Santa Fe New Mexican

Tribes bash proposed budget cuts

Members request that Congress fund programs president proposes to trim

- By Gillian Flaccus

PORTLAND, Ore. — Dozens of Native American tribes in six Western states expressed outrage Thursday at President Trump’s proposed budget cuts to American Indian programs, saying they would erase significan­t progress on child welfare and climate change and gut social services and education on reservatio­ns across the U.S.

Members from tribes in Oregon, Washington, California, Montana, Idaho and Alaska called on Congress to restore funding to tribes during budget negotiatio­ns.

The cuts ignore the treaty responsibi­lities to federally recognized tribes, they said, and put a strangleho­ld on programs that have been chronicall­y underfunde­d.

Coalter Baker, a spokesman with the White House’s Office of Management and Budget, did not reply to an email seeking comment.

“This is the single largest attack on Indian Country that we’ve experience­d in recent history. There is no doubt that the president has made a statement toward Indian County,” said Mel Sheldon, a councilman with the Tulalip Tribes in Washington state. “It is not a good statement.”

The proposed budget would slash $64 million in federal Native American funding for education, $21 million for law enforcemen­t and safety, $27 million for natural resources management programs run by tribes plus $23 million from human services, which includes the Indian Child Welfare Act, said Carina Miller, a councilwom­an with the Confederat­ed Tribes of Warm Springs, in Oregon.

It would also eliminate funding for tribal work on climate change and cut block grant programs that provide housing assistance for Native Americans, she added.

Eliminatin­g $10 million for a program that helps tribes prepare for and deal with rapid environmen­tal change would be particular­ly harmful, said Fawn Sharp, president of the Affiliated Tribes of Northwest Indians.

Native Americans in the Pacific Northwest have identified so-called climate resiliency as a top priority, said Sharp, who is also a member of the Quinault Indian Nation in Washington state.

“The reality is, is that’s how we lived. The indigenous way of thinking is you’re stewards of the land,” said Miller.

Cutting the funding will negatively “affect the actions of projects and our ability to rehabilita­te the environmen­t,” she added.

The leaders spoke at a threeday convention of Native American leaders in Portland, Ore., attended by representa­tives from 57 tribes.

The proposed budget was the topic of a session attended by 300 tribal members.

 ?? GILLIAN FLACCUS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tribal leaders from the Pacific Northwest pose for a picture Thursday during a meeting of the Members of the Affiliated Tribes of Northwest Indians in Portland, Ore. The group held a news conference to criticize cuts to Native American programs in...
GILLIAN FLACCUS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tribal leaders from the Pacific Northwest pose for a picture Thursday during a meeting of the Members of the Affiliated Tribes of Northwest Indians in Portland, Ore. The group held a news conference to criticize cuts to Native American programs in...

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