
NEZ PERCE TRIBE
DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES
P.O. BOX
365 Lapwai, ID 83540
Snake River Currents
August 2004, Volume 4 Issue 8
Weather Outlook for September
(supplied by CRITFC Weather Wizard Kyle
Martin).
For September, expect above normal temperatures (+1- +2
deg. F) and below normal precipitation (70 –90% of normal).
Chairman Johnson Testifies before Senate
Committee on Indian Affairs on Legislation regarding the Proposed Settlement of
the Tribe’s Water Right Claims.
On July 20,
NPTEC Chairman Anthony Johnson testified to the Senate Committee on Indian
Affairs on federal legislation known as the Snake River Water Rights Act of
2004. Introduced by Idaho Senators Larry Craig and Mike Crapo on June 24, this
legislation would ratify the proposed settlement of the Tribe’s water right
claims. Representative Butch Otter introduced companion legislation in the
House, although that Bill contains two elements (unrelated to the Tribe’s water
claims) not contained in the Senate Bill.
NPTEC Conducts Public
Meetings on Proposed Settlement of the Tribe’s Water Right Claims.
During the week of August 9th, NPTEC, along
with members of the SRBA Team, hosted public meetings with Tribal members and
the Circle of Elders to discuss the proposed settlement of the Tribe’s water
right claims. Tribal members asked many important questions, some of which are
listed below, followed by answers to those questions supplied by NPTEC members
and the SRBA Team. More questions and answers will appear in future editions of
this newsletter.
Questions and Answers
Q.
What are the options relative to the proposed settlement?
A.
The Tribe, and other parties, can either accept
the terms or it can reject the settlement proposal and litigate Tribal water
claims in state court. This decision must be made by March 31, 2006. If the
Tribe, the State of Idaho, the United States and numerous water users accept the
proposed settlement, all the pieces must be in place by that date. BLM lands
will be appraised, a Dworshak flow augmentation agreement will be developed,
management agreements will be developed for the Dworshak and Kooskia hatcheries,
the SRBA Court will decree the Tribe’s water rights, State and Federal
legislation will be passed, federal dollars authorized, and a payment schedule
established.
If any of the parties
rejects the proposed settlement, litigation of the Tribe’s water right claims
will resume in the Idaho Supreme Court and the SRBA Court.
Note:
In 1999, the SRBA Court ruled that the Tribe’s treaty fishing right did not
imply a water right and so dismissed the Tribe’s instream flow claims. In an
effort to distinguish between on-reservation and off-reservation water claims,
the SRBA Court ruled that the 1863 Reservation had been diminished. That
ruling is pending before the Idaho Supreme Court which has suspended the appeal
pending the outcome of the proposed settlement
Q. Has
any party to the proposed settlement agreement decided to oppose it?
A.
No party to the agreement has made that
decision. The state of Idaho is making a strong effort to gain the support from
its citizens and various water users for the proposed settlement. However, some
members of the North Central Idaho Jurisdictional Alliance are opposed to the
deal because the settlement recognizes tribal sovereignty and tribal rights and
also because federal land will be transferred to the Tribe in trust, which
directly challenges the Alliance’s argument that the Reservation has been
diminished.
Q. The
proposed settlement transfers BLM land to the Tribe. Will non-Indians be able
to access and use this land, much like they do on the Precious Lands in
northeastern Oregon?
A.
Existing grazing leases will be honored by the
Tribe when the land is transferred until those leases expire. After that, the
Tribe can decide what, if any, uses by non-Indians will occur.
Q. Representative Butch Otter has introduced congressional
legislation regarding the proposed settlement that contains two riders not in
the Senate Bill. Does the Tribe support these additional provisions?
A.
Representative Otter introduced legislation that
contains two provisions that are not in the Senate Bill introduced by Senators
Craig and Crapo. The provisions include a water right for an old gravel pit
that is now a small lake in southern Idaho and a request for the Bureau of
Reclamation to study additional storage projects
on the upper Snake River. NPTEC has
conveyed to Representative Otter and others that the Tribe does not support
these provisions and that they should be removed from the final legislation.
Q. If
the Tribe rejects the proposed settlement agreement and litigates its claims in
State Court and wins, what will the Tribe get?
A.
There are three answers because the Tribe filed
three types of water claims. If the Tribe wins the appeal of its instream flow
claims, that case will go back to the SRBA Court. The SRBA Court will then
decide what amount of instream flows in the Salmon and Clearwater Basins will
decreed and held by the Tribe. The proposed settlement decrees instream flows in
these Basins but these water rights will be held by the Idaho Water Resources
Board. If the Tribe’s wins the litigation of the springs claims, the Tribe will
retain the right to access and use springs in common with non-Indians on all
land in the 1863 ceded area, as stipulated in the 1863 Treaty. In the proposed
settlement, the Tribe waives its claims to springs on state and private land but
retains the right to access and use springs on federal land in the 1863 ceded
area. The consumptive use water claims for the Reservation would be determined
on the amount of trust land currently within the Reservation. This amount of
water could be less than the 50,000 acre-feet consumptive use right detailed in
the proposed settlement.
Q. If
the Tribe accepts the proposed settlement, will the Tribe be restricted from
asserting its water right claims in other states?
A.
Settlements do not set precedent in other legal
settings and cannot be cited in court as evidence of anything. The Tribe can
and will assert water claims in Oregon and Washington when those states begin a
general stream adjudication process.
Q. If
the Tribe buys more land, will the Tribe get more water rights?
A.
If the Tribe buys land with water rights, the
Tribe will get the water right in addition to the land. However, the priority
date for using that water would be the priority date held by the previous land
owner, not 1855.
Q. The Klamath Tribe won water rights to restore their fishery
based on their treaty fishing right even though their Reservation had been
terminated. How come the Nez Perce Tribe lost its claims for instream flows for
fish based on its Treaty fishing right?
A.
Judge Wood, former judge of the SRBA
Court, refused to consider the Klamath case or the Webb case when he ruled that
the treaty fishing right did not imply a water right for off-Reservation
instream flows. He also ruled that the Reservation was diminished because of the
1893 Agreement with the United States. Legally, this decision was wrong and the
Tribe appealed. The appeal has been stayed pending the resolution of the
proposed settlement.
Q. Who will fund the management of Kooskia and Dworshak
hatcheries when management authority is transferred to the Tribe?
A.
Existing federal funding for hatchery management
will continue after the Tribe gains management control of the hatcheries (sole
management of Kooskia and joint management of Dworshak).
Q. Will
water for the hatcheries come out of the Tribe’s 50,000 acre-feet consumptive
use right?
A.
No. The hatcheries have their own
separate water right, which is unrelated to the Tribe’s 50,000 acre-feet
consumptive use right.
Q. According to the proposed settlement, the Tribe can access
and use springs on federal land in the 1863 ceded area. How can Tribal members
use those springs?
A.
Tribal members can access and use these
springs for “watering purposes” which include watering stock or for cultural
purposes.
Q. What
water rights does the Tribe have now?
A.
None. Until the SRA Court recognizes and
decrees official “water right,” any treaty right to water cannot be enforced.
Q. Doesn’t
the Treaty fishing right give the Tribe a water right for fish?
A.
The
Tribe relied on the Treaty fishing right to make its claim for instream flows
for fish. Unfortunately, the SRBA Court ruled that the Treaty fishing right did
not imply a water right for off-Reservation instream flows. The Tribe has
appealed that decision.
Q. Why did the Tribe file its water right claims in state court?
A.
Under the concept of sovereign immunity, the
federal government and tribes historically could not be brought into state court
to have their water rights determined. However, in 1952 Congress passed the
McCarran Amendment which allowed the federal government to be brought into state
general stream adjudications, thereby waiving its sovereign immunity in such
matters.
The United States Supreme
Court has said that the McCarran Amendment also applies to state adjudications
of Indian reserved rights, which are held in trust by the U.S, and to rights
held by the Tribes themselves.
Q. Why don’t tribal members get free water and sewer services as
part of the settlement?
A.
As part of the proposed settlement, the Tribe
will get $23 million for the design and construction of water and sewer systems
in tribal communities on the Reservation. While this does not mean that tribal
members will get free water and sewer, it does mean that badly needed
infrastructure will be developed to supply reliable and safe drinking water and
to treat wastewater.
Snake River
Currents is published by Greg Haller, SRBA Coordinator for the Nez Perce Tribe
Department of Natural Resources. For
information regarding this newsletter, please contact Greg at (208) 208-843-7368
ext. 2612. For additional
information about the SRBA and the proposed settlement of the Tribe’s claims,
please contact Heidi Gudgell, SRBA attorney for the Nez Perce Tribe Office of
Legal Council at (208) 208-843-7355 ext. 2381.
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