Blog — Galanda Broadman

Trump’s Ineffective End to the “War on Coal”

By Amber Penn-Roco

On March 28, 2017, President Trump issued an Executive Order, “Promoting Energy Independence and Economic Growth,” designed to roll back President Obama’s climate change policies and to revive the coal industry.  Upon signing the Executive Order, President Trump remarked that he was “putting an end to the war on coal,” telling coal miners: “You’re going back to work.”  The next day, the Trump Administration formally lifted a coal-leasing moratorium on federal lands. 

Critics immediately expressed doubt as to whether President Trump’s Executive Order would be able to stop the coal industry’s decline, pointing out that the coal industry’s biggest problem is not regulation, but the rise of natural gas. 

A recent report from the Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs casts further doubt on effectiveness of the Executive Order, asking: “Can Coal Make a Comeback?”  The report examines the cause of coal industry’s collapse and the “prospects for a recovery of US coal production and employment by modeling the impact of President Trump’s executive order and assessing the global coal market outlook.”

The report supported critics’ assertions that natural gas, rather than regulation, was the primary reason for the decline in the coal market.  The report finds: “Increased competition from cheap natural gas is responsible for 49 percent of the decline in domestic US coal consumption. Lower-than-expected demand is responsible for 26 percent, and the growth in renewable energy is responsible for 18 percent.”  Further, the report finds that “environmental regulations have played a role in the switch from coal to natural gas and renewables in US electricity supply by accelerating coal plant retirements, but were a significantly smaller factor than recent natural gas and renewable energy cost reductions.” 

The report also indicates that international factors further contributed to the decline in coal, finding: “Changes in the global coal market have played a far greater role in the collapse of the US coal industry than is generally understood . . . More than half of the decline in US coal company revenue between 2011 and 2015 was due to international factors.”

The report scrutinizes the effectiveness of the Executive Order, finding that “[i]mplementing all the actions in President Trump’s executive order to roll back Obama-era environmental regulations could stem the recent decline in US coal consumption, but only if natural gas prices increase going forward. If natural gas prices remain at or near current levels or renewable costs fall more quickly than expected, US coal consumption will continue its decline despite Trump’s aggressive rollback of Obama-era regulations.” 

Ultimately, the report concludes, “President Trump’s efforts to roll back environmental regulations will not materially improve economic conditions in America’s coal communities.”  The report states that considering the “domestic and international market outlook, we believe it is highly unlikely US coal mining employment will return to pre-2015 levels, let alone the industry’s historical highs."

Coal is a contentious issue in Indian Country.  On one hand, many tribes own land that has large coal reserves.  Coal can provide an economically depressed tribe a source of income.  Accordingly, many tribes support the development of natural resources on their lands.  However, many tribes are also resistant to coal mining, as it can result in the destruction and desecration of the natural environment and tribal sacred places. 

In particular, many tribes, and individual tribal members, oppose the resulting environmental impact of coal burning, which increases the emission of greenhouse gases, negatively impacting climate change.  Climate change has, historically, had a disparate impact on indigenous peoples.  As recognized by the United Nations, “Indigenous peoples are among the first to face the direct consequences of climate change, owing to their dependence upon, and close relationship with the environment and its resources.”  Indeed, “Climate change exacerbates the difficulties already faced by vulnerable indigenous communities, including political and economic marginalization, loss of land and resources, human rights violations, discrimination and unemployment.”

Accordingly, President Trump’s ineffective Executive Order will have a mixed impact on tribes.  Tribes that allow coal mining may suffer economically.  Though, no more than they would’ve suffered already under the declining coal market.  However, from an environmental perspective, the decline of the coal industry is a favorable result, as it will decrease emissions.  In all, as the President’s pro-coal Executive Order demonstrates, the issue is more nuanced that it might first appear, with Tribes having interests on both sides.

Amber V. Penn-Roco is an associate attorney at Galanda Broadman, PLLC.  Amber is a member of the Confederated Tribes of the Chehalis Reservation.  Amber’s practice focuses on tribal sovereignty issues, including complex land and environmental issues, and economic development matters.  Amber can be reached at (206) 713-0040 and amber@galandabroadman.com.

New Book Includes Gabe Galanda's "The American Indian Middle Class"

A new book, "The American Middle Class: An Economic  Encyclopedia of Progress and Poverty," includes a chapter authored by Gabriel Galanda, titled "The American Indian Middle Class."

Gabe discusses the Dawes Act of 1887, the Urban Indian Relocation Program of the 1950s, federal Indian self-determination laws and policy since the 1970s, President Reagan's Commission on Indian Reservation Economies of the 1980s, and of course Indian gaming since 1988 primarily.  He concludes: "As Indian self-determination has firmly taken hold, so too has a tribal middle class."

An excerpt:

Then of course there was, and is, Indian gaming.  What began with high-stakes bingo on various reservations in the 1970s has since the passage of the federal Indian Gaming Regulatory Act in 1988[1], blossomed into a now steady $28-billion industry.[2]  Although Indian gaming has most certainly catapulted thousands of reservation Indian families out of poverty and into much higher income brackets, the new money of Indian gaming per capita distributions has created a unique, unemployed segment of the tribal middle class.  Ho-Chunk, Inc., CEO Lance Morgan has indicted those distributions as a “new form of welfare [that] is just the latest in a cycle of dependency that Indian Country has been trying to break out of for the last 100 years.”[3]  

That new money has also catalyzed the ejection of tribal members en masse through what is called tribal disenrollment, a process of terminating members’ citizenship with their tribal government. As the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals recently took occasion to remark about what is in essence tribal self-termination: “membership disputes have been proliferating in recent years, largely driven by the advent of Indian gaming, the revenues from which are distributed among tribal members.”[4]  In what has been described as a disenrollment epidemic, thousands of Indians—in 17 states and from over 60 tribes—have been jettisoned in recent years, relegating some of them into the lower class, if not abject poverty, and otherwise leaving them “culturally homeless.”[5]  Disenrollment has, thus, uniquely caused socio-economic stratification within tribes.[6] 

Meanwhile, those Indians who remain tribal members and still receive gaming per capita monies may not have made the definitional “sacrifices to create a better life for themselves,”[7] but they nonetheless comprise part of the tribal middle class.

The chapter was written in 2014, before undergoing an elaborate editorial and publication process. Disenrollment has increased in the interim.  As of today, nearly 80 tribes in 18 states have engaged in disenrollment, with an estimated 9,000-10,000 Indians having been terminated.

Gabriel S. Galanda is the managing lawyer of Galanda Broadman, PLLC, in Seattle. Gabe is a descendant of the Nomlaki and Concow Tribes, belonging to the Round Valley Indian Tribes of Northern California.

[1] 25 U.S.C. 2701 et seq.

[2] Press Release, National Indian Gaming Commission, 2013 Indian Gaming Revenues Increased 0.5%  (Jul. 21, 2014), available at http://www.nigc.gov/Media/Press_Releases/2014_Press_Releases/PR-226_07-2014.aspx.

[3] Stephan Cornell et al., Per Capita Distributions of American Indian Tribal Revenues: A Preliminary Discussion of Policy Considerations 1 (Native Nations Institute for Leadership, Management, and Policy & The Harvard Project on American Indian Economic Development, Occasional Paper No. 2008-02, 2007).   

[4] Alto v. Black, 738 F.3d 1111, 1116 n.2 (2013).

[5] David E. Wilkins, Two Possible Paths Forward for Native Disenrollees and the Federal Government?, Indian County Today Media Network, June 4, 2014; Cedric Sunray, Tribes Abandon Traditional Aspects of Inclusion, Indianz.com, Oct. 20, 2014, available at http://www.indianz.com/News/2014/015388.asp; Gozia Wosniacka, Disenrollment Leaves Natives ‘Culturally Homeless,’” Associated Press, Jan. 20, 2014, available at http://bigstory.ap.org/article/disenrollment-leaves-natives-culturally-homeless.

[6] Gabriel S. Galanda, Disenrollment Causes Tribal Classism, Income Inequality, Native News Network, June 29, 2015, available at http://nativenewsonline.net/opinion/disenrollment-causes-tribal-classism-income-inequality/.

[7] John Parker, Burgeoning Bourgeoisie, The Economist, Feb. 12, 2009, available at http://www.economist.com/node/13063298.

Gabe Galanda Featured in "Tribal Councils Increasingly Expel Members"

CQ Researcher has published an in-depth look at Indian Country today, including a profile on disenrollment titled, "Tribal Councils Increasingly Expel Members," in which Gabe Galanda is featured.

Gabriel S. Galanda, a Native American attorney who is fighting the disenrollment of more than 300 members of the Nooksack Indian Tribe in northwest Washington state, attributes the trend to “power and greed” sparked by increasing economic capitalism on native lands. 
Galanda says disenrollment is a non-native concept that stems from federal policies that required tribes to determine who belonged.

Gabriel S. Galanda is the managing lawyer of Galanda Broadman, PLLC, in Seattle. Gabe is a descendant of the Nomlaki and Concow Tribes, belonging to the Round Valley Indian Tribes of Northern California.