Smoke Signals March 1991 page 10 Native American Tribe Making a Real Effort at Sovereignty "If they fail, it will ripple throughout Indian country for years to come," said Gay Kingman, executive director of the National Congress of American Indians. The self-government initiative has divided the nation's Indians. Tribes more sophisticated at government lobbying tend to favor it, while others see it as an attempt by the federal government to abandon its trust responsibility to Indians. Even on the reservations that are part of the experi ment, there is broad debate. While many Indians say they despise the BIA, they are uncertain about abandon ing the one agency that has been a constant through nearly two centuries of ties to the government. SD., and a fellow in Harvard University's Nieman study program for journalists. Thus, even as government policy in the last 20 years has granted Indians more say in education and cultural areas, the Tribes say a single federal agency continues to run their lives. "We don't think some BIA bureaucrat in a regional office should be making all our decisions," said Raynette Finkbonner, who is in charge of the self-government project on the Lummi Indian reservation, about 80 miles northwest of Seattle. The Quinaults, more than most Tribes, seem to have a special reason to distrust the BIA. In the past 50 years, the agency has sold most of the reservation's old-growth timber in contracts with private industry. All but a few By Timothy Egan New York Tunes Taholah, WA. In trying to assert the right of Ameri can Indian Tribes to exist as nations within a nation, Joseph DeLaCruz has chased non-Indian cars off Tribal beaches, introduced separate license plates and quashed a federal road leading into the coastal rain forest at land's end in Taholah. Each measure was small, born of frustration, with an effect that was largely symbolic But now DeLaCruz, longtime president of the Quinault Indian Nation, has embarked on what he and other Tribal leaders consider one of the most significant steps toward self-determination in more than a century. With the eyes of Indians across the United States on them, the Quinaults and six other Tribes have begun a three-year experiment in self-government. In it, they are negotiating with the United States virtually as sovereign nations, a status the Tribes have long sought. Besides the Quinault (pronounced kwin-ALT), the six other Tribes that have signed self-government contracts are the Mille Lacs Chippewa band in Minnesota; the Jamestown Klallam in Washington; the Hoopa Valley Tribe in California, the Absentee-Shawnee and the Cherokee both in Oklahoma and the Lummi of Wash ington State. The Tribes are seeking to break a cycle of paternalism by eliminating their dependence on the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), the federal agency that has governed Indians since 1824. Essentially, the experiment allows certain Tribes to set their own budgets, run their own programs and negoti ate directly with the federal government for services. All those functions are usually performed by the BIA, one of the nation's oldest and most criticized bureaucracies. The Tribes say they are using their newfound power to bring lost languages back to the schools, create jobs in areas long overlooked and channel money directly into such things as fixing potholes in Tribal roads without having to go through government bureaucrats in regional offices. The current system delivers to the reservations only about 11 cents of every dollar appropriated to them and is rife with mismanagement and accounting lapses, according to recent federal investigations. An audit released last week found that the BIA could not account for $95 million, or nearly one-tenth of its budget, in the last fiscal year. "Basically, what brought us to this point was that Congress said things were so bad let's turn it over to the Indians and let them sink or swim on their own," DeLaCruz said. On a practical level, the shift to self-government, though in its infancy, is already having some effect. The Lummi Tribe has used its new power to add tutoring to its Indian school, where the native language is now taught. The Hoopa Valley Tribe is developing a forestry program. Some of the biggest Tribes in America, the Navajo and Sioux among them, are opting to see how the smaller Tribes fare before taking part in the project. There are 20 additional Indian nations that are ready to sign up for the second phase of the self-government project in the next three years. At the end of 1993, the experiment will be evaluated by Congress and the Interior Department and considered for enactment as policy. If the seven Tribes taking part in the experiment succeed, the experiment could change the way the government treats the nation's 310 recognized Indian Tribes. "On the one hand, we always cuss the BIA," Kingman said, "but any time the government has tried to remove it, the Tribes have objected." The memory of President Dwight Eisenhower's policy, in which some Tribes lost their sovereign status under the government after being given payments for past grievances over land and resources, is still feared by many Indian leaders. That policy, which became known as "termination," was designed to bring Indians into the American mainstream. Instead, its critics charge, by eliminating some longstanding Tribal fishing, hunting and land-use right, the policy only solidified the Indians' poverty. "This is not termination," said Interior Secretary Manuel Lujan, whose agency is responsible for most of the $3.5 billion budget allocated to Indians this fiscal year. "We still have trust responsibility and intend to keep it. But with this experiment, I foresee a day when we have true government-to-government relations." True nation status, while holding the United States to its duties under 19th century treaties, is what the Tribal leaders say they want. Since the J930's, most reserva tions have had their own police forces, courts and government councils. But the BIA has controlled the federal budgets of reservations, where nearly 1 million Indians live. Even the smallest decisions, Tribal leaders complain, have to be cleared by federal officials. "As long as they continue to control the purse strings, the BIA has all the power," said Tim Giago, an Oglala Sioux, who is editor of The Lakota Times in Rapid City, acres of the Tribe's vast rain-forest home was liquidated, the ground cover burned and the land never reforested. The Tribe has lived near the present-day Olympic National Park for thousands of years, hunting whales, fishing for salmon and building elaborate cedar long houses. They clashed with the Spaniards, who landed a vessel on the shores of the rain forest in 1775, and were among the last of the Northwest Tribes to give up large portions of their land to whites. A treaty signed in 1855 and enlarged in 1873 established the 200,000 acre Quinault Reservation. What happened to the Tribe during the next 100 years has been cited by some scholars as a textbook example of the failure of the government's Indian policy. In what is now seen as a government attempt to break up the reservation, the government in the late 1800's allowed individual Indians to sell reservation land piecemeal. By 1933, there was no Tribally owned land on the reservation, although some individuals still owned parcels. The adults were urged to take up farming and the children were forced into white schools. When DeLaCruz took over as chairman in the early 1970's, he began the drive to reclaim most of the reservation land for Indians, buying some with money earned from Tribal enterprises and trading with the Forest Service for other tracts. The Quinaults built a fish-processing plant and started their own Tribal timber policy, which was often at odds with the BIA. The Tribe now owns 46,000 acres, or about one fourth of the reservation, and its per-capita income is $3,100.