Legislature(2019 - 2020)CAPITOL 106

05/07/2019 08:30 AM House TRIBAL AFFAIRS

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08:32:57 AM Start
08:33:29 AM Presentation(s): State and Tribal Consultation Opportunities
09:52:40 AM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ Presentation: State and Tribal Consultation TELECONFERENCED
Opportunities
                    ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE                                                                                  
           HOUSE SPECIAL COMMITTEE ON TRIBAL AFFAIRS                                                                          
                          May 7, 2019                                                                                           
                           8:32 a.m.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative Tiffany Zulkosky, Chair                                                                                          
Representative John Lincoln                                                                                                     
Representative Dan Ortiz                                                                                                        
Representative Chuck Kopp                                                                                                       
Representative Dave Talerico                                                                                                    
Representative Sarah Vance                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative Bryce Edgmon, Vice Chair                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
COMMITTEE CALENDAR                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
PRESENTATION(S): STATE AND TRIBAL CONSULTATION OPPORTUNITIES                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     - HEARD                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
PREVIOUS COMMITTEE ACTION                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
No previous action to record                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
WITNESS REGISTER                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MATT NEWMAN, Esq., Staff Attorney                                                                                               
Native American Rights Fund (NARF)                                                                                              
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  Provided testimony during the presentation                                                               
on state and tribal consultation opportunities.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
ELIZABETH SAAGULIK HENSLEY, Esq.                                                                                                
Landye Bennet Blumstein LLP                                                                                                     
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  Provided testimony during the presentation                                                               
on state and tribal consultation opportunities.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
NATASHA SINGH, Esq., Co-Lead Negotiator                                                                                         
Alaska Tribal Health Compact (ATHC);                                                                                            
General Counsel, Tanana Chiefs Conference (TCC)                                                                                 
Fairbanks, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:   Provided testimony during the presentation                                                              
on state and tribal consultation opportunities.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
PATRICK ANDERSON, Esq., Chief Executive Officer                                                                                 
Rural Alaska Community Action Program, Inc. (RurAL CAP);                                                                        
Member,  Alaska Federation  of  Natives  (AFN)  Council for  the                                                                
Advancement of Alaska Natives                                                                                                   
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT:   Provided testimony during the presentation                                                              
on state and tribal consultation opportunities.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
ACTION NARRATIVE                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
8:32:57 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  TIFFANY ZULKOSKY called  the  House Special  Committee on                                                              
Tribal Affairs  meeting to order  at 8:33 a.m.   Representatives                                                                
Talerico, Lincoln,  Ortiz, Vance, and  Zulkosky were  present at                                                                
the call to  order.  Representative Kopp arrived  as the meeting                                                                
was in progress.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
^PRESENTATION(S): State and Tribal Consultation Opportunities                                                                   
  PRESENTATION(S): State and Tribal Consultation Opportunities                                                              
                                                                                                                              
8:33:29 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR ZULKOSKY announced  that the only order  of business would                                                                
be presentations on state and tribal consultation opportunities.                                                                
She invited Mr. Matt Newman to speak as the first witness.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
8:34:14 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MATT NEWMAN,  Esq., Staff Attorney, Native  American Rights Fund                                                                
(NARF),  stated that  NARF  is nonprofit  law  firm that  serves                                                                
Alaska's  229  federally recognized  tribes  as  well as  tribal                                                                
individuals and  organizations.   He  said he  will  provide the                                                                
committee  with  an  overview  of what  government-to-government                                                                
consultation is, what  it means, where the idea  comes from, and                                                                
the practicalities of it in Alaska.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR.  NEWMAN noted  that tribal  consultation  and government-to-                                                                
government consultation is not a new  idea.  Its origins go back                                                                
very far and  stem from the 1600  and 1700 Law of  Nations.  The                                                                
expectation  of that  doctrine  included that  the newly  minted                                                                
United States  in the 1700s  would meet with  representatives of                                                                
other   governments  to   talk   about   mutual  interests   and                                                                
obligations.   The  Law of  Nations was  made applicable  to the                                                                
relationship of  the  United States  with Indian  tribes, tribal                                                                
nations.  Some  of the first treaties  the United States entered                                                                
as  a newly  independent nation  were with  Native  nations, not                                                                
European nations.    Language in  these early  treaties included                                                                
obligations  for business  by  the  sovereigns  that they  would                                                                
consult and meet  to negotiate with each other  on a government-                                                                
to-government basis  on issues  and concerns of  mutual interest                                                                
between the nations.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
8:37:08 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. NEWMAN said  this concept has evolved over  the centuries to                                                                
now be  the modern government-to-government consultation system.                                                                
Because it is  described and laid out  through executive orders,                                                                
court decisions, and inter-agency policies, the  notion of it is                                                                
not solely federal.   As the title implies, it  is government to                                                                
government and there  is no limitation or  restriction that that                                                                
government-to-government consultation be  solely between federal                                                                
governments.   (Indisc. - audio  difficulties) ... consultations                                                                
with city/municipal  governments throughout Alaska,  which means                                                                
state governments as well as international.  For example, on the                                                                
North  Slope  there  are  international  institutions  like  the                                                                
Whaling Commission  that involve international  meetings between                                                                
Alaska tribal  nations and  other representatives.   So,  it's a                                                                
broad category that  reflects those origins  of mutual interests                                                                
and issues that require the meeting of government officials.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
8:39:12 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. NEWMAN  explained that consultation, in  a meaningful sense,                                                                
is a process.  It  cannot be effective if it's reduced to solely                                                                
one  meeting  and  handshake.    It is  an  ongoing  process  of                                                                
gathering government  officials to  discuss topics,  to identify                                                                
areas  of  concern or  agreement.    It  can  result in  a  best                                                                
practices model  of  policy and  decision making  where multiple                                                                
levels of  government or multiple governments are  involved.  It                                                                
provides a  forum where those  governments can discuss  and work                                                                
out thorny legal issues.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR. NEWMAN  stated that  as an  attorney one of  his jobs  is to                                                                
assess and identify risk for his clients and advise as to how to                                                                
avoid those risks.   Consultation, he continued,  is powerful in                                                                
doing the same thing.  For example, the modern permitting system                                                                
for a resource development project is exceedingly complex and is                                                                
a mishmash of  federal, state, and borough ordinances.   When it                                                                
is a  complex system, particularly a legal  system like resource                                                                
development permitting,  it is  to everyone's mutual  benefit to                                                                
meet and  identify risky or  thorny issues as soon  as possible.                                                                
From a risk analysis point of view, having the decisionmakers or                                                                
the  government policymakers  in  the  room  together having  an                                                                
ongoing dialogue  is better  for everyone and  is going  to make                                                                
this complex system more efficient and work more smoothly.  That                                                                
is something that only governments can do.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
8:43:02 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. NEWMAN  pointed out  that a  common misperception  of tribal                                                                
consultation is that tribes are stakeholders or that their views                                                                
and interests  can be adequately  represented in the  written or                                                                
oral public comment process.   That perception, he advised, does                                                                
not capture, reflect, or  understand the status of a  tribe as a                                                                
government.  Consultation is therefore critical, in his opinion.                                                                
It cannot  be the case where  a borough, city, or  tribe, or the                                                                
State of Alaska can be  dismissed or told by a government agency                                                                
that its  concerns should be  written down for future  review by                                                                
the  agency.   No  one would  appreciate a  situation where  the                                                                
Fairbanks North  Star Borough was told  that the Bureau  of Land                                                                
Management (BLM) has  a project in the borough's  region and BLM                                                                
is not going to meet or talk with the borough about this project                                                                
or its  impact on  the borough's citizenry,  but the  borough is                                                                
welcome  to send  the BLM  a letter.   That  situation  would be                                                                
unacceptable by any point of view.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. NEWMAN specified that that  standard should be universal for                                                                
all  the  governments  that  operate and  exist  within  Alaska,                                                                
including  the  state's  229   tribal  governments.    They  are                                                                
operating, functioning  governments providing services  to their                                                                
citizenry.  For them to represent the interests of the citizenry                                                                
in  any arena  or  respect,  that ability  to  meet directly  to                                                                
consult on issues affecting their operations and their people is                                                                
necessary.   Consultation  by and  large  is the  means and  the                                                                
method that has  been developed in the modern legal  system.  It                                                                
provides that avenue for governments to come together to discuss                                                                
issues and  make it  ongoing because  no one  wants a  system in                                                                
which boxes can  be checked and one  meeting held.  Consultation                                                                
is  an effective  medium and  tool, but  it must  be meaningful.                                                                
Results have been  seen in Alaska and across the  U.S. that when                                                                
consultation  is  done  meaningfully the  outcomes  are  better.                                                                
Those better outcomes serve the interests of both government and                                                                
people, which is what everyone is after.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
8:47:12 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE LINCOLN requested Mr. Newman to elaborate on some                                                                
of  the   risks  he  sees  being   mitigated  through  effective                                                                
consultation on resource development and permitting.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. NEWMAN replied  that one risk is that  there are myriad laws                                                                
and  regulations that are  applicable to  and can  be  evoked by                                                                
tribes.  These are laws that go to the evaluation and protection                                                                
of  cultural resources, of  tribal  subsistence resources.   One                                                                
would like  to think that  agencies have good attorneys  who are                                                                
familiar with  these laws and  know the agency must  comply with                                                                
the provisions of  law, but that often  isn't the case.   On the                                                                
many issues that  happen in Bush Alaska,  tribal governments are                                                                
very familiar with the unique  laws because they live them every                                                                
day and must deal with them every day.  Obscure subsections of a                                                                
federal law might be an  interesting unknown thing to lawyers in                                                                
Anchorage, but  people in villages  are living with  and dealing                                                                
with them  every day and they  can provide and  do provide those                                                                
kinds  of necessary reminders  early in  the  process.   If that                                                                
consultation occurs, they  can tell folks  from federal agencies                                                                
that  there  is an  issue  that  needs  to  be addressed.    The                                                                
consequences of not  addressing have been seen time  and again -                                                                
if  a  process  gets too  far  down  the  line and  those  legal                                                                
requirements are  not  dealt with  or addressed,  it  can derail                                                                
everything and  stop the  work and the  progress that  was made.                                                                
Consultation is a  means and the method to avoid  those kinds of                                                                
situations  and  outcomes   because  government  officials  were                                                                
talking and exchanging information earlier.  That is the kind of                                                                
best practices that consultation can achieve.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
8:50:31 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  ZULKOSKY,   regarding  dispelling  misperceptions  around                                                                
tribal consultation,  requested Mr. Newman  to elaborate  on how                                                                
treating tribes as public comment stakeholders is problematic.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR.  NEWMAN  responded that  it  is  problematic at  the  outset                                                                
because it diminishes the role  of what a government is, whether                                                                
it is  a tribal,  city, or other  government.  A  stakeholder is                                                                
someone who has  stakes or "skin in the  game."  But governments                                                                
and tribal  governments are larger than  that, they play  a more                                                                
important role than  that because tribes are  not just operating                                                                
for  their  own benefit.    They  are  governments that  have  a                                                                
citizenry that they  must serve and act  on behalf of.   A tribe                                                                
seeking to  hold a consultation  session is trying  to represent                                                                
its  citizenry.   Reducing a  tribal  body politic  to the  same                                                                
treatment as a  person in Anchorage where both  have the ability                                                                
to  write  a  letter,  is  not  a system  by  which  the  tribal                                                                
government is being treated as  a government; it's being treated                                                                
as just an  organization, like, say, a Rotary club.   An analogy                                                                
would be  that no one would  find it acceptable  that an elected                                                                
city council would  be told or asked to  just participate in the                                                                
comment process and fill out a letter.  If the city council were                                                                
to  request a  meeting  with  the policymaker  at  the state  or                                                                
federal level, it  would be a situation in  which everyone would                                                                
expect that the city  council's request would be honored because                                                                
that council is working on behalf  of the people who elected the                                                                
members.  The same is true for tribal government.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
8:54:20 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE KOPP  submitted that the  task of  raising public                                                                
knowledge  and understanding  of  what  tribal governments  are,                                                                
comes back to  textbooks speaking of federalism.   It's federal,                                                                
state, and  local government  and the  separation of  powers and                                                                
there  isn't  good  discussion  of  treaties  that  didn't  have                                                                
expiration dates and  where tribes and nations  of Indian people                                                                
were recognized in  that status through treaties.   A good start                                                                
would be to have a  more conscious push to recognize the federal                                                                
layer  of  government,  and   then  the  state/tribal  layer  of                                                                
government,  and then  local  government because  in that  whole                                                                
education of  government and  separation of powers,  rarely does                                                                
the subject  of tribal  powers as they  are understood  within a                                                                
context of a government come up.   In Alaska there is the unique                                                                
situation of only one designated piece of land that belongs to a                                                                
specific group  of Indigenous  people in  Metlakatla.   Then the                                                                
state  is divided  up into  Native corporations,  but really  no                                                                
other tribes  having designated  land.  So,  the question  is in                                                                
what sense those tribes are a government without a connectedness                                                                
to a land in the sense of a tribe in a Lower 48 state.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
8:56:28 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  NEWMAN  replied that  the  answer  here  is a  unique  one.                                                                
Governments are entities  that can exercise two  forms of power,                                                                
or power over two things  - they can exercise sovereignty over a                                                                
place, and they can exercise  sovereignty over people.  With its                                                                
one-of-a-kind institutions,  Alaska has tribal  governments that                                                                
do not by and large  exercise sovereignty over a place.  But, as                                                                
confirmed by  many court  opinions and  federal and  state laws,                                                                
Alaska  has tribes  that may  exercise sovereignty  over people.                                                                
Tribal governments that existed  before the Alaska Native Claims                                                                
Settlement Act, and  after the Act,  perhaps do not have  a land                                                                
base, but they do have  a citizenry to whom they are accountable                                                                
and that  elects them  to govern.   The exercise  of sovereignty                                                                
over people  continues even with the  absence of that  land base                                                                
that is pointed to in the Lower 48 context with the creation and                                                                
boundary lines of reservation or Indian country.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
8:59:17 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR ZULKOSKY invited  Ms. Elizabeth Saagulik  Hensley to speak                                                                
as the next witness.   She noted that Ms. Hensley's law practice                                                                
focuses  on meeting  the  unique legal  needs  of Alaska  Native                                                                
corporations, tribes, and tribal nonprofits.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
8:59:29 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ELIZABETH SAAGULIK  HENSLEY, Esq., Landye Bennet  Blumstein LLP,                                                                
said the State  of Alaska has a fabulous policy  on the books in                                                                
terms  of supporting  the  government-to-government relationship                                                                
between tribes and the state and  consultation.  It goes back to                                                                
2000  with Administrative  Order No.  186  by  Governor Knowles,                                                                
followed up by  the 2001 Millennium Agreement  between the state                                                                
and tribes.  In 2017, Attorney General Jahna Lindemuth issued an                                                                
opinion establishing that the  State of Alaska understands there                                                                
are federally  recognized tribes in  Alaska, and that  the state                                                                
itself  recognizes  the  tribes  and   that  they  are  separate                                                                
sovereigns  with   inherent   sovereignty  and   subject  matter                                                                
jurisdiction  over certain  matters.    In 2018,  Administrative                                                                
Order  No. 300  stated  that it  is  a policy  of  the state  to                                                                
recognize Alaska  tribe sovereignty by  interacting and engaging                                                                
with Alaska tribes on a government-to-government basis.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
9:01:26 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. HENSLEY noted that  various administrations over the past 19                                                                
years have done work to ensure that consultations happen between                                                                
the state  and tribes because why  not have the  right people in                                                                
the  room at  the  right time  to  talk about  things of  mutual                                                                
concern?  In broader legal context, consultation as practiced in                                                                
the U.S.  is a slightly  lesser standard than the  gold standard                                                                
established by the United Nations (UN) Declaration on the Rights                                                                
of Indigenous People (DRIP).  The UN DRIP sets the gold standard                                                                
for  state interactions  with  Indigenous people.   It  requires                                                                
consultation and cooperation  in good faith  with the Indigenous                                                                
people through their own representative institutions in order to                                                                
obtain  the tribe's  free,  prior, and  informed consent  before                                                                
adopting and  implementing things  that will  impact  the tribe.                                                                
That free, prior, and informed consent element of the UN DRIP is                                                                
the gold standard.   As has been seen,  consultation in the U.S.                                                                
typically doesn't have consent on the  part of the tribes as the                                                                
desired outcome.   It  often is  a process, and  consultation is                                                                
something that will happen  to ensure that tribal considerations                                                                
are taken into account, but  it doesn't tend to require consent.                                                                
So, there  is a.  big difference between  the gold  standard and                                                                
what is done.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MS. HENSLEY said the UN  DRIP has various articles and clarifies                                                                
where  free, prior,  and  informed consent  should  happen.   It                                                                
includes the  adoption of  legislation, administrative policies,                                                                
or  things   like  the  undertaking  of   projects  that  affect                                                                
Indigenous people,  their  right to  land and  caring for  their                                                                
resources,  and so  forth.   She  said she  is  sharing this  to                                                                
provide some context on what people  and tribes in Alaska may be                                                                
asking for  in the  U.S. context versus  a global  context where                                                                
free, prior, and informed consent is mandated.  It is not to say                                                                
that Alaska's tribal  consultation is not a positive  thing.  It                                                                
is a  very positive  thing, it's a  good business decision.   It                                                                
gets  the right  people in  the right  room together  around the                                                                
table or  walking on  the land  and ensuring  that the  needs of                                                                
tribal citizens will be served by the action being contemplated.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
9:05:08 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. HENSLEY said there are  millions of examples of where tribal                                                                
consultation only makes sense  and she will provide a  few.  The                                                                
Violence Against Women Act (VAWA)  requires the state to enforce                                                                
tribal  protection  orders  as  if it  were  the  order  of  the                                                                
enforcing state.   Protection  orders are  defined as  any order                                                                
issued  "for the  purpose of  preventing violent  or threatening                                                                
acts  or  harassment against,  sexual  violence, or  contact  or                                                                
communication with or physical  proximity to, another person, or                                                                
for  the  protection of  victims  of  domestic violence,  sexual                                                                
assault, dating violence,  or stalking."   Ms. Hensley commended                                                                
the committee's  work regarding missing  and murdered Indigenous                                                                
women (MMIW).  People may be  asking what they can do to prevent                                                                
murder from being  the number three killer of  Native women such                                                                
as herself.  So, VAWA is a tool for [Native women].  How can the                                                                
section of VAWA that she just read be implemented without tribal                                                                
consultation?    How  can  the  state  implement  a  program  of                                                                
enforcing tribal protection  orders if the state  and the tribes                                                                
don't consult and  don't communicate about what  that looks like                                                                
and how to make it successful and how to ensure Native women are                                                                
safe through VAWA?   That is one arena where boots-on-the-ground                                                                
tribal consultation is critical.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
9:07:19 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS.  HENSLEY said  another  example is  hunting  and fishing,  a                                                                
subject matter that people  feel very passionately about because                                                                
they   carry   profound   physical,  cultural,   and   spiritual                                                                
components.   Many of  the cultures around  the state  don't see                                                                
fish and  game and birds as  resources to be  allocated, in many                                                                
communities they are relatives.   Tremendous amounts of conflict                                                                
arise around  fish and game allocations.   So, when it  is known                                                                
that there is  an area that  is rife with conflict,  what can be                                                                
done about it?  One thing that  can be done is to get around the                                                                
table  and consult.    The  state and  tribes  can  sit down  as                                                                
governments and discuss how to do  this better, how to make sure                                                                
that people  can hunt and  fish without feeling  like criminals,                                                                
and  how   to  make  a   system  where  people   understand  the                                                                
regulations, and where hunters are not confused because there is                                                                
such a  broad array  of regulations that  are extremely  hard to                                                                
follow.  This is an area where tribal consultation can really do                                                                
some  good things  for tribal  citizens  as well  as for  Alaska                                                                
residents.   There are  some pilots in  place where  tribes, the                                                                
state,  and the  federal  government have  sat  down and  signed                                                                
agreements to  work together  to cooperatively manage  fish; for                                                                
example, on the Kuskokwim and Yukon  rivers.  These are ways for                                                                
better serving the people of the state.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
9:09:42 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE KOPP recalled that in  2013 or 2014 the Kuskokwim                                                                
River had  a very  low run of  king salmon.   King salmon  are a                                                                
substantial  portion of  the subsistence  lifestyle of  [Native]                                                                
families on this river.   Even though the fishery was closed the                                                                
families took  salmon anyway, for which  the administration then                                                                
wrote  misdemeanor tickets.    He  asked  Ms.  Hensley how  this                                                                
debacle could have  been prevented.  In this  instance the state                                                                
and its  regulatory agency,  the Alaska  Department of  Fish and                                                                
Game (ADF&G), were managing a fishery running in direct conflict                                                                
with traditional use.  It  resulted in one group of people being                                                                
treated as  criminals for trying  to maintain a  traditional use                                                                
during a time of low returns.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MS.  HENSLEY   answered  that  that  is   exactly  where  tribal                                                                
consultation needs to happen.  Issues of resource shortage occur                                                                
around the  state periodically,  but people  still need  to eat.                                                                
Sometimes there is conflicting information about how healthy the                                                                
stock is, how accurate the counts  are, and so forth.  Sometimes                                                                
people will make the choice to continue to harvest and sometimes                                                                
they won't.  Concern about the  population of a stock is exactly                                                                
the type  of situation where  the state  would want to  call the                                                                
tribes and ask that consultation take place to figure out how to                                                                
partner to ensure that the stock  is healthy and that people get                                                                
the food  they need.   On a  couple of rivers,  communities have                                                                
taken some  significant measures when they  were concerned about                                                                
stocks  and,   through  their   tribes,  they   imposed  fishing                                                                
moratoriums on themselves;  it wasn't a state  or federal agency                                                                
coming and  saying the tribes needed  to stop fishing.   This is                                                                
exactly the time to place a phone call and get people together.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
9:13:40 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE KOPP concurred there are  other examples but said                                                                
that  one  stood   out  in  his  mind  as   a  deeply  troubling                                                                
circumstance.   Many  people  felt a  significant injustice  had                                                                
occurred but  there was a lack  of understanding of how  to move                                                                
forward.     He   surmised   there   wasn't  much   state-tribal                                                                
consultation at that time.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS. HENSLEY  replied it has been  seen that when  people come to                                                                
the  table, they  can hammer  out an  agreement  for cooperative                                                                
management.   When the  Kuskokwim fishery crashed,  an agreement                                                                
for  cooperative management  was  hammered  out  and people  are                                                                
implementing it.  It hasn't been  an easy thing, but people have                                                                
been trying to  stay the course and work  together.  People have                                                                
very  different perspectives  on  those types  of  things.   The                                                                
people  who  were  fishing   probably  had  a  wildly  different                                                                
perspective  from the  enforcement  officer  who  gave them  the                                                                
ticket.  Getting  to the table to  ensure all those perspectives                                                                
are shared before people get penalized, or fish when they aren't                                                                
supposed to, is a very beneficial thing to do.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
9:15:28 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  ZULKOSKY  asked  whether  lack  of  state  law  requiring                                                                
consultation  precludes  the  state   from  engaging  in  tribal                                                                
consultation.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MS. HENSLEY responded, "Absolutely not ...  you don't need a law                                                                
that says you  have to consult."  It is  something inherent in a                                                                
sovereign entity.   The  state  is a  sovereign, the  tribes are                                                                
sovereign; they  can consult.   There is nothing  that precludes                                                                
that in  the state constitution  or any state  laws.  It  is 100                                                                
percent permissible.  She offered her belief that had there been                                                                
a constitutional problem,  Governor Knowles, his administration,                                                                
and  his  legal  advisors  would  not  have  put  in  place  the                                                                
Millennium Agreement; Attorney General Jahna Lindemuth would not                                                                
have issued  an opinion that conflicted  with state constitution                                                                
or state  law; nor would Governor  Walker's Administrative Order                                                                
No.  300  have  been   put  in  place  mandating  government-to-                                                                
government consultation.  She noted that Governor Walker himself                                                                
is an attorney and that he  had a fleet of lawyers advising him,                                                                
and she doesn't  imagine he would have done  something in direct                                                                
conflict with the state constitution or laws.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
9:17:36 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR ZULKOSKY  invited Ms. Natasha Singh  to speak as  the next                                                                
witness.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
9:17:49 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
NATASHA SINGH,  Esq., Co-Lead  Negotiator, Alaska  Tribal Health                                                                
Compact (ATHC); General Counsel, Tanana Chiefs Conference (TCC),                                                                
said she will  discuss the collaboration between [Alaska tribes]                                                                
and the [federal] Indian Health  Service (IHS) and the [federal]                                                                
Department of  Health and Human  Services (HHS), how  that plays                                                                
out in Alaska, and  how this consultation, negotiation, and work                                                                
group with Indian Health Service plays out.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS.  SINGH stated  that  tribal self-determination  is the  only                                                                
policy in U.S. history that  has been successful.  It recognizes                                                                
that Native people know best how to solve their own problems and                                                                
implement programs in  their communities.  It  was championed by                                                                
President  Nixon  and  a  Republican  Congress.    Tribal  self-                                                                
determination has historically been bipartisan and has developed                                                                
over the decades since passage of the [Indian Self-Determination                                                                
and Education Assistance Act  in 1975].  It is  where things are                                                                
today  with the  Alaska tribes  fully taking  over  the services                                                                
provided to the tribes by the Indian Health Service.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
9:20:00 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. SINGH  explained that  the tribes in  Alaska were  offered a                                                                
demonstration  project.    Rather than  competing  against  each                                                                
other,  the  tribes decided  in  the  1990s  to come  under  one                                                                
demonstration so that all Alaska  tribes were under one contract                                                                
with the federal government.  [Under the ATHC], the tribes speak                                                                
with one unified voice with the Indian Health Service, which has                                                                
benefitted the  tribes.   Alaska's  tribes have  taken over  all                                                                
services and  annually negotiate the contract,  which in federal                                                                
terms is a compact, but really it comes up to an agreement where                                                                
Alaska tribes  say "yes, Indian  Health Service, we  know what's                                                                
best for our people ... you don't know what's best ... and we're                                                                
going to negotiate with you on  how we take over the authorities                                                                
and responsibilities  to do that."   In  the responsibilities of                                                                
taking over  the contracts,  [ATHC] follows  consultation policy                                                                
with  both the  IHS  and the  HHS,  each of  which has  separate                                                                
consultation policies.   There  are  negotiation rules  and work                                                                
groups,  which  isn't  necessarily consultation,  but  the  work                                                                
groups get  the  discussion going.   All  work groups  trigger a                                                                
formal consultation if necessary.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
9:22:18 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. SINGH related  that the experience of Alaska  tribes is that                                                                
on the federal side the best consultations occur starting with a                                                                
consultation policy.  The policy should be written out with both                                                                
the state  and the tribes working  on the purposes  and then the                                                                
policy  itself.   Even  if it  is  working, it  is important  to                                                                
revisit the policy for improvements.  Just this week HHS will be                                                                
revisiting its  tribal consultation policy  and the  tribal side                                                                
has many  suggestions for  improvements.  Within  a consultation                                                                
policy,  the purpose  can  be explicitly  stated.   In  renewing                                                                
consultation policies for different  agencies in preparation for                                                                
this  discussion,  the  goal  of eliminating  health  and  human                                                                
services disparities for Native people is  what stands out.  She                                                                
urged that the state focus on that goal as well and that it is a                                                                
reason why  a formal  tribal consultation  policy should  be had                                                                
outside of regular public comments.   Native people face extreme                                                                
disparities, she advised, whether it  be education, health care,                                                                
or child protection.   The state should be  hyper-focused on the                                                                
Native  population because  it should  be wanting  to fix  these                                                                
issues and asking how it can partner with the tribes to do so.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
9:24:22 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. SINGH noted that that is how consultation works with IHS and                                                                
[HHS], but negotiation  is a little different.   [The ATHC] sits                                                                
down  annually  with  the  Indian Health  Service  to  negotiate                                                                
contract language and how funding is  distributed.  It is a very                                                                
important  process of  the  relationship  as basically  Congress                                                                
mandated that IHS hire [the ATHC]  to carry out IHS services and                                                                
[the ATHC]  negotiates with IHS the  language on just how  to do                                                                
that.  Each year [the ATHC  and IHS] sit down for the equivalent                                                                
of two weeks and hammer out the language.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS.  SINGH  pointed out  that  in  addition  to negotiation  and                                                                
consultation there are work groups on  a variety of issues, such                                                                
as an  information technology  (IT) work group,  facilities work                                                                
groups,  and the  budget  formulation work  group.   The  budget                                                                
formulation  work group  is  important because  it  gets to  the                                                                
details of  how the agency  will reflect funding  from Congress.                                                                
This is in recognition  of health disparities in Indian country,                                                                
so the agency  gives a lot of  weight to what the  tribes say is                                                                
needed  to  improve these  disparities.    This kind  of  budget                                                                
formulation work  group will be  very helpful with the  State of                                                                
Alaska as the state considers its budget crisis.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MS. SINGH added that there are specific work groups for anything                                                                
a statute might require, and that the agency would like guidance                                                                
on how to implement.   For example, if the facilities work group                                                                
comes  up  with an  issue  that  it  cannot  get beyond  in  its                                                                
discussions, the work group will recommend a formal consultation                                                                
where tribes  will submit formal comments  for the record.   The                                                                
Indian Health Service will then formally review the comments and                                                                
will describe in  its report how IHS  considered each comment in                                                                
creating a  solution to  the problem  or a  new regulation.   It                                                                
makes it  very meaningful when the agency  must respond directly                                                                
to those comments.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
9:28:17 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR ZULKOSKY  recalled Ms.  Singh's description that  the best                                                                
consultations  begin  with  conversations about  a  consultation                                                                
policy and that  the policy include the purpose and  goals.  She                                                                
asked whether there are any other aspects of consultation policy                                                                
that would be helpful for the committee to know and understand.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MS. SINGH replied that because of  the large number of tribes in                                                                
Alaska it can  be difficult to effectively communicate.   So, it                                                                
is  helpful and  important for  a successful  policy to  lay out                                                                
exactly how  the consultation procedures will  happen, including                                                                
how  a tribe  will receive  notice in  the communication.   Also                                                                
important  is  to  know  the  responsibilities on  the  specific                                                                
agencies that the tribes are working with.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR ZULKOSKY  recounted Ms.  Singh's statement that  there are                                                                
negotiation rules  that are set  out between both parties.   She                                                                
requested  Ms. Singh  to  briefly describe  what  some of  those                                                                
agreements are at the front end between both parties.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS. SINGH responded that the rules have developed over time; the                                                                
rules  are  organic and  continually  being  updated each  year.                                                                
After negotiations the  tribes and the agency will  meet to talk                                                                
about what worked and what didn't work and amend the rules.  The                                                                
foundation of  negotiation is based on  good faith and  trust in                                                                
the government-to-government relations.   It sets out  the rules                                                                
of  each   player  in   the  negotiation,  including   the  lead                                                                
negotiators for the  agency and the tribes.  It  describes how a                                                                
tribe will submit a negotiation  package.  It sets out deadlines                                                                
for language  as it has been  seen that if  strict deadlines are                                                                
not adhered to  the grey area causes  angst between the parties.                                                                
It  sets out  other  rules  in the  process  of negotiation  and                                                                
timelines and sets  out the rules for  the funding tables, which                                                                
get highly technical in how funding is distributed.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
9:32:10 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. SINGH resumed her  presentation, moving to discussion of the                                                                
experiences that the Tanana Chiefs Conference (TCC) has had with                                                                
various state departments in the past.   She said one example is                                                                
how the  Office of  Children's Services  (OCS) improved  once it                                                                
grabbed ahold of the  idea that Native tribal self-determination                                                                
is  what will  work  best  for Native  people  to improve  child                                                                
protection  disparities.   She said  she  isn't sure  OCS has  a                                                                
formal tribal consultation policy, but in the past OCS has taken                                                                
discussions  with tribes  very seriously  and  really considered                                                                
tribal comments and really implemented those comments throughout                                                                
the department's policies.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS. SINGH  related that last  week TCC met  with [HHS Secretary]                                                                
Price on issues of enforcing VAWA protection orders that TCC has                                                                
had in  its region.   As  well, TCC met  with officers  from the                                                                
Alaska State  Troopers.   The informal discussion  informed both                                                                
sides of situations  and it was agreed to  have regular meetings                                                                
between  [Secretary Price]  and  TCC going  forward because  the                                                                
discussion helped  so much.   Ms. Singh expressed her  hope that                                                                
other commissioners will do the same in reaching out and working                                                                
with  tribes,  which  has  not  always been  the  case  in  past                                                                
administrations.   Without  a  formal  consultation policy  that                                                                
requires these  commissioners to meet  with tribes  and consider                                                                
their comments,  it might not  happen.  In  past administrations                                                                
the department  wouldn't even  agree to meet  with TCC  or, when                                                                
they did, they were unable to take TCC's comments seriously.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
9:35:08 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. SINGH stated that a  crisis of king salmon has also occurred                                                                
on  the Yukon  River.   The  Yukon is  perhaps one  of the  most                                                                
challenging rivers  in the nation  on which to  manage fisheries                                                                
because  the  watershed  covers  so  much  area.    Commissioner                                                                
Vincent-Lang of the Alaska Department  of Fish and Game (ADF&G),                                                                
along with  ADF&G's Yukon  River manager, met  with TCC  and the                                                                
Yukon River  communities and  only then were  they able  to have                                                                
proper  discussions and  get  the feedback  that  was needed  to                                                                
change how  the Yukon River  is managed.   Commissioner Vincent-                                                                
Lang has agreed to continue these visits this summer.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS. SINGH concluded by  stating that tribal consultation is good                                                                
government.   A tribal consultation policy  would recognize that                                                                
there are  200 tribes within the  state.  These  tribes have the                                                                
same goals that the state  does for trying to improve the health                                                                
of  Native  communities and  reverse  the  disparities that  are                                                                
faced.   Alaska Native people make  up almost 20  percent of the                                                                
state  and a  tribal  consultation policy  would recognize  that                                                                
Natives are a special population.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
9:37:48 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  ZULKOSKY invited  Mr. Patrick  Anderson to  speak as  the                                                                
final witness.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
9:38:11 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
PATRICK ANDERSON,  Esq., Chief  Executive Officer,  Rural Alaska                                                                
Community  Action  Program,  Inc. (RurAL  CAP);  Member,  Alaska                                                                
Federation  of Natives  (AFN)  Council  for  the Advancement  of                                                                
Alaska Natives, stated he will talk about the value of having an                                                                
actual discussion  with tribes.   As the Tribal  Health Director                                                                
[of the Makah  Nation] he received under the  rules of diplomacy                                                                
for Indian  country within the state  of Washington consultation                                                                
policy the authority to speak on behalf of the tribe.  Under the                                                                
protocols, if the  chairmen were present the  chairmen spoke, if                                                                
the  vice  chair or  a  council  member  were present  they  had                                                                
priority, and  when it  came to  health matters  he was,  as the                                                                
Tribal Health Director the official representative for the Makah                                                                
Nation, able  to speak  to all  matters.   The process  was very                                                                
structured.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR.  ANDERSON related  that the  Northwest Portland  Area Indian                                                                
Health Board became  the health experts.  The  board applied for                                                                
grants on behalf of the 32 tribes in the state of Washington and                                                                
did the research.  The leadership, of which he was an alternate,                                                                
consisted  of  tribally  appointed officials  who  directed  the                                                                
executive  director  of  the  board to  work  in  very  complex,                                                                
interrelated, and interdependent, matters.   The last initiative                                                                
he worked  on while there  was the Medicaid  Section 1115 Waiver                                                                
that Washington state had received.  It ended up being a process                                                                
that  involved  regular  hospitals,  health  care  institutions,                                                                
county governments, and a  variety of interrelated entities that                                                                
were dealing with  the issues of the heavy usage  of Medicaid by                                                                
Medicaid patients.  It  was basically around addressing needs on                                                                
a coordinated care basis.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
9:41:00 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. ANDERSON said  he was involved in the  policy setting of the                                                                
Indian Child  Welfare Act,  an Act  that has  been in  place for                                                                
longer than the 40 years he has been a member of the Alaska Bar.                                                                
The issue is incredibly complex and every year more is found out                                                                
about why  Indian children  do not thrive.   Recently  under the                                                                
Trump Administration  the issue  of foster  care was  dealt with                                                                
through  a  bipartisan effort.    The  goal  is to  keep  foster                                                                
children in  stable families,  preferably relatives.   Knowledge                                                                
has  advanced during the  45  years of  conversation, but  it is                                                                
because of having  that conversation.  He was on  the Tribal Law                                                                
and Order  Commission several years ago when  the commission was                                                                
dealing  with   the  Indian  Child   Welfare  Act.     He  wrote                                                                
Representative Geran Tarr's resolution of several years ago that                                                                
dealt with adverse  childhood experiences and childhood acquired                                                                
trauma.  That topic emerged in 1998 and advanced very quickly in                                                                
Washington than  in Alaska.   Washington was more  advanced than                                                                
Alaska as the result of having had conversations that brought to                                                                
light the complex issues.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
9:42:54 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. ANDERSON referenced the work of Dr. Edgar Shein, a professor                                                                
at the Sloan  School who wrote about  the concept called "humble                                                                
inquiry."  In health care it was realized that when people slide                                                                
into chronic  disease the most  important attribute that  can be                                                                
had with them is a  relationship - trust and a belief that their                                                                
medical providers have  their best interests at heart.   In that                                                                
context the concept of  motivational interviewing was coined and                                                                
the practice  of it  began in  behavioral health.   Motivational                                                                
interviewing is  the act of  asking about the best  interests of                                                                
the individual being  spoken to.  When a  relationship is formed                                                                
with a physician the patient tends to trust that physician more.                                                                
Members of this  committee spend time in discussion  and even if                                                                
discussions  are heated  committee members  have  a relationship                                                                
with each  at the  end of  day and are  able to  understand each                                                                
other's motivations and can  perhaps discuss how to collectively                                                                
come  to  the point  of  doing  something  about the  incredibly                                                                
complex relationships that people have.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR.  ANDERSON noted  that  Dr. Shein's  concept  of motivational                                                                
interviewing  changed and  Dr.  Shein  began  calling it  humble                                                                
inquiry.   Mr. Anderson  related that when  he was  a practicing                                                                
lawyer one of the  inquiries he did was cross examination, which                                                                
doesn't make anyone feel good.  Humble inquiry, he continued, is                                                                
what he believes tribal consultation should be all about.  It is                                                                
forming the relationships after successive leadership changes in                                                                
government,   including  tribal   governments,   but  having   a                                                                
foundation  where difficult  issues have  been  discussed and  a                                                                
structure has  been  established similar to  what  the Northwest                                                                
Portland Area Indian Health Board came  up with where issues can                                                                
be   discussed  without   anger  or   animosity   and  with   an                                                                
understanding of  the limited  resources that are  available and                                                                
knowledge is advanced.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR. ANDERSON  allowed he  comes at this  a bit  differently than                                                                
some  of  his   tribal  members.    He  has   been  involved  in                                                                
consultation and  one issue  was trying  to convince  the Indian                                                                
Health Service  to move away  from the old  Resource and Patient                                                                
Management System (RPMS)  Electronic Health Record (EHR)  and to                                                                
go to a commercial platform.  However, the leadership decided to                                                                
put  over $100  million  into revising  the  old RPMS  platform.                                                                
Today  he reads  that, like  the Veterans  Administration, those                                                                
platforms don't serve the needs of the customers or the patients                                                                
and moving to a commercial platform is now happening.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
9:46:07 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. ANDERSON said  humble inquiry takes an  individual away from                                                                
the belief that  he or she  knows the best answer  for solving a                                                                
complex problem.  He has lots of conversations with his staff on                                                                
how to  address some  of the  intractable issues that  are being                                                                
experienced - high  levels of alcohol addiction,  high levels of                                                                
cocaine addiction, high rates of  sexual violence, high rates of                                                                
children's violence.   A great approach is having  a platform to                                                                
discuss how to find  solutions without wagging fingers about who                                                                
is  at fault,  and that  is where  tribal consultation  can take                                                                
everyone.  Humble inquiry means accepting that there are gaps in                                                                
one's knowledge and that it takes great self-introspection and a                                                                
conversation.   Consultation goes  both ways,  but the  start is                                                                
being interested in the other's point of view.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. ANDERSON stated that as the executive director of two tribal                                                                
organizations and one  non-tribal organization over the  last 15                                                                
years,  he has  been  involved in  a  lot of  the  battles.   In                                                                
addition,  he  has  served  as  parliamentarian for  the  Alaska                                                                
Federation of Natives where policy  resolutions are made and for                                                                
the National Congress of American Indians where resolutions from                                                                
tribal representatives  are introduced.   They are  well thought                                                                
out and the organizations go into Congress they get listened to.                                                                
However, they don't  always get listened to  in consultation but                                                                
that just depends on the  individual and his or her orientation,                                                                
and by doing this a lot of problems have been addressed.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
9:47:46 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  ANDERSON  added that  he  administered  the Village  Public                                                                
Safety Officer  (VPSO) program for  several years.   While there                                                                
are great  difficulties in that program,  it is one of  the very                                                                
few presences of police authority in a community; in many places                                                                
it helps a community feel safe.  That is connected to trauma and                                                                
to a lot of negative issues that occur and to have a forum where                                                                
tribal leadership  can come in  and in  the context of  a caring                                                                
administration to actually  be heard.  Having  the structure set                                                                
up outside  consultation to  look at  and discuss  resolution of                                                                
those issues is wonderful.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. ANDERSON  said that RurAL  CAP is currently in  60 villages.                                                                
It  is very  difficult, so  he  understands the  prior testimony                                                                
about getting 229  tribes together.  In the  state of Washington                                                                
he saw tribes  come together and have  the discussions framed by                                                                
people  who were  very knowledgeable,  essential to  what [RurAL                                                                
CAP's] diplomats do today.   Ambassadors conduct a lot of [RurAL                                                                
CAP's]  formal  protocols  and   then  the  state  service,  the                                                                
diplomatic  corps, are  the  ones who  engage  in attempting  to                                                                
problem solve  and then  they bring  it back  up.   Mr. Anderson                                                                
stated it would be wonderful to  have that process, but he knows                                                                
the committee  has a hard deadline.   He urged  the committee to                                                                
think about humble  inquiry on the part  of state.  It is  not a                                                                
mandate, he  pointed out,  it is something  that comes  from the                                                                
heart  when  talking  and  trying to  find  solutions  to  these                                                                
incredibly complex problems that are faced by people every day.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
9:49:47 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE KOPP  related that he  is interested in  the time                                                                
that  Mr. Anderson  spent  with  the VPSO  program,  an area  of                                                                
special interest  to committee members.   He said  the committee                                                                
may be calling on Mr. Anderson for his thoughts on that program.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. ANDERSON replied he would like to  share his ideas.  He said                                                                
it is very difficult in a community where everyone is related to                                                                
have someone  there addressing  negative behaviors.   That  is a                                                                
complex area - there is  a huge corrections budget, but negative                                                                
relationships are not managed very well.   He reiterated that he                                                                
would be happy to discuss his experience in the future.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
9:50:47 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  ZULKOSKY  said  Mr.  Anderson's statements  about  humble                                                                
inquiry and making  sure to ask about the  best interests of the                                                                
individuals being spoken to really  resonated.  For example, the                                                                
state always wants the federal  government to ask the state what                                                                
is in  the state's  best interest.   It seems appropriate  to be                                                                
able  to  extend  that  same  type of  relationship  with  local                                                                
governments and federally recognized tribes in Alaska.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR.  ANDERSON responded  that it  is very  important  the Native                                                                
community have a  voice, but it is very  important for the state                                                                
as  well.    He served  on  the  Sealaska  Corporation board  of                                                                
directors for years and  he has represented Alaska Native Claims                                                                
Settlement Act (ANCSA) corporations.  The billions of dollars in                                                                
revenue that they bring to the total gross product for the State                                                                
of  Alaska is  critical  and  important and  it  depends on  the                                                                
sovereign relationships that Alaska tribes have with the federal                                                                
government.  It  is the same way with  the Indian Health Service                                                                
in that  huge dollar amounts  are being brought into  the state.                                                                
It is  a benefit to  the state to nurture  that relationship and                                                                
try to grow it because he believes it can be grown.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
9:52:40 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ADJOURNMENT                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
There being no further  business before the committee, the House                                                                
Special Committee  on  Tribal Affairs  meeting was  adjourned at                                                                
9:52 a.m.                                                                                                                       

Document Name Date/Time Subjects