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Support Winnemem Wintu Tribe - Send Letter in Support of AJR 39!
If you haven't already done it, please write a letter of support for AJR 39, a bill that urges the President, Congress and BIA to restore recognition of the Winnemem Wintu Tribe. Please send to Speaker Fabian Nunez and Assembly Member Jared Huffman right away!
Hello Winnemem Wintu Supporters and Friends:
The Winnemem Wintu Tribe, the Environmental Justice Coalition for Water, and the Natural Resources Defense Council are sponsoring a California State Assembly Joint Resolution (AJR 39) that would urge the President, Congress, and the BIA to restore the Tribe's recognition. The Resolution, authored by Assembly Member Jared Huffman from Marin County, was passed by the Assembly Governmental Organization Committee in January and is now waiting on the Assembly Floor to be voted on.
In short, the Resolution will add the weight and influence of the California State Legislature to our call to restore the Winnemem Wintu Tribe's Federal status.
Now we need your help to get the bill off the Assembly Floor and over to the Senate.
SEND A LETTER TODAY
A sample letter of support is attached and includes fax numbers for Speaker Nunez and Assembly Member Huffman (in the cc at the bottom). Please also fax a copy to EJCW attention Benny Lee at (510)251-2203.
We need to demonstrate that there is broad support for this Resolution. So please send your letter today.
Thanks!
Debbie Davis
EJCW Legislative Analyst
AJR 39: Righting an Historic Wrong --Recognizing the Winnemem Wintu Tribe
Purpose of the Joint Resolution
AJR 39 (Huffman) will add the weight of the California State Legislature to the efforts to urge the Federal Government to restore the Winnemem Wintu Tribe's Federal recognition, a status the Tribe held until the mid-1980s.
Background
This resolution urges Congress to correct errors made by the Bureau of Indian Affairs and its predecessor agencies in the handling of the Winnemem Wintu Tribe. The BIA has been inconsistent in its treatment of the Winnemem providing tribal members services available only to recognized Tribes and then withdrawing those services without explanation.
Without basic services or any other benefits accruing to a recognized tribe, and following a long history of Federal and State policies designed to dismantle Tribes, the Winnemem have been working to restore their recognized tribal status so that they may protect their remaining sacred and cultural sites and maintain their cultural life way.
The Tribe's struggle began upon initial contact with Americans. Below you will see a few examples of the challenges they have faced over the course of this struggle.
Pre-contact the Winnemem number more than 14,000
1848 Pearson Reading discovers gold in Shasta County
1851 The Cottonwood Treaty agrees to provide a 35 square-mile reservation for the Winnemem
1851 The California Governor implements Indian Extermination policy
1852 The U.S. Senate refuses to ratify the treaty and embargoes the decision until 1905 while Winnemem begin to lose their land to encroaching settlement
1928 Winnemem travel to Washington, D.C. to plead for an investigation of the Winnemem case in the Court of Claims
1937 U.S. Government re-takes Winnemem land allotments to make way for the Shasta Dam
1941 Central Valley Indian Lands Acquisition Act signed into law providing for the relocation of tribal cemeteries to a cemetery to be held in trust for the Tribe. This and other provisions of the act were only partially implemented
1943 Winnemem are removed from their land to make way for the flooding of their homes and sacred sites to fill Shasta reservoir
1944 U.S. Court awards $17 million to all California Tribes to compensate for 18 unratified treaties. This works out to $1.25 an acre. The government deducts $12 million from the settlement for the cost of the existing Rancherias. The Winnemem decline to settle and continue to fight for fair compensation.
1960 to mid 1980s the Winnemem receive education and health benefits allotted to members of recognized tribes
Mid 1980s services to Winnemem tribal members are declined without explanation
Mid 1980s to the present the Winnemem fight for restoration of their federally recognized status
[For a more detailed timeline visit http://www.sacredland.org/PDFs/Wintu_Timeline.pdf]
While the tribe continues its fight to restore federal recognition, the Winnemem have maintained tribal relationships with state and federal agencies, private entities and with other "recognized" tribes. In fact, the California Native American Heritage Commission includes the Winnemem Wintu on the list of California Tribes. In addition, in 2004, Senator Ben Nighthorse Campbell introduced S. 2879, the "Winnemem Wintu Tribe Clarification and Restoration Act," which would have restored the tribe's status. Unfortunately, Senator Campbell retired from the Senate before the act was passed.
Passage of AJR 39 will add the weight and influence of the California State Legislature to Winnemem Wintu Tribe's efforts to urge Congress to restore the Tribe's status.
For more information contact:
Mark Franco, Headman, Winnemem Wintu Tribe
(530) 275-2737 or winnemem [at] msn.com
Barry Nelson, NRDC
(415) 875-6100 or bnelson [at] nrdc.org
The Winnemem Wintu Tribe is a band of the Wintu that lived for millennia on the McCloud River, a tributary of the Sacramento River. The tribe continues to hold ceremonies and maintain their culture on the village and sacred sites that remain accessible following the completion of Shasta Dam in 1945 which submerged 90 percent of the tribe's traditional lands and many of their cultural and religious sites.
Agency Recognition of the Winnemem Wintu Tribe
Many state, Federal, and international agencies acknowledge the Winnemem Wintu Tribe. Below is a partial list of MOUs, permits, and other evidence of agency recognition of the tribe.
· The Fish and Wildlife Service has issued Caleen Sisk-Franco (spiritual leader of the Winnemem) a permit to possess eagle feathers or other eagle parts.
· The Bureau of Reclamation has issued the tribe a permit to hold traditional ceremonies on the McCloud River
· The U.S. Forest Service has signed an MOU committing to consult with the tribe when working in traditional tribal lands and managing sacred sites.
· CALTRANS signed an MOU with the tribe to consult with them when transit projects encroach upon tribal land.
· California State Parks has posted information about the Winnemem at interpretive facilities in McCloud State Park and at the entrance to Panther Meadows on Mount Shasta.
· The Native American Heritage Commission, a State agency, lists the Winnemem Wintu as a legitimate California tribe.
· Caleen Sisk-Franco has spoken, by invitation, about Native American issues at the United Nations.
· The Federal Government signed the Cottonwood Treaty of 1851 (which was not ratified, but has never been withdrawn).
· Before the mid-1980's, tribal members received Bureau of Indian Affairs housing, health care and educational assistance available only to members of recognized tribes.
The Tribe and Gaming
The Winnemem are deeply committed to continuing their traditional way of life. Believing in the sovereign right of tribes to determine their own lifeways, the Winnemem have rejected Indian gaming as detrimental to their traditional values. S. 2879 (see above) would have restored federal recognition and, at the tribe's request, would not have given them the authority to conduct gaming activities now or in the future.
--
Debbie Davis
Legislative Analyst
Environmental Justice Coalition for Water
654 13th St.
Preservation Park
Oakland, CA 94612
(510)286-8400
The Honorable Fabien Nunez
State Capitol
P.O. Box 942849
Sacramento, CA 94249-0046
Fax: (916)319-2146
RE: Support for AJR 39 (Huffman)
Dear Speaker Nunez:
I write this letter in support of AJR 39 introduced by Assembly Member Jared Huffman, of the 6th assembly district, which would memorialize the President, Congress, and the BIA to restore recognition of the Winnemem Wintu Tribe. Passage of AJR 39 will add the California State Legislature’s power and influence to this important effort.
The Winnemem Wintu, a Northern California Tribe led by spiritual leader Caleen Sisk-Franco, whose home lies along the McCloud River in Shasta County, has a long history of promises broken by the federal government. It Started with a treaty that was never ratified by congress and continues, most recently, with the unexplained loss of the Tribe’s Federal Recognition in the mid-1980s. In 1941, Congress passed the “Central Valley Project Indian Lands Acquisition Act” (CVPILAA) to secure the land necessary to complete the construction of Shasta Dam. Despite the requirements of the CVPILAA, the tribe has not been compensated for the loss of their lands, nor have they received replacement lands. The failure to fulfill the basic requirements of the CVPILAA has left the Tribe to struggle for its very existence.
While the federal government continues to create roadblocks to prevent the Tribe from regaining its recognized status, California state agencies and even federal agencies like the U.S. Forest Service recognize the Winnemem as a legitimate tribe. The Winnemem are included on the list of California Tribes held by the Native American Heritage Commission, and the Tribe has been issued state and federal permits reserved for federally recognized tribes.
The federal government has never terminated the tribe. The tribe believes that their status is the result of an error on the part of the BIA – an error made possible by the failure of the Department of the Interior to comply with the CVPILAA by replacing tribal lands lost when Shasta Dam was constructed and by holding a cemetery in trust by the appropriate Indian Services Agency. The cemetery was created to relocate the remains of tribal dead to make way for Shasta Dam. Because no “like-land” was ever provided and because the cemetery was incorrectly transferred to a federal agency not capable of holding land in trust, the tribe has a reduced role in federal decisions that affect them, and they are denied the basic health, education and housing benefits received by recognized tribes.
AJR 39 will help the Winnemem in their struggle to regain recognition by joining the voices of California’s legislators with those of the Tribe in urging the Federal Government to restore the tribe’s Federal recognition.
As a California State leader, you have the opportunity to help rectify an injustice long overdue. We urge your aye vote on AJR 39.
Sincerely,
cc: Assembly Member Huffman Fax: (916) 319-2106
The Winnemem Wintu Tribe, the Environmental Justice Coalition for Water, and the Natural Resources Defense Council are sponsoring a California State Assembly Joint Resolution (AJR 39) that would urge the President, Congress, and the BIA to restore the Tribe's recognition. The Resolution, authored by Assembly Member Jared Huffman from Marin County, was passed by the Assembly Governmental Organization Committee in January and is now waiting on the Assembly Floor to be voted on.
In short, the Resolution will add the weight and influence of the California State Legislature to our call to restore the Winnemem Wintu Tribe's Federal status.
Now we need your help to get the bill off the Assembly Floor and over to the Senate.
SEND A LETTER TODAY
A sample letter of support is attached and includes fax numbers for Speaker Nunez and Assembly Member Huffman (in the cc at the bottom). Please also fax a copy to EJCW attention Benny Lee at (510)251-2203.
We need to demonstrate that there is broad support for this Resolution. So please send your letter today.
Thanks!
Debbie Davis
EJCW Legislative Analyst
AJR 39: Righting an Historic Wrong --Recognizing the Winnemem Wintu Tribe
Purpose of the Joint Resolution
AJR 39 (Huffman) will add the weight of the California State Legislature to the efforts to urge the Federal Government to restore the Winnemem Wintu Tribe's Federal recognition, a status the Tribe held until the mid-1980s.
Background
This resolution urges Congress to correct errors made by the Bureau of Indian Affairs and its predecessor agencies in the handling of the Winnemem Wintu Tribe. The BIA has been inconsistent in its treatment of the Winnemem providing tribal members services available only to recognized Tribes and then withdrawing those services without explanation.
Without basic services or any other benefits accruing to a recognized tribe, and following a long history of Federal and State policies designed to dismantle Tribes, the Winnemem have been working to restore their recognized tribal status so that they may protect their remaining sacred and cultural sites and maintain their cultural life way.
The Tribe's struggle began upon initial contact with Americans. Below you will see a few examples of the challenges they have faced over the course of this struggle.
Pre-contact the Winnemem number more than 14,000
1848 Pearson Reading discovers gold in Shasta County
1851 The Cottonwood Treaty agrees to provide a 35 square-mile reservation for the Winnemem
1851 The California Governor implements Indian Extermination policy
1852 The U.S. Senate refuses to ratify the treaty and embargoes the decision until 1905 while Winnemem begin to lose their land to encroaching settlement
1928 Winnemem travel to Washington, D.C. to plead for an investigation of the Winnemem case in the Court of Claims
1937 U.S. Government re-takes Winnemem land allotments to make way for the Shasta Dam
1941 Central Valley Indian Lands Acquisition Act signed into law providing for the relocation of tribal cemeteries to a cemetery to be held in trust for the Tribe. This and other provisions of the act were only partially implemented
1943 Winnemem are removed from their land to make way for the flooding of their homes and sacred sites to fill Shasta reservoir
1944 U.S. Court awards $17 million to all California Tribes to compensate for 18 unratified treaties. This works out to $1.25 an acre. The government deducts $12 million from the settlement for the cost of the existing Rancherias. The Winnemem decline to settle and continue to fight for fair compensation.
1960 to mid 1980s the Winnemem receive education and health benefits allotted to members of recognized tribes
Mid 1980s services to Winnemem tribal members are declined without explanation
Mid 1980s to the present the Winnemem fight for restoration of their federally recognized status
[For a more detailed timeline visit http://www.sacredland.org/PDFs/Wintu_Timeline.pdf]
While the tribe continues its fight to restore federal recognition, the Winnemem have maintained tribal relationships with state and federal agencies, private entities and with other "recognized" tribes. In fact, the California Native American Heritage Commission includes the Winnemem Wintu on the list of California Tribes. In addition, in 2004, Senator Ben Nighthorse Campbell introduced S. 2879, the "Winnemem Wintu Tribe Clarification and Restoration Act," which would have restored the tribe's status. Unfortunately, Senator Campbell retired from the Senate before the act was passed.
Passage of AJR 39 will add the weight and influence of the California State Legislature to Winnemem Wintu Tribe's efforts to urge Congress to restore the Tribe's status.
For more information contact:
Mark Franco, Headman, Winnemem Wintu Tribe
(530) 275-2737 or winnemem [at] msn.com
Barry Nelson, NRDC
(415) 875-6100 or bnelson [at] nrdc.org
The Winnemem Wintu Tribe is a band of the Wintu that lived for millennia on the McCloud River, a tributary of the Sacramento River. The tribe continues to hold ceremonies and maintain their culture on the village and sacred sites that remain accessible following the completion of Shasta Dam in 1945 which submerged 90 percent of the tribe's traditional lands and many of their cultural and religious sites.
Agency Recognition of the Winnemem Wintu Tribe
Many state, Federal, and international agencies acknowledge the Winnemem Wintu Tribe. Below is a partial list of MOUs, permits, and other evidence of agency recognition of the tribe.
· The Fish and Wildlife Service has issued Caleen Sisk-Franco (spiritual leader of the Winnemem) a permit to possess eagle feathers or other eagle parts.
· The Bureau of Reclamation has issued the tribe a permit to hold traditional ceremonies on the McCloud River
· The U.S. Forest Service has signed an MOU committing to consult with the tribe when working in traditional tribal lands and managing sacred sites.
· CALTRANS signed an MOU with the tribe to consult with them when transit projects encroach upon tribal land.
· California State Parks has posted information about the Winnemem at interpretive facilities in McCloud State Park and at the entrance to Panther Meadows on Mount Shasta.
· The Native American Heritage Commission, a State agency, lists the Winnemem Wintu as a legitimate California tribe.
· Caleen Sisk-Franco has spoken, by invitation, about Native American issues at the United Nations.
· The Federal Government signed the Cottonwood Treaty of 1851 (which was not ratified, but has never been withdrawn).
· Before the mid-1980's, tribal members received Bureau of Indian Affairs housing, health care and educational assistance available only to members of recognized tribes.
The Tribe and Gaming
The Winnemem are deeply committed to continuing their traditional way of life. Believing in the sovereign right of tribes to determine their own lifeways, the Winnemem have rejected Indian gaming as detrimental to their traditional values. S. 2879 (see above) would have restored federal recognition and, at the tribe's request, would not have given them the authority to conduct gaming activities now or in the future.
--
Debbie Davis
Legislative Analyst
Environmental Justice Coalition for Water
654 13th St.
Preservation Park
Oakland, CA 94612
(510)286-8400
The Honorable Fabien Nunez
State Capitol
P.O. Box 942849
Sacramento, CA 94249-0046
Fax: (916)319-2146
RE: Support for AJR 39 (Huffman)
Dear Speaker Nunez:
I write this letter in support of AJR 39 introduced by Assembly Member Jared Huffman, of the 6th assembly district, which would memorialize the President, Congress, and the BIA to restore recognition of the Winnemem Wintu Tribe. Passage of AJR 39 will add the California State Legislature’s power and influence to this important effort.
The Winnemem Wintu, a Northern California Tribe led by spiritual leader Caleen Sisk-Franco, whose home lies along the McCloud River in Shasta County, has a long history of promises broken by the federal government. It Started with a treaty that was never ratified by congress and continues, most recently, with the unexplained loss of the Tribe’s Federal Recognition in the mid-1980s. In 1941, Congress passed the “Central Valley Project Indian Lands Acquisition Act” (CVPILAA) to secure the land necessary to complete the construction of Shasta Dam. Despite the requirements of the CVPILAA, the tribe has not been compensated for the loss of their lands, nor have they received replacement lands. The failure to fulfill the basic requirements of the CVPILAA has left the Tribe to struggle for its very existence.
While the federal government continues to create roadblocks to prevent the Tribe from regaining its recognized status, California state agencies and even federal agencies like the U.S. Forest Service recognize the Winnemem as a legitimate tribe. The Winnemem are included on the list of California Tribes held by the Native American Heritage Commission, and the Tribe has been issued state and federal permits reserved for federally recognized tribes.
The federal government has never terminated the tribe. The tribe believes that their status is the result of an error on the part of the BIA – an error made possible by the failure of the Department of the Interior to comply with the CVPILAA by replacing tribal lands lost when Shasta Dam was constructed and by holding a cemetery in trust by the appropriate Indian Services Agency. The cemetery was created to relocate the remains of tribal dead to make way for Shasta Dam. Because no “like-land” was ever provided and because the cemetery was incorrectly transferred to a federal agency not capable of holding land in trust, the tribe has a reduced role in federal decisions that affect them, and they are denied the basic health, education and housing benefits received by recognized tribes.
AJR 39 will help the Winnemem in their struggle to regain recognition by joining the voices of California’s legislators with those of the Tribe in urging the Federal Government to restore the tribe’s Federal recognition.
As a California State leader, you have the opportunity to help rectify an injustice long overdue. We urge your aye vote on AJR 39.
Sincerely,
cc: Assembly Member Huffman Fax: (916) 319-2106
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