Indianz.Com > News > Nooksack Tribe puts housing evictions on ‘pause’ amid high-level attention
Nooksack Tribe puts housing evictions on ‘pause’ amid high-level attention
Wednesday, February 2, 2022
Indianz.Com
Former citizens of the Nooksack Tribe have won temporary respite from being evicted from their federally-funded homes in Washington state.
The tribe agreed to put the evictions on “pause” until Tuesday, Vice Chair Rick George wrote in an email to Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs Bryan Newland. The move came as the Biden administration investigates a situation that has been attracting more high-level attention in recent weeks.
“I am hopeful that this investigation will be the last, as this issue has been depriving deserving enrolled Nooksack tribal members of housing for more than six years,” George wrote in the January 12 message.
A copy of the email was posted on social media on Wednesday by Gabe Galanda, an attorney who has represented Nooksack people who have been disenrolled from the tribe. He believes the Bureau of Indian Affairs, which Newland oversees, has been taking “historic” steps to address the rights of individuals in Indian Country. “The BIA’s statement marks the second time the Biden administration has professed a commitment to protecting Indigenous individuals’ human rights from violation by tribal governments, and a break from modern administrations that focused almost exclusively on supporting tribal self-determination rights,” Galanda wrote in a blog post after the Biden administration provided a response to a mainstream media story about The Nooksack 306. Despite the concession to delay the evictions, the tribe has consistently asserted its sovereign right to determine who is entitled to citizenship. Nooksack leaders, including Chair Roswell “Ross” Cline Sr., have long said those who have been disenrolled are “non-Indians” who don’t belong — a contention rejected by a former council member.3/ A week later, Nooksack Vice Chairman Rick George emailed the BIA "agree[ing] to pause the current evictions until Tuesday, February 1, 2022," pending the BIA's investigation into Indian Civil Rights Act violations against @nooksack306. pic.twitter.com/7lRrGKL9vY
— Gabe Galanda, Indigenous Rights Lawyer (@NDNlawyer) February 2, 2022
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Gabe Galanda: Biden administration takes a stand on Indian civil rights (January 25, 2022)Cam Foreman: Human rights abuses continue in Indian Country (January 25, 2022)
Native America Calling: Nooksack disenrollees at a crossroads (January 13, 2022)
Gabe Galanda: The forgotten plight of the disenrolled in Indian Country (October 6, 2020)
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