Administration pitches new rules to simplify
home building, energy development on tribal lands
By Associated Press,
Published: November 28
Washington — Ahead of a meeting Friday between President
Barack Obama and hundreds of Native American leaders, the
administration unveiled new rules for tribal lands that
officials say will expedite home building and energy
development.
The proposed changes — the first of its kind in 50 years
— would open the door to badly-needed housing development on
reservations, and for wind and solar energy projects that
tribes have been eager to launch.
The plan gives Obama another boasting point for this week’s meeting
with leaders of the 565 federally-recognized tribes at the White House.
“We have for three years worked very hard to change the relationship
between the administration and the nation’s first Americans,” Interior
Secretary Ken Salazar said Monday. He said Obama tasked him with
changing the federal government’s relationship with tribes “in a very
complete way.”
Obama has been winning high praise among Native Americans. The
president has appointed Native Americans to high level positions in his
administration, signed laws to improve health care and law enforcement
for Native Americans and resolved a long running lawsuit over royalties
for minerals on tribal lands. In February, Obama nominated Arvo Mikkanen
to serve as a federal judge. If confirmed, he would be the only Native
American actively serving on the federal bench.
“We’ve had more access to federal officials to speak about these
important issues in Indian Country,” said Mellor Willie, a Navajo tribe
member and executive director of the National American Indian Housing
Council.
That was the case on the land leasing rules. Willie said the council
asked the administration to consider reforming the rules during the
transition between the Bush and Obama administrations. He said the Obama
administration has held a number of meetings with tribes on the subject
and provided draft proposals to leaders as the rules were being
rewritten.
Land on American Indian reservations cannot be bought and sold
because it is held in trust by the federal government on behalf of the
tribes. If a tribe or tribe member wants to build a house on it or use
it for multifamily housing, a business or industry, the Interior
Department must approve a “lease” of the land or mortgages.
The proposed changes would set time limits for the Bureau of Indian
Affairs to approve such leases. Residential leases, subleases and
mortgages would have to be approved in 30 days; leases for commercial or
industrial development must be approved in 60 days. If the bureau does
not meet the deadlines, leases would automatically be approved.
Currently, there are no time limits.
The proposed rules apply only to land development and not to oil and
gas and mining leases.
Larry Echo Hawk, the Interior Department’s assistant secretary for
Indian affairs, said the current rules, which date back to 1961, are
paternalistic. The federal government through the proposed changes is no
longer trying to exercise as much federal authority over the leasing
process, he said.
Although tribes have been leasing property for years for agricultural
and other reasons, the process has become slow and cumbersome.
“It is not unusual to hear tribes talk about waiting two or three
years for approval of a lease,” said John Dossett, attorney for the
National Congress of American Indians.
In recent years, Dossett said, it has been particularly frustrating
for tribes applying for more complex leases like those for wind farms,
which can take two to three years to review. “By that time, the tribes
lose the deal. The business partner doesn’t want to wait that long,”
Dossett said.
The administration has been pushing for renewable energy projects and
working to advance solar and wind projects on public lands. It gave
priority to 18 projects for this year, including the Moapa Solar
Project, which will be built mostly on Moapa Band of Paiutes tribal
lands in Nevada.
Developing wind and solar energy projects has drawn interest from
tribes around the country, Dossett said. Tribes can partner with
companies and sell the energy produced back to power grids.
Willie said the changes should also help tribal members get mortgages
more quickly. Under the current rules, government approval of mortgages
can take two months to two years. With that kind of delay, getting the
banking industry to see tribal members as a profitable market can be
difficult, Willie said.
The rules will be open for public comment for 60 days beginning
Tuesday. The administration also plans additional meetings with tribes
on the proposed changes.
___
Department of the Interior: http://www.doi.gov
National Congress of American Indians: http://www.ncai.org/
National American Indian Housing Council: http://www.naihc.net/
___
Suzanne Gamboa can be reached on Twitter at
http://www.twitter.com/APsgamboa
___
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
|