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Modoc tribal meeting is Friday
Separation proposal will be discussed
By LEE
JUILLERAT, Herald and News 1/27/10
A group of Modocs
interested in terminating their political relationship
with the Klamath Tribes will host an informational
meeting Friday in the Klamath County Government Center.
The meeting starts
at 6:30 p.m.. in the hearing room.
About 30 Modocs, who
are members of the Klamath Tribes, attended an inaugural
meeting in October on a proposal to create a new Modoc
tribal unit, according to Perry Chesnut, an adopted
member of the Modoc Tribe. He said Friday’s meeting is
for those who want to learn more about the separation
movement.
Chesnut said Modocs
need to end 136 years of subservience to the Klamaths.
“The only practical
way to preserve the Modoc Tribe’s unique ethnic and
cultural identity, and protect and advance the Modoc
people’s political and economic interests, is to set up
their own government, separate from that of the current
Klamath tribal government,” he said.
Since that meeting,
he said,
some Modocs have gathered about 60 signatures supporting
a proposal to create a Modoc tribal government.
At Friday’s meeting,
M. Sean Manion, a Modoc who is a civil engineer and has
spent the last seven years in Iraq managing various
rebuilding projects, will present an economic
development model used for Arab tribes in Iraq.
Manion believes
the model can be used by tribal entities, including the
Modocs, to create large tribally owned enterprises as
well as smaller, individually owned business ventures.
Manion plans to
discuss eligibility for tribal membership by contrasting
the blood quantum standard now used by the Klamath
Tribes with the lineal descent standard being used by
some other tribes.
“I’m going to talk
about the kind of businesses we could have given our
land base,” Chesnut said, including the possibility of a
casino resort near the Modoc Point area.
He also will present
a map of Modoc ancestral lands ceded to the government
in the Lakes Treaty of 1864 and discuss opportunities
for economic development on those lands and the
potential restoration of wetlands that constituted Lower
Klamath Lake, Tule Lake and Clear Lake prior to
reclamation projects of the early 1900s.
Chesnut and Manion will be available for
a question and answer session following their
presentations.
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