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Modoc tribal meeting is
Friday
Separation proposal
will be discussed
By LEE JUILLERAT
H&N Regional
Editor
A group of Modocs interested
in terminating their political relationship with the Klamath
Tribes will host an informational meeting Friday in the Klamath
County Government Center.
The meeting starts at 6:30
p.m. in the hearing room.
About 30 Modocs, who are
members of the Klamath Tribes, attended an inaugural meeting in
October on a proposal to create a new Modoc tribal unit,
according to Perry Chesnut, an adopted member of the Modoc
Tribe. He said Friday’s meeting is for those who want to learn
more about the separation movement.
Chesnut said Modocs need to
end 136 years of subservience to the Klamaths.
“The only practical way to
preserve the Modoc Tribe’s unique ethnic and cultural identity,
and protect and advance the Modoc people’s political and
economic interests, is to set up their own government, separate
from that of the current Klamath tribal government,” he said.
Since that meeting, he said,
some Modocs have gathered about 60 signatures supporting a
proposal to create a Modoc tribal government.
At Friday’s meeting, M. Sean
Manion, a Modoc who is a civil engineer and has spent the last
seven years in Iraq managing various rebuilding projects, will
present an economic development model used for Arab tribes in
Iraq.
Manion
believes the model can be used by tribal entities, including the
Modocs, to create large tribally owned enterprises as well as
smaller, individually owned business ventures.
Manion plans to discuss
eligibility for tribal membership by contrasting the blood
quantum standard now used by the Klamath Tribes with the lineal
descent standard being used by some other tribes.
“I’m going to talk about the
kind of businesses we could have given our land base,” Chesnut
said, including the possibility of a casino resort near the
Modoc Point area.
He also will present a map
of Modoc ancestral lands ceded to the government in the Lakes
Treaty of 1864 and discuss opportunities for economic
development on those lands and the potential restoration of
wetlands that constituted Lower Klamath Lake, Tule Lake and
Clear Lake prior to reclamation projects of the early 1900s.
Chesnut and
Manion will be available for a question and answer session
following their presentations.
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