Saturday, January 24, 2009

Obama and border rights: Tucson Feb. 14



President Obama's statement on Native Americans is a start! But, where are the the rights of Indigenous Peoples, border rights and southern border militarization, economic and environmental justice issues?
--Jose Matus, director of the Indigenous Alliance without Borders/Alianza Indigena sin Fronteras

A CALL TO MEET - ALIANZA INDIGENA SIN FRONTERAS MEETING
SANTA ROSA - 1075 S. 10TH AVE.
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2009
TUCSON, AZ 10AM - 4PM

CONTACT - JOSE MATUS - 520-979-2125
Photo: Jose Matus at migrant rights march at Democratic National Convention in Denver 2008/Photo Brenda Norrell
--Censored News
http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com

BARACK OBAMA’S PRINCIPLES FOR STRONGER TRIBAL COMMUNITIES

“Perhaps more than anyone else, the Native American community faces huge challenges that have been ignored
by Washington for too long. It is time to empower Native Americans in the development of the national policy
agenda.” Barack Obama

The hundreds of Indian tribes in America face a unique set of challenges. Issues like sovereignty, health care,
and education—issues that are central to tribes’ future prosperity and embedded in the federal government’s
responsibility—are often neglected. Barack Obama is committed to tribal nation building and enforcing the
federal government’s obligations to Indian people.

SOVEREIGNTY, TRIBAL-FEDERAL RELATIONS AND THE TRUST RESPONSIBILITY: Native
American tribal nations are sovereign, self-governing political entities and enjoy a government-to-government
relationship with the United States federal government that is recognized expressly in the U.S. Constitution.

Self-Determination: Barack Obama supports the principle of tribal self-determination, with recognition that the
federal government must honor its treaty obligations and fully enable tribal self-governance.

Consultation and Inclusion: In furtherance of the government-to-government relationship, Barack Obama will
include tribal leadership in the important policy determinations that impact Indian Country. Obama will appoint
an American Indian policy advisor on his senior White House staff so that Indian Country has a direct interface
at the highest level of the Obama Administration. In addition, Obama will host a White House “Tribal G8” – an
annual meeting with Native American leaders to develop a national Indian policy agenda.

Honoring the Trust Responsibility: Barack Obama recognizes that honoring the government-to-government
relationship requires fulfillment of the United States’ trust responsibility to tribes and individual Indians. More
specifically, Obama is committed to meaningful reform of the broken system that manages and administers the
trust lands and other trust assets belonging to tribes and individual Indians. Further, he is committed to
resolving equitably with both tribes and individual Indians litigation resulting from the past failures in the
administration and accounting of their trust assets.


HEALTH CARE: The Indian Health Service estimates that it receives only 55 percent of the federal funding it
requires. Federal per-capita funding for Indian health care amounts to about half of the federal per capita health
funding for federal prisoners. Indians are the most at-risk minority group for health problems like diabetes,
which they suffer from at a rate 249 percent higher than the national average. Moreover, Indians have the
nation’s highest death rates for tuberculosis and suicide. After Haiti, men on the Pine Ridge and Rosebud
Reservations in South Dakota have the lowest life expectancy in the Western Hemisphere.

Indian Health Services: Barack Obama voted in the Senate to provide an additional $1 billion for IHS to
address these disparities. Additionally, he was an original cosponsor of the Indian Health Care Improvement
Act of 2007 which mandates modernization of the Indian health care system and strengthens urban Indian
health facilities. Obama has fought against the Bush Administration’s attempt to eliminate urban health care for
Indians not living in reservation communities. Obama opposed a federal land acquisition program that would have
diverted funds from the Special Diabetes Program for Indians and the Alcohol and Substance Abuse
program. Obama supports sufficient funding for IHS and proper staffing and maintenance for IHS facilities.

EDUCATION: Education is the key to improving the lives of Native Americans and empowering tribal
nations to build a better future. Educational policies in the 1970s attempted to reverse past federal policies
aimed at eradicating Native American languages and cultures, but Native Americans still suffer from some of
the lowest high school graduation and college matriculation rates in the nation. We must continue to honor our
obligations to Native Americans by providing tribes with the educational resources promised by treaty and
federal law.

COMMUNITIES

Indian Language Education: Tribes are struggling to preserve their languages. It is estimated that by 2050
only 20 of the over 500 Native languages once spoken will remain. Research shows that instruction in tribal
language increases Native American academic performance in other areas like math and science. Barack Obama
supports funding for Native language immersion and preservation programs.

No Child Left Behind: The goal of the No Child Left Behind Act is the right one – ensuring that all children
meet high education standards – but the law has significant flaws that need to be addressed, including in Indian
Country. Unfulfilled promises, ineffective implementation, and shortcomings in the design of the law itself have
created countless obstacles for tribal educators. Barack Obama would fund No Child Left Behind and reform
the law to better incorporate Title VII, the law’s Indian, Hawaiian, and Alaskan education provision. Obama’s
plan would provide greater flexibility in integrating Native languages, cultures, and communities into school
programs in a manner consistent with principles of tribal sovereignty.

Early Childhood Education: Research shows that half of low-income children start school up to two years
behind their peers in preschool skills and that these early achievement gaps continue throughout elementary
school. Barack Obama supports increasing funding for the Head Start program, including the American Indian
and Alaska Native Head Start Programs, to provide American Indian preschool children with critically
important learning skills. He also appreciates the role of parental involvement in the success of Head Start and
has called on states to replicate the Illinois model of Preschool for All. Tribes should also be given the
opportunity to implement culturally appropriate versions of this program.

Indian School Construction: Many government-funded Indian schools are dilapidated, and many are simply
too small to meet the needs of growing Indian populations. A safe, comfortable place to learn is critical to
receiving a proper education. Barack Obama is committed to repairing and building Indian schools.

Tribal Colleges: Tribal colleges have played a critical role in improving the lives of Native Americans. Obama
supports increased funding for operations and facility construction, as well as the removal of bureaucratic
impediments so tribal colleges can thrive.

RELIGIOUS FREEDOM AND CULTURAL PROTECTION

Cultural Rights and Sacred Places Protection: Native American sacred places and site-specific ceremonies
are under threat from development, pollution, and vandalism. Barack Obama supports legal protections for
sacred places and cultural traditions, including Native ancestors’ burial grounds and churches.

ECONOMIC & INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT: Native Americans experience some of the most
severe socioeconomic conditions in the United States. Poverty and its effects are pervasive, with more than
quarter of all Native Americans living in poverty and unemployment rates reaching 80 percent on some
reservations. Obama’s experience as a community organizer working in poor neighborhoods plagued by high
unemployment has taught him that there is no single solution to community poverty. Therefore, he supports
using a comprehensive approach that includes investment in physical, human and institutional infrastructure,
increased access to capital, the removal of barriers to development, and above all, authentic government-to-
government relationships between the federal government and tribes.

Minimum Wage: Barack Obama believes that people who work full time should not live in poverty. In 2007,
Obama supported legislation that increased the Federal minimum wage for the first time in 10 years. Even
though the minimum wage will rise to $7.25 an hour by 2009, the minimum wage’s real purchasing power will
still be below what it was in 1968. As president, Obama will further raise the minimum wage to $9.50 an hour
by 2011, index it to inflation and increase the Earned Income Tax Credit to make sure that full-time workers can
earn a living wage that allows them to raise their families and pay for basic needs such as food, transportation,
and housing – things so many people take for granted.

Housing: The federal government has a moral and legal responsibility to assist tribes in providing housing. Yet,
Native Americans suffer from some of the worst housing conditions in the nation. Some 14 percent of all
reservation homes have no electricity, and on some reservations, as many as 20 individuals are forced to live in
a single-family home. Barack Obama supports increased funding for the Indian Housing Block Grant and other
Indian housing programs as well as improving the effectiveness of these programs.

Gaming: The Supreme Court has upheld the right of tribes, as sovereign entities, to operate gaming operations
on Indian reservations. A total of 225 of the 558 federally recognized Indian tribes operate gaming facilities,
creating 670,000 jobs nationwide and paying $11 billion to the federal and state governments through taxes and
other revenue. The vast majority of Indian gaming operations are small enterprises providing jobs to tribal
members. Because most tribes continue to suffer from high rates of poverty and unemployment, Barack Obama
believes that gaming revenues are important tribal resources for funding education, healthcare, law
enforcement, and other essential government functions.

Energy: Tribal nations have joined in America’s quest for alternative, renewable energy. Because of their rural
land bases and access to natural resources, many tribes have made great strides in economic development in the
energy sector. Tribes have successful operations producing gas, solar, and wind energy. In addition to
harnessing and producing energy, tribes have an interest in energy rights-of-way. Barack Obama encourages
energy companies and Indian tribes to negotiate in good faith to ensure tribes receive just compensation and in
furtherance of carrying sustainable energy to all communities.

WOMEN’S HEALTH: Indians are often subject to unusually harsh conditions when it comes to women’s
health. A recent study by Amnesty International details the alarming rates at which Native women are subject to
violence. The report states that one in three American Indian women will be raped in their lifetime, and they are
more than three times as likely to be raped or sexually assaulted than other women in America.

Reproductive Health: In the past, IHS has been criticized for performing forced sterilizations of Indian
women. More recently, many Native women have been pushed to receive one type of contraception instead of
more suitable alternatives. Although these women often have no alternative to IHS, the program often does not
provide them with adequate reproductive health care, and many women are often denied equal access to birth
control, and prenatal care. Barack Obama supports the reproductive health rights of American Indian women,
and supports ensuring that they receive equal opportunities to make healthy reproductive choices.

Violence against Women: Violence in Indian country is committed at alarmingly high rates, and all too often
Indian women are the victims. Medical facilities are few and far between, and are often not adequately prepared
to deal with assault victims. Also, because of the unique jurisdictional scheme on reservations, law enforcement
can be slow and difficult to come by. If the perpetrator is non-Indian, then the tribe does not have jurisdiction
over the crime. This is alarming when more than 86 percent of assaults against Indian women are committed by
non-Indians. State and federal law enforcement officials are often far removed from the situation, and the tribes
are left without the authority to protect their people. Barack Obama will reexamine the legal framework that
allows such injustices, and supports empowering tribes to combat violence against Native women irrespective
of whether the perpetrators are Indian or non-Indian.

Law Enforcement: Barack Obama also supports fully funding the Community Oriented Policing Services
(COPS) program that many tribal law enforcement agencies have come to rely upon. He also recognizes the
important role tribal courts play on the reservation. Obama will continue to support additional resources to
strengthen tribal courts as well as correction by statute of the jurisdictional gaps that currently inhibit tribes’
ability to protect their communities.

Detention Centers: There is a demonstrable need for facility improvements and expansions of detention
centers in Indian Country. Barack Obama understands that federal funding of such improvements is essential to
enable tribe’s to effectively protect their communities.

METHAMPHETAMINES: In a 2006 survey, 74 percent of tribal law enforcement officials reported
methamphetamines to be the leading threat to their tribes’ livelihood. The same survey reported dramatic
increases in cases of domestic violence, child neglect, sex crimes, and weapons charges.

Combat Meth Act of 2005: Barack Obama supported the Combat Meth Act of 2005, major parts of which
became law in 2006. The act puts federal funds into the fight against methamphetamine, provides assistance to
children affected by meth abuse, and places restrictions on the sale of the ingredients used to make the drug.

Tribal empowerment: Barack Obama believes that funding tribal police programs and tribal courts and
resolving longstanding jurisdiction issues will enable tribal authorities to deal more effectively with the causes
and effects of this and other crime problems on Indian land.

VETERANS AFFAIRS: Native Americans serve in the armed forces at a higher rate than any other minority
group in America. Native Americans have served in every war, and their special place in American military
history is widely recognized. The first woman to die in combat in the Iraq war was a young Native American
woman. World War II’s Codetalkers are the most celebrated examples of how Indians have been critical to the
success of American efforts overseas. As a member of the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee, Obama
supports several Veteran measures, including the sheltering and rehabilitation of homeless veterans, securing
veterans’ benefits, and easing service members’ transition back into society.

HUNTING AND FISHING: Hunting and fishing are important to many tribes’ diet, culture, and spirituality.
Protecting hunting and fishing rights ensures that tribes are able to carry on those aspects of their traditional
way of life.

Fishing Rights: The fishing rights of Indian tribes are guaranteed not only by 150 year-old treaties, but by the
Supreme Court’s affirmation of the Boldt decision as well. It is our shared duty to uphold these obligations and
protect fisheries in such a manner that allows tribal and non-tribal fishing to continue into the future.

The path to equitable fishery management is paved with good science. Barack Obama supports initiatives to
improve the science and our understanding of our nation’s fish stocks. Through improved science, we can better
guide decisions about how to protect the health of fish stocks, and, in turn, ensure a better, more secure and
predictable future for our nation’s fishermen.

“We’ve got to make sure we are not just having a BIA that is dealing with the various Native American tribes;
we’ve got to have the President of the United States meeting on a regular basis with the Native American
leadership and ensuring relationships of dignity and respect.”

Barack Obama, Elko, Nevada
January 18, 2008
More on President Obama's statements on Native American rights at:
http://my.barackobama.com/page/content/firstamissues

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