Protecting subsistence rights and investigating prison deaths are among this year’s AFN draft resolutions

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AFN delegates will consider about 30 proposed resolutions at the federation's annual conference, set to begin Thursday in Anchorage.

Alaska Federation of Natives delegates debate a resolution on subsistence during AFN’s 2022 convention at the Dena’ina Center in Anchorage. gets underway in Anchorage on Thursday, there’s a lot of effort to prepare resolutions to be considered by the full convention.

One calls for congressional action to permanently protect the right of Alaska Natives to engage in subsistence in Alaska’s navigable waters. “Hunger is a right-to-live issue. And we have Alaska Natives, non-Alaska Natives that live in rural Alaska on the river systems that are hungry,” Borromeo said. “The river is their Carrs or Safeway, and we need to be able to prioritize the taking of fish in times of shortages, which we are in, for rural residents.”Some of the other subsistence resolutions AFN will consider is a request to the state to incorporate more traditional Indigenous ecological knowledge into its decision-making process.

 

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