Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Funding bill to aid indigenous women has life

Nevada’s Cortez Masto co-sponsored original

- By Dave Kolpack

FARGO, N.D. — A bill originally meant to help law enforcemen­t investigat­e cold cases of murdered and missing indigenous women that has floundered in Congress for two years may have the missing ingredient­s to become law: money and muscle.

The money comes from an appropriat­ions subcommitt­ee chaired by Alaska Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski, who said that for the first time, funding is being directed specifical­ly to murdered and missing indigenous people. The muscle comes from the White House, specifical­ly the Department of Justice, which last week unveiled a plan that would investigat­e issues raised in the bill like data collection practices and federal databases.

It adds up to a strong outlook for Savanna’s Act, which was originally introduced in 2017 by Murkowski, Democratic Nevada Sen. Catherine Cortez Mastro and former North Dakota Democratic Sen. Heidi Heitkamp. Murkowski and Heitkamp, longtime allies on issues affecting indigenous people, also created the Commission on Native Children, which recently held its first meeting.

“The great thing about Lisa’s work has been her willingnes­s to not just pass this law but make sure there’s an appropriat­ion for it,” Heitkamp said Friday.

The bill is named for Savanna Greywind, a Native American North Dakota woman who was killed in 2017 when her baby was cut from her womb.

William Hoehn, and his girlfriend Brooke Crews, are charged in connection with Greywind’s slaying.

The Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, chaired by North Dakota Republican John Hoeven, earlier this month advanced another version of bill to the full Senate for considerat­ion.

Gloria Allred, an attorney for Greywind’s family, said relatives are “encouraged by what appears to be the strong efforts of U.S. Sen. Lisa

Murkowski’s commitment to gather support for this bill in order for it to be signed into law one day.”

Savanna’s Act passed the Senate in 2018 but was blocked in the House by former Virginia Rep. Bob Goodlatte because he said it would hurt some agencies that have no link to tribal communitie­s. Heitkamp said a new companion piece to the bill, the Not Invisible Act, has helped broaden the scope of the initiative and address concerns raised by Goodlatte.

“We are making some headway,” Murkowski said. “Not fast enough, but I think we’re making the efforts that are going to make a difference in the long haul. The legislativ­e initiative­s that we have used have successful­ly raised the issue of awareness.”

Savanna’s Act was introduced in the House earlier this year. Three of its co-sponsors are Native American: Sharice Davids of Kansas and Tom Cole and Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma.

 ?? Dave Kolpack The Associated Press file ?? A makeshift memorial to Savanna Greywind in Fargo, N.D., outside the apartment where Greywind lived with her parents. Republican U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski from Alaska is taking up the cause for a bill aimed at helping law enforcemen­t with cases of murdered and missing indigenous women.
Dave Kolpack The Associated Press file A makeshift memorial to Savanna Greywind in Fargo, N.D., outside the apartment where Greywind lived with her parents. Republican U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski from Alaska is taking up the cause for a bill aimed at helping law enforcemen­t with cases of murdered and missing indigenous women.
 ??  ?? William Hoehn
Brooke Crews
William Hoehn Brooke Crews

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