Mono Lake Kutzadika’a Tribe aboriginal lands

Mono Lake Kut za dikaa Tribe

Mono Lake Kutzadika’a tribe

According to U.S. Congressman Jay Obernolte’s (R-Hesperia) office, last Tuesday, June 1, he reintroduced a bill, HR 3649, titled the Mono Lake Kutadika’a Paiute Tribal Recognition Act that would grant federal recognition to the Mono Lake Kutzadika’a tribe as a distinct Native American Tribe. The legislation was originally introduced by former Rep. Paul Cook. The bill would address the tribe’s decades-long struggle for indigenous sovereignty and would afford them the services, benefits, and rights provided to federally recognized tribes, says the communique.

Jay Obernolte US Congressman Calif Eiighth District

U.S. Congressman Jay Obernolte

Rep. Obernolte said, “The Mono Lake Kutzadika’a Tribe has a long history of advocating on their behalf with the federal government, helping to preserve and conserve Mono Lake as the center of their culture and history and protecting their traditional hunting and gathering lands by working alongside the U.S. Forest Service and National Park Service, both of whom already recognize the Kutzadika’a Tribe as a political entity.” He went on to say that “It is past time that the federal government formally recognize this tribe’s sovereignty and provide the rights, services and benefits extended to federally recognized tribes.”

The tribe is the southernmost band of the Numu, an indigenous people of the Mono Basin in east central California and adjacent Nevada. They have functioned as a tribal community since before white settlers and others came to California beginning in the early to mid-1800. The tribe maintains its unique traditions, including harvesting the alkali fly pupae from Mono Lake as a traditional food source from which the tribe derives its name: Kutzadika’a, roughly translated, means “fly eaters,” something most of us only do by accident.

If federally recognized, the Mono Lake Ku-ta-dika’a would have official government-to-government relationship with the United States and have the inherent rights of self-government and tribal sovereignty. They would also be entitled to receive certain federal benefits, services, and protections because of their special relationship with the United States, including grants of hunting and fishing rights on all federal lands within its aboriginal land area, access to the Indian Health Services, and the ability to request certain land in Mono County, California be taken into trust for the benefit of the tribe.

Federally recognized tribes

Federally recognized tribes

The Mono Lake Kutzadika’a Tribe has strong local support and is recognized as a political entity by both local government and local divisions of the Forest Service and National Park Service in California’s 8th District.

Neighboring tribes also support the recognition of the Mono Lake Kutzadika’a Tribe, including the Benton Paiute Tribe, Bridgeport Indian Colony, Bishop-Paiute Tribe, Big Pine Paiute Tribe of Owens Valley, Timbi-sha Shoshone Tribe, Forth Independence Indian Tribe, Lone Pine Paiute-Shoshone Tribe, Tuolumne Me-Wuk Tribe, North Fork Rancheria of Mono Indians of California, Picayune Rancheria of Chukchansi Indians, and Southern Sierra Miwuk Nation. Other supporters of the tribe’s federal recognition include the Mono County Board of Supervisors, Mono Lake Committee, Sierra Club, Town of Bishop, Friends of Inyo, Department of the Interior at Yosemite National Park, California State University, Chico – Department of Anthropology, and California Indian Manpower Consortium.

 

 

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