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Judge backs broad Indian preference at DOI WASHINGTON The Interior Department is breaking the law by restricting its Indian preference policy to the Bureau of Indian Affairs, a federal judge ruled on Monday. In a significant decision, Chief Judge Thomas F. Hogan in Washington, D.C., opened up Indian preference to all positions at Interior that directly and primarily relate to Indian programs. Currently, the policy is limited to the BIA and other posts that were transferred out of the BIA to other agencies. However, Hogan determined that the Indian Reorganization Act favors a much broader policy. Since the law doesnt define the meaning of the term Indian Office, judicial principles require him to construe the preference as favorable as possible to American Indians and Alaska Natives, he said. Simply put, he wrote, American Indians legitimately expected that the Indian preference would be applied to all positions in the Interior Department that directly and primarily relate to providing services to Indians and an interpretation of the term Indian Office that reaffirms that expectation comports with the canon that statutes are to be construed liberally in favor of the Indians, with ambiguous provisions interpreted to their benefit. The 17-page decision is a major victory to the estimated
9,000 Indian employees at Interior. Hogan said it was uncontested
that the plaintiffs, who were represented by Indian Educators Federation
union, were qualified for jobs within the Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Indian Affairs and the Office of Special Trustee for
American Indians but were passed over for non-Indian applicants. Several of the top, non-political positions within the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs, though, have been held by non-Indians in the past few years. The positions include the Chief Information Officer, the Chief Financial Officer and the head of the Office of Indian Energy Resource Development. Special Trustee Ross Swimmer was unavailable for comment because he had to travel out of Washington following yesterdays House appropriations hearing. In the past he has told Indianz.Com that he strives to hire and promote American Indians and Alaska Natives even though OST, in the eyes of Interior, does not have a preference policy. Swimmers top deputy, Donna Erwin, and her senior-most
aides are tribal members. But the Indian Educators Federation noted
in court filings that only 170 out of 550 positions at OST are being
covered by Indian preference because they were previously part of
programs at the BIA. |
Friday Residents air concerns over Tuba hospital TUBA CITY, Ariz. Cibola Navajo language program going full-speed MILAN, N.M. Feds OK renaming Phoenix peak for Lori Piestewa PHOENIX, Ariz. Victim lost it after son died ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. Judge backs broad Indian preference at DOI WASHINGTON |
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