JOB: Colville Staff Attorney

STAFF ATTORNEYS (TWO POSITIONS)
OFFICE OF THE RESERVATION ATTORNEY

The Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation seeks to fill two positions in its Office of Reservation Attorney (ORA). Candidates for either position must possess particular experience and expertise in Indian Law; experience working for a tribal government is preferred. One position requires at least two years experience as a licensed attorney; the other requires at least eight years experience as a licensed attorney.

The Colville Reservation, with headquarters in Nespelem, Wash., contains 1.4 million acres and provides its attorneys the opportunity to work on significant jurisdictional, natural resources and sovereignty issues, among other areas, and to become engaged in a variety of interesting and important legal matters. ORA is one of the oldest on-reservation tribal government law offices (established in 1981), with a strong tradition of excellence.

Applicants must be admitted to practice before the Washington State Courts upon hire or within one year of hire. Applicants should have extensive civil litigation experience in federal courts and be able to perform all litigation tasks. Exceptionally strong research and writing skills are required. Otherwise strongly qualified applicants with less litigation experience will be considered.

Salary is DOE, beginning at $68,000 annually for an attorney with two years of experience, and increasing thereafter based upon additional years of experience. Generous health and retirement benefits are provided.

The position is open until filled, but applications must be submitted by March 1, 2009, to be considered for the first round of interviews. Please submit cover letter, resume listing at least three references, and writing sample to Alice Koskela, Managing Attorney, Office of the Reservation Attorney, P.O. Box 150, Nespelem, WA 99155.

ORA is an Indian Preference employer, and Native American attorneys are encouraged to apply.

Tsosie contributes to book on Indigenous Rights

Tsosie contributes to book on ‘Indigenous Rights’

Rebecca Tsosie Rebecca Tsosie, executive director of the Indian Legal Program, has contributed a paper on “Indigenous Treaty Rights: Sacred obligations, Intercultural Justice and the Discourse of Treaty Rights,” to a book, Indigenous Rights, that will be published by Ashgate in April.

“Throughout the world, indigenous rights have become increasingly prominent and controversial,” states the book’s description. “The recent adoption by the United Nations General Assembly of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples is the latest in a series of significant developments in the recognition of such rights across a range of jurisdictions.

“The papers in this collection address the most important philosophical and practical issues informing the discussion of indigenous rights over the past decade or so, at both the international and national levels. Its contributing authors comprise some of the most interesting and influential indigenous and non-indigenous thinkers presently writing on the topic.”

The book is edited by Anthony J. Connolly, of the Australian National University.

Upcoming College of Law events

Statutory Interpretation from Blackstone to Scalia and Beyond – CLE
Friday, February 6, 20092:00 PM – 5:00 PMDowntown Justice Center
620 W. Jackson St.
Phoenix, AZ More Information

Utah Alumni Reception
Friday, February 6, 2009
5:00 PM – 6:30 PM
Hosted by Alumnus Gordon Campbell, Esq. College of Law Class Year 1972
At the Law Firm of Parsons Behle & Latimer, PLC 201 South Main Street, Suite 1800
Salt Lake City, UT 84111 RSVP for Event

DNA Database Woes and the Birthday Problem
Speaker: David Kaye, Professor of Law, Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law
Tuesday, Feb. 17, 200912:10 PM – 1:00 PM Armstrong Hall, Room 114
Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law

2nd Annual William C. Canby Lecture
Speaker: Diane Enos, President of the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community
Tuesday, February 17, 20094:30 PM – 6:00 PM
Armstrong Hall, Great Hall
Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law
RSVP for Event

1st Annual Edward J. Shoen Leading Scholars Lecture
Speaker: Paul H. Robinson, Colin S. Diver Professor of Law at the University of Pennsylvania Law SchoolThursday, Feb. 26, 200912:00 PM – 1:30 PM
Armstrong Hall, Great HallSandra Day O’Connor College of Law
RSVP for Event

The Importance of Intellectual Property in Advancing Science
Speaker: Rod Fuller, Esq., Fennemore Craig
Thursday, Feb. 26, 200912:10 PM – 1:00 PM Armstrong Hall, Room 114
Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law

Health Care Entrepreneurism: Legal Challenges
Speaker: Dr. John Shufeldt, NextCare
Tuesday, March 3, 200912:10 PM – 1:00 PM Armstrong Hall, Room 114
Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law
2009 Rocky Mountain Legal Writing ConferenceMarch 13-15, 2009 Armstrong HallSandra Day O’Connor College of LawMore Information

Arizona Supreme Court Oral Arguments
Tuesday, March 24, 20098:30 AM – 1:30 PM Armstrong Hall, Great Hall
Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law

John P. Morris Memorial Lecture
Topic: The Meaning of the Obama Candidacy to Lawyers of Color and to all Americans
Tuesday, March 31, 20095:00 PM – 6:30 PM Armstrong Hall, Faculty Center
Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law

Indian Legal Program Alumni & Friends Reception
Thursday, April 2, 20095:30 PM – 7:00 PM Buffalo Thunder Resort & CasinoSante Fe, NM
For more information, please contact Kate Rosier at 480-965-6204

Forensic Science for the 21st Century: The National Academy Sciences Report and Beyond
April 3-4, 2009
Armstrong Hall
Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law
More Information

13th Annual Willard H. Pedrick Lecture
Speaker: The Honorable Harry T. Edwards, Senior Circuit Judge, Chief Judge Emeritus of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
Friday, April 3, 20091:00 PM – 2:00 PM Armstrong Hall, Great HallSandra Day O’Connor College of Law

Class of 1998 Reunion
Saturday, April 4, 20096:00 PM – 10:00 PM
Old Main
Arizona State University
For information please contact Ann Snider at 480-965-5290 or ann.snider@asu.edu

Hooked: Legal and Ethical Implications of Recent Advances in Alcohol and Drug Addiction Research Conference
Friday, April 10, 2009
8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
Sandra Day O’Connor U.S. Courthouse
401 W. Washington St.
Phoenix, AZ
More Information

March 17-18, 2009 Workshop on NEPA in Indian Country
International Institute for Indigenous Resource Management
444 South Emerson Street
Denver, Colorado 80209-2176
Phone: (303) 733-0481; FAX: (303) 744-9808
E-Mail: iiirm@iiirm.org Website: www.iiirm.org

A Workshop on the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) in Indian Country Designed for Tribal Council Members, Attorneys, Natural and Cultural Resource Specialists and environmental Protection Professionals and Federal Agency Personnel and Contractors Working in Indian Country

March 17-18, 2009 Radisson Hotel Denver Stapleton Plaza
3333 Quebec Street
Denver, Colorado

Applied to the Colorado Supreme Court for Continuing Legal Education Credit

The National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) can be an important part of federal agency consultation with Indian tribes. However, effective tribal participation in the NEPA process requires an awareness of the workings and procedural requirements of NEPA, technical expertise, knowledge of the broad range of tribal environmental, social, cultural, health and safety interests that March be affected by federal programs and activities and a strategy that links NEPA responses to other legal and statutory requirements such as the federal-Indian trust doctrine, treaty rights, AIRFA, NAGPRA, etc. This Workshop will provide practical instruction and assistance to inform tribal decision-makers on: the requirements and latest developments in NEPA compliance and litigation; the role of tribal, federal and state regulators in the NEPA process; and strategies to identify and protect tribal interests that March be affected by
proposed federal actions.

Preliminary Agenda
March 17, 2009
8:15 a.m. Registration, Coffee and Continental Breakfast
9:00 a.m. Welcome and Introductions Mervyn L. Tano, International Institute for Indigenous Resource Management
9:30 a.m. Small Group Exercise
10:15 a.m. History and Overview of NEPA James “Skip” Spensley, Spensley & Associates
10:30 a.m. NEPA as a Tribal Environmental Protection and Development Strategy Mervyn L. Tano
11:30 a.m. Break
11:45 a.m. An Approach to Identifying Tribal Interests Affected by Proposed Federal Actions Mervyn L. Tano
12:30 p.m. Lunch (on your own)
1:30 p.m. Planning for NEPA: What Tribes Need to Know About Federal Agencies, What Federal Agencies Need to Know About Tribes Mervyn L. Tano
2:30 p.m. The Environmental Impact Statement: The Process James “Skip” Spensley
4:30 p.m. Adjourn

March 18, 2009
8:30 a.m. Registration, Coffee and Continental Breakfast
9:00 a.m. Content of the EIS: Making Sure it’s Adequate James “Skip” Spensley
10:00 a.m. Assessing Cumulative Impacts Mervyn L. Tano
10:45 a.m. Break
11:00 a.m. Tribes as Cooperating Agencies: Issues and Opportunities Mervyn L. Tano
11:30 a.m. Other Issues including Programmatic EIS, Environmental Justice, etc. James “Skip” Spensley and Mervyn L. Tano
12:30 p.m. Lunch (on your own)
1:30 p.m. Indigenous Approaches to Adaptive Management Mervyn L. Tano
2:10 p.m. Strategic Approaches to NEPA Requirements James “Skip” Spensley Mervyn L. Tano
2:40 p.m. Small Group Exercise
4:15 p.m. Adjourn

Workshop Faculty:
James W. “Skip” Spensley is one of the nation’s experts on the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA) working with its requirements from numerous perspectives including administrative, legislative, judicial, and project development. Mr. Spensley served as staff to the President’s Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) in 1970 after NEPA was first enacted. He assisted in preparing the first CEQ guidelines on environmental impact statement (EIS) preparation. He subsequently worked with an environmental law firm in Alexandria, Virginia where he litigated NEPA cases. In 1974, Mr. Spensley worked for a transportation and consulting firm which managed one of the largest urban transportation projects in New York where he was the architect of the EIS for the West Side Highway Project in New York City. In 1975, Mr. Spensley was hired by the United States House of Representatives to act as Legal Counsel to the Subcommittee responsible for NEPA. During his tenure there, he was responsible for writing the first and only amendment to NEPA in 1975. In 1984, The Marchor of Denver hired Mr. Spensley to manage the preparation of the EIS for Denver’s new international airport, the largest land area commercial airport in the world. Between 1989 and 1995, he has consulted with numerous large-scale projects concerning their NEPA requirements including among others the Vail Ski Area Expansion project; the Department of Energy’s Technology Integration Program; the E-470 Toll Road Project in Denver; and the Rocky Flats Site Wide Environmental Impact Statement. Since 1995, Mr. Spensley has provided consulting and project management services to the Colorado Department of Transportation, the City and County of Broomfield, the Seattle Port Authority, Will County Illinois on the 3rd Chicago South Suburban Airport project and several private company clients concerning environmental documents related to major transportation and development projects. Mr. Spensley has lectured on environmental law and NEPA at both the University of Colorado and the University of Denver in the law schools and other graduate programs since 1982. He is the author of the NEPA Compliance Manual for federal managers and author of the NEPA Chapter in the Environmental Law Handbook (Editions 12-16) for Government Institutes. He conducts regular annual national workshops on NEPA and the EIS process.

Mervyn L. Tano Mervyn L. Tano, Esq. is an attorney and the president of the International Institute for Indigenous Resource Management. He earned his Bachelor of Arts Degree in History from the Church College of Hawaii, Masters Degree in Education from the University of Arizona and the Juris Doctor Degree from the J. Reuben Clark Law School at Brigham Young University. Mr. Tano has extensive experience working with Indian tribes and includes, as a small sample: assisting the Confederated tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation establish a comprehensive water quality management system; helping the Nez Perce tribe establish the tribal environmental restoration and waste management department to oversee the cleanup of Department of Energy facilities at Hanford; and, advising the Oglala Sioux tribe on solid waste management issues. Mr. Tano has been a member of several national advisory boards including EPA’s Federal Facilities Environmental Restoration Dialogue Committee, the National Environmental Justice Advisory Council, DOE Office of Science and Technology’s Community Leaders Network, the National Academy of Public Administration’s committee on intergenerational responsibility and the National Research Council’s committee on priority setting, timing and staging of DOE’s environmental management activities. Mr. Tano has written numerous papers, articles and manuals on risk, environmental justice, environmental restoration, technology development, environmental law and radioactive waste management, and has written extensively on tribal strategies for NEPA responses.

Workshop Logistics:
All workshop sessions will be held at the Radisson Hotel Denver Stapleton Plaza, 3333 Quebec Street, Denver, Colorado. Rooms are available to workshop attendees at the special rate of $89.00 (single or double) per night. For reservations, call the Radisson Hotel Denver Stapleton Plaza at 303-317-3500 or 1-800-333-3333. Be sure to mention the “IIIRM NEPA in Indian Country Workshop” and make your reservation by April 20, 2009, to qualify for the special rate.

Registration Information:
Registration Fee: Early registration (until February 28, 2009) is $395.
After that date registration is $450. Tuition includes morning and afternoon coffee service and one copy of the workshop materials. For information on multiple registrations from one tribe, or other information, call the International Institute for Indigenous Resource Management at 303-744-9686. Please fill out the registration form and send it and your check or purchase order to: IIIRM, 444 South Emerson Street, Denver, CO 80209-2176; or FAX to: 303-744-9808.

The International Institute for Indigenous Resource Management
444 South Emerson Street, Denver, Colorado 80209-2176
Workshop on the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) in Indian Country Radisson Hotel Denver Stapleton Plaza, 3333 Quebec Street, Denver, Colorado March 17-18, 2009

To pay by credit card or electronic check, please call Jeanne Rubin at 303-744-9686. A small on-line convenience fee applies.

If you no longer wish to receive these notices please send an e-mail message with “Unsubscribe” on the Subject line to mervtano@iiirm.org.

Mervyn L. Tano, President
International Institute for Indigenous Resource Management
444 South Emerson Street
Denver, Colorado 80209-2216 U.S.A.
Phone: +1 303-733-0481; FAX: +1 303-744-9808; Mobile: +1 720-341-4755
E-mail: mervtano@iiirm.org; Website: www.iiirm.org

Mervyn L. Tano, President
International Institute for Indigenous Resource Management
444 South Emerson Street
Denver, Colorado 80209-2216 U.S.A.
Phone: +1 303-733-0481; FAX: +1 303-744-9808; Mobile: +1 720-341-4755
E-mail: mervtano@iiirm.org; Website: www.iiirm.org

Diane Enos: Canby Lecture 2/17

The Second Annual
William C. Canby Lecture

presented by the Indian Legal Program

“Tribal Governance and Individual Rights: the Delicate Balance of Power and Alarm”

Diane Enos, President
Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community

Tuesday, February 17, 2009
4:30 p.m.
Great Hall, Armstrong Hall
Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law

Diane Enos is the 23rd President of the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community and the second woman elected to this office. She is the daughter of Naomi and Johnson Enos, and the great granddaughter of Jose Anton, one of the leaders for the Pima communities at the time of the Indian Reorganization Act.

As a trailblazer for the community, President Enos became the first member of the Salt River Indian Community to become a lawyer. As a Senior Trial Attorney, Enos practiced in the Maricopa County Public Defender’s Office for 11 years.

Enos has spent her entire professional life in community service, is dedicated to promoting education for the Salt River Pima-Maricopa people and in creating new opportunities for traditional O’odham (Pima) and Piipaash (Maricopa) life to flourish within the Community.

She avidly supports small business and believes that tribal government has a responsibility to plan for development by creating synergies so all Community members can share in the financial gain. In the near future, she hopes to encourage more small business owners to become vendors, employers and “vision-creators” for the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community to enhance the social, economic and cultural foundation of the Community.

Prior to being elected President, Enos served on the Council for the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community for sixteen years serving four terms. She was first elected to Council while a second-year law student at Arizona State University. She became interested in law and politics while working as a news reporter, covering the proposed Pima Freeway for the “Scottsdale Progress” newspaper.

Enos graduated law school in 1992, becoming a member of the Arizona State Bar the same year. After graduating law school, she worked at a small Phoenix law firm and practiced primarily immigration and civil law. She had also graduated cum laude with a bachelor’s degree in Fine Arts from ASU and planned to pursue a career as an artist. Five of her paintings hang in the Sacaton hospital on the Gila River Indian Community, and in New York and Maine.

Currently, in her position as President, Enos also serves as the Chair of the Maricopa County Association of Governments Domestic Violence Committee, member of the Tribal Justice Advisory Group to the U.S. Department of Justice Tribal Justice Programs, is a member of the Executive Committee for the Intertribal Council of Arizona, and Secretary for the Executive Committee of the Arizona Indian Gaming Association.

JOB: Native Public Media

Policy Analyst for Native Public Media

CONSULTANT TITLE: Policy Analyst

Summary Statement and Job Description:
The Native Public Media (“NPM”) Policy Analyst (“PA”) will carry out analysis, drafting of key policy position statements and assist client-driven research. The PA will also track policy and legal/legislative developments; assess strategic options for NPM; participate in policy related project evaluation and development; analyze the development and implementation policy-related projects; manage and write reports and other documents (internal, client-related, and publications); and assist client to prepare for hill visits, meetings with the Federal Communications Commission (“FCC” or “Commission”) or Congressional leaders.

The PA will work directly with the NPM Executive Director on strategic planning, management of client work products, policy related projects, report development, and other responsibilities as assigned.

Subject areas encompass FCC rulemakings, Congressional legislation, testimony, briefings, brown papers, and other policy initiatives.

Minimum Job Qualifications:
Graduate degree in public policy or Indian law. Familiarity and experience in one or more of the following areas: Federal Communications Commission policy, Communications policy, Indian policy, Media policy and Telecommunications policy.
Superior research, writing, and analytical skills.
Strong computer literacy.
Ability to assume initiative, work independently, and work as part of a team.

To Apply:
Consultant will be on a month retainer. Resumes may be sent to jobs@nativepublicmedia.org. Electronic submissions are preferred. Closing date is February 13, 2009.

Native Public Media
Native Public Media (NPM) promotes healthy, engaged, independent Native communities by strengthening and expanding Native American media capacity and by empowering a strong, proud Native American voice. More information about NPM, a project of the National Federation of Community Broadcasters, can be found at www.nativepublicmedia.org.

2nd Annual NABA-AZ Golf Tournament

2nd Annual NABA-AZ Golf Tournament
March 22, 2009 at 1:00 p.m.
Course Information:
Whirlwind Golf Club
5692 W. North Loop Rd.
Chandler, Arizona, 85226
(480) 940- 1500

Our Purpose:
With the cost of tuition rising each year, Native law students are finding it increasingly difficult to afford law school. The financial burdens of law school can prevent and delay legal education of many Native American law students who often are supporting their families while pursuing their law degrees. That is why, starting in 2008, NABA-AZ proudly began its efforts to assist Native law students in Arizona with managing the burden of the increasingly high cost of tuition. In March 2008, NABA-AZ held the first annual golf tournament benefiting Native law students. Our first event was a great success, drawing more than 72 golfers and raising enough money to provide book scholarships to needy Native law students! With your support at our 2nd Annual Tournament we believe we can provide more students with even more substantial financial assistance towards educations costs.

For More Information Contact:
Steve Bodmer
Phone: (480) 889-8990
E-mail: sbodmer@rosettelaw.com

or

Sheri Freemont
Phone: (480) 362-5412
E-mail: sheri.freemont@srpmic-nsn.gov

FEES:
Foursome: $500, Individual $125.00

Entry fee includes:
green fees, cart, a “Closest to the Pin “and “Long Drive” entry, and dinner.
Four-Person scramble format.

MAIL REGISTRATION FORM AND CHECK PAYABLE TO NABA-AZ
C/O Steve Bodmer
565 W. Chandler Blvd #212
Chandler, AZ 85225