HomeLatest Information

Freeze amendment opposed
McCain's legislation to on Navajo, Hopi Land Settlement resisted


By Kathy Helms
Diné Bureau

WINDOW ROCK — The Intergovernmental Relations Committee of the Navajo
Nation Council backed legislation Monday sponsored by Delegate Hope
MacDonald-LoneTree opposing the Navajo-Hopi Land Settlement Amendments of
2005 sponsored by U.S. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.

The Navajo Nation is urging Congress to establish a blue ribbon panel to
study and review the negative effects of relocation and the Bennett Freeze
upon the Navajo people, the long-term costs of the relocation policy, and
to provide the resources necessary to properly resettle the Navajo people
and address the negative impacts of the Bennett Freeze.

The Nation also is asking Congress to allow relocatees and other affected
Navajos to testify regarding "failure of the relocation law" and specific
problems which would be encountered by the Navajo Nation and its people as
a result of passage of McCain's legislation, Senate Bill 1003.

MacDonald-LoneTree (Coalmine Canyon/Toh Nanees Dizi chapters) told IGR
members that Navajo Nation President Joe Shirley Jr. and the Navajo-Hopi
Land Commission have already taken a position of opposition against Sen.
McCain's bill.

"That has already gone through the Senate, it has been heard before the
House, and this document will be the official position of Navajo that we
oppose that bill," she said.

"Sen. McCain's trying to close the office of Navajo-Hopi Indian Relocation
(in Flagstaff) and seize the funding that would be allowed to benefit
those people who were affected by the relocation act," MacDonald-LoneTree
said.

Chilchinbeto/Kayenta Delegate Roy Laughter responded, "I know this is a
very controversial issue. I wish there was some specifics on Senate Bill
1003. I know for people this has been long, drawn-out, and the government,
Sen. McCain and other senators say they have spent millions of dollars and
it's not going forth.

"What areas of that Senate bill are we totally in opposition to? Is there
something we can work with? Are there areas that we can mediate on and
say, 'this is what is in our best interest to our people'?"

Laughter said he was concerned about saying the Navajo Nation is in
opposition to the entire bill.

"I know from working with the Navajo-Hopi Land Commission Office some
years back, a lot of our people are saying, 'No, we're not going to
settle.' But every time we have proposals before us, nobody wants to
settle. It seems they just want to draw it out,"he said.

"I think in 1975 or 1980, the settlement agreement only had 15 families.
Now those families have multiplied, and now one of the things is they want
all of the offspring to be compensated and get new housing.

"So, I just want to know why and how we settle this and maybe one day end
this land dispute," Laughter said.

MacDonald-Lonetree told him, "Sen. McCain's bill, S. 1003, is proposing to
close the office of relocation and shut down the benefits. That includes
all of the funding that was available to that office.

"Sen. McCain is complaining that millions of dollars have been spent on
this. Yet the families and the residents of those areas know that that
money was not spent on them, but it was spent on the bureaucracy of much
of the office and the law.

"That's why the Navajo Nation, through the land commission and the
president, are opposing Senate Bill 1003, because all of those benefits
have not yet been afforded to the people who are remaining or need those
benefits out in the communities.

"That's why the president testified before the House Resource Committee
opposing it, as well as the land commission," MacDonald-LoneTree told him.

Laughter said the topic could lead to further discussion. "I guess Navajo,
we've been dragging this out long enough. I don't think our families, no
one will be satisfied with closing the office. So specifically, what areas
are we totally in opposition to and what areas can we live with?

"That was my question, but other than that, I can probably study more on
it," he said.

IGR approved the policy statement opposing McCain's bill, 7-0.

Hopi Tribal Chairman Ivan Sidney has said the Hopi Tribe would like to see
an end to the land dispute and that the tribe is in favor of McCain's
legislation.

http://www.gallupindependent.com/2006/july/072606frzamnd.html