And now:Ish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Wed, 7 Apr 1999 03:04:57 EDT
Subject: U.S. Supreme Court grants cert in Rice
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

>From Victor's pechanga.net  
Martha Ture  

When race determines who gets to vote

�Lawsuit over agency that lets only Hawaii natives choose leaders could 
echo across US. 

By Alex Salkever, Special to The Christian Science Monitor 

To native Hawaiians, the Office of Hawaiian Affairs is a crucial part of 
the state's effort to right past wrongs. To at least one of Hawaii's 
other residents, it's creating new ones. 

The Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA) manages more than $300 million of 
public money and administers a variety of social programs. But its 
trustees are elected in a vote open only to native Hawaiians. 

Sixth-generation Hawaii resident Harold Rice says this practice is 
discriminatory and unconstitutional, so he's suing the state. After 
years of appeals, the United States Supreme Court recently agreed to 
hear the case. 

If it sides with the disgruntled Big Island rancher when it takes up the 
case later this year, the ruling could have a profound impact on the 
rights of native groups both here and on the mainland. 

"If the court reverses, it could raise fundamental questions about the 
ability of any native group to govern itself," says Jon Van Dyke, a 
University of Hawaii law professor who has represented OHA on the case. 

For native Hawaiians, the case is a crucial step in their long road 
toward sovereignty. Their status with the federal government has been 
vague for decades. 

Unlike other indigenous groups in the US, native Hawaiians have never 
had a claims court to address their grievances, and special provisions 
to set up reservations or include Hawaiians in Bureau of Indian Affairs 
(BIA) social programs were never made. 

In addition, Hawaiians never entered into any treaties with the federal 
government - a legal platform that Indian groups have used to gain 
compensation or access to natural resources. 

Many native Hawaiians say this case will help them redress some of these 
inequalities. "The No. 1 issue with this lawsuit is whether or not 
Hawaiians are considered to have political status," says OHA trustee 
Clayton Hee. If the court sides with OHA, "the next logical step is for 
the Hawaiians ... to establish their sovereign rights before the US 
Congress. Every facet that is enjoyed by other native peoples should be 
enjoyed by Hawaiians." 

Such logic is only fair, OHA supporters add, because native Hawaiians - 
who make up as much as 20 percent of the state's population - share many 
of the same troubles as their mainland indigenous counterparts. High 
rates of poverty, mortality, drug abuse, and imprisonment make them the 
most troubled ethnic group in Hawaii. 

OHA was set up in 1978 to help alleviate some of these problems. It was 
also intended to return some of the power stripped from native Hawaiians 
when the Kingdom of Hawaii was overthrown by a US-backed group of white 
merchants and missionaries in 1893. 

During the past two decades, millions of dollars have poured into OHA 
coffers from the state general fund and from revenues on "ceded lands," 
lands held in trust by the state for the benefit native Hawaiians and 
the general public. Under state law, native Hawaiians are entitled to 20 
percent of the revenues. Negotiations are currently under way to 
determine the extent of additional state obligations to OHA, which could 
range as high as $1 billion. 

OHA'S access to this money is what has upset Mr. Rice. If OHA can spend 
state money, then everyone in the state should have a say in how it's 
spent, he says. 

"Mr. Rice contends that he was denied the right to vote in an election 
held by the State of Hawaii to elect individuals who would make 
decisions concerning public resources in Hawaii, and he was denied the 
right to vote based on his race or national origin," says Theodore 
Olson, Rice's attorney. "The courts never said that the people who moved 
into Utah and settled Utah can deny equal rights and privileges to 
people who moved in afterwards." 

Rice's attorney asserts that, unlike Indian tribes, native Hawaiians are 
not sovereign political entities, but ancestral residents. Thus, OHA 
elections that exclude Hawaii residents violate the 14th and 15th 
Amendments, which promise equal protection under the law and the right 
to vote regardless of race. 

But the state and the native Hawaiians note that a 1974 United States 
Supreme Court ruling allows the BIA to give hiring preferences to native 
Americans because the BIA's job is to serve and improve the status of 
native Americans. 

"Because the native people have their own resources and their own trust 
assets, they should be allowed to govern these assets themselves," says 
Professor Van Dyke. 

The fact is, though, the Supreme Court has consistently ruled against 
indigenous groups during the 1990s. 

Justices Clarence Thomas and Antonin Scalia are opponents of 
preferential treatment of virtually any type. And with the pendulum 
swinging against affirmative-action programs, there is a chance that the 
Supreme Court could revise its 1974 ruling, upending the legal bulwarks 
that have been used to build programs for native Americans. 

http://www.csmonitor.com/durable/1999/04/06/text/p2s1.html
<<<< To remove your name from this list send a message to
"[EMAIL PROTECTED]" with the message "unsubscribe triballaw" >>>> 
           &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
          Tsonkwadiyonrat (We are ONE Spirit)
                     Unenh onhwa' Awayaton
                  http://www.tdi.net/ishgooda/       
           &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
                             

Reply via email to