2000
[DOCID: f:h939ih.txt]
107th CONGRESS
1st Session
H. R. 939
To reaffirm and clarify the Federal relationship of the Swan Creek
Black River Confederated Ojibwa Tribes of Michigan as a distinct
federally recognized Indian tribe and to restore aboriginal rights, and
for other purposes.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
March 8, 2001
Mr. Knollenberg introduced the following bill; which was referred to
the Committee on Resources
_______________________________________________________________________
A BILL
To reaffirm and clarify the Federal relationship of the Swan Creek
Black River Confederated Ojibwa Tribes of Michigan as a distinct
federally recognized Indian tribe and to restore aboriginal rights, and
for other purposes.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the
United States of America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the ``Swan Creek Black River Confederated
Ojibwa Tribes of Michigan Act''.
SEC. 2. DEFINITIONS.
For purposes of this Act--
(1) the term ``Tribe'' means the Swan Creek and Black River
Confederated Ojibwa Tribes of Michigan;
(2) the term ``member'' means an individual who is eligible
for enrollment in the Tribe pursuant to section 7;
(3) the term ``Secretary'' means the Secretary of the
Interior; and
(4) the ``Indian Reorganization Act'' means the Act of June
18, 1934 (25 U.S.C. 461 et seq.).
SEC. 3. FINDINGS.
The Congress finds the following:
(1) The Tribe is the political descendant of certain
signatories of the 1785 Treaty of McIntosh (7 Stat. 16); the
1789 Treaty of Fort Harmar (7 Stat. 28); the 1795 Treaty of
Greenville (7 Stat. 49); the 1805 Treaty with the Wyandot (7
Stat. 87); the 1807 Treaty of Detroit (7 Stat. 105); the 1808
Treaty of Detroit (7 Stat. 112); the Treaty of 1815 (7 Stat.
131); the Treaty of 1816 (7 Stat. 146); the Treaty of 1817 (7
Stat. 160); the Treaty of 1833 (7 Stat. 431); the 1836 Treaty
of Washington (7 Stat. 503); the 1855 Treaty of Detroit (11
Stat. 633); and the Treaty of 1864 (14 Stat. 657).
(2) The Tribe is the political successor to the Swan Creek
Black River leadership who signed 4 of the forenamed treaties:
the 1807 Treaty of Detroit (7 Stat. 105); the 1836 Treaty of
Washington (7 Stat. 503); the 1855 Treaty of Detroit (11 Stat.
633); and the Treaty of 1864 (14 Stat. 657).
(3) The aboriginal lands of the Tribe, as defined in the
aforementioned treaties, comprise the area which is now located
in the State of Michigan, beginning at a point north of the
mouth of the Miami River at the present day western boundary of
Lenawee County where it intersects with the northern boundary
of the State of Ohio, and running due north to a point in
Shiawasee County that intersects a parallel of latitude equal
to the outlet of Lake Huron which forms the mouth of the St.
Clair River, thence running northeast in a direct line to White
rock in Huron County, at the shoreline of Lake Huron, thence
east until it intersects the boundary lines between the United
States of America and Canada at the midpoint of Lake Huron, and
thence due south along the centerline of Lake Huron through the
River St. Clair, Lake St. Clair, the Detroit River, and into
Lake Erie, to a point where the boundary line of Michigan,
Ohio, and Ontario coverage and intersect, and thence due
southwest along said boundary of Michigan to the boundary line
between Michigan and Ohio, and thence due west to the point and
place of beginning.
(4) As a result of the cession treaties, from the 1807
Treaty of Detroit through the 1836 Treaty of Washington, the
Tribe was compelled to withdraw from most of its intrinsically
valuable aboriginal lands in southeastern lower Michigan. In
return, the Federal Government dedicated specific tracts of
reservation land in Macomb and St. Clair Counties in Michigan,
and nominal annuity payments by the United States Government
were available to tribal members. These annuity payments
resulted in 17 separate Swan Creek Black River annuities that
survived from 1818 to 1867.
(5) The 1836 Treaty of Washington compelled the Tribe to
further withdraw from the small tracts of land granted in
southeastern lower Michigan by the 1807 Treaty of Detroit, in
return for future annuity payments and land west of the
Mississippi River. The 1836 treaty did not require any member
of the Tribe to move to Kansas and only 51 members actually
relocated. According to the 1845 United States Richmond census,
the vast majority of the Tribe under the leadership of Ona Way
Tuck Quod Too, migrated north to Lapeer County, Michigan, or remained
on smaller tracts of land situated within the boundaries of Macomb,
western Wayne, eastern Washtenaw, St. Clair, and southern Oakland
Counties.
(6) Pursuant to the 1855 Treaty of Detroit, members of the
Tribe withdrew and relocated from their remaining lands in
Lapeer, Macomb, Wayne, Washtenaw, St. Clair, and Oakland
Counties in Michigan, to nonaboriginal, nonhistoric,
reservation lands further north in Isabella County, Michigan,
where tribal members were eligible for individual land
allotments. Many tribal members, however, continued to remain
on land holdings in their aboriginal lands in Lapeer, Macomb,
Wayne, Washtenaw, and St. Clair Counties. For administrative
convenience, the Federal Government placed multiple tribes on
these newly established reservation lands in Isabella County.
(7) The stated purpose of the 1855 Treaty of Detroit was to
resolve the multiple outstanding legal and equitable claims of
all the tribes on the Isabella Indian Reservation against the
United States by providing land, annuity payments, and other
benefits. The intent to maintain separate tribal identities was
reflected throughout the 1855 Treaty by references to the
distinct tribes as separate political entities to the
agreement. The Preamble text clearly identified each of the
tribes by reference to the separate treaties previously signed
by each chief or headmen of their respective tribes. Article 2
of the treaty makes an implied reference to separateness. In
Article 3, the tribes were expressly separated and individually
identified by the words ``the said Chippewas of Saginaw, and of
Swan Creek and Black River''. Finally, Article 6 specifically
dispels the notion that the grouping of the Swan Creek and
Black River Tribes and the Saginaw Chippewa Tribe should be for
anything more than the specific purpose of Federal
administrative convenience. The temporary counsel as a tribal
organization, was without permanent delegation by providing
that: ``The tribal organization of said Indians, except so far
as may be necessary for the purpose of carrying into effect the
provisions of this agreement, is hereby dissolved.'' The
reference to the ``Tribal Organization'' dissolved refers only
to the entity that would provide distribution of land as
required by the treaty of 1855.
(8) Over time and without justification, the Federal
Government unilaterally la
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psed its relationship with the Tribe
through the treaties described above. The Tribe brought suit
against the Federal Government for amounts past due under those
treaties. In 1910 and 1924, the Congress enacted jurisdictional
acts (36 Stat. 829 and 43 Stat. 137, respectively) to enable
both the Tribe and the Saginaw Band of Chippewa, as distinct
plaintiffs, to file their respective claims against the United
States. These claims, filed in 1927, were later incorporated
into a combined cause of action for purposes of Federal
administrative convenience into Indian Claims Commission
Dockets 57, 59, 13-E, 13-H, and 13-1, and United Claims Court
Docket 13-F. However, the 2 distinct tribes were retained in
the distribution judgment, and Congress ratified the same in
1986 through enactment of Public Law 99-346 (100 Stat. 674).
(9) In 1935, the Tribe petitioned for reorganization and
sought to reaffirm its sovereign status by requesting
assistance pursuant to the Indian Reorganization Act.
(10) In 1939, without resolution of the Tribe's demand for
recognition and reaffirmation, agents of the Federal Government
made an administrative decision not to provide services or
extend benefits pursuant to the Indian Reorganization Act to
any additional Indian tribes located in Michigan's lower
peninsula. The Swan Creek Black River Ojibwa was a signatory
and recognized by the following treaties; the 1807 Treaty of
Detroit (7 Stat. 105), the 1819 Treaty of Saginaw (7 Stat.
203), the March 28, 1836 Treaty of Washington (7 Stat. 491),
and the May 9, 1836 Treaty of Washington (7 Stat. 503),
therefore, their petition under the Indian Reorganization Act
should have been honored as other Michigan tribes.
Additionally, the Swan Creek Black River Tribe has never been
formally dissolved by the Federal Government.
(11) Despite administrative denials of requests by the
Tribe to establish an organization according to Federal forms
of tribal government, the Tribe continued to carry out its
traditional sovereign tribal functions through various formal
and informal political institutions, social structures, and
actions, including a representative Tribal Council. Between
1937 and 1991, the Tribe conducted many of its governmental
functions through tribal based associations organized by Swan
Creek Black River members, including the Saginaw Rural and
Urban Indian Association. In 1991, the Tribe chartered within
the State a historic, nonprofit, tribal government, and agreed
to seek Federal reaffirmation of its Confederation of Swan
Creek and Black River Ojibwa Bands as a distinct sovereign
tribe.
(12) Other tribes in Michigan, whose members are
descendants of the signatories to 1 or more of the treaties
listed in section 3(1) have been acknowledged, reaffirmed, and
restored by the Federal Government as distinct Indian tribes,
separate and apart, including the Pokagon Band of Potawatomi
Indians, the Huron Potawatomi Band of Indians, the Grand
Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians, the Sault Ste.
Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians, the Bay Mills Band of Chippewa
Indians, the Little Traverse Bay Bands of Ottawa Indians, and
the Match-E-Be-Nash-She-Wish Potawatomi. Due process and treaty
rights require that restoration be provided for the Tribe.
(13) In light of the Federal treaty relations between the
Tribe and the United States, recognition as a tribe as defined
by Acts of Congress, to provide Federal restoration of the
Tribe's rights in lands and funds, it is appropriate for
Congress to restore, affirm, and clarify the Federal
relationship of the Tribe in the same manner as Congress has affirmed
Federal recognition of the Lac Vieux Desert Band of Lake Superior
Chippewa Indians, the Sault St. Marie Band of Chippewa, the Pokagon
Band of Potawatomi Indians, the Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa
Indians, and the Little River Band of Ottawa Indians.
SEC. 4. FEDERAL REAFFIRMATION AND RESTORATION.
(a) Federal Reaffirmation and Restoration.--Federal recognition of
the Swan Creek Black River Confederated Ojibwa Tribes of Michigan
Indians is hereby restored and reaffirmed. All laws and regulations of
the United States of general application to Indians or nations, tribes,
or bands of Indians, including the Act of June 18, 1934 (25 U.S.C. 461
et seq.) which are not inconsistent with any specific provision of this
Act, shall be applicable to the Tribe and its members.
(b) Federal Services and Benefits.--
(1) In general.--The Tribe and its members shall be
eligible, on and after the date of the enactment of this Act,
for all future services and benefits provided by the Federal
Government to federally recognized Indian tribes without regard
to the existence of a reservation for the Tribe or the location
of the residence of any member on or near any Indian
reservation.
(2) Service area.--For purposes of the delivery of Federal
services to enrolled members of the Tribe, the Tribe's service
area shall be deemed to be the area comprised of Monroe,
Lapeer, Lenawee, Wayne, Oakland, Macomb, St. Clair, Washtenaw,
and portions of Sanilac, Shiawassee, Genesee, and Tuscola
Counties that were lands in southeastern lower Michigan
reserved to the Swan Creek Black River Bands in the 1807 Treaty
of Detroit (as later confirmed in the Treaty of 1864).
SEC. 5. REAFFIRMATION OF RIGHTS.
(a) In General.--All rights and privileges of the Tribe, and the
members thereof, which may have been abrogated or diminished before the
date of enactment of this Act are hereby restored.
(b) Existing Rights of Tribe.--Nothing in this Act shall be
construed to diminish any right or privilege of the Tribe, or the
members thereof, that existed prior to the date of enactment of this
Act. Except as otherwise specifically provided in any other provision
of this Act, nothing in this Act shall be construed as altering or
affecting any legal or equitable claim the Tribe may have to enforce
any right or privilege reserved by or granted to the Tribe which was
wrongfully denied or taken from the Tribe prior to the enactment of
this Act.
SEC. 6. TRIBAL LANDS.
The tribal lands of the Tribe shall consist of all real property,
now or hereafter held in trust for the Tribe. Pursuant to section 5 of
the Act of June 18, 1934 (25 U.S.C. 465), not later than 6 months after
the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall acquire and
take into trust for the benefit of the Tribe not less than 250 acres of
land located in the service area specified in section 4(b)(2) as
restored lands for the Tribe. Such land shall become the initial
reservation of the Tribe. Thereafter, the Secretary may accept
additional land in trust for the benefit of the Tribe within its
service area and such additional land shall become part of the Tribe's
reservation.
SEC. 7. MEMBERSHIP.
Not later than 18 months after the date of the enactment of this
Act, the Tribe shall submit to the Secretary a membership roll
consisting of all individuals enrolled as members of the Tribe. The
qualification for inclusion on the membership roll of the Tribe shall
be determined in accordance with Article II, section 1, paragraph (a)
of the Tribe's Constitution. The Tribe shall ensure that such
membership roll is maintained and kept current.
SEC. 8. CONSTITUTION AND GOVERNING BODY.
(a) Constitution.--
(1) Adoption.--Not later than 24 months after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Tribe shall condu
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ct, by secret
ballot, an election to adopt a constitution and bylaws for the
Tribe.
(2) Interim governing documents.--Until such time as a new
constitution is adopted under paragraph (1), the governing
documents in effect on the date of enactment of this Act shall
be the interim governing documents for the Tribe.
(b) Officials.--
(1) Election.--Not later than 6 months after the Tribe
adopts a constitution and bylaws pursuant to subsection (a),
the Tribe shall conduct elections by secret ballot for the
purpose of electing officials for the Tribe as provided in the
constitution and bylaws.
(2) Interim government.--Until such time as the Tribe
elects new officials pursuant to paragraph (1), the governing
body of the Tribe shall be the governing body in place on the
date of the enactment of this Act, or any new governing body
selected under the election procedures specified in the interim
governing documents of the Tribe.
SEC. 9. JURISDICTION.
The Tribe shall have jurisdiction to the full extent allowed by law
over all lands taken into trust for the benefit of the Tribe by the
Secretary. The Tribe shall exercise jurisdiction over all its members,
who reside within its service area, as specified in section 4(b)(2), in
matters pursuant to the Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978 (25 U.S.C.
1901 et seq.) as if the members were residing upon a reservation as
defined in that Act.
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