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Indian Gaming Membership Book

2021 MEMBERSHIP BOOK

To our Member Tribes and Partners:

This past year has tested the resolve of the entire nation. We have all suffered unthinkable losses - the COVID-19 pandemic created a health and economic crisis in the United States, taking more than 600,000 American lives, infecting nearly 29 million Americans, and more than 10 million remain unemployed. While the COVID-19 pandemic spared no one, it disparately impacted Native Nations from both a health care and economic perspective. In March of 2020, tribal governments took immediate action to prevent transmission of the virus and to protect the safety of employees, guests, and our communities. Knowing that prior pandemics inflicted death and trauma on Native communities at rates four times the national average, tribal leaders nationwide closed enterprise operations and issued lockdown orders in early March to help stop the spread of the coronavirus. Despite these significant precautions, the CDC reports that on a per capita basis, Native Americans have the highest COVID-infection, hospitalization, and death rates of any community in the Nation. From an economic standpoint, every Indian gaming operation in the nation closed to prevent spread of the virus in our communities. Some Tribes chose to keep their doors closed where community spread remained a high risk. Those that chose to re-open did so slowly and safely, in coordination with tribal health officials, engaged in testing, temperature checks, hand sanitizing, mask wearing, deep cleaning, occupancy limits. As a result, it is estimated that Tribal Government-owned enterprises will sustain 35 percent revenue losses in 2020 alone—with losses totaling more than $30 billion before a full recovery to 2019 revenue levels in 2023. These lost government revenues have forced many Tribes to furlough government employees and cut provisions of essential education, health, housing and safety services to Reservation residents. At the onset of the pandemic in early March 2020, the National Indian Gaming Association immediately got to work to address the quickly emerging crises caused by COVID-19. Congress responded to the calls from Indian Country by enacting the CARES Act on March 27, 2020, which provided historic levels of funding for Indian tribes through the $8 billion Coronavirus Relief Fund, and other key provisions to help Tribal Governments stop the spread of the virus and maintain economic stability. In these early days of the pandemic, the National Indian Gaming Association immediately united with our Member Tribes and sister tribal organizations to help Indian Country meet this unprecedented challenge. In late March of 2020, we worked with federal policymakers to secure $8 billion in direct funding to

Tribal Governments through the CARES Act to help blunt the economic devastation caused by the pandemic. While the CARES Act helped provide a bridge to keep Indian Country moving, the United States suffered the steepest surges of infections and deaths through the winter of 2020-21. The National Indian Gaming Association never slowed in our outreach. We consistently urged Congress to enact a COVID-relief package that included $20 billion for Tribal Governments to build on the CARES Act that was more flexible and better respected the local decision-making of tribal leaders. The November 2020 elections brought significant changes in leadership to Washington, D.C. Our Association worked seamlessly with the incoming Biden Administration and congressional leaders to deliver more than $31 billion through the American Rescue Plan (ARP) for Indian Country. The ARP delivered the economic relief Indian Country needed in the form of $20 billion in Fiscal Recovery Funds that are going directly to Tribal Governments. The Plan also provides significant resources to the Indian health care system, Tribal housing, education, language preservation and other critical services. Set asides were included throughout the American Rescue Plan to provide direct funding to Tribal Governments on par with state and territorial governments. Possibly the most important aid to helping Indian Country begin to emerge was the Biden Administration’s work with tribal leaders to distribute vital vaccines throughout Indian Country. Thanks to this work, we are carefully opening our communities. However, as noted above, much work lies ahead to ensure this devastation is not revisited. We must continue our work to build even more resilient communities. To accomplish this goal, the National Indian Gaming Association is again uniting with our Member Tribes and sister tribal organizations in working with the Biden Administration and Congress as they develop legislation to revitalize America’s infrastructure. Indian Country’s infrastructure backlog is estimated to stand at more than $50 billion, covering the entire range of basic structures and systems. The COVID-19 pandemic laid bare the infrastructure shortfalls throughout Indian Country. Overcrowded homes, substandard health systems and facilities, and broken water systems all contributed to spreading the virus in Native communities. As schools closed, the lack of broadband made it impossible for many students to engage in remote learning. Any infrastructure proposal must include direct federal funding to address these significant unmet infrastructure needs. In addition to helping address these immediate needs, investing in Indian Country’s infrastructure will work to spur short-term job growth through construction, foster long-term economic development by opening doors for Native entrepreneurs, and stabilize and diversify tribal economies for generations to come. These direct federal investments must be coupled with long-needed changes to the Tax Code. While the Tax Code provides state, local, and territorial governments with preferred access to capital and tax credits that help them finance infrastructure projects, these same tools are not directly available to Tribal Governments. These omissions suffocate tribal economies, feed into high unemployment rates, and limit opportunity on Indian lands. The most glaring examples of the Tax Code’s failure to respect Indian tribes as governments are found in the federal Low Income Housing Tax Credit program (LIHTC), the New Markets Tax Credits, and Tax

Exempt Bonding authority. Securing legislative fixes to respect the governmental status of Indian Tribes will help establish and strengthen tribal government-private sector partnerships and access to capital. Congress has struggled for more than a decade to deliver for the American people on an infrastructure package. However, we must continue our work in Washington, D.C. to meet this historic moment. The coronavirus pandemic has taken so much from so many. But it also showed us what is possible when Indian Country unites behind the common purpose of working together to build a better place for all generations to come. My continued prayers go out to hundreds of thousands of American families who lost loved ones over the past year. We pray for a safe journey for those who have walked on, for the continued safety of our frontline workers, and for the continued health and safety for our tribal communities. We have a full plate ahead in the 117 th Congress, and we are eager to get to work for you. On behalf of the National Indian Gaming Association, I would like to express my deepest gratitude for all of our Member Tribes’ support throughout these trying times, and we will always continue to serve and fight for you. We will host periodic virtual legislative summits until business returns to normal, with the exception of our Mid-Year Conference and Tradeshow, happening November 15-17 at Pechanga Casino & Resort. We look forward to seeing you this week in Las Vegas.

Sincerely,

Ernest L. Stevens, Jr. Chairman

224 Second Street SE, Washington, DC 20003 • Tel. (202) 546-7711 • www.indiangaming.org

FEDERAL LANDSCAPE AND POLICY OPPORTUNITIES INDIAN GAMING TRADESHOW & CONVENTION 2021

Historic Confirmation of Secretary Haaland………………………

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Native Americans Serving in the Biden Administration…………

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Tribal Provisions in the American Rescue Plan …………..………

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Enhancing the Indian Land Into Trust Process ………….………

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Infrastructure Revitalization: Indian Country Needs …………….

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H.R. 4308, Removing Barriers to Mobile Wagers on Indian Lands

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The Historic Appointment of Secretary Deb Haaland It is often said that, “personnel is policy” – a President’s advisors and agency officials provide deep insight into the policy positions that the Administration will press for the duration of the four-year term. The most impactful decisions that a President makes are the nominations made to appoint cabinet-level positions. On December 17, 2020 then-President Elect Biden made the announcement that he would nominate Rep. Deb Haaland to serve as Secretary of the Interior. To say this nomination is a historic moment in Indian Country would be an understatement. The Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee held a hearing on the nomination on February 23, 2021. Rep. Don Young (R-AK) introduced Rep. Haaland, providing a key endorsement of her nomination. The full Committee approved the Haaland nomination on March 4, 2021, with Alaska Republican Senator Lisa Murkowski joining all Committee Democrats voting to approve the nomination. The full Senate confirmed President Biden’s nomination of Secretary Haaland on March 15, 2021 by a vote of 51-40. Four Republicans joined 47 Democrats, voting in favor of her nomination. Four months into the historic term of Secretary Haaland, early actions indicate that she will place a careful focus on Interior’s decision-making on issues relating to Native cultural preservation, land restoration, climate impacts on Native communities, and the centuries long need to face the past, educate the public, and move all of Indian Country forward. A Return to Preserving Native Culture The Interior Department manages more than 500 million acres of public lands. Interior agencies make determinations about whether to open these public lands for oil and gas drilling and other development. For decades, decision makers have ignored the impacts of federal actions on tribal government treaty rights and sacred places on these federal lands. Haaland’s first trip as Interior Secretary was a visit to the Bears Ears National Monument in early April. She hiked and held three days of meetings with tribal leaders, members of the Bears Ears Inter-Tribal Coalition, the Governor of Utah, and members of the Utah federal delegation to discuss the current status of the Monument. The 1906 Antiquities Act authorizes the president to “declare by public proclamation historic landmarks, historic and prehistoric structures, and other objects of historic or scientific interest that are situated on land owned or controlled by the Federal Government to be national monuments.” Former President Obama established the Bears Ears National Monument on December 28, 2016. The Monument protects 1.35 million acres, more than 100,000 objects of historic significance, including burial sites, ceremonial grounds, and ancient cliff dwellings. Tribes and advocates sought to preserve the area for decades. In his proclamation designating the Bears Ears Monument, then-President Obama noted that the area represents “one of the densest and most significant cultural landscapes in the United States, [containing] rock art, ancient cliff dwellings, ceremonial sites, and countless other artifacts that provide an extraordinary cultural record." On December 4, 2017, former President Trump slashed the size of the Bears Ears National Monument by 85 percent to 228,000 acres, opening 1.1 million acres of formerly protected lands to leasing for oil and gas development. In early June, Secretary Haaland submitted the Interior Department’s recommendation to President Biden relating to the restoration of Bears Ears and two other National Monuments that were diminished by the previous administration. The recommendations remain under review at the White House. According to Indian Country Today Reporter-Producer, Ailyah Chavez (Kewa Pueblo), Secretary Haaland’s first business trip also included a visit to her homelands. On April 6, 2021, she held a listening session with Members of the All Pueblo Council of Governors at the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Former Cochiti Pueblo Gov. Regis Pecos described the meeting as a “profoundly defining moment…. Their availability to

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have this kind of really frank and honest discussion is something I’ve not seen in my 40 years of work in this area.” See https://indiancountrytoday.com/news/deb-haalands-visit-home-grandparents-prayers. Pueblo Governors also expressed their hope that the Interior Department would extend greater protections to the Chaco Culture National Historic Park that is held as sacred by their people. Restoring Tribal Homelands In April, Secretary Haaland took decisive action to reverse a course set by the previous administration that harmed the ability of Tribal governments to restore their land base. She announced several decisions to reverse actions that complicated the Indian Reorganization Act’s (IRA) Indian fee to trust process. Indian tribes lost or had taken hundreds of millions of acres of tribal homelands through past policies of Removal, Allotment, and Termination. The IRA provides Tribal governments with a federal process to restore lands to Native communities. The Obama Administration prioritized the tribal land to trust process, approving applications to move more than 560,000 of tribal fee lands into trust status from 2009 - 2017. It has been reported that the Trump Administration approved approximately 75,000 acres into trust from 2017 - 2021. To help expedite the land to trust process, on April 27, 2021, Secretary Haaland issued Secretarial Order No. 3400, which returns review of tribal fee land to trust applications to regional BIA directors. The order reverses a 2017 move to place these decisions under the jurisdiction of department headquarters, where they lingered for years. Secretary Haaland acknowledged, “[W]e have an obligation to work with Tribes to protect their lands and ensure that each Tribe has a homeland where its citizens can live together and lead safe and fulfilling lives.” Secretary Haaland also approved the revocation of past Interior legal opinions that added burdens on tribal governments as they seek to use the IRA’s land into trust process. The decision restored the Obama Interior Department’s 2014 M-Opinion to determine whether a Tribe was “under federal jurisdiction”, a relatively new process that was made necessary due to the Supreme Court’s 2009 Carcieri v. Salazar decision. The Department is reviewing the current land to trust process, and will soon release details on proposals to improve the system. Moving Forward While Confronting the Past On June 22, 2021, Secretary Haaland announced the Department’s “Federal Indian Boarding School Initiative”, which will investigate the loss of human life and the lasting consequences of residential Indian boarding schools. The investigation will gather records and information related to the Department’s oversight and implementation of the Indian boarding schools, conduct formal consultations with Tribal Nations on all matters relating to the Initiative. A final written report on the investigation will be submitted to the Secretary by April 1, 2022. The atrocities of government boarding schools for Native children were highlighted with the recent discovery of unmarked graves of indigenous children in Canada. In an op-ed published in the Washington Post, Secretary Haaland detailed the “United States’ history of taking Native children from their families in an effort to eradicate our culture and erase us as a people. It is a history that we must learn from if our country is to heal from this tragic era.” She added, “I am a product of these horrific assimilation policies. My maternal grandparents were stolen from their families when they were only 8 years old and were forced to live away from their parents, culture and communities until they were 13. Many children like them never made it back home.” Secretary Haaland acknowledged that the lasting and profound impacts of the federal government’s boarding school system have never been appropriately addressed. “I know that this process will be long and difficult. I know that this process will be painful. It won’t undo the heartbreak and loss we feel. But only by acknowledging the past can we work toward a future that we’re all proud to embrace.” The historic term of Interior Secretary Deb Haaland is an opportunity to put this past to rest, educate the American public, and help Native communities heal, while setting new precedent and opening a new era for Indian tribes to work in true partnership with the United States to improve the lives of reservation residents.

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Native American Appointees Serving in the Biden Administration Indian Country applauds the Biden Administration’s decisions to restore and elevate official positions throughout the federal government to improve tribal government access to federal decision-making. The Administration has begun to appoint key officials in the various agencies who will be dedicated to developing and implementing Indian Affairs policies for the coming term. Below is a listing of Native Americans appointed and nominated by President Biden to serve in his administration. White House Appointments Elizabeth “Libby” Washburn (Chickasaw Nation), Special Assistant to the President for Native Affairs - Domestic Policy Counsel (DPC) – Ms. Washburn previously served in the Obama-Biden Interior Department. She also served as State Director and Legislative Director for Senator Jeff Bingaman. In her current position, Libby advises President Biden on Native issues as the DPC works to drive the President’s domestic agenda in Congress and throughout the federal agencies to ensure that policy decisions and programs are consistent with the President’s stated goals. Paawee Rivera (Pueblo of Pojoaque), White House Office of Intergovernmental Affairs (OIA) – Mr. Rivera previously served as the Western Coalitions Director for the Biden-Harris campaign. Prior to this role, PaaWee served as Senator Elizabeth Warren’s Western Political Director. In 2018, he also served on Senator Warren’s campaign as her Colorado State Director and Special Advisor during the 2020 Presidential cycle. PaaWee serves as the primary liaison between the White House and all 574 federally recognized tribes. He will support the president’s commitment to strengthening tribal sovereignty and advancing the Nation-to-Nation relationship. Morgan Rodman (Navajo Nation/Osage Nation), Executive Director – White House Council on Native American Affairs (WHCNAA) – Mr. Rodman enters this role after previously serving as the Executive Director of WHCNAA under the Obama Administration. After the Trump Administration transition, Morgan served as the Acting Director of the Indian Affairs Office of Indian Economic Development. With Secretary Haaland as Chair, Morgan’s experience and previous leadership will help lead the Administration’s “all-of-government” approach to Native issues, prioritizing strengthening the Nation-to-Nation relationship with Tribal governments. Dr. Jill Jim (Navajo), COVID Advisory Board – Dr. Jim was recommended to the Biden-Harris COVID-19 Advisory Board by Navajo Nation President, Jonathan Nez, for her critical work as the Executive Director of the Navajo Nation Department of Health. Dr. Jim was appointed to the role of Executive Director in 2019. Under the leadership of the Board Chairs, former Food and Drug Administration commissioner Dr. David Kessler, former Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy, and Yale University Dean Dr. Marcella Nunez-Smith, Jill will be a key voice in ensuring Indian Country’s needs for this board are heard. Department of the Interior Lawrence “Larry” Roberts (Oneida Nation), Chief of Staff to the Secretary of the Interior - Mr. Roberts previously served as Acting Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs (AS-IA) and Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs during the Obama Administration. Most recently, Larry was a professor at Arizona State University’s Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law. Prior to his roles as Acting AS-IA and Principal Deputy AS- IA, Larry served as General Counsel of the National Indian Gaming Commission. Larry is the first Native Chief of Staff for the Department of Interior and his breadth of experience working in the Federal government for Indian Country will be pinnacle to Secretary Haaland’s team.

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Robert Anderson (Bois Forte Band), Solicitor – Mr. Anderson has taught American Indian law, public land, and water law at the University of Washington School of Law where he directed its Native American Law Center for twenty years. Since 2010, he has served as visiting professor at Harvard Law School. In the Clinton Administration, he served as the Associate Solicitor for Indian Affairs and Counselor to the Secretary. President Biden nominated him to serve as the Solicitor for the U.S. Department of the Interior. The Senate Energy & Natural Resources Committee approved his nomination by an 11-9 vote with Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) as the only Republican to vote in favor of his nomination. Mr. Anderson’s nomination awaits further consideration from the full U.S. Senate. Anna Marie Bledsoe Downs (Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska), Deputy Solicitor for Indian Affairs – Ms. Bledsoe Downs joins Interior after serving as the Executive Vice President of Community Impact and Engagement at Ho- Chunk, Inc. She previously served as Interim Director of the BIE in the Obama Administration. She was also Executive Director of the Indian Legal Program (ILP) at ASU. As Deputy Solicitor for Indian Affairs, she will spearhead the Department’s views on legal issues impacting Indian Country and make recommendations on which cases to elevate to the Justice Department. Natalie Landreth (Chickasaw Nation), Deputy Solicitor for Land Resources – Ms. Landreth is a former attorney for the Native American Rights Fund where she worked for 17 years, representing tribes and Native Americans in treaty rights, public lands, and administrative and environmental laws. As Deputy Solicitor for Land Resources, she will be helping the Biden administration to address major challenges that include racial equality and climate change. Bryan Newland (Bay Mills Indian Community), Assistant Secretary-Indian Affairs – Mr. Newland, while awaiting his confirmation process to progress in the Senate, is currently serving as the Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs at the U.S. Department of the Interior. He is a citizen of the Bay Mills Indian Community (Ojibwe), where he recently completed his tenure as Tribal President. Prior to that, Bryan served as Chief Judge of the Bay Mills Tribal Court. From 2009 to 2012, he served as a Counselor and Policy Advisor to the Assistant Secretary of the Interior – Indian Affairs. The Senate Committee on Indian Affairs held an oversight hearing on the nomination on June 9, 2021. The Committee has scheduled a vote on Mr. Newland’s nomination for July 14, 2021, which will occur after this report goes to print. U.S. Department of Agriculture Janie Hipp (Chickasaw Nation), USDA General Counsel – President Biden nominated Ms. Hipp to the USDA in March of this year, while she was serving as the CEO of the Native American Agriculture Fund. Before this role, Janie was the founding director of the Indigenous Food and Agriculture Initiative at the University of Arkansas. She served as Director of the Office of Tribal Relations in the Obama Administration. For more than 35 years prior to her federal service, Janie built her career as an agriculture and food lawyer and policy expert. Her work has focused on the complex intersection of Indian law and agriculture and food law. The Senate Agriculture Committee approved her nomination by unanimous voice vote on June 10, 2021. Her nomination now awaits consideration before the full U.S. Senate. Zach Ducheneaux (Cheyenne River Sioux), Administrator of the Farm Service Agency – Mr. Ducheneaux previously served as the Executive Director of the Intertribal Agriculture Council, the largest, longest-standing Native American agriculture organization in the United States. In this role, Zach will provide leadership and direction on agricultural policy, administering credit and loan programs, and managing conservation, commodity, disaster and farm marketing programs through a national network of offices. In addition to his duties as Administrator, Zach currently serves on the board of directors for Project H3LP!, a nonprofit founded by his family to benefit his local community by providing life lessons and therapy through horsemanship. Heather Dawn Thompson (Cheyenne River Sioux), Director Office of Tribal Relations (OTR) – Ms. Thompson has worked in Indian law and policy for two decades, most recently in private practice. She has also served as law clerk with the Attorney General’s Office for the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe, as Counsel and Policy

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Advisor to the U.S. Senate’s Democratic Policy Committee, and as an Assistant U.S. Attorney for South Dakota’s Indian Country Section, where she prosecuted cases involving violence against women and children. USDA has restored the Office of Tribal Relations back to directly advising the Secretary, which will better ensure that maintain nation-to-nation relationships in recognition of tribal sovereignty and to ensure that meaningful tribal consultation is standard practice across the Department. Army Corps of Engineers Jaime Pinkham (Nez Perce), Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Army for Civil Works (Appointed) – Mr. Pinkham previously served as the Executive Director of the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, and has two decades of experience advocating for tribal sovereignty, self- determination and treaty rights. He is chairman emeritus for the American Indian Science and Engineering Society and past president of the Intertribal Timber Council. As principal deputy assistant secretary, Pinkham helps guide the civil works program, which guides the agency’s water resource development on issues related to flood control, hydroelectric power, water supply, fish and wildlife habitat restoration, and related ecosystems management. Department of Transportation Arlando Teller (Navajo Nation), Deputy Assistant Secretary for Tribal Affairs – Prior to this appointment, Mr. Teller served as a Representative within the Arizona State Legislature. He brings an additional 9 years of experience with the Navajo Division of Transportation, serving as Deputy Division Director before departing. Mr. Teller’s goals within this role are to improve, reengage and improve the relationship building with tribes, prioritizing Tribes that have minimal or no connections with the DOT. Department of Energy Wahleah Johns (Navajo Nation), Senior Advisor for the Office of Indian Energy – Prior to the role at OIE, Ms. Johns co-founded Native Renewables, a nonprofit that builds renewable energy tribal capacity while addressing energy access. Her work with the Black Mesa Water Coalition and Navajo Green Economy Coalition has led to groundbreaking legislative victories for groundwater protection, green jobs, and environmental justice. She is responsible for upholding and advancing the Office of Indian Energy’s mission to maximize the development and deployment of energy solutions for the benefit of American Indians and Alaska Natives.

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The American Rescue Plan Delivers $31 Billion to Tribal Governments President Biden signed the American Rescue Plan (“Rescue Plan”) into law on March 11, 2021. The law is delivering more than $31.2 billion – by far historic levels of funding – to Indian Country to help address the disparate impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. Included in these funding provisions are several set-asides for tribal governments. For more than two decades, the National Indian Gaming Association has advocated to end federal programs that force tribal governments to seek “pass-through” funding from the states, and instead establish set-asides that provide direct funding to Indian tribes. The set-asides included in the American Rescue Plan set historic precedent for all of Indian Country and strengthen tribal sovereignty as well as the respect for the governmental status of Indian tribes. Federal resources delivered to tribes through the American Rescue Plan seek to address the root causes for the disparate health and economic impacts of the pandemic on Native communities. The Rescue Plan includes a revised version of the Coronavirus Relief Fund – renamed the Fiscal Recovery Fund, a third round of the Paycheck Protection Program, and a tribal set-aside from the reauthorized Small Business Credit Initiative. The law also provides more than $6 billion to improve Indian health care systems - including vaccine distribution, telehealth and other health and mental health care-related needs; $1.1+ billion for Native education programs; more than $1 billion for tribal child care programs; more than $1 billion for Indian housing, rental assistance and assistance to homeowners; $900 million for BIA programs and services focused on child welfare, social services, and public safety; and $20 million to address the impacts on Native languages and the need for increased language preservation programs; among many other resources. The items listed below provide a more detailed description of major tribal provisions and set-asides included in the American Rescue Plan. Key Tribal Provisions in the American Rescue Plan $20 billion set-aside for Tribal governments in the Fiscal Recovery Fund. The largest program for Indian tribes is the Coronavirus Fiscal Recovery Funds (FRF)(formerly the CARES Act - Coronavirus Relief Fund (CRF)). The $20 billion set aside for Tribal governments represents 5.7 percent of the total amount of funding that will be distributed to all governments under the Fiscal Recovery Fund. The Fiscal Recovery Fund, like the CRF, allocates funding to tribal, state, and territorial governments. The FRF improves on the former provision by clarifying that funding will only be allocated to federally recognized tribal governments. The FRF definition of “Indian tribe” removes the confusing reference to the Indian Self-Determination Act, and instead references the Federally Recognized Tribal List Act. Importantly, the use of FRF funding is more flexible to better respect the local decision-making of governments to respond to the health and economic impacts of the pandemic. The Rescue Plan’s FRF appropriated $20 billion to Tribal governments. It directs the Treasury Department to allocate $1 billion equally among each of the eligible Tribal governments. The remaining $19 billion shall be allocated in a manner determined by the Secretary of the Treasury. The Treasury Department is distributing the $20 billion to Tribal governments in two rounds. The first round of funding, totaling $13.1 billion has been allocated based on tribal population >Page 1 Page 2 Page 3 Page 4 Page 5 Page 6 Page 7 Page 8 Page 9 Page 10 Page 11 Page 12 Page 13 Page 14 Page 15 Page 16 Page 17 Page 18 Page 19 Page 20 Page 21 Page 22 Page 23 Page 24 Page 25 Page 26 Page 27 Page 28 Page 29 Page 30 Page 31 Page 32 Page 33 Page 34 Page 35 Page 36 Page 37 Page 38

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