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Category: 17.5. Efforts to obtain federal recognition
LOCK008. Testimony of Arlinda
Locklear on S. 611, before the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, on
behalf of the Miami Nation of Indiana, May 24, 2000. 6,174
words.
Publication type: Congressional hearings or testimony
Electronic access: CIS Congressional Universe
Arlinda Locklear notes that although she is speaking
as co-counsel with the Native American Rights Fund and with Albert Harker
in the Miami Nation's lawsuit over failure to receive federal recognition,
she is also speaking as a member of the Lumbee tribe, the nation's largest
non-federally-recognized tribe. Her remarks concern S. 611, a bill which
would create a commission to process tribal petitions for federal recognition.
She explains a number of limitations in the Bureau of Indian Affairs'
process for handling petitions, which has been in place since 1978:
- The process is a closed one; other than the initial
list of obvious deficiencies, the petitioner receives
no feedback until the proposed and final determinations are made public.
- The process has no firm deadlines; petitioners can
wait years before work begins on their petition, then more years before
the final decision is made.
- The process has a built-in institutional bias, since
the agency which serves federally recognized tribes (the BIA) is also
deciding which tribes can become recognized.
Locklear then discusses problems with S. 611, several of which relate
to the fact that the bill adopts the same criteria for determining tribal
existence that the present process uses. These are some of the problems
she outlines:
- The bill unfairly excludes certain groups from submitting
petitions, such as those who have previously submitted petitions and
been denied recognition.
- The criterion that a petitioner demonstrate sustained
continuous existence as a tribe since first contact with whites is
unworkable for petitioners. Non-federally-recognized groups are unlikely
to have records to draw on for proof, since they have no common resources
(such as land) that would generate records; they did not receive federal
programs that would generate records; and they did not have reasons
to keep records of their own. Due to discrimination and hostility
from whites, they usually avoided record-keepers.
- The criterion requiring proof that consistent
interactions and significant social relationships exist within its
membership and that its members are differentiated from and identified
as distinct from nonmembers can only be proven by sophisticated
fieldwork and social science analysis, creating an expensive, time-consuming
burden for petitioners--much more so for large groups than for small
ones. The markers established by the BIA in 1994 to make
the community criterion less subjective--including proof that 50%
of tribal members reside in a geographic area and a 50% in-marriage
rate--could not be met by most federally recognized tribes as well
as most petitioners.
- The criterion requiring proof of political leaders
and proof that tribal members have political relationship with leaders
of the tribe does not reflect the nature of political authority in
aboriginal communities. Native American communities usually exercise
political authority through loose alliances of extended family groups
which act only when a need arises. The criterion reflects the structures
already in place on reservations, rather than the structures petitioners
are likely to have in place.
Locklear, for several reasons, favors the modifications of
the BIA's criteria that are reflected in H.R. 361. In response to concern
by the Department of the Interior, this bill creates--not an independent
commission--but a commission that is part of the Department of the Interior.
Its process would, however, be open and adjudicatory. The commission would
still use seven mandatory criteria, but they would be modified to reduce
the burdensome, detailed documentation required and the subjectivity that
is now in place. Petitioners would document continuous existence as a tribe
since 1934; less subjective indicators of political authority and community
are permitted; and information other than direct genealogical connection
is permissible as proof of descent from a historic tribe.
Note: Author is Lumbee.
This annotation was edited on: June 17, 2002
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