Santa Fe New Mexican

U.S. House OKs bill extending Amber Alerts to tribal lands

Measure was inspired by kidnapped Navajo girl Ashlynne Mike

- By Kyley Schultz Cronkite News

WASHINGTON — The House gave final approval Monday to a bill that will give tribes direct access to funds that will let them quickly post Amber Alerts over text messaging, radio and television to counties within reservatio­n borders.

The Amber Alerts in Indian Country Act was sparked by the May 2016 abduction of Ashlynne Mike, an 11-year-old Navajo girl. Authoritie­s did not post an alert that Ashlynne was missing until the day her body was found near Shiprock.

The bill, sponsored by Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., passed the House on a voice vote last week and now goes to the president for his signature. It is identical to a House version that was co-sponsored all nine members of the state’s congressio­nal delegation, among others.

“There is a massive hole in the system when the only areas in the country not protected with Amber Alert access are those in tribal lands,” said Rep. Andy Biggs, R-Ariz., lead sponsor of the House version. “By expanding already available grants to include tribes, we are ensuring Indian country communitie­s have resources that better protect their children.”

Amber Alerts — for America’s Missing: Broadcast Emergency Response — are used to quickly spread the word about missing children.

The National Center for Missing & Exploited Children says there are currently 144 open missing children cases in Arizona.

“We know that Amber Alerts are often critical in the safe recovery of an abducted child,” said Emily Farrell, a spokeswoma­n for the center. “The Amber Alert in Indian Country Act of 2017 will help improve and lead to the expansion of the Amber Alert system on Native American reservatio­ns.”

Until now, tribal law enforcemen­t agencies had to work through state and local police agencies to get an alert posted. The bill, passed Feb. 26, would give funding directly to tribes to help them improve their technology and post alerts on their own.

Rep. Raul Grijalva, D-Tucson, said the bill provides “567 tribes across Indian Country with the funding they need to secure and protect their children in the unfortunat­e event that they go missing.”

“By creating tribal Amber alert systems and integratin­g them with existing state systems, we’re renewing our commitment to the communitie­s of Indian Country to ensure that their children are protected,” Grijalva said in a statement Monday.

Virginia Davis, a senior policy adviser for the National Congress of American Indians, called it another example of tribes suffering because they do not have a seat at the table.

“What we see across the board in public safety legislatio­n is that tribes aren’t really included up front in the decision making, so years later we have to go back and rectify policies that end up not working for us,” Davis said. “Unfortunat­ely, this is one of many examples where we are forced to advocate for our voice in legislatio­n that should have included us from the start.”

She welcomed the bill’s requiremen­t for reports to Congress, saying they will let federal lawmakers “understand exactly what safety barriers tribes are facing.”

Rep. Paul Gosar, R-Ariz., said the bill is just the beginning of improving public safety on tribal lands.

“Increasing the tribes’ access to funding and support is the first step, but we need to be able to assess what other safety barriers there are so we can fix them and make this new system really work,” Gosar said in a prepared statement.

Davis said the change is long overdue.

“Indian tribes shouldn’t be an afterthoug­ht to Congress when they are passing these national public safety laws,” she said. “They should be included right there on the front lines, in a direct manner than can help each of their unique circumstan­ces.”

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