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January 10, 1921 - June 17, 2005

 

 

 

      

Tribes pay members 

Per capita distribution first since 1954 for Klamath Tribes

 

By TY BEAVER

H&N Staff Writer

September 22, 2007 

 Jessica Jackson, of Chiloquin, shows a check she received from the Klamath Tribes Friday morning. The money comes from revenue generated at the Kla-Mo-Ya casino. Members said the payments are a sign of the Tribes’ improving health and progress.


   CHILOQUIN — Mary Gentry was a small child when members of the Klamath Tribes last received per capita payments from tribal revenue. 


   She remembers going to Klamath Agency to collect her check, worth about $200. A short time later, the Tribes lost federal recognition and its history of self-sufficiency faltered. 


   But Friday, for the first time since 1954, the Klamath Tribes distributed per capita checks based on about $3.6 million worth of revenue to around 3,600 tribal members. Members received a little more than $1,000 per person. 


   Some started waiting at 11 p.m. Thursday at the Klamath Tribes Administration near Chiloquin. They came from Nevada, California and Washington as well as the Klamath Basin. 


   Tribal members said the payments are a sign of the Tribes’ improving health and progress toward the self-sufficiency it had in the 1950s. 


   “My children, my grandchildren, my great-grandchildren are part of this,” said Gentry, tribal member benefits administrator. “It’s exciting.” 


   Kla-Mo-Ya 


   Friday’s payments come from the Tribes’ gaming operations at Kla-Mo-Ya casino. While exempt from state and local taxes, tribal members will be required to pay federal taxes on the payments. 


   Payments for those under age 18 will go into individual trust funds. 

 

   Once they are 18 and have a high school diploma or GED, they will be able to access the money. Otherwise, it becomes available when they turn 21. 


   Tribes around the county provide per capita payments to their members for their share in tribal businesses. The payments vary, from about $50 per person up into the thousands. 


   Preparations 


   Preparing for the event was a five-year process. Along with compiling all member information, tribal administration went through the regulations set by the U.S. Department of the Interior on Indian gaming. A member benefits department had to be set up to disburse the payments. 


   “It’s been a long time coming,” said Torina Case, tribal council secretary. “It’s always something you want to do is give back to your people.” 


   Tribal officials hope the distributions will be made annually, depending on how profitable the casino is. Kla-Mo-Ya opened in 1997. 


   Individual plans for the checks differed. 


   James Sr. and Preslianna Hamilton plan to use their checks to pay for new school clothes for their 4-year-old son, Desimus, and his four brothers. Winnie Foster said she’d either invest in a new computer or her home. 


   Money for tuition 


   Jessica Jackson’s check will allow her to pay fallterm tuition at Klamath Community College. She was thankful for the check because she was denied financial aid. She’ll even have money left to pay for gas to get to and from class. 


   Christine G. Allen said she appreciates the money. She was in her 30s and working for the Klamath Agency the last time she received a per capita payment. 


   She had no plans for her money yet. Rather, the payments will ensure the future stability of the tribal members who have come after her. 


   “ This will help the younger generation,” she said.

 

In the past


   The Klamath Tribal Council was hesitant to publicly announce the per capita payments because of past history. 


   The last payments came from revenue sources such as logging on what was the Klamath Reservation. 


   In 1980, decades after the tribes lost federal recognition, the federal government provided a final compensation payment to tribal members. 


   Tribal members give accounts of businesses raising prices to coincide with the payments. Sometimes tribal members were enticed to invest in shady business schemes and lost. 


   Tribal spokeswoman Taylor David said tribal members are focused on re-attaining the financial stability they had before they lost federal recognition. 


   “Things that happened in the past, that’s all they are,” she said.

 

 

RIGHT: James Hamilton Sr. and his wife, Preslianna, play with their son Desimus, 4, in front of the Tribal Administration building following the disbursement of the first per capita payment in more than 50 years to Klamath tribal members.

 

 

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