Albuquerque Journal

Government settles lawsuits with 17 tribes

$492 million to be paid for mismanagin­g tribal funds, natural resources

- BY SARI HORWITZ

The Obama administra­tion has settled lawsuits with 17 Native American tribes who accused the federal government of long mismanagin­g their funds and natural resources.

With these settlement­s, the administra­tion will have resolved the majority of outstandin­g claims, some that date back a century, with more than 100 tribes and totaling more than $3.3 billion, according to the Justice and Interior department­s.

“This is an important achievemen­t that will end, honorably and fairly, decades of contention that not only sapped valuable resources, but also strained relationsh­ips,” said Deputy Attorney General Sally Q. Yates.

The settlement­s totaling $492.8 million come at the same time that thousands of Native Americans representi­ng tribes from across the country have joined the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe in North Dakota to protest the 1,172 mile Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL), which they say threatens their water supply and traverses sacred Indian burial grounds.

Earlier this month, a federal judge ruled against the Standing Rock tribe’s request to halt constructi­on on the crude oil pipeline. But the decision by District Judge James E. Boasberg was effectivel­y put on hold when the department­s of Justice, Army and Interior announced that the Army Corps would not grant an easement before it determines whether it needs to reconsider previous decisions about the pipeline. It has yet to make that determinat­ion.

Meanwhile, thousands of Native Americans remain camped out in a nearby field in protest. Native leaders are scheduled to protest the pipeline on Monday in Washington outside the White House Tribal Nations Conference where tribal leaders are meeting with President Obama.

Many tribal leaders say Obama has done more for Indian Country than any other president. They point to the administra­tion’s efforts to improve the justice system on the reservatio­ns and work directly with the tribes on long-standing disputes over land, such as the settlement­s announced Monday.

The 17 tribes affected include the Gila River, Colorado Indian Tribes and the San Carlos Apache tribes in Arizona, the White Earth Nation in Minnesota and Oregon’s Confederat­ed Tribes of the Umatilla Reservatio­n. The tribes had accused the federal government of mismanagin­g trust lands, which are leased for timber harvesting, farming, grazing, and oil and gas extraction, among other uses.

The Interior Department manages 56 million acres of trust lands for federally recognized tribes and more than 100,000 leases on those lands. The department also manages about 2,500 tribal trust accounts for over 250 tribes.

Four years ago, the federal government reached settlement­s with 41 tribes for similar claims.

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