Rural Alaska

Alaska Native organization seeks land for 5 Southeast communities omitted from ANCSA

JUNEAU - An Alaska Native advocacy group is seeking land and the establishment of Native corporations for communities that were omitted from a federal settlement, officials said.

Alaska Natives Without Land wants a change to the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act on behalf of Haines, Ketchikan, Petersburg, Tenakee Springs and Wrangell, The Juneau Empire reported.

Some tribal communities were excluded when the act passed in December 1971, leading to the creation of Alaska Native regional, urban and village corporations. The act also transferred 68,750 square miles of land to those corporations, officials said.

A change to the federal act would require a vote in Congress.

Alaska Natives Without Land held an event Peratrovich Hall in Juneau last Saturday to build support and share information about the issue, said Todd Antioquia, the group's campaign and volunteer coordinator.

"We want to rally support," Antioquia said. "We want to build awareness of why it's so important."

The proposed amendment to the act would affect 4,400 enrolled shareholders in landless communities. Since its passage, 48% of registered landless shareholders have died, Antioquia said.

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Alaska Natives received $962 million under the settlement act, but Antioquia said a monetary component is not being pursued in the new proposal.

Alaska Natives Without Land is supported by Sealaska regional Native corporation, which proposed establishing five urban corporations and allotting each of them 36 square miles.

The amount of land would be less than 1% of the Tongass National Forest and its uses would be determined by the individual corporations, Sealaska board member Nicole Hallingstad said.

“Each community has the inherent right to decide,” Hallingstad said.

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