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December 13, 2024

Schatz, Murkowski: Six Indian Affairs Bills for Native Lands, Buffalo Restoration, and IHS Veterinary Services Head to House for Further Consideration

For Immediate Release

December 13, 2024

Contact:

Mike Inacay (Schatz) at press@indian.senate.gov

Hannah Ray (Murkowski) at hannah_ray@indian.senate.gov

Schatz, Murkowski: Six Indian Affairs Bills for Native Lands, Buffalo Restoration, and IHS Veterinary Services Head to House for Further Consideration

WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Brian Schatz (D-Hawai‘i), chairman of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, and U.S. Senator Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), vice chairman of the Committee, released the following statements on Senate passage of the following six bills, which head to the House for further consideration:

On passing the bills, Chairman Schatz said, “We have already had the most constructive and productive period for Native people in Congressional history. We have invested more in water, transportation, broadband, energy, culture, and economic development. We have passed an extraordinary number of bipartisan bills. But we are not done. We have about a week left and we have a number of bipartisan bills that have to get across the finish line.”

“I applaud the U.S. Senate for passing by voice vote two bipartisan bills I introduced. S.4365, the Veterinary Services to Improve Public Health in Rural Communities Act, is vital to combatting rabies and other zoonotic diseases in Native communities across the nation. The Tribal Forest Protection Act Amendments Act, S. 4370, provides straightforward, meaningful improvements to the original TFPA, promoting greater Indigenous stewardship of Federal and Indian forest and rangelands,” said Vice Chair Murkowski.  “I am also pleased that the Indian Buffalo Management Act, a bill long championed by my late friend and colleague, Congressman Don Young, and strongly supported by Old Harbor and Stevens Village in Alaska, also passed the Senate today. This bill strengthens a small program operated by the Bureau of Indian Affairs that is rebuilding buffalo populations in Native communities.”

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