The Supreme Court upheld the Indian Child Welfare Act. Will Utah lawmakers?

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Tribal nations and allies in Utah, and beyond, applauded the Supreme Court decision to uphold a federal law that gives them sovereignty over foster care and adoption proceedings involving Native American children.

would have contradicted the federal act and removed a number of provisions that the attorney general's office, tribal leaders and others had spent years crafting.

"I think there's enough feeling that yeah, we think it was done a little bit underhanded to not give us the appropriate time to respond — but honestly I don't know the legislators' reasons for doing it," he continued. "I had a couple of representatives say to me, 'Well, we don't do this for Black children, for Asian children for all these others and I had to point out to them that the tribes have their own sovereign nation inside of ours," Watkins said, adding that educating lawmakers on Indian law and tribal sovereignty "could be" necessary. "Some of them have really and truly don't want to know any different — seriously.

"When it comes back up next year, definitely it's going to be on our part to really continue to educate them on that government-to-government relationship," he said. "I think that if is not planning on doing it, I think it'll be up to us to try to find out who can be our champion next year. I really do appreciate her help this year."

 

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