Leaf
Main Menu
Home
BLOG
The News
Streaming News
Native View TV
YouTube Videos
Tribal Sites VT
Tribal News VT
VCNAA Commission
VCNAA Members
Lake Champlain
Heritage
Arts / Crafts
Environment
VT GOV Sites
Contact Us
Links
Search
Translate the Entire Web Site


Abenaki Language
Online Dictionary of The Western Abenaki Language and Radio.
Alliance for Abenaki Basketmakers
The Story and Membership Application Form
'Moccasin Tracks' Community Radio
Radio Free Vermont!
Youth in Transition
Anywhere In Vermont 211 can Help
 Vermont 211 , United Ways of Vermont
If you are in a Crisis
    A 24-hour, toll-free suicide prevention service
Green Mountain Care
Administrator

Design
Lavinya
Leaf Home arrow The News arrow National News arrow Cobell settlement stumbles in Senate
Cobell settlement stumbles in Senate
Written by Administrator   
Saturday, 03 July 2010
Cobell settlement stumbles in Senate
By Rob Capriccioso
Story Published: Jul 2, 2010


WASHINGTON – Any last-minute hopes that the Cobell settlement could pass the Senate as part of a tax extenders package before the Independence Day congressional recess have proven futile.

Sen. Majority Leader Harry Reid admitted June 30 that the settlement could not pass as part of the package on the table at the time. He blamed Republicans for blocking the overall bill.

Jon Summers, a spokesman for Reid, said senators would work through the Fourth of July recess to develop a “compromise package” including the settlement “that can garner enough Republican support for passage.”

The death of Cobell as part of the extenders measure has now happened more than once.

First, the week of June 21, Republicans filibustered an effort to have the extenders bill passed with Cobell attached. GOP leaders said the overall bill should be paid for, and Senate Committee on Indian Affairs Vice Chairman John Barrasso, R-Wyo., thought the settlement should be amended to address several Indian country concerns, including lawyers’ fees. The following week, hope was kept on life support for some who want the agreement approved after Reid said he would revive a vote via a pared down bill.

But after Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., died June 28, passage of a bigger bill, even pared down, became all the more difficult with one less Democratic supporter.

Senate leaders soon began trimming the legislation to get Republican votes to help them reach the 60 needed for passage. In turn, the Cobell settlement was struck from the extenders package.

Whether it can be placed back in after the Independence Day recess remains to be seen, but given the uncertainness of passage of the larger legislation, some supporters are looking for another piece of legislation to attach it to.

On top of that burden, the latest deadline for congressional approval agreed to by the Indian plaintiffs in the case and the Obama administration is July 9. Congress won’t return from recess until after that date, which means that another extension will have to be considered. Five extensions have already been granted.

Dennis Gingold, lead lawyer for the Indian plaintiffs, said June 30 that a new piece of legislation would likely be needed to achieve Senate passage.

“Reportedly, the bill has been gutted and it is reduced to only 13 pages. We, along with many other provisions have been cut from the bill. We are looking into other must-pass bills.”

Some observers speculated that Senate leaders may try to move Cobell to a small business bill being crafted, but Reid’s office could not say if that was a possibility.

The House passed a version of the legislation with Cobell attached just before the Memorial Day recess. That action would be meaningless in terms of the extenders bill if it remains cut out of the Senate package, and the settlement would have to find a new legislative vehicle to become law, or pass muster as a stand-alone measure.

The Obama administration deal calls for a $3.4 billion settlement to thousands of Indian plaintiffs who have been suing the federal government for years due to alleged royalty mismanagement.

Some Congress members have said they have problems with Cobell being attached to another piece of legislation, rather than being voted on as a stand-alone bill.

The House legislation is known as the American Jobs and Closing Tax Loopholes Act of 2010.

http://www.indiancountrytoday.com/home/content/97663089.html

 
< Prev   Next >
Make this a favorite RSS
Super Bookmark It !
Share this Page
 
Search this Site
Who's Online
We have 32 guests online
 How do I get my company on this website
Transformative Counseling Services, LLC
Basketmakers Alliance
The Story and Membership Application Form
Juice Plus+®
Western Abenaki Baskets
Western Abenaki Baskets .com
ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES
 MEDICAL AND MENTAL HEALTH TRANSCRIPTION SERVICES
LAUGHING COUPLE
Native American Storytelling
           
Morningstar Studio
Micnaki Trading Post
Rhonda Besaw.com
Traditional and contemporary beadwork
VT Speciality Foods
 VT Speciality Foods
The Bad Black Dog
The Bad Black Dog Online Store
Website Managed by "The Doctor"   Beautiful template designed by Lavinya  Template Valid w3c XHTML 1.0