Las Vegas Review-Journal

Tribal communitie­s set to receive big infusion of aid

- By Mark Walker and Emily Cochrane The New York Times Company

After a year that provided stark new evidence of how racial inequities and a lack of federal funding had left tribal communitie­s and Indigenous people especially vulnerable to crises like the pandemic, President Joe Biden and Democrats in Congress are seeking to address those long-standing issues with a huge infusion of federal aid.

The $1.9 trillion relief package signed into law by Biden contains more than $31 billion for tribal government­s and other federal programs to help Native population­s, a record level of assistance intended to help bolster health care and a variety of other services in some of the nation’s poorest communitie­s.

The money is a crucial plank of Biden’s vow to address racial and economic inequities, and is a potentiall­y transforma­tive lifeline for tribes, who were among the hardest hit by the spread of the coronaviru­s.

It is also a high-profile step toward more equitable treatment after centuries of treaty violations and failures by the federal government to live up to its obligation­s. Biden signed the law March 11, and four days later the Senate confirmed Deb Haaland, who had been representi­ng New Mexico in the House, as interior secretary, the first Native American woman to serve in the Cabinet.

The new legislatio­n, passed without a single Republican vote, allocates $20 billion to tribal government­s. It also includes more than $6 billion for the Indian Health Service and other Native American health systems, including a $20 million fund for Native Hawaiians, as well as $1.2 billion for housing and more than $1.1 billion for primary, secondary and higher education programs.

The new money comes on top of $8 billion allocated to tribal government­s by Congress last March in the $2.2 trillion relief law, and additional funding for tribal health and education services in other relief legislatio­n passed last year.

“Our promise to them has always been — on any of these issues — they will have a seat at the table,” Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California said in an interview. “It’s essential that we’re listening to the specific issues.”

Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, the Democratic majority leader, said during a floor speech that the legislatio­n “takes us a giant step closer to fulfilling our trust responsibi­lities to all Native

Americans, Alaska Natives and Native Hawaiians.”

The aid comes after a year that devastated Native people across the country, as poverty, multigener­ational housing and underlying health conditions contribute­d to the deadly spread of the pandemic. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found in August that in nearly half the states, Native Americans were disproport­ionately affected by the virus compared with their white counterpar­ts.

“There’s nothing more unjust than the way we currently treat Native people in the United States with whom we have treaty interest, and this was an opportunit­y for us to put our money where our mouth is,” said Sen. Brian Schatz, D-HAwaii, the chairman of the Indian Affairs Committee. “This is quite literally the biggest down payment in American history in the right direction, in the direction of justice.”

Lynn Malerba, the chief of the Mohegan Tribe, said the pandemic highlighte­d the inequities and challenges in Native American communitie­s. Biden and this Congress understand those challenges much better than the previous administra­tion, she said.

The funding, Malerba said, marks the first time the federal government has recognized that tribal nations participat­e in the national economy and have the same responsibi­lities to the health and well-being of their citizens as state and local government­s.

“If you consider the Native population, depending on what estimate you are using, is 3 to 5% of the population and we received 1.5% of funding, that’s significan­t,” Malerba said. “It’s a much greater number than the previous administra­tion had provided to us.”

The funds will mean tribal government­s will be able to partly, or in some cases completely, offset revenue losses suffered during the pandemic, address health care shortcomin­gs exposed by the virus and expand broadband access. The legislatio­n also includes two separate grant funds for education programs for Alaska Natives and Native Hawaiians.

In Washington state, Leonard Forsman, the chairman of the Suquamish Tribe, said a portion of the allotment would be used to continue building the tribe’s first health clinic within the reservatio­n. The tribal nation of about 1,200 enrolled members has used the services of doctors from nearby towns.

Included in the relief package is an injection of more than $6 billion to the Indian Health Service, which is part of the Department of Health and Human Services. The Indian Health Service was created to carry out the government’s treaty obligation­s to provide health care to American Indians and Alaskan Natives.

The health service struggled to cope with the pandemic in some of the hardest-hit areas in the country. The agency said the new money would help with coronaviru­s testing and vaccinatio­n programs as well as with hiring more health care workers, expanding availabili­ty of mental health services and providing better access to water, a major issue in many tribal communitie­s.

Beyond health care, the legislatio­n addresses a range of other issues important to Native communitie­s, including $20 million to establish an emergency Native language preservati­on and maintenanc­e grant program, as tribes race to ensure that their languages are not lost with time and the deaths of older members during the pandemic.

“It took a lot of time just to sort of educate people about Indian Country and the structural — just the historic — lack of basics,” said Sen. Martin Heinrich, D-N.M.

A number of things are converging, he said, “but I do think that the conversati­on around race also opened the door for people to realize, wait a minute, we never got around to getting running water and electricit­y and all these things, broadband, to Indian Country — like they’re not starting at the same place.”

While the $2.2 trillion relief law approved nearly a year ago included $8 billion for tribal government­s, a portion of those funds remains frozen in a legal battle over who is eligible. Alaska Native corporatio­ns, for-profit businesses that serve tribal villages in Alaska, have sought to receive some of the money, prompting a monthslong battle over the definition of a tribal government.

The more than 200 Alaska Native corporatio­ns, which were establishe­d in 1971 to manage almost 45 million acres as part of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act, were the subject of lawsuits filed by dozens of tribal government­s in the lower 48 states who challenged a Trump administra­tion decision to allow them to receive a portion of the funding. They argued the corporatio­ns should not be eligible for coronaviru­s relief because they do not meet the definition of government.

A federal district judge in the District of Columbia ruled in favor of the lower 48 tribes, deeming the Alaska Native corporatio­ns ineligible for coronaviru­s relief funds. Because of the legal fight, only some subsidiari­es of the Alaska Native corporatio­ns have received Paycheck Protection Program funds, although individual tribes in Alaska are set to get some relief through the relief legislatio­n.

Representa­tives from the Alaska Native corporatio­ns say that despite the successes they have had getting vaccines into their communitie­s, many villages have been stretched to the breaking point.

“Many of our villages lack road access, and over 30 Alaska Native communitie­s currently lack access to running water,” the Alaska Native corporatio­ns said in a joint statement. “These realities are further exacerbate­d by the economic devastatio­n COVID-19 has brought to Alaska, along with some of the highest mortality rates in the nation.”

In New Mexico, the Pueblo of Acoma continues its legal battle with the Indian Health Service over a reduction of services taking place at the community’s only hospital. In late 2020, as coronaviru­s cases rose in the state and hospital beds dwindled, services at the Acoma-cañoncito-laguna hospital were cut and it was effectivel­y reduced to a clinic.

The Pueblo of Acoma filed suit in federal court in Washington in January, accusing the Indian Health Service of failing to provide proper notice and details to Congress before moving to downsize the hospital. The tribe claimed that under the Indian Health Care Improvemen­t Act, a year’s advance notice must be given to Congress before closing one of these facilities. The agency has stated that it did not notify Congress about the hospital changes because it was only a reduction of services.

In February, a federal district judge in the District of Columbia granted a temporary restrainin­g order to keep the federal health agency from making deeper cuts. With the order expected to expire April 2, Gov. Brian Vallo of the Pueblo of Acoma said the tribe was exploring ways to address the health care issue it was facing by drawing on the new funding in the relief package.

 ?? ADRIA MALCOLM / NEW YORK TIMES FILE (2020) ?? Signs mark the entrance for COVID-19 testing Dec. 14 at the Acomacanon­cito-laguna Indian Health Service hospital in Acoma Pueblo, N.M. The $1.9 trillion stimulus package signed into law by President Joe Biden contains more than $31 billion for tribal government­s and other federal programs to help native population­s, a record level of help intended to help bolster health care and a variety of other services in some of the nation’s poorest communitie­s.
ADRIA MALCOLM / NEW YORK TIMES FILE (2020) Signs mark the entrance for COVID-19 testing Dec. 14 at the Acomacanon­cito-laguna Indian Health Service hospital in Acoma Pueblo, N.M. The $1.9 trillion stimulus package signed into law by President Joe Biden contains more than $31 billion for tribal government­s and other federal programs to help native population­s, a record level of help intended to help bolster health care and a variety of other services in some of the nation’s poorest communitie­s.

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