Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Lift roadblocks, landowners ask

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MADISON, Wis. — Wisconsin landowners have asked a federal judge to order the removal of barricades set up by an American Indian tribe in a decadelong dispute over roads it claims were built on tribal land illegally.

The owners of 21 homes and businesses on tribal land said in a lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Madison this week that they have been able to leave only for medical appointmen­ts since the Lac Du Flambeau Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians put up four roadblocks Jan. 31.

Tribal leaders said they resorted to the measure after 10 years of failed negotiatio­ns with title companies representi­ng property owners who have expired right-of-way agreements to use the roads on tribal land.

The title companies want permanent right-of-way agreements, but the tribe has been willing to offer only 25-year leases, according to a statement last month.

“Essentiall­y, they are asking us to give up our land. We have given up millions of acres of land over generation­s. We now live on a 12-by-12 square mile piece of land known as a Reservatio­n,” the tribe said in a Feb. 9 statement. “This is all we have left.”

Tribal leaders have demanded that property owners and the title companies pay $20 million to remove the barricades and secure a 25-year right-of-way agreement.

The lawsuit asks a judge to either declare the roads public and therefore required to stay open or declare that the property owners have a right to cross the tribal land by necessity.

Some residents of the estimated 65 homes without road access feel they’ve been “held hostage,” the Green Bay Press Gazette reported. Others have crossed a frozen lake on snowmobile­s to circumvent the roadblocks.

Residents without road access still have access to emergency medical services, propane, mail delivery and garbage removal, the tribe said, and tribal police have been checking in on residents to ensure their safety.

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