by ERICA WERNER,
Associated Press Writer
The
Reno Gazette-Journal Online
22 June 2004
WASHINGTON
(AP) -- A measure to reimburse thousands of Western
Shoshone Indians for the loss of their ancestral lands
passed the House of Representatives on Monday, putting
the bill in reach of becoming law after years of
dispute.
The
Western Shoshone Claims Distribution Act passed on a
voice vote. The bill would provide about $145 million to
as many as 6,000 of Nevada's Western Shoshone Indians,
who lost their homeland to settlers and others in the
19th century.
Tribal
members have long clashed over the legislation. Some
oppose it, saying their priority is getting their land
back. An apparent majority supports it, contending that
seeking the return of millions of acres is not realistic
and the money would help tribal members buy basic
necessities.
"The
needs of our people are simple. Most of our homes don't
have telephones, 98 percent don't own computers,"
said Nancy Stewart, co-chairwoman of the Western
Shoshone Claims Steering Committee, which describes
itself as a grass-roots tribal organization.
The
money has been collecting interest in a bank account
since 1979, when the U.S. Court of Claims first awarded
$27 million to the tribe - the 1872 value of the 24
million acres of lands that were lost. Tribal members
unwilling to relinquish their claim to the land fought
the distribution all the way to the Supreme Court, where
they lost in 1985.
"The
problem is it's a one-time boost in the arm to everyone,
and it's going to leave the same problems we had before
we got the money, which is no land base," said
Elwood Mose, tribal manager of the Western Shoshone's
Te-Moak tribe.
Nevada
lawmakers have sought since 2000 to pass legislation to
distribute the money. A bill by Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev.,
passed the Senate in 2002 and 2003, but the legislation
didn't make it to the House floor. Last month Rep. Jim
Gibbons, R-Nev., dropped his own bill to embrace Reid's
and work with House leaders to bring it to a vote.
The
measures had the same goal, except Reid's is more
explicit in stating that the money sent to tribal
members would not be taxed. Gibbons said his measure
wouldn't have required tribal members to pay taxes,
either. He said he steered clear of such a specific tax
provision to avoid jurisdictional disputes in the House,
where the Ways and Means Committee must sign off on
bills with tax implications.
That
dispute threatened to hang up the legislation earlier
this month, when a scheduled vote was postponed. Gibbons
and other lawmakers ultimately resolved the concerns.
"I
think it is time that the Shoshone members enjoy the
benefit of what the court has said belongs to them, and
this bill simply attempts to do just that," Gibbons
said before the vote.
The
bill also would create a $1.5 million fund to provide
educational grants to tribal members. The bill must go
back to the Senate for final passage before going to
President Bush for his signature. Gibbons said he thinks
the administration will be supportive.
The
Western Shoshone ancestral lands ranged from the Snake
River Valley in Idaho to Salt Lake Valley in Utah,
across most of eastern and central Nevada, and into
Death Valley and the Mojave Desert in California.
Tribal
members' fight to retain the land included the
high-profile efforts of two aging sisters, Mary and
Carrie Dann, who grazed their horses for decades without
paying fees on federal land in northeast Nevada they
contended belonged to the Western Shoshone. The Bureau
of Land Management finally seized the horses in 2003.
©
2004 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This
material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or
redistributed.
|