by Gale
Courey Toensing
Indian Country Today
16 November 2009
WASHINGTON—A top BIA official has promised to
reform the federal recognition process.
Acting Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for
Indian Affairs George Skibine told the Senate Committee on Indian
Affairs it would take about two years to review existing
regulations and develop new ones in consultation with tribal
nations.
It was déjà vu all over again at SCIA’s hearing
on fixing the federal acknowledgment process November 4.
“The very title implies that the process is
broken, so our title says this is about fixing it,” SCIA Chairman
Senator Byron Dorgan, D-ND, said.
Dorgan and other members of the committee noted
the “frustrating” fact that similar hearings have occurred on
average every two years for the past several years.
But this time members seemed intent on making a
breakthrough. Their renewed energy for reform may have been
spurred by the BIA’s recent denial of federal acknowledgment to
the Little Shell Tribe of Chippewa Indians of Montana, the poster
child for the wrecked federal recognition process.
The tribe filed its letter of intent to
petition in 1978, completed its petition in 1985 and had to wait
31 years to be denied federal status, Dorgan said.
But before it was denied, it was approved by
former Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs Kevin Gover in 2000.
Then, the Bush administration neglected the decision for the next
eight years.
“People will be born and people will die in the
middle of that process without getting answers,” Dorgan said.
He raised a number of questions about the
process: Were the mandatory criteria being inconsistently
interpreted? What do “on a substantially continuous basis” and
“reasonable likelihood” mean? Who decides the fate of a petition,
the Office of Federal Acknowledgment or the assistant secretary
for Indian Affairs? What exactly is the burden of proof a tribe
needs to meet the seven criteria? Should the process be turned
over to an independent commission as proposed in a pending bill?
Should administrative law judges be involved to provide more
transparency and a clear legal standard for evidentiary review?
“Petitioners say the OFA keeps moving the goal
post back, requiring more and more documentation. It’s an open
ended process and some would say it’s a never ending process.”
Skibine and Lee Fleming, OFA director, were the
first witnesses. The two career employees have around six decades
of combined federal government experience and have both testified
before the committee on numerous occasions.
Skibine said Larry EchoHawk, the new assistant
secretary for Indian Affairs, agreed at his confirmation hearing
that the acknowledgment process needs to be improved.
“So he has asked me to be the chief architect
of trying to fix what is broken, and as a result, I have committed
to him that this is going to be one of the priorities of his
administration and we are going to get that done before he leaves
office, for sure.”
Skibine said he plans to develop new
regulations, and Dorgan asked for a timeline.
“I think it will take about a year to develop
proposed regulations and then they have to be finalized. We still
have to do consultation with the Indian tribes, so that will take
another year,” Skibine said.
In one of the humorous moments at the hearing,
Dorgan asked Skibine if he thought he would still be working for
the federal government when the new regulations go into effect.
“I’m eligible to retire right now,” Skibine
said, laughing.
Although he disagreed that the process is
entirely broken, Skibine outlined a number of potential
improvements, such as establishing clear time frames; eliminating
unneeded steps; clarifying language ambiguities; and reviewing the
standards.
“We’re probably going to take a hard look at
the standards.... to see if there’s some redundancy or whether
it’s all needed.”
He cited as unacceptable the different
interpretations of “substantially continuous basis” in Gover’s
positive finding and the recent negative determination in Little
Shell.
“How can you have this kind of disagreement? I
think it’s important to have standards where you can articulate,
either they meet (the criteria) or they don’t,” Skibine said.
“Little Shell was an excruciating decision for
me.”
Sen. Jon Tester, D-Montana, a supporter of Little
Shell, asked about the tribe’s options now.
The tribe can ask Congress for recognition, ask
the BIA to reconsider its decision or appeal to a federal court,
Skibine said. The last two options have slim chances of success,
however.
Justice must be done for Little Shell, the
tribe’s President John Sinclair said.
The BIA’s treatment of Little Shell “undermines
sovereignty for all tribes".
"We ask Congress to do what the BIA
should have done,” Sinclair said, urging Congress to support
Tester’s bill to recognize the tribe.
Fleming outlined the BIA process and the
changes that have been made since a 2001 Government Accountability
Office recommendation for wide sweeping reforms. Perpetually
understaffed, the OFA is nowhere near reviewing a petition in the
desired 25-month timeline.
“How much money do you need to do the job
effectively and are you asking for this money? Otherwise, maybe we
should all give up and say this process doesn’t work,” Dorgan
said.
Other witnesses included Frank Ettawageshik,
chairman of the National Congress of American Indians’ Task Force
on Federal Recognition, Muscogee Nation of Florida Chairwoman Anne
D. Tucker, and Patty Ferguson-Bohnee, the director of the Indian
Legal Clinic in Tempe, Arizona.
Their testimony and a video of the hearing are
available
online.