Sequestration: Why Are Special Interest Programs Getting Funding, But the Crucial Indian Health Service Faces Major Cuts?
When it comes to the automatic budget cuts that began taking effect this month, federal lawmakers were able to find a way to spare certain special interest programs — such as $227K program to study pictures of animals in National Geographic magazines, paying people $46K to attend an annual snowmobile competition in Michigan, and $350K for a study that looks at the “effects of meditation and self-reflection,” all of which were awarded grants at the beginning of March — from sequestration.
That wasn’t the case with programs for American Indian reservations, where unemployment is far above the national average, women suffer disproportionately from sexual assaults, and school districts largely lack a tax base to make up for the cuts.
The federal Indian Health Service, which serves 2.1 million tribal members, says it would be forced to slash its number of patient visits by more than 800,000 per year. Tribal programs under the U.S. Department of Interior and the U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs that fund human services, law enforcement, schools, economic development and natural resources stand to lose almost $130 million under the cuts, according to the National Congress of American Indians.
While food distribution, welfare programs and health care services that serve the needy are exempt from the cuts, similar services on reservations aren’t, said Amber Ebarb, a budget and policy analyst for the National Congress of American Indians.
“Tribes have too little political clout, too small numbers for those same protections to be applied,” she said. “I don’t think it’s the intent of any member of Congress. The ones we hear from, Republicans and Democrats who understand trust and treaty rights, think it’s outrageous that tribes are subject to these across-the-board cuts.”
The timing and magnitude of most of the cuts are uncertain as Congress looks for a way to keep the government operating beyond March 27 with no budget in place. In the meantime, tribes across the country are preparing for the worst.
Some are better-positioned than others.
In northwestern New Mexico’s McKinley County, where about a third of the population lives below the federal poverty level, the Gallup-McKinley County School District is facing a $2 million hit. The district that draws mostly Navajo students from reservation land not subject to state property taxes relies heavily on federal funding to pay its teachers and provide textbooks to students.
“To me, it seems very unfair that one of the poorest counties with one of highest Native enrollment in the country has to be impacted the most by sequestration,” said district superintendent Ray Arsenault. “We are very poor, we’re very rural, and it’s going to hurt us much more.”
On the Rosebud Indian Reservation in south-central South Dakota, a new $25 million, 67,500-square foot jail sits empty. The annual operating budget of $5 million would be reduced to around $840,000 because of the automatic budget cuts, said jail administrator Melissa Eagle Bear.
“I don’t think this is intentional, but I do feel like it’s the government’s way of controlling things,” she said. “They definitely have control, and we’re going to keep going. … I know Indian people. We tend to survive off what resources we have.”
In Oklahoma, the Cherokee Nation said it is well-poised to handle cuts to its diabetes, housing rehabilitation, Head Start and health care programs. The tribe put a freeze on nonessential hires and halted most travel and training for tribal employees. The tribe’s $600 million budget for services and programs comes largely from federal funds, but tribal businesses also post annual revenues in the same amount that have been used to fill in gaps, said Principal Chief Bill John Baker.
“What this really is going to boil down to mean is that there won’t be any new purchases, new equipment, and probably we’ll hold our programs but not be in a position to add new programs,” Baker said. “Luckily, we’re in pretty good shape.”
Baker and other tribal leaders have argued against the cuts, saying the federal government has a responsibility that dates back to the signing of treaties to protect American Indian people, their land and tribal sovereignty.
Clara Pratte, director of the Navajo Nation’s Washington, D.C., office, said regardless of the outcome of the budget talks, tribal leaders should press Congress to make funding for Indian programs mandatory, not discretionary.
Nearly two-thirds of the Navajo Nation’s $456 million budget comes from federal sources that go to public safety, education, and health and human services. The tribe is facing up to $30 million in automatic budget cuts.
“A lot of these programs go to people that cannot lift themselves up by their bootstraps,” Pratte said. “I’m talking about grandmas, grandpas, kids under the age of 10. We can’t very well expect them to go to work.”
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The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Comments (70)
G-WHIZ
Posted on March 22, 2013 at 10:36amNot enough VOTES to make any [D]election difference!!
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fireyogi
Posted on March 21, 2013 at 8:42pmThis Indian just became a republican.
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s_usa_n
Posted on March 21, 2013 at 6:45pmLiving near the Ute Indain Reservation and having worked at IHS as a nurse for a few years, some years back, I have to say that living off the government has only harmed these people. Take their diabetic programs. Members of the tribe have mulitple programs to help treat and educate them on this devastating disease. I feel safe to say, without having the stats, that the tribal members are becoming diabetic at younger ages and at a higher rate than ever. It makes me sad for them and bugged at the same time. Resources are wasted and taken for granted, and no amount of money or support seems to be enough or good enough. That’s what living on the government dime does for the human spirit, it kills it.
I agree 100% with the sentiment that if you really want to know what obama’s america will look like, go to one of these reservations, take it all in, see the results for yourself.
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Bohump
Posted on March 21, 2013 at 4:43pmCut the Health Care ? Wait for…. OBOMACARE … Then you will see a CUT to the Bone !
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Wolfram
Posted on March 21, 2013 at 4:35pmTake a look at ACA and Dodd-Frank and see how many times Native American Tribes are mentioned
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CommonSenseTalk
Posted on March 21, 2013 at 3:41pmPBS will still get all its money this year. NPR will still get money this year.
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Nabuquduriuzhur
Posted on March 21, 2013 at 3:37pmre: DSN397
Almost true. A few treaties were honored, but not many. Otherwise there would be no tribes with lands today.
Consider that Congress had no right to make treaties with American Citizens, but did anyway. The Louisiana Purchase included clauses that every person in the Purchase would immediately be an American Citizen. Nor did Congress have a right to make treaties within the boundaries of the United States.
But they did anyway. And broke most of them.
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Nabuquduriuzhur
Posted on March 21, 2013 at 3:49pmThe existing treaties have been incredibly exceeded. For example, the monthly dole, medical care, scholarships, special treatment under the law, and so on were not things than any person of any group received in the 1800s. Wasn’t even thought of in the 1800s. The idea of tribal members not working was not thought of in the 1800s.
These programs have proved to be the worst thing that has ever happened to the American Indian. When life has no purpose, where one doesn’t have to work, where one just gets their living without earning it, it leads to alcoholism, drugs, crime, etc.nothing in life has value as a result. One sees the same attitudes among rich kids.
It’s hardly traditional. There was no precedent. The typical tribesman/tribeswoman had to work incredibly hard before these programs began. It gave people pride. They could say “I did this”, “I earned this.” When a Kurok or Hoopa family gathered five hundred pounds of acorns every year, that was work. When Navajo prepared the soil, planted, weeded, watered, harvested, and stored, that was work.
When life had no work, everything was lost.
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G-WHIZ
Posted on March 22, 2013 at 10:39amBecause those “treaties” were illegal-anyway, they were ALREADY BROKEN while they were being-written!!
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Kneale
Posted on March 21, 2013 at 3:28pmWe are all Indians now. If you want to see a preview of how this country will look on Obamas third term (want to bet) look at any reservation in the country. When you give up all for complete welfare this is how it goes.
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zoro51
Posted on March 21, 2013 at 1:56pmamerican indians NOT WET BACKS who are here ilegally should be funded PERIOD not raped yet again…
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moreteaplease
Posted on March 21, 2013 at 1:33pmThe_Jerk
Posted on March 21, 2013 at 11:42am
We shouldn’t be paying for Indian healthcare anyway.
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What about black healthcare-should we be paying for that too?
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