Indian Affairs' draft plan gets preliminary approval
Repatriation, interment of 1,500 human remains is top priority
Division director Forrest Cuch told members of the Native American Legislative Liaison Committee this past week that repatriation and interment of some 1,500 human remains will be a top priority.
He hopes to have one-third of the remains in the state burial vault repatriated by the end of the year. Cuch said his office is working on an estimate to help fund the cost of forensics experts, which is by law covered by landowners.
He said the "biggest holdup" has been relying on landowners who sometimes don't have the reports done correctly, or can't afford them.
Cuch described the plan as ambitious and asked for a bill to appropriate funding for an additional staff member to help meet the goals.
Senate Chairwoman Beverly Evans, R-Altamont, made a successful motion to add "natural resources" to the draft proposal's economic development section, and to give it the committee's approval. Another successful motion was to work with the division on legislation requests.
"It's an opportunity for us to do what we should have been doing in a more formal way," she said of the plan. "I'm really excited about it."
Allyson Isom, deputy director of the Utah Department of Community and Culture, said the plan is a return to the division's legislatively mandated position and the focus is "real results."
Those deliverables include 14 goals. Among them:
Education: A stable program that helps preserve oral tradition and Native American dialects; and strong partnerships to improve education for Native Americans.
Housing: Create two transitional homes for Native American youth in foster care; and bring more attention to housing needs.
Economic development: Create two new businesses and 100 new jobs.
The plan also focuses on interaction between the tribes, the Division of Indian Affairs and the Native American Legislative Liaison Committee. There are also plans for a spring conference among tribal leaders, state agencies and all other stakeholders.
Lora Tom, chairwoman of the Piute Tribe of Utah, and Ivan Wongon, chairman of the Northwestern Band of Shoshone, expressed a concern that only five of 14 state divisions are required to work with the tribes. At a special meeting earlier this month, they said, tribal leaders decided unanimously to study the draft further before approving it.
Legislators said although they have given their support to the plan, they would welcome any proposed changes at their next meeting in October.
"I'm hoping the tribes will look at it, and if there are any recommendations to make, we'll look at it," said House Chairman David Cox, R-Lehi. "I want to have their buy-in on it."
Yvette Donosso Diaz, executive director of the Department of Community and Culture, said it could take up to a year to work out all the kinks, but the draft plan is already being used as a basic framework for the office's activities.
"We realize it's a flexible process," Diaz said. "It is an ambitious plan. It will take at least two years to get everything done. We want to get it right."
E-mail: dbulkeley@desnews.com
Comments
- Luxury home market stalls 12:02 p.m.
- Kirk Douglas classic on DVD 11:38 a.m.
- Zion fire moving southeast 11:36 a.m.
- More school-money than expected 11:24 a.m.
- Virginia 'Freedman's' project done 11:12 a.m.
- Teen relive Mormon trek 11:12 a.m.
- Oldest American to scale Mount Everest 11:07 a.m.
- Knicks sign first-round pick 10:59 a.m.
- Armstrong third, Leipheimer fourthe 10:58 a.m.
- 6.0 quake in China 10:43 a.m.
- Jazz brass debate Millsap match
- LDS seminary principal arrested
- 2 men cited on LDS plaza
- Jazz finances not quite so bleak
- HBO defends U. logo use in 'Love'
- Reactions on Boozer speculation
- Cash for Clunkers to get rolling soon
- Utahns among Texans' investors
- Man spots his stolen car
- Jazz rookies quiet Thunder youngsters
- LDS seminary principal arrested
252 - Jazz brass debate Millsap match
162 - Bronco collecting a galaxy of recruits
141 - Jazz talking Boozer trade?
140 - Blazers may offer Millsap a contract
124 - 2 men cited on LDS plaza
119 - Stadium of Fire flag burning was fake
98 - Fairness of BCS debated
81 - Chaffetz eyes challenging Bennett
76 - Letters: Single-payer system best
75
As more and more dads are put out of work in this economy, I've been...
The photographs are mysterious, brooding, dark. They show dimples and...
where do you meet?
anyone who wants this girl to share "any" of the blame are wrongheaded and...
Yep--just when you thought it couldn't get any more ridiculous, a couple of...
Thanks Bill for helping to stop this genocide and getting other nations...
So easy for those with no standards to cry and whine about those with them....
I seem to recall a black woman who once was asked politely to give up her...
What the Jazz need to do is trade all the players and fold. These guys are...
Its time to let Paul go and be over paid for a back up roll. Thats all he...
What if something like this happened to YOUR child?
It seems to be that people are forgetting who coached one of the best power...


You can be the first to comment on this story.