Thursday, December 13, 2012

Feb 2013: Emergency Management and Public Safety For Tribal Officials Training


Many tribes these days are coming to grips with the fact that the damage a natural disaster can bring to a community doesn't stop when the emergency is over. Our Native trainers, and our partners at Risk and Rewards Management Group, have decades of experience with planning for disasters, establishing mutual aid agreements and mitigating the impact of a fire, drought, tornado, hurricane or winter storm on a tribal community.

The training will be held in Albuquerque, NM February 26-27, 2013.

Click here to learn more about this training opportunity.  Click here to register.

Monday, December 10, 2012

Native Women May Be Excluded From VAWA Reauthorization

Rumors are swirling in DC about what's stalling the reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act. The House bill, which stripped protections for Native women victimized by non-Native men, among other groups, must be reconciled with a more inclusive Senate version. Indian Country Today Media Network was able to get some confirmation that the GOP is blocking the reauthorization solely to prevent the inclusion of protections for Native women. Representative Tom Cole, a Republican from Oklahoma and a member of the Chickasaw nation, argues that Tribes deserve local jurisdiction and that tribes need effective police power and protection in their own territory. The National Task Force to End Sexual and Domestic Violence Against Women also clarifies some of the facts about Title IX, Safety For Indian Women.

If you want Native women to have protection from domestic violence—no matter who commits it— contact Congressman Eric Cantor, who is leading the negotiations to draft new legislation before Congress breaks for the holidays.

Friday, December 7, 2012

Minnesota Tribes Battling Flood of Heroin

Read the whole story at Indian Country Today Media Network. The news from the Minnesota tribes is grim, but there are solutions to be found in education and community coalitions that battle this problem, starting with preventing and treating prescription painkiller addiction.  Besides destroying the user's life and health, heroin use results in increased crime, HIV and hepatitis infections, and children living in filthy and dangerous environments. Tribes are working with county, state and federal officials to turn this around, but they also need help from all concerned community members, from caregivers to teachers and from health care workers to law enforcement officers and Tribal courts.