
Yuroks
to reap $15,500 each
from settlement
The windfall stems
from the tribe's share of money from logging 50 years ago, plus
interest.
WASHINGTON
– Members of the Yurok
Tribe in the northwest corner of
California
have voted themselves checks for about $15,500 apiece,
dividing the bulk of a $92 million settlement in a long-standing dispute
with the nearby Hoopa Valley Indian Tribe.
The settlement money was
released to the Yuroks in April after the Hoopa tribe lost an appeal
over its distribution before the Interior Department's Board of Indian
Appeals.
In voting this week,
tribal members decided between retaining half of the money for tribal
use, or just 10 percent, with the remainder dispersed in checks to the
5,200 enrolled members.
Tribal spokesman Matt
Mais said 1,603 of the 1,927 votes cast favored the larger per-capita
distribution. The remaining 10 percent, or about $9.2 million, will be
used for in-home services to tribal elders, rights protection, education
and funerals, the tribe said.
"The tribal
membership has given us a clear directive on how to spend the
fund," tribal Chairwoman Maria Tripp said in a statement. "We
are ready to begin work immediately implementing the 90/10 split."
The vote will be
certified by the tribal council at a meeting Monday. Mais said checks
probably won't be ready to mail out for a month or so.
At issue in the dispute
was money from logging five decades ago at a time when the two tribes
shared a reservation. To end the dispute, Congress passed a settlement
act in 1988 that gave the Yurok their own reservation along the
Klamath River
.
The legislation also
created a settlement fund containing the disputed logging proceeds plus
some additional cash. The money was to be divided equally, but only if
each tribe agreed not to sue the federal government.
The Hoopa tribe signed a
waiver in 1991 and collected $34 million. But the Yuroks filed a lawsuit
that dragged on until 2001, when the U.S. Supreme Court said it would
not review a lower court's rejection of its lawsuit.
The Supreme Court's
decision touched off another round of acrimony as the Hoopa tribe
fiercely argued that the Yuroks were not entitled to the remainder of
the fund, which by then had grown to $90 million with interest deposits,
because they had sued.
Eventually, the Hoopa
agreed to split the remaining settlement money, but the Yurok insisted
it all belonged to them. The stalemate was broken earlier this year when
the Interior Department abruptly reversed its long-standing position
against giving the money to the Yuroks. It said there was nothing in the
settlement act setting a deadline for a waiver and that the tribe still
could qualify for the proceeds if it signed.
The Yurok tribal council
approved a resolution in March waiving its right to sue. That month, the
Board of Indian Appeals rejected the Hoopa's appeal, and on April 20,
Ross Swimmer, special trustee for American Indians, ordered the money
disbursed to the Yuroks.
The Hoopa's attorney, Tom
Schlosser, reached in his
Seattle
office, declined comment on
the vote, saying only that the Hoopa tribe was still exploring further
avenues of appeal.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any copyrighted
material herein is distributed without profit or payment to those
who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this information for
non-profit
research and educational purposes only. For more information go
to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
Source:
http://www.sacbee.com/111/story/552298.html
|