2 Native News Smoke Signals U.S. Supreme Court issues ruling in tribal sovereignty case ANCHORAGE, AK The unanimous and un usually short 13-page decision written by Justice Clarence Thomas came in a much-watched land mark case brought by the State of Alaska twelve years ago to block an outside construction com pany from paying a tribal tax that funds road re pairs, maintenance of a rudimentary airstrip, and other governmental services in the Native village of Venetie. The ruling reverses the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals decision that upheld the tribal tax. Much of the litigation centered on the interpreta tion of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA), the largest tribal land claims settlement in American history. Under the Act, Congress ex tinguished Alaska tribal claims to 340 million acres in return for a cash payment of $962.5 million and secure title to 44 million acres selected and to be divided under a complex formula. In an unprece dented move in federaltribal relations, Congress directed that the 44 million acres be conveyed not to the Alaska tribes, but to new Native corpora tions which the tribes were required to establish under state law. At the same time, Congress elimi nated some federal controls over land development that generally apply on Indian reservations else where. In the end, some 200 village tribes took part in the land claims settlement. The particular conflict that gave rise to the litiga tion in this case involved the application of ANCSA to the Venetie Tribe of Neetsaii Gwich'in Indians a remote Athabascan tribe that inhabits a vast area north of the Arctic Circle and hundreds of miles away from Alaska's major population centers. Accessible only by air, boat, snowmobile, or dogsled, tribal members largely live a traditional life based on hunt ing, fishing, and trapping. The Tribal Council ad ministers all essential governmental services other than the federally supported local school. In 1943, the Secretary of the Interior set aside $1.9 million acre reservation in order to protect the Venetie Tribe from outsiders encroaching on tribal hunting and trapping grounds. During the late 1960s the Tribe opposed the evolving ANCSA legislation. The Tribe wrote to Congress to retain its reservation, even if it meant giving up the cash settlement. Congress obliged and the Tribe re ceived no share of the monetary settlement. Still, Congress required that the land initially be con veyed to two state chartered corporations estab lished by the Tribe for its tribal citizens. Once the lands were conveyed, the corporations immediately reconveyed the lands back to the Venetie Tribe, which still owns the lands today. In ruling against the Tribe's continued right to tax, the Supreme Court reasoned that when a res ervation does not exist, Indian tribes can only con tinue to govern their lands if those lands qualify as a "dependent Indian community," under a 1948 federal law known as the Indian Country statute. The Court then ruled that Venetie's lands could not satisfy the standard because Congress initially conveyed the lands to the corporations for what ever use they might, and because Congress had deliberately chosen to forego any control over how those choices would be made. Native American Rights Fund (NARF) attorney Heather Kendall-Miller called the opinion "super ficial and poorly-reasoned." She said that "over thirty years ago Congress abandoned the Court's paternalistic view of keeping Indians under abso lute federal control and of being unable to take charge of their own affairs. Instead, Congress did everything to promote tribal independence and self governance. The Court's analysis today twists that policy into a cruel and backhanded termination of the very rights it was intended to promote." NCAI News: Legislative Update Senator Gorton introduces bill As tribal leaders were forewarned by Senator Dan Inouye (D-Hawaii) at the National Congress of American Indians (NCAI) gathering in early January of this year, Senator Slade Gorton (R-WA) introduced legislation on February 27, 1998 that would remove tribal government sovereign immu nity and make tribal governments subject to law suits in federal and state courts. The bill, S. 1691, was referred to the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs (SCIA). The SCIA has scheduled hearings for this issue. NCAI President W. Ron Allen has been invited to testify, along with a number of tribal leaders and legal experts. Senator Gorton has not yet identi fied to the SCIA the witnesses that he will invite to testify. Senator Gorton's bill will certainly be subject to further analysis in the coming weeks, but a pre liminary review indicates that the bill is similar in scope to Section 120, the budget rider that Senator Gorton attempted to attach to the FY 1998 Interior Appropriations bill. The bill is more detailed in its mechanisms, but contains extremely broad waiv ers of tribal sovereign immunity that would make it highly difficult to carry out government func ' tions. In brief, S. 1691 would: 1) waive tribal government immunity for tort to remove tribal immunity claims to the same extent as a private organi zation except for punitive damages; 2) waive tribal government immunity for con tract claims; 3) waive tribal government immunity regard ing the collection of state taxes; 4) subject tribal governments to lawsuits in fed eral district courts; 5) subject tribal governments to lawsuits in state courts under state law for torts and con tracts; 6) waive tribal government immunity for pur poses of the Indian Civil Rights Act and create a cause of action under that act in federal dis trict courts. In summary, S. 1691 promotes the notion that an Indian tribal government should be treated no differently than any private individual or organi zation and represents Senator Gorton's desire to extinguish hundreds of years of federal Indian policy that protects the sovereign status of tribal governments. In the coming weeks and months, NCAI will be mobilizing efforts to defeat S. 1691 and the misrepresentations of tribal governance that it embodies. For more information, please contact the National Congress of American Indians at (202) 466-7767. Spirit Mountain Development strives for economic diversity By Adam Henny, Public Relations Specialist As a result of the hardships of Termination, and the long struggle for Restoration, the tribal leaders vowed to achieve self-sufficiency and economic security for the Tribe. In 1988, the Tribe received 9,811 acres of tim berland and began to generate timber revenue. However, it soon became clear that the timber alone could not enable the Tribe to become self-sufficient: it didn't produce enough revenue to meet the Tribe's needs and restrictions placed on log ging activities by Congress, combined with the volatility of timber markets, made timber an unre liable source of income. The Tribal Council soon realized that we needed to diversify to secure the Tribe's economic future. The Council set up Spirit Mountain Development Corporation (SMDC) to develop a diversified asset of businesses. Thus, diversification has always been a primary goal of Spirit Mountain Development. The first project undertaken by SMDC was gam ing. Although the Casino has been very success ful, gaming is subject to even greater uncertainties than timber. The Tribal Council recognized the need to develop other businesses outside of gam ing and Spirit Mountain Development has pursued other sound economic opportunities. The first de velopment since the Casino' is the retail center in Salem. We are working in partnership with a very experienced real estate developer with a long his tory of success in similar projects. We also se lected real estate, because it is, in general, a con servative investment. , So far, SMDC has been able to insulate the Tribe from major risk by obtaining non-resource financ ing. Through sound diversification and limited li ability by SMDC, the Tribe is securing its future by not relying on one source of income. Spirit Mountain Development has been guided in making sound and profitable investments for the Tribe by an extremely experienced and qualified Board of Directors. The next issue of Smoke Sig nals will feature an article on SMDC's Board of Directors and management team. Grant to aid Warm Springs educational program CORVALLIS, OR - The GTE Foundation has awarded Oregon State University (OSU) a $30,000 grant to assist with development of its Bachelor's degree program at the Warm Springs Indian Res ervation. This innovative program is allowing Native American students to earn, for the first time, complete Bachelor's degrees in natural resources or environmental sciences without ever leaving the reservation. The grant is one of only 15 awarded nationally by the GTE Foundation for 1998. It will help sup port student scholarships and a part-time adviser and program coordinator at the Warm Springs site elements that university officials say "is critical to the success of new programs such as this." The goal is to provide lifelong education from high school through retirement. The Warm Springs initiative, in particular, seeks to meet the needs of students who want an advanced education but are concerned about interrupting the social and cul tural ties provided by the reservation, or lack the time or financial resources to pursue a college de gree elsewhere. The grant is part of GTE's annual "FOCUS" pro gram, which has awarded a total of $6.1 million since its inception in 1982.