With the White House planning to hold its annual Tribal Nations Summit on December 6 and 7, we are looking forward to seeing the Interior Department’s second annual report on tribal co-stewardship. The annual reports are required under Joint Secretarial Order 3403, “Fulfilling the Trust Responsibility to Indian Tribes in the Stewardship of Federal Lands and Waters.” The Department’s first annual report detailed more than 20 new co-stewardship agreements signed by the Interior Department and the USDA Forest Service and signaled that more than 60 additional agreements were under review.
The current efforts of the Interior Department and of the Department of Agriculture are all, of course, limited by the constraints of federal law. While we are following efforts pursuant to existing legal authorities, the following summarizes three notable efforts to expand federal authorities to support tribal land repatriation as well as tribal co-management and co-stewardship of federal lands.
BIA’s Proposed LWCF Tribal Land Acquisition Program
In the President’s FY 2024 Budget, released in March 2023, the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) proposed to create a new tribal Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF) land acquisition program. BIA stated that the primary objective of the program would be to “provide funding to Tribes to acquire lands or easements for the purposes of protecting and conserving natural resource areas that may also be of cultural importance to the Tribe or have significant recreational benefits for Tribal communities.” BIA has previously received funds for tribal land acquisition, but not through a stand-alone LWCF program.
Congress currently allocates LWCF funding to the Bureau of Land Management, National Park Service, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, Forest Service, and state and local governments. LWCF funds are invested by federal agencies to purchase and protect federal lands for public outdoor recreation. Agencies also partner with landowners to support voluntary conservation activities on private lands. The LWCF program is well-funded, and in 2020, the Great American Outdoors Act, Pub. L. No. 116-15, amended the statutory authorization for LWCF to provide full and permanent funding for the program. The law provides for the deposit of $900 million into the LWCF each fiscal year, which is available the next fiscal year to support the purposes of the program.
Some LWCF funds are distributed directly to states and local communities through grant programs. Currently, Tribes can work with states through the grant programs to secure LWCF funding for conservation projects. These grants can be used for a range of projects, including projects that protect historic and cultural sites.
BIA’s FY 2024 budget requests $12 million in funding specifically for LWCF Tribal Land Acquisition. So far, however, Congress has not been willing to implement the proposal. Neither the Senate nor the House appropriations bills for FY 2024 provide funding for the proposed program—Senate appropriations legislation explicitly states that no funding is appropriated. Still, BIA continues to work on developing the new program. In August, BIA invited Tribal Governments to consult on the proposed program, and three consultations were held in September. We will be interested to see how BIA’s proposal fares when Congress considers BIA’s FY 2025 budget this spring.
“Co-Stewardship” Model Proposed in Wy’east Tribal Resources Restoration Act
On November 15, Congressman Earl Blumenauer (D-OR) re-introduced the Wy’east Tribal Resources Restoration Act. Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR) introduced a companion bill in the Senate. According to Congressman Blumenauer’s office, the legislation “would establish one of the first placed-based co-management strategies in the nation.” This legislation is notable for its approach to establishing a comprehensive co-management system specifically for the Mount Hood National Forest, including by providing for the automatic withdrawal from the public land laws, mining laws, and mineral leasing laws of “any area within the [Mount Hood] National Forest with respect to which the [Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs] and the [Forest Service] enter into a memorandum of understanding.”
The legislation would direct the U.S. Forest Service to establish work with the Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs to establish Treaty Resource Emphasis Zones, within which the Forest Service would develop a co-management plan that, among other things must:
- prohibit new temporary or permanent roads, except as necessary;
- provide for the retention of large trees;
- assess wildfire risk to the Tribe’s Reservation and to Treaty and cultural resources within Mount Hood National Forest; and
- provide that forest restoration and management planning within any Zone includes, and is guided by, reserved Treaty rights, and the resources on which the Treaty rights depend.
Existing roads would be permitted to stay in place so long as they are “deemed to be necessary” by the Forest Service in consultation with the Tribe.
The legislation also directs the Secretary of Agriculture to provide funding to the Tribe “to ensure that the Tribe, in partnership with the Forest Service, has the capacity to participate in designing, implementing, and monitoring projects within a Zone.”
A Senate hearing was held on the legislation during the previous (117th) Congress.
Legislation Establishing Tribal Cultural Areas System Would Incorporate Tribal Co-Management
Legislation introduced by Congressman Raúl Grijalva (D-AZ) in the House (H.R. 6147) and Senator Martin Heinrich (D-NM) in the Senate (S. 3185) would establish a federal “Tribal Cultural Areas System,” which could include historic properties, landforms, locations, and landscapes with significant historical, cultural, or spiritual significance to a specific Tribe or Tribes. Similar legislation was introduced in the previous (117th) Congress.
The legislation would establish a system under which Tribes would recommend—and Congress would designate—an area of public lands that would be withdrawn and designated as a tribal cultural area. Tribal Commissions would be established for each tribal cultural area and would be consulted on all aspects of federal management of the area. One of the goals of the bill is to establish a co-management role for interested Tribes. According to the bill sponsors: “Through cooperative management agreements known as self-determination contracts and increased consultation with land management agencies, tribes [would be able to] share their traditional knowledge, and help ensure that tribal cultural area management protects cultural resources.”
However, the proposal, as drafted, has also elicited a number of concerns. For example, the legislation does not establish any limits on the size of a tribal cultural area withdrawal, which raises concerns because Tribal cultural areas would be subject to significant management restrictions, including prohibitions on road construction and withdrawal from mineral leasing laws. Committee Republicans have suggested that other federal laws—including the Antiquities Act—may offer alternative mechanisms to protect cultural sites and have noted that the proposed legislation could authorize the set aside of entire landscapes. Additionally, although Congress must formally designate new tribal cultural areas, observers have noted that any Tribe would be able to recommend the designation of a tribal cultural area, and the Secretary of the Interior (or the Secretary of Agriculture, as appropriate) would be required to withdraw “all public land” in any such recommended cultural area and “only allow such uses in the recommended Tribal cultural area as are consistent with preserving Tribal cultural sites and cultural values of the area.”
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The three proposals outlined above all appear to be mired in political discord for now. However, it’s worth understanding the approach that each proposal takes to promoting tribal interests. Federal agencies must, of course, adhere to the limits set forth in federal statute, but we see a lot of interest right now in expanding federal statutory authorities to allow for innovative new approaches to promoting tribal land repatriation and tribal co-stewardship and co-management of federal lands.