Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Justices to hear virus funds case

At issue is eligibilit­y for $530M in aid set aside for tribes

- FELICIA FONSECA

ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M. — The U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in a case that will determine who is eligible to receive more than $530 million in federal virus relief funding set aside for tribes more than a year ago.

More than a dozen American Indian tribes sued the U.S. Treasury Department to keep the money out of the hands of Alaska Native corporatio­ns, which provide services to Alaska Natives but do not have a government-to-government relationsh­ip with the United States.

The question raised in the case set for oral arguments Monday is whether the corporatio­ns are tribes for purposes of the Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act, which defines “tribes” under a 1975 law meant to strengthen their abilities to govern themselves.

The case has practical impacts. American Indians have been disproport­ionately sickened and killed by the pandemic — despite precaution­s that included curfews, roadblocks, universal testing and business closures — and historical­ly have had limited financial resources. About $530 million of the $8 billion set aside for tribes hasn’t been distribute­d.

“But it also seems to me there have been bigger conceptual questions posed about who or what is an Indian tribe that have come out of this particular case and conflict,” said Monte Mills, director of the Indian Law Clinic at the University of Montana. “I think that’s really been the source of a lot of concern or divisivene­ss.”

Lower courts have parsed language in the Indian Self Determinat­ion and Education Assistance Act, other federal laws and congressio­nal intent, and arrived at different conclusion­s. A U.S. District Court found Alaska Native corporatio­ns can be treated as tribes for limited purposes, while a federal appeals court said they’re not eligible for the CARES Act funding.

The corporatio­ns, formed under the 1971 Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act, own most of the Native land in the state and serve as economic engines for Alaska Natives who are shareholde­rs by birthright. The corporatio­ns also have non-Native shareholde­rs.

They’ve argued that a decision from the Supreme Court could have broad impacts for services they provide to Alaska Natives. The Indian Self Determinat­ion and Education Assistance Act is incorporat­ed into dozens of statutes that cover language preservati­on, education, workforce developmen­t, economic developmen­t, housing and health care.

It allows tribal government­s or other entities on behalf of tribal government­s to provide those types of services under contract with the federal government to American Indians and Alaska Natives.

The corporatio­ns argue that they are interconne­cted with Alaska Native villages that aren’t able to reach everyone, particular­ly in more urban areas of Alaska.

“It feels a little bit like standing at the edge of a cliff and we may fall off, the fact that our services that we have relied upon for more than 40 years will potentiall­y be gone based on a decision of this court,” said Jaeleen Kookesh, an enrolled member of the Tlingit & Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska who works for Sealaska Corp. “It just feels like we may fall and have nothing left to catch us.”

Tribes argue that the corporatio­ns, known as ANCs, simply aren’t eligible for financial assistance meant for tribal government­s that have direct responsibi­lity for their citizens regardless of where they live.

“ANCs do not stand in the shoes of Alaska’s federally recognized tribes, and allowing them to compete with tribal government­s for scarce funding exclusivel­y set aside for government­s would represent a monumental and unpreceden­ted shift in the legal status of ANCs,” attorneys for the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe in South Dakota wrote in court documents.

 ?? (AP file photo/Gregory Bull) ?? A woman walks in Toksook Bay, Alaska, a mostly Yuip’ik village on the edge of the Bering Sea. The U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments Monday in a case that will determine who is eligible to receive more than $530 million in federal coronaviru­s relief funding set aside for tribes more than a year ago.
(AP file photo/Gregory Bull) A woman walks in Toksook Bay, Alaska, a mostly Yuip’ik village on the edge of the Bering Sea. The U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments Monday in a case that will determine who is eligible to receive more than $530 million in federal coronaviru­s relief funding set aside for tribes more than a year ago.

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