Blog — Galanda Broadman

Tribal Lawyer Ryan Dreveskracht To Address Nisqually Community Re Indian Voting Rights

On Tuesday, November 5, Ryan Dreveskracht will deliver a speech to the Nisqually Tribe regarding Indian Voting Rights. Ryan will speak from his forthcoming law review article, tentatively titled,"Reenfranchising the Native Vote After Shelby County v. Holder." In that paper, he argues that Section 5 of the federal Voting Rights Act "is both an appropriate and necessary measure to prevent ongoing voting discrimination targeting Native American citizens, and concludes that "Congress not only has the power to compel preapproval of state voting legislation that is applicable to Indian Country, but it has an obligation to do so."

Ryan's speech will occut in the Nisqually Library, starting at 5:30 PM.

Ryan Dreveskracht is an Associate at Galanda Broadman, PLLC.  His practice focuses on representing businesses and tribal governments in public affairs, energy, gaming, taxation, and general economic development.  He can be reached at 206.909.3842 or ryan @galandabroadman.com.

Freedom’s Just Another Word: The BIA’s FOIA Debacle

The Bureau of Indian Affairs needs an attitude adjustment when it comes to freedom of information. That is because the BIA, or at least its Pacific Northwest Region, stifles the spirit of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), including when it comes to the agency’s trust responsibility to Indian people. Any tribal official or citizen who has sought information from the federal Indian trustee, knows that the Bureau does everything in its power to choke the flow of information to tribal government and citizens. Having had clients in search of needed information, outright disrespected by the BIA, the Bureau’s illegal practices must be brought to light – and halted by the Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs for the Department of Interior.

During his first term in the Oval Office, President Obama issued an Executive Order, mandating that when “responding to requests under the FOIA, executive branch agencies should act promptly and in a spirit of cooperation, recognizing that such agencies are servants of the public.” 74 Fed. Reg. 4693 (Jan. 21, 2009). Yet despite this order that the BIA cooperate in service to the public, consider two recent examples of how uncooperatively the Bureau’s Pacific Northwest Regional Office treated tribal parties seeking information critical to them.

Last year a tribal enterprise requested information about Bureau commercial regulatory practices regarding Tribal trust resources. That information should have been produced without a FOIA request, because the United States’ fiduciary responsibility affords tribal trust beneficiaries “government documents prepared in aid of trust administration,” and “the requirements of FOIA serve different policies and interests” than does the execution of that duty. Osage Nation v. U.S., 66 Fed.Cl. 244 (Fed. Cl. 2005).

Even so, the Bureau required a FOIA request, as it typically does. Then, after the tribal entity wrote the BIA pursuant to FOIA, the Regional Director (or his Solicitor) glibly replied, and I quote:

The law is clear that the FOIA is not meant to have federal agencies become the research arms of other entities.

What gall, especially because the law could not be more clear: FOIA is in fact designed to cause federal agencies to be research arms – of the taxpaying American public, including Indians.

More recently members of a tribal council requested from the BIA all documents regarding a Secretarial election. In order to receive 1,000 pages of information, the BIA assessed them fees of over $10,000 – an astonishing $10 a page. What Indian or Tribe has $10,000 lying around, especially for purchase of their own federal documents?

After the Councilpersons requested a fee waiver, explaining that they needed the election records to for fundamental governmental purposes, the Regional Director (or his Solicitor) deemed the request one of “commercial interest” and reasoned:

'This request concerns individuals that would derive benefits from being enrolled in a specific tribal government and disclosure provides specific information on how individual tribal members voted. As such, your commercial interest in these disclosures is your primary interest and clearly outweighs any public interest’ in disclosure.

Again, what gall, to insult tribal citizens by declaring their governmental concerns a matter of monetary interest. Imagine the BIA offering the same explanation to a U.S. Senator asking for governmental documents.

It is time for Assistant Secretary Kevin Washburn to change the attitude of the BIA’s career employees regarding disclosure of information to the tribal public. This spring, Secretary Washburn remarked that the recent Cobell settlement allows the United States and Indian Country to “hit the reset button” on the federal Indian trust relationship. The reset button must also be hit as to Interior’s role as trustee of Indian records and information.

Indeed, “[t]he common law recognizes an obligation on the part of the trustee to provide full and accurate information to the beneficiary on his management of the trust.” Martin v. Valley Nat'l Bank of Arizona, 140 F.R.D. 291, 322 (S.D.N.Y. 1991); see also Cobell v. Norton, 225 F.R.D. 41, 45 (D.D.C. 2004). The two anecdotes I share suggest that Interior has not sufficiently learned its lesson from Cobell about tribal access to trust-related information.

In all, when responding to requests under the FOIA, the BIA should start acting promptly and in a spirit of cooperation, recognizing that the agency is a servant of the American Indian public. Perhaps then freedom of federal Indian information will reign.

Gabriel S. Galanda is a Round Valley Indian Tribal member and a partner with the Seattle office of Galanda Broadman, PLLC. Gabe has sued the Department of the Interior and BIA for freedom of federal Indian information. He can be reached at gabe@galandabroadman.com.

The NIGC Can Fix Bay Mills

By now, we all knows the risk of Michigan v. Bay Mills Indian Community being decided by the U.S. Supreme Court this winter. The Indian gaming sky is literally falling. What began as a fight over whether Bay Mills could open an off-reservation casino on Indian lands-claims property, has devolved into a direct attack on (1) tribal sovereign immunity and (2) tribal sovereignty over gaming. NCAI has wisely urged the NIGC to moot this case by issuing a closure order for the off-reservation casino. But before the issue came to a head, a few years ago, a lawyer within the NIGC opined that the agency lacked jurisdiction over – incredibly – this Indian gaming operation because it is not on Indian lands. This 2010 letter has apparently given the NIGC all the cover it needs to completely punt the issue. In doing so, the NIGC is failing to achieve its core mission of protecting Indian gaming as a means of tribal economic development.

Ideally, the Bay Mills Tribal Gaming Commission will exercise Indian sovereignty as the primary regulator of the casino and issue its own closure order, mooting this issue. But if its lacks that foresight or resolve, the NIGC should close the casino. And it can. Plainly, the NIGC is authorized to temporarily close “an Indian game” when a tribe violates IGRA, its own laws, a compact, or its gaming ordinance. 25 USC § 2713. Indian game is not defined in IGRA. Whatever it means, it does not appear to be limited to games on Indian land. Historically, the NIGC has been either too paternal (CRIT) or too afraid (Bay Mills) when it needs to act in the best interests of governmental gaming. Abdicating the agency’s core responsibility as to Bay Mills is no longer an option. Anthony Broadman is a partner at Galanda Broadman PLLC. He can be reached at 206.321.2672, anthony@galandabroadman.com, or via www.galandabroadman.com.

Being Blunt: Tribes and Washington’s New Pot Regs

I-502-implementation Washington State Liquor Control Board’s new proposed rules on marijuana licenses mistake Indian tribes for cities and counties on one hand, and ignore tribes on the other. The silence and misapprehension will lead to problems. Comments on the new regulations are due tomorrow, October 4 with a hearing scheduled for October 9. Washington tribal governments should make their voices heard. • The pot rules should recognize Tribes’ rights to ban or regulate and tax reservation marijuana.

The new pot rules suggest that the state has a role in on-Reservation regulation of marijuana. See WAC 314-55-160. It does not. Pot sales are not liquor traffic, where tribes share regulatory authority with states. Pot is illegal under federal law and may be illegal under certain tribal laws. The notion in the new rules that the State “may” simply “notify” Tribes when someone wishes to sell marijuana on the reservation completely misses the point. Even more problematic, the State “shall” notify cities and counties. The state has no civil regulatory jurisdiction on the Reservation. The new rules should reflect this.

• The pot rules should recognize Tribal sovereignty over taxation if sales are not banned.

Now if Tribes wish to take another tack and legalize the drug (and the federal blind eye to Washington and Colorado legalization might arguably prevent them from treating reservations any differently), Washington should be barred from asserting pot taxes on such “value generated on the reservation,” whether sold to Indians or non-Indians. See WAC 458-20-192(c). Untaxed on-Reservation sales could undercut off-Reservation sales, which will carry a 25% tax. In addition, all the other regulatory constraints on pot sales included in the new rules (e.g. the one hundred mg THC limit) are clearly civil regulatory and have no place on the reservation. Decisions about how and whether to sell reservation pot are for Tribes.

• The pot rules should address intergovernmental agreements related to pot.

If Washington’s burgeoning pot economy takes off, we’re headed for the same types of intergovernmental fights the state has picked with tribes over liquor, tobacco, and fuel. The rules should not shy away from what we all know: Good agreements make good neighbors. To the extent the Washington State Liquor Control Board has the authority, it should welcome the security of intergovernmental agreements related to pot and reflect that goal in its rules.

Anthony Broadman is a partner at Galanda Broadman PLLC. He can be reached at 206.321.2672, anthony@galandabroadman.com, or via www.galandabroadman.com.