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Native Americans,
Family,
Constitutional Law,
Civil Rights

Oct. 12, 2018

ICWA is under attack, again

The Indian Child Welfare Act, and potentially tribal sovereignty, suffered a significant setback last week when a federal court held the landmark legislation unconstitutional.

Delia Sharpe

Executive Director, California Tribal Families Coalition

Email: dmsharpe@ucdavis.edu

California Tribal Families Coalition is a nonprofit organization comprised of tribes and tribal leaders from across the state whose mission is to promote and protect the health, safety and welfare of tribal children and families.

Jedd Parr

Directing Attorney, California Indian Legal Services

Email: jparr@calindian.org

Jedd is directing attorney of the Sacramento office of California Indian Legal Services, a nonprofit Indian law firm dedicated to protecting Indian rights, fostering Indian self-determination, and facilitating tribal nation-building.


Attachments


Prior to the Texas ruling, California Attorney General Xavier Becerra led a bipartisan coalition of six attorneys general from Alaska, Montana, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah and Washington in filing an amicus brief in Brackeen arguing that ICWA complies with the Constitution. (New York Times News Service)

The Indian Child Welfare Act, and potentially tribal sovereignty, suffered a significant setback last week when a federal court held the landmark legislation unconstitutional. Brackeen et al. v. Zinke, 4:17-CV-00868 (N.D. Texas, Oct. 4, 2018) [ruling attached below].

Passed by Congress in 1978, ICWA was designed to reverse decades of culturally biased and abusive practices that led to one-third of all tribal children being forcibly removed by the government from their families and tribal communities -- a substantially higher removal rate than any other group.

Over its 40-year history, ICWA has survived numerous challenges, including a case recently before the U.S. Supreme Court where the court declined to rule ICWA unconstitutional. Adoptive Couple v. Baby Girl, 570 U.S. 637 (2013). Despite this history, the decision from the Northern District of Texas held ICWA invalid on multiple grounds, characterizing it as a race-based statute in violation of the equal protection clause as well as the Tenth Amendment's prohibition against commandeering.

The case is part of an ongoing national campaign by the Goldwater Institute, a conservative organization based in Arizona, which for several years has pursued anti-ICWA litigation in various courts across the country. Interestingly, its namesake, the late Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-AZ), voted in favor of the ICWA in 1977, and ICWA's author, retired Sen. James Abourezk (D-SD), is adamant that Goldwater, his friend and colleague, would be opposed to the institute's anti-ICWA efforts if alive today.

Fortunately for California tribes and out-of-state tribes with children in this state, the Texas decision does not apply here. Existing statutes incorporating ICWA into state law remain valid, as does recent California legislation, Assembly Bill 3176 (R-Waldron) taking effect on Jan. 1, 2019, incorporating the Bureau of Indian Affairs' ICWA regulations into state law.

Brackeen, however, is likely to be appealed to the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, and could possibly advance to the Supreme Court for a final decision on the constitutionality of ICWA.

Tribes across the nation remain united in their support for the law, buoyed by many of the 33 states who have acted to strengthen ICWA within their borders. Prior to the Texas ruling, California Attorney General Xavier Becerra led a bipartisan coalition of six attorneys general from Alaska, Montana, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah and Washington in filing an amicus brief in Brackeen arguing that ICWA complies with the Constitution.

ICWA's purpose is to "protect the best interests of Indian children and promote the stability and security of Indian tribes and families by the establishment of minimum Federal standards." 25 U.S.C. Section 1902.

In passing the ICWA, Congress specifically found that Indian children are best served by placement, if possible, in homes which keep them connected to their extended family and their tribes. This position is supported today by numerous child welfare organizations such as the National CASA Association, the National Association of Social Workers, Casey Family Programs and the Annie E. Casey Foundation. See Brief of Casey Family Programs & Child Welfare League of America, et al. as Amici Curiae Supporting Respondent, Adoptive Couple v. Baby Girl, supra ("Amici are united in their view that, in the Indian Child Welfare Act, Congress adopted the gold standard for child welfare policies and practices that should be afforded to all children."). ICWA works to preserve families and keep Indian children connected to their communities when they cannot safely return home. These are foundational principles to good social work practice and are embedded in many other child welfare laws.

Alarmingly, the Brackeen decision also has the potential to go well beyond the world of child welfare. The holding that ICWA is a race-based statute, rather than a statute based on a parent's or child's political status as a citizen of a federally recognized tribe, could open the door for all federal legislation involving Indian tribes to be undone. Indian Health Services and similar programs could disappear. Tribal lands, owned by the federal government and held in trust for tribes, could be sold off or opened to oil, gas, or minerals extraction -- a factor reportedly in consideration in the recent and controversial reduction of the Bears Ears National Monument. Even tribes' status as sovereign entities is potentially at risk.

From Alaska Gov. Bill Walker, to social services advocates, to tribes nationwide, the ruling has generated a wave of support for ICWA, and to vows to defend the 40-year-old law which has helped reverse decades of culturally abusive practices. Tara MacLean Sweeney, the assistant secretary for Indian affairs of the Department of the Interior (a defendant in the Texas case), has already stated that the agency "strongly opposes any diminishment of ICWA's protections for Indian children, families and tribes."

We urge all tribes and child welfare advocates to do the same, and to share their stories of cases where ICWA has made a positive difference for Indian families. These stories seldom get as much media traction as the ones lamenting the law's application, but those of us who practice in the field know the widespread success ICWA has had in keeping children connected to their tribal communities.

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