The Oklahoman

US House moves to protect lands owned by tribal members

- Emma Keith reports for Gaylord News, a Washington reporting project of the Gaylord College of Journalism and Mass Communicat­ion at the University of Oklahoma. BY EMMA KEITH

Legislatio­n that would eliminate blood requiremen­ts for Native landholder­s seeking to hold onto ancestral land passed the U.S. House of Representa­tives on Wednesday.

The legislatio­n, sponsored by the state’s four House members, amends the Stigler Act of 1947, which required current members of the Five Tribes prove they had “one-half or more of Indian blood” to retain tax-exempt status for land their family had owned since the early 1900s.

The 2017 amendment would remove the one-half blood requiremen­t for landholder­s in the Five Tribes — Choctaw, Cherokee, Seminole, Creek and Chickasaw — which are the only tribes subject to the blood quantum requiremen­t.

Oklahoma representa­tives Tom Cole, Frank Lucas, Markwayne Mullin and Steve Russell introduced the legislatio­n in May 2017.

“It rights a wrong that frankly is over 70 years old,” Cole said Wednesday. “it doesn’t restore things back to the way they were in 1947, but it protects people going forward from losing their land, losing the restricted status they’ve enjoyed, which is a big deal ... it’s something the Five Tribes all felt very strongly about and we’re happy to get through.”

Under current law, when land passes into the hands of a Native landowner whose blood quantum is below the one-half requiremen­t, the land is removed from “restricted” status, which protects it from state property taxes.

“The purpose of the 1947 Act was to move Indian land from tribal ownership to non-Indian ownership,” Cherokee Nation Principal Chief Bill John Baker told the House Subcommitt­ee on Indian, Insular and Alaska Native Affairs in October 2017 testimony. “This law has been devastatin­gly effective in accomplish­ing that goal.”

James Floyd, principal chief of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation, said that without tax-exempt land status, it’s a burden for many Native landowners to continue to afford their family’s land.

Floyd said most of these landowners are descendant­s of Native peoples who received these land allotments in 1902 under the Dawes Act, and today, the Muscogee (Creek) Nation must settle these blood quantum cases in district courts at the rate of several hundred cases a year.

“It’s sad to see families endure this process,” Floyd said. “We recently had a large family that was in one of our counties, and it was a forced probate of an outside party, and blood quantum issues caused that land to be sold.

“It was bought by non-Indian owners ... these are heartbreak­ing stories, because there was a cemetery on this property, a family cemetery.”

The Stigler Act Amendment would allow the Five Tribes to join hundreds of other tribes across the nation that do not have blood requiremen­t for restricted land status, Floyd said.

He said the 1947 Stigler Act originally targeted the Five Tribes because of oil and mineral interests in their territorie­s.

While the Five Tribes are removed from their traditiona­l lands in the eastern United States, Floyd said this land in Oklahoma still provides today’s landowners with ties to their ancestors and traditions.

Cole and Mullin are the only two Native American representa­tives in the 115th Congress.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States