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Category: 37. Federal bills; state and federal laws;
federal hearings and reports; court cases
108-213. Providing for the acknowledgment
of the Lumbee Indian tribe of North Carolina, and for other purposes.
Report, Senate Comm. on Indian Affairs. S. Rept. 108-213. 11 p. Dated
November 25, 2003. Y1.1/5: 108-213.
Publication type: Congressional report
Electronic access: Full text available at the Library
of Congresss THOMAS site:
<http://thomas.loc.gov>
Under the Committee Information heading, click on: Committee Reports.
Then, check the circle for Senate Reports. Then, in the Report Number
Box, type in: 108-213.
In this report, the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs
conveys a favorable report on Senate bill 420, proposing passage of
the bill with an amendment in the nature of a substitution. According
to the report, the substitute amendment adopted by the Committee
is identical to H.R. 898 [Under
Search bill text 108th Congress, in the Bill Number Search
Box, type in: H.R.898] introduced by Mr. McIntyre and Mr. Hayes in the
House of Representatives on February 25, 2003, and referred to the House
Committee on Resources (p. 1).
The Background section provides a brief but detailed
account of the tribes voluminous Congressional and administrative
record dating back to 1899 as far as efforts to obtain support
and true federal recognition. One highlight of this section is the fact
that the Tiwa Tribe of Texas, the only other Indian tribe to have been
in the same anomalous position as the Lumbee, received true recognition
in 1987 through Congressional legislation (PL 100-89, 101 Stat. 667).
The 1968 statute that first acknowledged the Tiwa was modeled on the
1956 Lumbee Act. Like the Lumbee Act, this statute precluded delivery
of federal services.
The report briefly reviews testimony from the September
17, 2003 hearing arguing that the Lumbee meet all the mandatory criteria
for acknowledgment set fort by the Bureau of Indian Affairs Federal
Acknowledgment process except one. In summary:
- Numerous administrative and Congressional reports
establish the tribes descent from the Cheraw and other Siouan-speaking
tribes.
- Research by Dr. Jack Campisi establishes that the
tribe meets the high evidence standard (i.e., exceeds the
minimum 50% requirement) for exerting community and political authority
over its people, as shown by the tribes geographic concentration
and marriage of tribal members within the tribe.
- The tribes history shows that it has long had
a separate existence as a political community. A few examples of major
events include the Henry Berry Lowrie era (during which Lowrie was protected
by members of the tribe and was never captured), establishment in 1887
of a state-funded school system for Lumbee children, and establishment
in 1888 of a normal school to education Lumbee teachers.
- The only major criterion not met by the tribe is that
it not be the subject of congressional legislation that has expressly
terminated or forbidden the federal relationshipas the 1956
Lumbee Act does. In response to this criterion, the Committee stressed
its belief that the Lumbee Tribe differs from all other non-Federally
recognized tribes. First, the Lumbee are the largest of such tribes
(with 53,000 enrolled members). The Committee received a letter from
Bud Shapard, the primary author of the BIAs federal acknowledgment
regulations, supporting S. 420 and observing that the regulations were
not designed to accommodate petitions from tribes as large as the Lumbee.
Other differences include the tribes extensive record of interactions
with Congress and the federal government, dating back to 1899 and thus
corroborating the tribes history as a political community, and
the tribes support from the leaders of other tribes and from Indian
organizations (including the National Congress of American Indians and
some tribes within the United South and Eastern Tribes). Thus, the
Committee is of the view that recognition by special legislation is
the appropriate remedy to the Tribes anomalous status (p.
5).
In the reports discussion of major provisions
of S. 420, the Committee further notes that section 2 does not
restore the Tribe, but extends Federal recognition. Thus, the bill
is not deemed to be a restoration act, for purposes of the Indian
Gaming Regulatory Act, 25 U.S.C. section 2701 et seq., or otherwise
(p. 5). [Note: Some guidance in understanding this statement can be
obtained from a memorandum
by the National Indian Gaming Commission regarding the situation of
the Mechoopda Indian Tribe of the Chico Rancheria. The memorandum
explains that the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act precludes gaming on
trust land acquired after October 17, 1988, unless the land meets
one of several statutory exemptions. The statutory exemptions include
land restored to a tribe that is restored to federal recognition.
The report includes a cost estimate for S. 420 provided
by the Congressional Budget Office. If the tribe receives benefits
and services at a level comparable to other tribes already recognized,
the bill would cost the federal government $430 million for the entire
2004-2008 period. The bill does not authorize that funds in a specific
amount be appropriated for the Lumbee. Section 6 states, There
are authorized to be appropriated such sums as are necessary to carry
out this act (p. 11). It does, however, make tribal members
eligible for services from the Bureau of Indian Affairs and the Indian
Health Service. Programs from the BIA would include adult care, child
and family services, child welfare services,and general assistance.
BIA services would cost an estimated $15 million in 2004 and $100
million over the next five years for the 34,000 eligible Lumbees.
Indian Health Services would cost an estimated $60 million in 2004
and $330 million for the entire 2004-2008 period for the 34,000 eligible
Lumbees.
An important provision of Section 2 of S. 420 is
that any group of Indians in Robeson and adjoining counties,
North Carolina, whose members are not enrolled in the Lumbee Tribe
of North Carolina as determined under section 3(c), may petition under
part 83 of title 25 of the Code of Federal Regulations for acknowledgment
of tribal existence (p. 10).
Additional Subjects: Federal recognition
This annotation was written on: June
5, 2004
Home Page URL: lumbeebibliography.net
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