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Alaska village anticipates return of ancestral lands

Catholic missionaries first started venturing into the Alaska territory in the late 19th century, not long after Russia sold the land to the United States for 2 cents per acre. The Catholic church built missions and churches, and in the 1950s, bought land in the Copper River Valley from the U.S. government for a mission school largely serving Native students. Even at a modest $1.25 per acre, the sale netted the U.S. government a tidy return on investment. Now, 50 years after the once-thriving school was shuttered, the Archdiocese of Anchorage-Juneau wants to sell the 462-acre property back to its Indigenous inhabitants for more than $4,000 an acre — or put it up for sale on the open market.

Enbridge Line 5 Pipeline Battle Heats Up in Michigan

Alaska village eyes return of ancestral lands

Alaska village eyes return of ancestral lands STEWART HUNTINGTON, Indian Country Today May 22, 2021 FacebookTwitterEmail 3 1of3In this April 22, 2021, photo, signs of spring thaw appear along the Tazlina River in Tazlina, Alaska. The Catholic Church wants to sell 462 acres that once housed the Copper Valley mission school to the Native Village of Tazlina, a federally recognized tribe. The tribe is scrambling to raise the nearly $1.9 million asking price so it can regain stewardship of its ancestral land. (John Tierney/Indian Country Today via AP)John Tierney/APShow MoreShow Less 2of3This April 22, 2021, photo, shows a sign in tiny Tazlina, Alaska, northwest of Anchorage. The Native Village of Tazlina, a federally recognized tribe, is trying to raise money so it can buy 460 acres of ancestral lands from the Archdiocese of Anchorage-Juneau. The land once held a mission school. (John Tierney/Indian Country Today via AP)John Tierney/APShow MoreShow Less

Suit targets laws that opponents say hurt Native voters

Suit targets laws that opponents say hurt Native voters ‘These new laws directly threaten our right to have our voices heard’ Author: May 19, 2021 Shelly R. Fyant, chairwoman of the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes of Montana, poses for a photo Nov. 30 in Pablo, Montana. (Amy Schlatter via AP, File) ‘These new laws directly threaten our right to have our voices heard’ Amy Beth Hanson Associated Press HELENA, Mont. A lawsuit was filed Monday on behalf of Native American voting rights organizations and four tribes challenging new laws they say are part of a broader scheme by the Montana Legislature to disenfranchise Native voters.

Biden Releases Tax Forms, Resuming an Almost Uninterrupted Tradition

Biden Releases Tax Forms, Resuming an ‘Almost Uninterrupted’ Tradition Last Updated May 20, 2021, 11:53 a.m. ETMay 20, 2021, 11:53 a.m. ET Donald J. Trump was the first president in 40 years to refuse to share his tax forms with the public. Arizona Republicans split over what some call the “insane lies” driving a review of the 2020 vote. Follow our Here’s what you need to know: President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris both released financial disclosures on Monday.Credit.T.J. Kirkpatrick for The New York Times President Biden released tax forms on Monday showing that he and his wife, Jill Biden, earned just over $600,000 in 2020. The release resumed a presidential tradition of disclosure broken by Donald J. Trump.

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