Gabe Galanda: Decision favors Nez Perce Tribe's treaty rights

Attorney Gabe Galanda discusses court decision favoring Nez Perce Tribe of Idaho and its treaty rights:
On September 12, an Idaho federal district court stopped massive industrial equipment headed for the Alberta Tar Sands — now commonly known as the Megaloads — from traversing Nez Perce Treaty-protected ceded lands. The federal court’s decision affirms the power of Indian Treaties and the intrinsic consultation requirements of those sacred pacts.

Article III of the Treaty with the Nez Perces of 1855 reserved for Nez Perce Indians the “right of taking fish at all usual and accustomed places” and “the privilege of hunting . . . upon open and unclaimed land.” As the court explained: “Although the Nez Perce ceded the lands now encompassing the Nez Perce Clearwater National Forests to the United States, ‘they did not relinquish rights to hunt, fish, and gather, or to practice traditional religious and cultural ceremonies on these ancestral homelands.’”

Critically, even though Article III of the Nez Perce Treaty does not mention the word “consultation,” the federal court ruled that: The duty of the Forest Service to conduct a consultation after finding that the mega-loads might affect cultural and intrinsic values is commanded by Treaty rights” – “there is no discretion to refuse consultation.” And “[w]hen the duty to consult runs to a Tribe, the federal agency generally must consult with the Tribe before taking the action at issue.” Indeed, “meaningful consultation takes place “typically before undertaking a course of action”.

Get the Story:
Nez Perce v. Megaloads: Another Treaty-Based Consultation Victory (Galanda Broadman Blog 9/16)

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