by Jennifer Talhelm Associated Press WASHINGTON — The government would end its long and controversial responsibility for managing American Indian trust lands under a proposed change to a bill settling a decade-old lawsuit by Indians against the government.
Senate Indian Affairs Committee Chairman John McCain, R-Ariz., and vice chairman Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., filed the bill last year to overhaul the trust system and end the lawsuit. The senators had discussed settling for $8 billion as recently as July, but they have struggled to find a plan all sides can accept.
The latest proposal, posted this week on the committee’s Web site, is endorsed by the Bush administration.
Indians claim in their class-action lawsuit that the government has mismanaged more than $100 billion in oil, gas, timber and other royalties held in trust from their lands dating back to 1887.
Besides making Indians responsible for managing their trust lands, the new proposal would consolidate ownership of Indian lands, which are now often held by many people. It also would resolve multiple claims by Indians and Indian tribes that the government mismanaged their lands.
McCain and Dorgan have not agreed to the changes but have asked their aides to gather input from Indians during ongoing meetings around the country.
But a committee memo explaining the proposal cautions that to gain support for a multibillion-dollar bill Indians may need to agree to significant changes in the trust system.
Spokesmen for the plaintiffs said it was unacceptable.
“It is simply one more act of bad faith and part of an obvious scheme to kill any reasonable legislation that could have resolved this case,” said Dennis Gingold, the plaintiffs’ lead attorney.
Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne has said he wants to find a mutually acceptable resolution to the litigation that would be “full, fair and final.”
Department spokesman Shane Wolfe said the new proposal fulfills those principles.
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