Office of the Assistant Secretary - Indian Affairs |
CONTACT: Nedra
Darling
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE February 7, 2005 |
202-219-4152
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Trust and Detention
Facilities See Increases Budget proposal maintains commitment to improve tribal communities |
WASHINGTON - President Bush has proposed a $2.2 billion budget for the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) for Fiscal Year 2006. The budget continues the Department's commitment to reform trust management and provides increases for law enforcement and detention centers, an economic development commission, and a leadership academy pilot program. "The President's Fiscal Year 2006 budget request for Indian Affairs maintains his commitment to improving tribal communities by targeting federal dollars where they can produce the greatest results," said David W. Anderson, Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs. Together with a request of $304 million for the Office of the Special Trustee for American Indians (OST), the Fiscal Year 2006 budget proposes an investment of $2.5 billion in Indian programs. The Fiscal Year 2006 budget request for Operation of Indian Programs is $1.9 billion. The Fiscal Year 2006 budget request includes a $12.6 million increase to continue support for Secretary Norton's ongoing efforts to reform current trust systems, policies and procedures. The increase includes $3.0 million to continue to implement trust reform permitting more decisions to be made at the local level and more efficient management of trust assets. An increase of $9.6 million will strengthen the Bureau's efforts to address the current backlog in probating Indian estates. This increase includes $8.0 million for contractor costs associated with case preparation for over 23,000 probate cases and $1.6 million for contract support for title related workload associated with Indian land consolidation, administrative law judges and Youpee activities. The request for the BIA portion of the unified trust budget reflects a $5.2 million savings to the government due to elimination of one-time costs, project task completion, and management efficiency gains. The budget request also includes $1.5 million for lease costs at the new National American Indian Training Center in Albuquerque, N.M. The center, which was established to provide standardized trust and program-related training, will provide a broad range of mission critical, leadership and career development training to employees of the BIA and OST. The Fiscal Year 2006 budget
request proposes a $16.7 million increase for BIA detention facilities.
The proposed budget addresses issues raised by the Interior Office of
the Inspector General (OIG) in its September 2004 report that documented
poor conditions at BIA detention facilities. The increase includes $4.1
million to support detention operations at four new centers currently
under construction with Department of Justice (DOJ) funds, and $3.2
million for facility operations and maintenance at 19 detention centers
built with DOJ grants since 2001. The budget request includes $500,000 to establish an Economic Development Commission to increase tribal business opportunities and reduce unemployment on Indian lands. The commission will investigate impediments to tribal business development and develop an operational model for tribal businesses. The President's Fiscal Year 2006 budget request for Indian School Operations provides $521.6 million to support 184 BIA-funded schools and dormitories. The BIA and the Department of Education continue to work together to ensure that BIA-funded schools meet performance and accountability requirements under the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (Public Law 107-110). The Fiscal Year 2006 budget request proposes a $2.0 million increase to implement pilot leadership academies at four BIA schools. The intent of leadership academies, which will seek to apply the best practices of innovative schools in the public and private sector, is to instill in students a life-long desire and aptitude for learning and encourage post-secondary education. In addition, the budget seeks $60.9 million for post-secondary education to fund operating grants to 26 tribal colleges and universities and the BIA-operated institutions of Haskell Indian Nations University in Lawrence, Kan., and Southwestern Indian Polytechnic Institute in Albuquerque, NM. The request also includes a $500,000 increase to expand the BIA student loan repayment program, which was first implemented in Fiscal Year 2005 to improve the Bureau's ability to recruit highly qualified new employees. The Fiscal Year 2006 budget request for Construction is $232.1 million. Repairing and rebuilding BIA-funded Indian schools is one of Interior's highest priorities. The request for Indian school construction of $173.9 million provides funding for replacement schools and major facility improvement and repair projects. In 2001, 65 percent of BIA-funded schools were in poor condition with 35 percent considered good or fair. After compilation of the work funded through 2006, those numbers will be reversed, showing marked improvement in the condition of schools. Between 2001 and 2005, funding
was appropriated for 34 replacement schools, nine of which have been
completed and are in operation. Twenty-five schools are in design or
construction phases. Fiscal Year 2006 funding will allow replacement
of the Porcupine Day School in South Dakota and fund Phase I of the
replacement of the Crownpoint Community School in New Mexico, schools
which are next in priority on the new Replacement School Construction
Priority List published in March 2004. The reduction in the number of
school replacements funded in the 2006 request will allow BIA to focus
on completing the 25 schools already under design or in construction. The Fiscal Year 2006 budget
request for land and water settlements is $24.8 million. Settlements
resolve long-standing claims to water and lands by Indian tribes. The
request includes funds for the Cherokee, Choctaw and Chickasaw settlement
in Oklahoma ($10.2 million), the Colorado Ute/Animas La Plata settlement
($8.1 million), and the Zuni water settlement in New Mexico ($5.4 million). The Assistant Secretary - Indian Affairs has responsibility for fulfilling the Department's trust responsibilities to individual and tribal trust beneficiaries, as well as promoting tribal self-determination, education and economic development for the nation's 562 federally recognized American Indian and Alaska Native tribes and their 1.8 million members.
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