1981-10-15 Char-Koosta News |
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3ali3h-:{ootenai Community College box 1020 Ronan, MT 59364
PABLO, MONTANA 59855 ISSN: 0528-8592
NEWSPAPER OF THE SAUSH, PEND rTOREILLE AND KOOTENAI TRIBES OF THE FLATHEAD INDIAN RESERVATION, WESTERN MONTANA
VOLUME 10 NUMBER 11 MOON OF THE HALF SUMMER - HALF AUTUMN
Primaries, yes; retrocession, who knows?
OCTOBER 15,1981
Between concurrent jurisdiction and Indian water rights, two major issues of recent concern, life has been pretty confusing here on the Flathead.
One thing can be reported with certainty, though: 289 tribal voters went to the polls on October 3 and decided that, yes, they'd like to have primary elections here. The final count, according to the BIA, who supervised the secretarial election, was
Council meeting changed
Since a quorum is not anticipated to be available for what should have been an October 16 Council meeting -there's an NC AI convention going on in Alaska - the Council will convene instead on Monday, October 19, at 9 a.m. in the Council Chambers in Pablo.
Off-Rez hunting rules suggested
Last month's series of district meetings about the October 3 referendum had an extra topic put on their unofficial agendas: hunting off the Reservation.
Tribal members, of course, have a right to hunt game in "open and unclaimed land" that once used to be their aboriginal territory. This right is guaranteed by the Hell Gate Treaty of 1855.
As the game gets scarce, though, and as the State gets tense about it, a need has been seen to draft some kind of system governing off-Reservation hunting. It's a case of either we show some initiative ourselves in the matter, or the State may claim a "jurisdictional void" and move in to set up their own rules, whether or not they actually have the authority to do so. As a result, Tribal Attorney Evelyn Stevenson and Tribal
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262 in favor, 27 opposed.
Left hanging in the air was whether or not tribal members want to back off from sharing jurisdiction over certain matters with the State of Montana. That issue was withdrawn from the ballot by an unanimous decision of the Tribal Council one day before the referendum.
Contributing to the last-minute ballot change were three areas of confusion: What are the consequences and cost of retrocession? How do you go about retroceding? Isn't this too important an issue to allow it to be decided by a mere handful of tribal members?
It was also felt that things were happening too quickly. Those questions above needed answering first and needed to be explained to the membership before asking them to make a decision.
A final factor was the controversy surrounding the BIA's registration drive. A lot of people failed to register either because they didn't realize the difference between a secretarial and a tribal election, or they mistakenly thought they were automatically eligible for the October 3 vote because they voted at some earlier election. Others said that they'd spent most or all of their lives on the Reservation, and how dare the BIA try
(Continued on page 2)
Inside this issue
Water conference report.........................Page 3
Quarterly highlights.............................Page 4
Catholics in Indian Country......................Page 7
"Letters to the Editor"..........................Page 8
"Charlo's People*continues......................Page 9
Health Corner................................Page 11
"Around the Campfire"........................Page 16
Council Minutes..............................Page 22
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Title | 1981-10-15 Char-Koosta News |
| Creator | Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes of the Flathead Reservation. |
| Subject | Salish Indians --Newspapers.; Kutenai Indians --Newspapers.; Pablo (Montana) --Newspapers.; Kootenai Indians |
| Description | Primaries, yes; retrocession, who knows?; Off-Rez hunting rules suggested; Indian water rights in Montana: more questions raised than answered; Attendance up a little at quarterly meeting; Camel victorious once again; Tribal radio show gets syndicated, sort of; Kalispell wants to 'borrow' some of our water; Grizzlies officially off-limits; Pablo on another council; Altercation at the PR Corral; Catholic influence in Montana is topic of cultural event; The future Miss NCAI?; Liquor ordinance okayed; A war exploit by Three Heads; Family Counseling Unit for children in long-term foster care; Back to school health hints; Moran family needs your help; CERT to meet this month; U.S. Indian Police Academy; The Federal process; A tale of intrigue; Housing 'Rehab' has money woes; Position paper on gizzly bear management; Block grant funds from HHS will be made directly available to Tribes; Court rules tribe owns lakebed; President expresses renewed commitment to Indians; Tribal sovereignty acknowledged in New York State land swap with tribe; Chemawa student goes to Korea; Smith address Navajo Tribal Council; Navajos argue census figures are low by 24,400; Interior Solicitor says Watt can choose alternative to Orme Dam; Choctaw heads up NTCA; 'Agent Orange' victims should be checked; Offenses for the month of September. |
| Publisher | Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes of the Flathead Indian Nation |
| Date Original | 1981-10-15 |
| Date Digital | 2007-04-13 |
| Type | text |
| Format | image/tiff |
| Resource Identifier | Y54000521 |
| Rights Management | Copyright (c) Salish and Kootenai Federated Tribes, all rights reserved. |
| Contributing Institution | Salish Kootenai College |
| Contributor | D'Arcy McNickle Library |
| Source | CSKT PN 4883.J6 C4 |
| Language | en |
| Relation | Vol. 10; No. 11 |
| Digitization Specifications | Digitized at the University of Montana Maureen and Mike Mansfield Library; Scanned as master TIFF using Bookeye 3 scanner at 400 ppi, 8 bit grayscale; Optical Character Recognition with Abbyy FineReader Corporate Edition; Derivatives created using Photoshop CS |
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