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Western Region Fiscal Year 2013 Budget Formulation.
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Western RegionFiscal Year 2013Budget Formulation The U.S. Department of the Interior is responsible to uphold the unique government to government relationship with Federally-recognized American Indian Tribes, as provided by the Constitution of the United States, U.S. treaties and court decisions, presidential executive orders and federal policies and administrative actions. Presented by: Honorable Vice Chairman Wright Honorable Vice Chairman Hinton
2 Agencies 42 Tribes 13 Agencies 13 Million Acres Population – 143,000 2 Agencies 9 Agencies
Tribal Recommendations • Protect Indian Affairs funding: all TPA programs are critical to tribes • WRO TPA Base for Tribes = $24,367,708 (FY 2010 level) • TPA base funding for WRO tribes at 56% (FY 2010 • TPA funding upholds the Secretary's “Advancing Nation to Nation Relationships” principle • Setting priorities justifies funding reductions, see FY2012 Budget Justifications page IA-PSJ-14 • GPRA should reinforce the need for federal programs and to justify funding support
Protecting Indian Country • Western Region service area: 13 Million acres • The International border with Mexico adds meeting Homeland Security requirements • Indian community victim rate is twice the national average • 1.9 officers per 1000 residents (national average 3.5:1000) • Funding shortfall minimizes bed space at regional detention facilities
Protecting Indian Country • Increase funding base for tribal courts • Updating law and order codes and ordinances • Technical assistance and training • Improving data management systems, archiving records • Staffing support, magistrates/judges, court clerks, prosecutors, defense advocates and probation • Implementation of Tribal Law & Order Act
Advancing Indian Education • There are 54 BIE-funded schools in Arizona; 2 BIE funded schools in Nevada; and 3 BIE funded schools in Utah • Few schools meet the requirements of Adequate Yearly Progress, an unfunded mandate • JOM funding supports critical educational services; tutoring, mentoring, counseling, incentives and language classes • JOM funds also provides student supplied, ACT fees, remedial courses in writing, math and science
Advancing Indian Education • Public college tuition for 4-yr and 2-yr institutions increasing 10-15% requiring scholarship increases • Western Region BIE schools require: • Security measures • System upgrades • Routine and standard maintenance • Funding must support increasing measures: • Achievement standards • Curriculum enhancement • Addressing teen suicide; security and safety • Recruitment and retention of teachers
Trust Land Management: Natural Resources • WRO is 2nd largest in area of Indian trust lands of the 12 BIA regions: 13 M Acres • WRO supports only 1 FTE Per 1 Million Acres; funding increases are rationally proportionate • Western Region supports 22% of the commercial forested acres nationwide
Trust Land Management: Natural Resources • Population growth and development increases NEPA responsibility for tribes • Water rights protection and management responsibilities are becoming increasingly critical to conservation, recovery, and restoration • Noxious weed infestation of over 1 Million acres of tribal lands threatens economic opportunities to tribes
Trust Land Management: Natural Resources • Rangeland is expected to be the first impacted by climate change; agricultural resource plans continue to be an unfunded mandate • Lease compliance, unresolved rights, and lease default, lease holdover, and trespass issues requires support for Realty Services • BIA’s Land, Titles and Records Office (LTRO) and the Office of the Special Trustee, Office of Appraisal Services are critical to achieving compliance with enforcement obligations
Trust Land Management: Natural Resources • Negotiation, documentation and administration of multiple utility-scale solar energy leases • 3 leases currently pending in WRO • No other regions have reported such leases • 5-6 more under consideration by tribes in WRO • Monitoring lease enforcement, boundary protection/establishment and trespass • WRO plays lead role in settlement negotiations resulting in benefits for Indian landowners
Trust Land Management: Natural Resources Funding Constant for 12 years 6,000 miles of roads 20% • Road Miles: • Bituminous; 1,625 • Concrete; 2.4 • Gravel; 726 • Unimproved (Earthen); 3,180
Improving Indian Communities • BIA HIP Program needs continued funding to address sub-standard housing • BIA is a partner with Tribes in support of continued funding for HIP • The BIA must provide qualified housing staff at the Regional Office to provide expert assistance on housing needs, funding, and inspections
Improving Tribal Communities • Current census unemployment rates do not reflect reservation unemployment statistics • Continued support of General Assistance to serve employable and unemployable clients—GPRA shows 73% of the goals in Individual Self-Sufficiency Plans are met for the Western Region • Over 25% of the GA clients are unemployable—those that can not work, lack skills, old or are disabled
Renewable Energy • Green Energy projects and partnerships with private industry are on the rise in Indian Country • Outcomes include increasing employment opportunities and creation of high demand driven jobs • Examples of renewable energy projects include: • Generating hydro electricity at Rattlesnake Point on the Ft. McDowell Yavapai Nation • Creating Biomass for Wildfire Mitigation using salt cedars • Solar energy rebates and geothermal development at the Pyramid Lake and Walker River Indian Reservations