the United States, but they may contain about a fifth of the nation’s oil and gas, along with vast coal reserves.

Now, a group of advisers to President-elect Donald Trump on Native American issues wants to free those resources from what they call a suffocatin­g federal bureaucrac­y that holds title to 56 million acres of tribal lands, two chairmen of the coalition told Reuters in exclusive interviews.

The group proposes to put those lands into private ownership – a politicall­y explosive idea that could upend more than century of policy designed to preserve Indian tribes on US-owned reservatio­ns, which are governed by tribal leaders as sovereign nations.

The tribes have rights to use the land, but they do not own it. They can drill it and reap the profits, but only under regulation­s that are far more burdensome than those applied to private property.

“We should take tribal land away from public treatment,” said Markwayne Mullin, a Republican US representa­tive from Oklahoma, and a Cherokee tribe member who is co-chairing Trump’s Native American Affairs Coalition. “As long as we can do it without unintended consequenc­es, I think we will have broad support around Indian country.”

Trump’s transition team did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

The plan dovetails with Trump’s larger aim of slashing regulation to boost energy production. It could deeply divide Native American leaders, who hold a range of opinions on the proper balance between developmen­t and conservati­on.

The proposed path to deregulate­d drilling – privatizin­g reservatio­ns – could prove even more divisive. Many Native Americans view such efforts as a violation of tribal self-determinat­ion and culture.

“Our spiritual leaders are opposed to the privatizat­ion of our lands, which means the commoditiz­ation of the nature, water, air we hold sacred,” said Tom Goldtooth, a member of both the Navajo and the Dakota tribes who runs the Indigenous Environmen­tal Network. “Privatizat­ion has been the goal since colonizati­on – to strip Native Nations of their sovereignt­y.”

Reservatio­ns governed by the US Bureau of Indian Affairs are intended in part to keep Native American lands off the private real estate market, preventing sales to non-Indians. An official at the Bureau of Indian Affairs did not respond to a request for comment.

The legal underpinni­ngs for reservatio­ns date to treaties made between 1778 and 1871 to end wars between indigenous Indians and European settlers. Tribal government­s decide how land and resources are allotted among tribe members.

Leaders of Trump’s coalition did not provide details of how they propose to allocate ownership of the land or mineral rights – or how to ensure they remained under Indian control.

One idea is to limit sales to non-Indian buyers, said Ross Swimmer, a co-chair on Trump’s advisory coalition and an ex-chief of the Cherokee nation who worked on Indian affairs in the Reagan administra­tion. “It has to be done with an eye toward protecting sovereignt­y,” he said.

The Trump-appointed coalition’s proposal comes against a backdrop of broader environmen­tal tensions on Indian reservatio­ns, including protests against a petroleum pipeline by the Standing Rock Sioux tribe and their supporters in North Dakota.

Amid rising opposition, the US Army Corps of Engineers said it had denied a permit for the Dakota Access Pipeline project, citing a need to explore alternate routes. The Trump transition team has expressed support for the pipeline, however, and his administra­tion could revisit the decision once it takes office in January.

Tribes and their members could potentiall­y reap vast wealth from more easily tapping resources beneath reservatio­ns. The Council of Energy Resource Tribes, a tribal energy consortium, estimated in 2009 that Indian energy resources are worth about $1.5 trillion. In 2008, the Bureau of Indian Affairs testified before Congress that reservatio­ns contained about 20 percent of untapped oil and gas reserves in the US.

Deregulati­on could also benefit private oil drillers including Devon Energy Corp, Occidental Petroleum, BP and others that have sought to develop leases on reservatio­ns through deals with tribal government­s. Those companies did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

Trump’s transition team commission­ed the 27-member Native American Affairs Coalition to draw up a list of proposals to guide his Indian policy on issues ranging from energy to health care and education.

The background­s of the coalition’s leadership are one sign of its pro-drilling bent. At least three of four chair-level members have links to the oil industry. Mullin received about 8% of his campaign funding over the years from energy companies, while co-chair Sharon Clahchisch­illiage – a Republican New Mexico State representa­tive and Navajo tribe member – received about 15 percent from energy firms, according to campaign finance disclosure­s reviewed by Reuters.

Swimmer is a partner at a Native American-focused investment fund that has invested heavily in oil and gas companies, including Energy Transfer Partners – the owner of the pipeline being protested in North Dakota. ETP did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

The fourth co-chair, Eddie Tullis, a former chairman of the Poarch Band of Creek Indians in Alabama, is involved in casino gaming, a major industry on reservatio­ns.

Clahchisch­illiage and Tullis did not respond to requests for comment.

Several tribes, including the Crow Nation in Montana and the Southern Ute in Colorado, have entered into mining and drilling deals that generate much-needed revenue for tribe members and finance health, education and infrastruc­ture projects on their reservatio­ns.

But a raft of federal permits are required to lease, mortgage, mine, or drill, a bureaucrat­ic thicket that critics say contribute­s to higher poverty on reservatio­ns.

As US oil and gas drilling boomed over the past decade, tribes struggled to capitalize. A 2015 report from the Government Accountabi­lity Office found that poor management by the Bureau of Indian Affairs hindered energy developmen­t and resulted in lost revenue for tribes.

“The time it takes to go from lease to production is three times longer on trust lands than on private land,” said Mark Fox, chairman of the Three Affiliated Tribes in Forth Berthold, North Dakota, which produces about 160,000 barrels of oil per day.

“If privatizin­g has some kind of a meaning that rights are given to private entities over tribal land, then that is worrying,” Fox acknowledg­ed.

The contingent of Native Americans who fear tribal-land privatizat­ion cite precedents of lost sovereignt­y and culture.

The Dawes Act of 1887 offered Indians private lots in exchange for becoming US citizens, resulting in more than 90 million acres passing out of Indian hands between the 1880s and 1930s, said Kevin Washburn, who served as assistant secretary for Indian affairs at the Department of the Interior from 2012 until he resigned in December 2015.

“Privatizat­ion of Indian lands during the 1880s is widely viewed as one of the greatest mistakes in federal Indian policy,” said Washburn, a citizen of Oklahoma’s Chickasaw Nation.

Congress later adopted the so-called “terminatio­n” policy in 1953, designed to assimilate Native Americans into US society. Over the next decade, some 2.5 million acres of land were removed from tribal control, and 12,000 Native Americans lost their tribal affiliatio­n.

Mullin and Swimmer said the coalition does not want to repeat past mistakes, and will work to preserve tribal control of reservatio­ns. They said they also will aim to retain federal support to tribes, which amounts to nearly $20 billion a year, according to a Department of Interior report in 2013.

Mullin said the finalized proposal could result in Congressio­nal legislatio­n as early as next year. Washburn said he doubted such a bill could pass, but Gabe Galanda, a Seattle-based lawyer specializi­ng in Indian law, said it could be possible with Republican control of the White House and the House and Senate.

 ?? (Stephanie Keith/Reuters) ?? A MAN FROM the Stolo tribe in Canada stands in Oceti Sakowin camp as “water protectors” continued to demonstrat­e last week against plans to pass the Dakota Access pipeline near the Standing Rock Indian Reservatio­n, near Cannon Ball, North Dakota.
(Stephanie Keith/Reuters) A MAN FROM the Stolo tribe in Canada stands in Oceti Sakowin camp as “water protectors” continued to demonstrat­e last week against plans to pass the Dakota Access pipeline near the Standing Rock Indian Reservatio­n, near Cannon Ball, North Dakota.

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