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Oregon bill could empower tribes to remove state control
Oregon bill could empower tribes to remove state control

Yahoo

time27-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Oregon bill could empower tribes to remove state control

By Melanie HenshawInvestigateWest When the victim of a crime calls for help on tribal lands, who will respond isn't so straightforward. Some crimes are the responsibility of state police. Others are the tribal police or FBI. It all depends on the severity of the crime and the Indian status of the parties involved. Civil matters on tribal lands are caught in a similar web. Jurisdiction over everything from labor suits to probate law depends on the Indian status of the people involved and the nature of the dispute. Tribal leaders say these complexities undermine tribal sovereignty and harm public safety. A new bill that advanced out of committee in the Oregon Legislature aims to create a formal process for tribes to request the reversal of a 1953 federal law called Public Law 83-280, or PL-280, that tribal leaders say complicates jurisdiction on tribal lands. These reversals — known as retrocession — would simplify the jurisdictional patchwork on tribal lands, removing the state from some tribal affairs. The federal law mandates that Oregon exercise criminal and civil jurisdiction over tribal lands within its borders. Passed at the height of an era of federal policies weakening tribal sovereignty in the 1950s, the law has long been criticized by tribal nations as interfering with their sovereignty by giving states concurrent criminal and civil jurisdiction — previously held by the federal government — over tribal lands. The new Oregon bill, Senate Bill 1011, would create a formal process for a tribe to petition for the repeal of the law on their lands, returning jurisdiction to the federal government. While many tribal governments hope for full criminal and civil restoration over their lands eventually, they say removing state jurisdiction is an important step toward respecting Native American nations as self-governing sovereign states. 'The return of state-assumed jurisdiction under PL-280 to the federal government is essential to improving tribal self-governance and is further acknowledgment by the state of Oregon of tribal sovereignty,' Corrine Sams, one of the nine trustees of the Confederated Tribes of Umatilla Indian Reservation, testified at a March 6 public hearing on the bill before the state Senate Committee on Veterans, Emergency Management, Federal and World Affairs. Oregon state Sen. Anthony Broadman, D-Bend, the bill's sponsor, said the 1953 law comes from an era when the U.S. sought to 'do away' with tribes. 'It's a stain on our country's history, on Oregon's history,' he testified. A fundamental tenet of sovereignty is the power to apply the law, but tribal governments' ability to do that is limited. Federally recognized tribes are sovereign states with rights guaranteed by treaties between them and the U.S. government, but a series of laws have stripped them of jurisdiction over their lands. Tribal officials and legal experts say state jurisdiction hurts tribal communities in Oregon, harming tribal sovereignty and leaving Indigenous communities disproportionately vulnerable to violence. They contend that the formal structure to petition for the reversal of the law is an important step to affirm tribal sovereignty and improve public safety on tribal lands. 'What I've always heard from Oregon tribes is a desire to be a great partner in public safety and exercise the sovereignty that they know better than anybody that they have, to keep Indian country safe, and protect their people and their lands,' Broadman testified. The overlapping jurisdictions of state, tribal and federal agencies can lead to a host of problems, including a lack of enforcement of laws on tribal land, and delayed investigations and prosecutions. 'You get three different jurisdictions that might assume that some other jurisdiction is doing it when they're not, and they're not communicating with each other, and they don't know who has jurisdiction,' said Brent Leonhard, staff attorney for the Confederated Tribes of Umatilla Indian Reservation. Native Americans face disproportionate risks of crime, particularly violent crime; nearly 90% of Native American women report experiencing violence in their lifetime, and the vast majority of violence against Native Americans is committed by non-Native American offenders who more easily evade prosecution due to jurisdictional failures. 'There are gaps and there's overlap, and anytime that's the case, you know, I think it's incumbent upon us as legislators to think about the real life impacts on Oregonians' public safety,' Broadman said. Legal experts say the disproportionate victimization is in part a result of issues related to various agencies with overlapping authority failing to properly investigate and prosecute crimes, at times due to confusion, something cited in the Oregon State Police's first-ever report researching the crisis of missing and murdered Indigenous women in the state. 'Making referrals to the proper organization is equally confusing for state, local and county law enforcement especially if the organization does not regularly interact with tribal policing agencies or commonly handle concerns involving tribal members,' the report said. Congress began allowing tribes to petition for the reversal of PL-280 on their lands in 1968. Since then, a number of tribes have undertaken the existing process with varying success. Tribal leaders say the framework and timelines for retrocession provided under the new bill allow for more transparency and accountability. SB 1011 would allow those tribes that have not yet done so to decide when or if they would like to begin that process. The Umatilla Tribe is prepared to begin seeking civil retrocession, which unlike criminal retrocession, would not return power to the federal government. Instead, it would effectively close state courts to suits against Indians for affairs on tribal lands, like in a majority of states, where PL-280 doesn't apply. The Umatilla Tribe has been at the forefront of efforts to increase tribal sovereignty and to push for full tribal jurisdiction on tribal lands. Native nations with a less-developed judicial system may choose to wait until they have developed additional infrastructure to pursue the retrocession process. State jurisdiction over tribal lands has hurt tribal communities, officials say. State police overwhelmingly have no ties to the tribal communities they're tasked with policing, response times are slow, and tribal citizens feel they've often been treated unfairly. Distrust of law enforcement in tribal communities is a well-known problem. Officials say tribal citizens are more receptive to tribal police officers from within their communities, and view state jurisdiction as an unwanted imposition. Still, the power of tribal governments to apply law is seriously limited by the federal government. With some exceptions for domestic violence against tribal citizens, tribes generally cannot prosecute non-Indians for crimes on tribal lands. Laws give wide-ranging criminal jurisdiction to the federal government, while tribal courts remain subject to sentencing limitations. Leonhard said that going through criminal jurisdictional retrocession had profound effects on the Umatilla tribe and its legal system. Under state jurisdiction, citizens sometimes felt harassed — now, state police generally can't operate there. 'Tribal members felt like the state would come on for reservation to basically harass tribal members and not do anything to non-Indians who were committing crimes,' Leonhard said. 'So it was really a problem, you know, they weren't creating a safer community.' The origins of PL-280 are rooted in the Termination Era of federal Indian policy, when the federal government sought to limit its role in tribal governance. Congress passed it a year before passing the Western Oregon Indian Termination Act of 1954, which unilaterally 'terminated' the federally recognized status of almost all tribes within the geographic bounds of Oregon to force assimilation. With the stroke of a pen, the federal government ceased its relationship with the affected tribes. 'It was a time in the United States when the government was trying to do away with tribes,' Broadman testified. The law applies mandatorily in six states, including Oregon, with the exception of the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs Indian Reservation. 'The tribes always wanted full, full sovereignty, really — and by giving the state jurisdiction under PL-280, first of all, it's been a disaster everywhere where they did it,' Leonhard said. When Congress passed the law in 1953, it fundamentally altered the legal landscape of Indian Country by compelling the included states to exercise complete criminal and civil jurisdiction over tribal lands, without the consent of tribes, regardless of Indian status. The law passed despite the protest of tribal governments. 'PL-280, plain and simple, hurt tribes,' Broadman said. 'It took jurisdiction away from the United States and gave it to states. And that in itself — philosophically, allowing states to exercise jurisdiction in Indian Country — that really is inconsistent, again, with centuries of federal law when it came to how states and tribes are going to act toward one another.' It was also an unfunded mandate that provided no additional resources to state law enforcement to adequately police tribal lands, leaving growing gaps in enforcement, especially as tribes took significantly more land into trust in the past 30 years. During the 1970s and '80s, Congress 'restored' some of the previously terminated tribes, but the policies left lasting damage on tribal communities. Tribal land had been sold to non-Indians; and it took decades for tribes to begin rebuilding their land bases. Remnant laws from that era, like this one, carry forward the harm of that 'dark time,' tribal officials say. Some tribes within the geographic bounds of Oregon have already undertaken the informal process to go through retrocession, but six tribes still remain under Oregon state civil jurisdiction and five tribes remain under state criminal jurisdiction. Tribal officials who support SB 1011 say it creates clarity and consistency in the ad-hoc system currently governing retrocession requests, improving efficiency and promoting transparency in the process. Currently, a tribe that wishes to begin the retrocession process must rely on the 'governor's discretion and political goodwill,' which creates uncertainty for tribes, according to a report submitted to the Legislature by the Umatilla Tribe, a primary backer of the bill. The Umatilla Tribe testified in support of the legislation in a public hearing before the Legislature on March 6. The tribe intends to move for civil retrocession if SB 1011 passes. 'There are lots of problems that come from multiple jurisdictions exercising authority over the same incident,' Leonhard said. InvestigateWest ( is an independent news nonprofit dedicated to investigative journalism in the Pacific Northwest. Reporter Melanie Henshaw covers Indigenous affairs and communities in the region. Reach her directly at melanie@ or at (971) 258-0891.

Oregon bill takes aim at ‘epidemic of violence' around missing and murdered Indigenous people
Oregon bill takes aim at ‘epidemic of violence' around missing and murdered Indigenous people

Yahoo

time13-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Oregon bill takes aim at ‘epidemic of violence' around missing and murdered Indigenous people

This story was originally published by InvestigateWest. Melanie HenshawInvestigateWest A new bill progressing in the Oregon Legislature would allocate staff and resources within the Oregon Health Authority to address the state's ongoing crisis of missing and murdered Indigenous people. The legislation, sponsored by Rep. Tawna Sanchez, D-Portland, would provide victim outreach and prevention services related to missing and murdered Indigenous people. In addition, it would instruct the health authority to create and maintain datasets on missing and murdered Indigenous people and to create several partnerships with tribal governments, Native American-led organizations, community leaders, and local, state, tribal and federal law enforcement. The legislation, House Bill 3198, comes six years after another law that produced a report on the issue yielded limited results. An InvestigateWest investigation into the state's response to the 2019 bill found there was limited progress on the report's recommendations for improving relationships between Indigenous communities and law enforcement and for improving data collection — and that Gov. Tina Kotek then had no awareness of progress on the law. Sanchez told InvestigateWest last May that she was formulating new legislation to spur further action. Advocates were unsatisfied with the results of the 2019 bill, saying it didn't improve conditions for Native American families searching for loved ones. As originally written, the 2025 bill would've ordered another study in collaboration with the U.S Department of Justice — but amendments proposed by Sanchez, the Legislature's second Indigenous lawmaker, moved it toward an 'action plan' that would provide long-sought resources. In addition to ordering the collection of data on cases, the bill would dedicate staff within the Oregon Health Authority to establish interagency agreements with tribal governments, Native American-led organizations, law enforcement, and community leaders. These staffers would focus on victim services, outreach, education, and violence prevention for Indigenous communities. The bill's estimated cost is $500,000. 'Community wanted something to happen,' Sanchez told the House Committee on Judiciary in a public hearing Feb. 3. 'And they wanted it to happen sooner than taking a lot of time to continue to do more studies.' The Oregon Health Authority, the state's health agency, would be tasked with the response, with Sanchez saying that it already has an existing prevention-model system used in public health crises and a good working relationship with the nine tribes. As it stands, practical support for families, such as legal advocacy, emergency financial assistance, emotional support and assistance navigating the criminal justice system, has primarily come from individuals' communities or Native American-led community organizations. Many family members, including in written testimony on the bill, cite the confusing and overwhelming process of juggling the search for a loved one, the associated emotional trauma and financial concerns. Jurisdictional complexities complicate which law enforcement agencies are responsible for managing a case involving a Native person, and families often find themselves without support. 'No family should be searching in the dark, without hope and without the help that they need,' testified Amanda Freeman, citizen of the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde, on Feb. 3. 'This bill is a step toward making sure our people are seen, heard and protected.' Multiple tribal organizations, as well as Multnomah County and Portland's Office of Government Relations, support the bill, which advanced from the House Committee on Judiciary and is now before the House Ways and Means Committee. One component of the bill addresses a priority for advocates across Indian Country — improved data collection on missing and murdered Native Americans. Improved data collection was one of the major recommendations from the 2019 law that made little progress. Advocates for Indigenous people say that poor data collection due in part to racial misclassification has made it impossible to determine the true number of missing and murdered Native American individuals. Although there have been stated efforts to improve data collection at the federal level, there's been little improvement on the ground, with many Native Americans turning to other community members for support and community-based data organizations left to try to keep track of the missing. 'Our state cannot wait for federal efforts to catch up,' testified Luhui Whitebear, an assistant professor at Oregon State University and member of the Coastal Band of the Chumash Nation. The bill would direct the health authority to work with tribal governments and Native American-led organizations to collect and maintain data on the missing and murdered, then use it to identify patterns and areas for targeted health interventions and violence prevention programs. It also calls on the health authority to work with representatives of the nine tribes within the geographic bounds of Oregon and representatives from Native American-led organizations to implement community education programs and support youth engagement initiatives to reduce vulnerabilities that disproportionately impact Indigenous people. Supporters of the bill say it's an important step that moves beyond studying the problem and allocates staff from within the health authority to address the issue and begin to understand the root causes, though it doesn't touch on broader issues like criminal jurisdiction for tribes, which is limited. 'There have been task forces and studies and acknowledgments, but we still have a disproportionate impact to tribal people,' state Sen. Anthony Broadman, D-Bend, a former chief judge for the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs tribal court, said in his testimony supporting the bill. Broadman is sponsoring the companion bill to HB 3192 in the state Senate. Advocates and tribal officials say criminal jurisdictional complexities on tribal lands complicate investigations and leave Native Americans vulnerable to violence. Tribes do not have full authority to prosecute all crimes that occur on tribal lands. Instead, they are governed by a jurisdictional patchwork that can involve tribal, state or federal law enforcement, depending on a crime's location and whether or not the victim or offender is a citizen of a federally recognized tribe. In Oregon, tribes are still recovering from the termination era of the 1950s, when almost all federally recognized tribes sharing geography with Oregon were 'terminated,' losing their federal recognition, land base, funding and services from the federal government. Tribes had their status restored in the 1970s and 1980s, but it caused lasting damage to tribal communities, which Broadman highlighted as contributing to the ongoing crisis. 'Consider the systems that have brought us here today in what we all acknowledge is an epidemic of violence in the missing (and) murdered and Indigenous persons epidemic,' Broadman said. 'As a state we are still in the phase of restoration — restoration of safe communities, restoration of systems that protect all Oregonians adequately.' Reporter Melanie Henshaw covers Indigenous affairs and communities in the region. Reach her directly at melanie@

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