msquebanh, to oregon
@msquebanh@mastodon.sdf.org avatar

of the Reservation of filed a petition with the Oregon Department of asking it to repeal or amend the rule implementing the August 4, 2023 Memorandum of Agreement that authorized off-reservation hunting, fishing, trapping & gathering by Confederated Tribes of .

https://www.legalreader.com/confederated-tribes-of-warm-springs-asks-oregon-department-of-fish-and-wildlife-to-repeal-agreement-harming-tribal-sovereignty/

DoomsdaysCW, to maine
@DoomsdaysCW@kolektiva.social avatar

This article from the March 2024 issue of has a lot of background behind the Maine Settlement Act. A must read!!!

What Would Mean for the ?

For more than 40 years, the tribes in Maine have had to play by different rules than other indigenous groups across the country, and they have suffered in tangible ways as a result. Now, a push for greater tribal autonomy has come to a head

"18th-century treaties were never intended to deed away land. Like many American groups, the viewed stewardship as a communal undertaking — they didn’t share European conceptions of private land ownership. Unattuned to this foreign mindset, the Wabanaki signed treaties assuming the documents outlined land use, not ownership."

By Rachel Slade
March, 2024

"The ’ administrative headquarters, built to resemble a log cabin, sits on a small tract of tribal land in Aroostook County, just north of where I-95 intersects the Canadian border. A few steps away, the roars past, the sound of rushing water a reminder of the harm done by 19th-century log drives, when clearing the river of obstacles turned the flow fast and shallow. A decade ago, the Maliseets took it upon themselves to start a project, partnering with federal and state agencies and nonprofit groups to add boulders and bends to the Meduxnekeag. To date, they have covered a four-mile stretch, recreating conditions that will cool and oxygenate the water, in order to help insects, birds, and fish thrive. The work requires patience. So does much else. The river is hardly the only historical damage tribal leaders around the state have been attempting to repair.

"One of the four remaining Wabanaki tribes whose forebears arrived in Maine more than 10,000 years ago, the Maliseets inhabited an area now split between the United States and Canada long before the existence of an international border. Chief , who wears her heather-brown hair in two long, thick braids that drape over her shoulders, was elected to lead the in in 2017. Since then, she says, she has struggled daily with the complex legal relationships the tribes have with the state government, dictated by the 1980 .

"The terms of the settlement were the result of a decade of legal wrangling (and centuries of fraught dealings before that) that resulted in the state wielding unprecedented power over tribal affairs. The tribes have come to find the arrangement both burdensome and unjust. 'Our tribal council is our governing body,' Sabattis said when I met her at the Maliseet administrative offices. 'We should have full authority to make the laws and serve our people without interference from other governments.'

"Several years ago, the Maliseets, Mi’kmaq, , and banded together and formed to collectively push for . Most of the country’s 570 other federally recognized tribes are sovereign, which in the context of tribal affairs implies a sort of quasi-independence: through a direct nation-to-nation relationship with the federal government, indigenous groups can run their own communities. They administer their law enforcement, courts, schools, health care, and civil infrastructure on their reserved lands with federal assistance and funding — and, unlike in Maine, can do so without state-level interference. Sovereignty also means that if the tribes believe the state has violated their federally protected rights, they have recourse both through federal agencies and courts. It’s a system under which tribes across the nation have begun to flourish in recent decades."

Read more:
https://downeast.com/issues-politics/what-would-tribal-sovereignty-mean-for-the-wabanaki/

DoomsdaysCW,
@DoomsdaysCW@kolektiva.social avatar

"If the were , they would need to be consulted on every land-use decision that might impact their territory. Potential harms to human health, water and air quality, or plants and animals would be grounds for blocking commercial activity. The influential lobbies for owners, companies, and , including Maine’s largest landowner, the Canada-based company, which controls 1.25 million acres in the state. It has also been one of the most forceful opponents of , arguing that any additional regulatory hurdles would stifle economic activity in the ."

TundraTaoist, to Alaska
WesternWatershedsProject, to random
@WesternWatershedsProject@mastodon.world avatar

"If it looks messy in these early stages, blame the state interference that creates that appearance, not the tribal members taking the first buffalo for their clan in over 150 years. Blame the crushing poverty we turn a blind eye to on the reservations those Tribal members travel from. And blame the damned cows that railroad barons deemed the best use of our public lands."


https://www.buffalofieldcampaign.org/shaping-the-narrative-for-yellowstone-bison

amywestervelt, to climate

post (which I love! thank you for bearing with us newbies): I'm an investigative journalist focused on . I run a small company and report/host one of our shows (Drilled, a true-crime pod on climate change), and also write regularly for The Guardian, The Intercept, and The Nation. Last year we made S2 of This Land on the case threatening I live in Costa Rica with 2 kids, a dog, 2 cats, & 1 Scottish maniac

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