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The tribe has played a big leadership role in
the battle
to restore the California Delta and Central Valley
rivers and stop the raising of Shasta Dam.
California Supports Winnemem Wintu Tribe: Senate passes Joint
Resolution urging restoration of federal recognition status
By Dan Bacher, editor of the FishSniffer
August 13, 2008 -- Sacramento, CA – The Winnemem Wintu Tribe drew one
step closer to righting years of historic wrongs today. The Senate
passed a Joint Resolution urging the federal government to restore
federal recognition status to the Winnemem Wintu Tribe. The resolution,
authored by Assembly Member Huffman, passed with 24 votes.
"California has sent a clear message today: our state stands in
solidarity with the Winnemem Wintu Tribe to correct a terrible injustice
by the federal government," said Assemblymember Jared Huffman.
"It's not time for the federal government to acknowledge its
mistake and once again recognize the Tribe."
The Winnemem were mysteriously dropped from the list of federally
recognized Tribes in the 1980's. For years, the Winnemem received
benefits from the federal government, such as housing and educational
assistance. They abruptly stopped receiving benefits, ending access to
local healthcare, housing assistance, and cutting families off from
scholarships they had only years before used to pursue college degrees.
To this day, the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) has failed to provide an
adequate explanation for what happened.
"This resolution is long-overdue. For years, we have struggled
to maintain our traditions on our own," explained Caleen
Sisk-Franco, leader of the Winnemem. "Recognition would enable us
to maintain our spiritual lifeways, get our youth scholarships and
healthcare. To have the State of California declare their support for us
sends a message that we are no longer alone on this issue."
The Winnemem are a traditional, non-gaming Tribe from Northern
California. They have been unable to get a clear answer as to why the
federal government stopped recognizing the Tribe, and the resolution
will aid the Tribe in rectifying the historic injustice. The Winnemem
Wintu, together with and the Natural Resource Defense Council and the
Environmental Justice Coalition for Water, introduced AJR 39 in 2007.
The Resolution documents the state of California's long history with the
Winnemem Wintu and urges the Federal government to fix an
incomprehensible mistake that has drastically impacted the Tribe.
State agencies and many other organizations maintain relationships
with the Tribe, but recognition can only be granted by the federal
government. The Native American Heritage Commission lists the Winnemem
as a California Tribe. Agencies such as the California Department of
Fish and Game hold Memorandums of Understanding with the Tribe. Even
federal agencies maintain a relationship with the Winnemem; the Tribe
has legal agreements with the U.S. Forest Service, and their leaders
receives religious protections and rights only guaranteed to Tribes
under the American Indian Religious Freedom Act.
"We will be taking this resolution to Washington D.C. We hope it
will be impetus for our Congressional representatives to help us,"
said Mark Franco, headman of the Winnemem. "Recognition impacts our
very survival as a people. California is in danger of losing a part of
its cultural heritage if we do not act on this now."
The resolution comes at a particularly important time for the
Winnemem. The US Bureau of Reclamation is investigating the possibility
of increasing the size of the Shasta Dam, which would flood the
Winnemem's few remaining sacred sites and ancestral lands. Recognition
would force the Bureau to negotiate directly with the Tribe throughout
this process.
The vote today signaled the growing support for the Tribe and the
overwhelming need to address this long-standing inequity. The resolution
will now be memorialized in federal Congress as a permanent statement on
the California Legislature's support for the Winnemem Wintu Tribe.
Mark Franco, Winnemem Wintu Tribe, (530) 510-0944
Debbie Davis, Environmental Justice Coalition for Water (916)
743-4406