U.S. President Joe Biden and other Cabinet officials will
announce the measures at this year's two-day Tribal Nations
Summit, with additional steps focused on providing better access
to capital for tribal nations, the White House said.
Biden's three signature piece of legislation - laws dealing with
infrastructure, climate and COVID-19 relief - have provided
nearly $46 billion in funding for tribal communities and Native
American people, the White House said.
The actions include new uniform standards for how federal
agencies should consult Native American tribes and the addition
of the Commerce Department to agreements promoting the
co-stewardship of federal lands, waters, fisheries and other
resources of significance and value to tribes.
Federal agencies will also be instructed to recognize and
include indigenous knowledge in federal research, policy, and
decision-making, by elevating tribal "observations, oral and
written knowledge, practices, and beliefs" that promote
environmental sustainability.
The Small Business Administration will announce plans to boost
access to financing opportunities, while the Energy Department
plans to increase federal agencies’ use of tribal energy through
purchasing authority established under a 2005 law unused for
more than 17 years.
The administration will also work to deploy EV infrastructure in
tribal lands, prioritize the replacement of diesel school buses
with low or zero emission school buses, and help tribes buy or
lease EV fleet vehicles.
As part of that drive, the Interior Department will set a goal
to award 75% of contract dollars from Indian Affairs agencies
and 10% of the department's remaining contract dollars to
Native-owned businesses. Along with a new Indian Health Service
goal of 20% of purchases, the actions could redirect hundreds of
millions of dollars to businesses in Indian country.
The government will also release of a draft 10-year plan to
revitalize Native American languages and underscores the urgency
for immediate action, while formally recognizing the role that
the U.S. government played in erasing Native languages.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Robert Birsel)
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