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New laws aim to strengthen Indigenous education and language revitalization efforts
New laws aim to strengthen Indigenous education and language revitalization efforts

Yahoo

time13-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

New laws aim to strengthen Indigenous education and language revitalization efforts

Nora Mabie and Kaiden Forman-WebsterMontana Free Press + ICT Two bills aimed at strengthening the state's commitment to Native American education and language revitalization recently became law. Sponsor Sen. Jonathan Windy Boy, D-Box Elder, described the bills as complementary, as both relate to state initiatives that stem from Article X of Montana's Constitution, which reads in part, 'The state recognizes the distinct and unique cultural heritage of the American Indians and is committed in its educational goals to the preservation of their cultural integrity.' In 1999, the state Legislature enacted the Indian Education for All Act to implement that constitutional mandate, requiring K-12 public schools to teach Native American history and culture. And in 2013 the Legislature established the Montana Indian Language Preservation program to support tribes' language revitalization efforts. The Legislature appropriates money each biennium for both programs, and Windy Boy's bills — now law — enact measures to improve financial accountability and elevate the role of tribal governments. Enacting Indian Education for All has not been easy. Since 2007, the Legislature has appropriated about $3.5 million annually to Montana school districts to implement IEFA. According to the original legislation, schools are supposed to use the funds for curriculum development, class materials and teacher training. In 2021, a group of Montana students and tribes sued the state Office of Public Instruction and Board of Public Education, alleging that districts were improperly using funds meant to support IEFA. One school, according to court documents, used IEFA funds to pay a portion of librarians' salaries. Others allegedly used the funds to purchase books unrelated to Native American culture or history. 'School districts and schools have no incentive to fully and accurately report their IEFA expenditures because there is no penalty for failing to do so,' the plaintiffs claimed. While the Board of Public Education recently reached a settlement agreement in the case, the class action lawsuit continues against OPI, which is responsible for distributing IEFA funds. Windy Boy has brought several bills across multiple legislative sessions that aim to bolster the state's commitment to IEFA. In 2023, he brought a bill that required, rather than encouraged, school districts to implement IEFA. The bill, which was signed into law, also stipulated that IEFA funds can be revoked if districts fail to report how the funds are spent. This year, Windy Boy successfully carried Senate Bill 181, which adds new mechanisms of financial accountability. If a school district fails to submit an annual report showing how IEFA funds were spent, or if an annual district report shows improper IEFA expenditures, OPI is authorized to reduce the district's IEFA funding until a report is submitted. The law requires OPI to publish an annual report listing any districts that fail to submit satisfactory IEFA reports. It also requires the Board of Public Education to note IEFA reporting failures in a school's accreditation status report. In a March House Education Committee hearing, Windy Boy testified that the legislation is 'about accountability and transparency.' 'If you get a dollar, then you should provide a report for what you're spending it on,' he said. The new law also enhances tribal consultation and the role of Native language specialists in the development of IEFA curricula. And it requires OPI to create and manage an online portal by which parents, students and educators can submit feedback on IEFA implementation. Rep. Peter Strand, D-Bozeman, who carried the bill in the House, said the legislation 'creates mechanisms that ensure that the money we give to schools for Indian Education for All goes where it's supposed to go.' SB 181 cleared both chambers, and Gov. Greg Gianforte last week signed it into law. Another Windy Boy bill, which revises laws related to Native language revitalization, was also recently signed into law. The Montana Indian Language Preservation (MILP) program aims to help revitalize Native American languages by encouraging tribes to create resources that perpetuate language usage. The program has a biennial budget of $750,000. Several Native languages in Montana are considered critically endangered, meaning the youngest speakers often are elders who speak the language infrequently. Windy Boy successfully brought legislation in 2023 that elevated the role of tribal governments in administering the MILP program. This year, he sponsored Senate Bill 182, which grants more flexibility in such partnerships, allowing tribes to decide whether to partner with local school districts, rather than requiring them to do so. SB 182 encourages tribal governments to use MILP funds for professional development for staff and collaborations and stipulates that tribal language education materials produced by the tribes be housed at the Montana Historical Society for conservation. 'We should be preserving what we have left,' Windy Boy said in a January committee hearing. In January, Patrick Yawakie, a lobbyist for the Blackfeet, Fort Belknap and Chippewa Cree tribes, told members of the Senate Education and Cultural Resources Committee he wished a program like MILP had existed when he was young. 'Having access to Indian education growing up would've been a great opportunity for myself, definitely, to understand parts of my identity that I'm still learning today,' he said. In the same hearing, former lawmaker Sharon Stewart Peregoy testified that Little Big Horn College, the Crow Tribe and area school districts have used MILP funds to provide 'the needed materials to teach the Crow language.' 'The language is the conveyor of the culture,' she said. 'If you don't have the language, the worldview does not come across.' As the language program continues to grow, Windy Boy said he hopes tribes and OPI can eventually create a language curriculum for all teachers to use. 'Teachers that go in to teach math, science, history, or whatever, they walk into the room and they've already got a set curriculum. Why can't we?' Windy Boy told Montana Free Press in a January interview. He said he hopes to focus on that issue in the 2027 legislative session. This story is co-published by Montana Free Press and ICT, a news partnership that covers the Montana American Indian Caucus during the state's 2025 legislative session.

Montana legislature aims to resolve law enforcement dispute
Montana legislature aims to resolve law enforcement dispute

Yahoo

time20-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Montana legislature aims to resolve law enforcement dispute

Nora Mabie and Kaiden Forman-WebsterMTFP + ICT Lawmakers have proposed two bills this session that aim to resolve a long-standing law enforcement dispute between the state of Montana, Lake County and the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes. At the center of the conflict is Public Law 280, a federal law that shifts law enforcement jurisdiction on some Indian reservations from the federal government to certain states. While Public Law 280 was mandatory for six states when it was enacted in 1953, in Montana individual counties or the entire state could choose to opt in. Unlike the original federal law, a Montana law required tribal consent. In 1965, frustrated with what they said was insufficient federal policing and inadequate resources at the tribal level, the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes (CSKT) consented to implementing Public Law 280 on the Flathead Reservation. Since then, local county law enforcement — rather than federal entities like the FBI and Bureau of Indian Affairs — has had jurisdiction over accusations of felony crimes committed by tribal members on the Flathead Reservation. And for the last 30 years, the CSKT have investigated claims of misdemeanors committed by tribal members, helping shoulder the jurisdictional burden. The two bills proposed this session come from non-Native Lake County lawmakers. The proposals take different approaches to addressing the funding question, and one has garnered support from CSKT leadership as well as the lieutenant governor. Lake County in northwest Montana overlaps with much of the Flathead Indian Reservation. In the 1960s Lake County officials supported Public Law 280, saying it would help combat crime on the reservation, but attitudes have shifted in the decades since. Because the federal law is unfunded, Lake County officials have for years said it is burdensome to taxpayers. Where county leaders argue the state should reimburse Lake County for the law enforcement services it provides on the reservation, Republican Gov. Greg Gianforte has maintained that funding Public Law 280 is the responsibility of individual counties, not the state. The conflict has serious implications for Native and non-Native Lake County residents as it could change which law enforcement entity — state, tribal or federal — has jurisdiction over certain crimes committed on the reservation. County officials have over the years turned to the courts and the Legislature to resolve the dispute — to no avail. They've also threatened to withdraw from the agreement altogether, which would kick jurisdictional responsibility to the state. In 2021, the Legislature appropriated $1 to Lake County for exercising jurisdiction on the Flathead Reservation — an amount a Montana judge later called 'patently absurd.' And last legislative session, Gianforte vetoed a bill that would have sent $5 million in state money to the Montana Department of Justice to offset costs for Lake County over a two-year period. The bill also would've created a Public Law 280 task force, and it would have prevented Lake County from withdrawing from the Public Law 280 agreement in the future. In his 2023 veto letter, Gianforte wrote that reimbursing Lake County would create 'a slippery slope at the end of which we can expect another request for funding in 2025 from Lake County — and any other counties experiencing financial pressures in enforcing state criminal jurisdiction within their boundaries.' This session, two lawmakers have brought bills they say will remedy the conflict. Rep. Tracy Sharp, a Republican from Polson, sponsored House Bill 366 that would provide $5 million to reimburse Lake County over the next two years. Unlike the bill Gianforte vetoed last session, Sharp's bill does not prohibit Lake County from eventually withdrawing from the agreement. Sharp's bill was heard early in February and as of March 17, it had not passed out of the House Judiciary Committee. While Sharp called Public Law 280 'a model for law enforcement on the reservation' in a February House Judiciary Committee hearing, he added that 'Lake County and Lake County's taxpayers, tribal and non-tribal, simply cannot afford to bear the financial burden of Public Law 280 any longer.' No one spoke in support of Sharp's bill. The bill's only opponent, Keaton Sunchild, Chippewa Cree, with Western Native Voice, offered what he called 'soft opposition,' saying the organization would like to see more consultation with the CSKT on the matter. Several lawmakers on the committee noted the lack of testimony from state or tribal representatives, saying their perspectives would help inform their votes. Sharp earlier this session proposed a bill to open parts of the Flathead Reservation to non-tribal landowners, which drew sharp criticism from the CSKT and ultimately failed. In February, Sen. Greg Hertz, a Republican from Polson, introduced his own Public Law 280 bill, which as of March 15 had made its way through the Senate and will be heard in the House. In a February hearing before the Senate Finance and Claims Committee, Lt. Gov. Kristen Juras spoke in support of Senate Bill 393 — a notable departure from the governor's past opposition to Public Law 280 legislation. 'The governor supports a one-time only solution to help with the tribes and the state transition to a solution where both of them can contribute financially to the ongoing costs of enforcement,' she said. When asked if Gianforte would sign Public Law 280 legislation this session, a spokesperson told Montana Free Press the governor 'will consider any bill that makes it to his desk.' Lake County Commissioner William Barron and CSKT secretary Martin Charlo also supported Hertz's bill in testimony before the committee. Sen. Jonathan Windy Boy, Chippewa Cree, and whose district overlaps with six counties and three reservations, criticized the bill on the Senate Floor, calling it unfair. 'What about the other 55 counties?' he asked. 'What about the other six tribes?' SB 393 does not yet contain a fiscal note prepared by the governor's budget office that would estimate its price tag. But Hertz said the funding level will be determined by the House. '[Between] $5-7 million is the range,' Hertz told MTFP. 'That's what the governor's office talked about.' In their testimonies, both Sharp and Hertz alluded to the possibility of Lake County withdrawing from the Public Law 280 agreement. If the county were to withdraw, Hertz said the state would assume jurisdiction and could end up spending $100 million to build new facilities and establish new police forces. Rep. Shelly Fyant, citizen of the CSKT, told MTFP she would not support Sharp's bill but will likely carry Hertz's bill on the House floor. Fyant said the tribe and Lake County have been collaborating on SB 393. 'This is the most I have seen them work together [the CSKT and the county] on this issue,' she said. Even with this collaboration and Juras' support, however, Hertz said he thinks his bill has 'a 50-50' chance of crossing the finish line. This story is co-published by Montana Free Press and ICT, a news partnership that covers the Montana American Indian Caucus during the state's 2025 legislative session

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