Pain on the Reservation
Cutbacks on ‘The Rez’: At Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, one of the poorest 
parts of the United States, the budget cuts known as sequestration have slashed 
millions of federal dollars in funding.
By ANNIE LOWREY
Published: July 12, 2013 

PINE RIDGE, S.D. — The Red Cloud-Bissonette family needs a new trailer. 
Frank, who is disabled, and Norma, his wife, are members of the Oglala 
Sioux Tribe who live on the sprawling grasslands of the Pine Ridge 
Indian Reservation. Despite their constant efforts to patch the seams of one of 
their trailers that was hauled here in 1988, rot and mold 
continue to climb up the walls. 
The family has punched a hole in the ceiling for a chimney for their 
wood stove, a necessity given the harshness of the winters but a fire 
hazard in the dry climate. 
A second trailer a few feet away, where some family members live, 
including a grandchild, has no plumbing or running water. 
The Red Cloud-Bissonettes are one of about 1,500 families on a waiting list at 
a local housing improvement program that was recently told that it is being 
shut down. “These are 
real, real low-income people,” said Andre Janis, the housing program’s 
director. “If we go away, a lot of people are going to be without these 
services completely.” 
And it is just one of dozens of cuts the tribe is stomaching, many of 
them caused by the mandatory federal budget reductions known as 
sequestration. When Congress approved legislation for the budget cuts, 
which went into effect on March 1, they specifically exempted many 
programs that benefit low-income Americans, including Medicaid, tax 
credits for working families and food stamps. But virtually none of the 
programs aiding American Indians — including money spent through the 
departments of interior, education, health and human services and 
agriculture — were included on that list. 
As a result, the cuts are starting to deliver yet another blow to 
hundreds of the United States’ most deeply impoverished communities. 
“More people sick; fewer people educated; fewer people getting general 
assistance; more domestic violence; more alcoholism,” said Richard L. 
Zephier, the executive director of the Oglala Sioux tribe. “That’s all 
correlated to the cuts from sequestration.” 
On the Pine Ridge reservation, home to around 40,000 members of the 
tribe, the unemployment rate is estimated at as much as 85 percent. 
Shannon County, home to the town of Pine Ridge, has a per-capita income 
of less than $8,000. The local economy is not just reliant on transfers 
from the federal government; it in no small part consists of them. 
Over all, the tribe’s budget is about $80 million a year, of which $70 
million comes from federal sources, said Mason Big Crow, the tribe’s 
treasurer. The tribe still did not know how much money it would lose, 
waiting on word from Washington, he said, but the number would be in the 
millions. 
The tribe is cutting the size of a program that delivers meals to the 
elderly, many of whom are housebound. The school budget, Head Start 
program and health service are shrinking, too. The tribe has no choice 
but to cut everywhere, Mr. Big Crow said. 
Despite the reservation’s extraordinary problems with crime — alcohol 
and methamphetamine abuse are rampant, many of the tribe’s youth are 
involved in gangs — its police force is absorbing more than a million 
dollars in cuts. 
“We’re cut to the bone,” Ron Duke, the police chief, said. “Right now, 
we’re being reactive to things. It’s really hard to be proactive when 
you don’t have enough staff. We’re just constantly answering calls.” 
The force has already absorbed a cut of more than 6 percent, he said. 
This autumn, it will cut another 8 percent. Chief Duke has let 14 staff 
members go. He said that at any given time, the reservation had only 
nine patrol cars on duty to cover an area the size of Connecticut, 
exhausting his officers as they chased down calls. 
With the cuts, the poverty trap that has plagued the reservation for 
generations looks certain to worsen, with yet more families mired in 
deprivation, reservation officials and residents said. 
“Imagine how people feel who can’t help themselves,” said Robert Brave 
Heart Sr., the executive vice president of the Red Cloud Indian School 
on the reservation. “It’s a condition that a lot of people believe is 
the result of the federal government putting them in that position, a 
lot of people are set up for failure. People have no hope and no ability 
whatsoever to change their fate in life. You take resources that they 
have, that are taken away, it just adds to the misery.” 

While the effect of sequestration on the overall economy has been 
diffuse, with the largest impact falling on the military and companies 
dependent on Pentagon spending, nowhere has the sting been felt more 
severely than on American Indian reservations. 
There was a time when the Bureau of Indian Affairs was “a bunch of 
federal employees providing direct services to tribes,” said Kevin 
Washburn, the assistant secretary of the interior in charge of the 
bureau. “Now, a big part of the way we provide services to Indian tribes is 
that we contract with tribal governments, so they’re providing the 
services to citizens.” 
The bureau, he said, had no choice but to pass the cuts directly to the 
tribes. “Tragic consequences are occurring,” Mr. Washburn said. 
“In Indian country, there’s a disproportionate number of people employed by the 
government,” said Amber Ebarb of the National Congress of 
American Indians, a nonprofit based in Washington. “There is not as much of a 
private sector presence in Indian country, which tends to be 
high-poverty and high-unemployment to begin with.” 
Some tribes, including those that operate successful casinos close to 
major population centers, have the resources to compensate for some of 
the cuts, diverting money from rainy day funds or holding back 
nonessential expenses. 
But dozens of smaller or less wealthy tribes and nations are not so 
lucky. Aaron Payment, the chairman of the Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of 
Chippewa Indians in Michigan, said the tribe was absorbing a $1.7 
million cut, and trying to avoid layoffs and program closings. Still, if worse 
came to worst, it might have to move to emergency-only medical 
services, or closing entire programs. 
“We put in about 50 percent of our financing, and the federal government puts 
in about 50 percent,” Mr. Payment said. “But we’re only meeting 
about 60 percent of our need to begin with.” 
In the Navajo Nation, Deborah Jackson-Dennison, the superintendent of 
the Window Rock Unified School District, is in the process of reducing 
the school budget to about $17 million, from about $24 million, 
absorbing a cut from sequestration as well as from the local government. “It’s 
like getting two black eyes at once,” she said. She has let go of 14 employees, 
and moved the school district down to four buildings from seven. 
In response to the cuts, many tribal leaders are lobbying the federal 
government to protect the tribes from sequestration — on both moral and 
legal grounds. 
“We should be exempt from sequestration,” said Dr. Zephier, the Ogala Sioux 
director. “All tribes should be exempt.” 
The tribes contend that the federal government does not just disburse 
money to them through federal programs. It meets its nation-to-nation 
treaty obligation to provide certain services to American Indians. 
Viewed in that light, a cut is not just a cut but a broken legal 
promise, and one in a long line of them. 
“The tribes in this country, the federally recognized American Indians 
and Alaska Natives, have the world’s first prepaid health plan,” said 
Stacy Bohlen, the executive director of the National Indian Health 
Board, an advocacy organization based in Washington that has argued 
vocally against the cuts to Indian health programs. “They paid for it 
with their lives, and their land, and their culture, and the forced 
abrogation of their future.” 
But on the reservations, a sense of resignation has set in. 
“It’s one more reminder that our relationship with the federal 
government is a series of broken promises,” said the Rev. George 
Winzenburg, the Catholic priest who serves as president of the Red Cloud Indian 
School. “It’s a series of underfunded projects and initiatives 
that we were told would be funded to allow us to live at the quality of 
life that other Americans do.” 

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/13/business/economy/us-budget-cuts-fall-heavily-on-american-indians.html?ref=todayspaper&_r=0


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