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Ute Indian Tribe rejects court s dismissal of lawsuit to recognize and protect water rights, plans to appeal
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Tenth Circuit rules in favor of Ute Indian Tribe and requires exhaustion of tribe s lawsuit against Lynn Becker
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Ute Indian Tribe presents arguments on CARES Act distributions to U.S. Supreme Court â UPDATED
Tribe argues Alaska Native Corporations are not recognized governing bodies of Indian tribes eligible to receive CARES Act funding
Author:
News Release
Ute Indian Tribe
On Monday, April 19, 2021, the Ute Indian Tribe presented arguments before the U.S. Supreme Court on the distribution of Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) funds to federally recognized tribal governments. The consolidated cases are known in the media as
Yellen v. Confederated Tribes of the Chehalis Reservation, but actually include a number of separate cases brought by the Ute Indian Tribe, other Indian tribes, and Alaska Native Villages.
| Updated: March 6, 2021, 12:35 a.m.
Citing decades of conflict with the state over water, the Ute Indian Tribe is upset with a freshly passed bill that would set up a new state agency to advance Utah’s interests in the Colorado River, potentially at the expense of the tribe’s more senior rights.
On Wednesday, tribal Chairman Luke Duncan sent a letter to Gov. Spencer Cox, insisting on guarantees that the newly proposed Colorado River Authority of Utah wouldn’t take steps that would diminish the tribe’s water rights.
“We were a tribe long before Utah was a state and controlling law prevents Utah or its Colorado River Authority from taking any action that would impact our water rights,” the Ute Indian Tribal Business Committee said Friday in a statement. “After more than a century of broken agreements and attacks on our waters, state laws like HB297 must be clear that the state cannot diminish or impact our Indian reserved water rights. Respecting the tribe’s rights
What about us? Ute Tribe asks as Utah moves to protect its share of the Colorado River. Brian Maffly © Francisco Kjolseth (Francisco Kjolseth | Tribune file photo) Hite Crossing Bridge stretches over the Colorado River as it flows into Lake Powell near Hite Marina on Thursday, Feb. 4, 2021. The Ute Indian Tribe worries that the newly proposed Colorado River Authority of Utah could deprive the tribe of its rights to the river s water.
Citing decades of conflict with the state over water, the Ute Indian Tribe is upset with a freshly passed bill that would set up a new state agency to advance Utah’s interests in the Colorado River, potentially at the expense of the tribe’s more senior rights.
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