Letter from Secretary of the Interior Julius Krug to President Harry S. Truman, with Attachment
Images (3)
Document
| id |
id
296761738
|
|---|---|
| contentType |
contentType
document
|
| source |
source
import
|
Source image fields (6)
Extracted text
OCR Page 1 of 37
OF
THE INTERIOR DEPA
6-AA
THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
8-17-46
WASHINGTON 25
AUG - 1 1946
My dear Mr. President:
I should like to call your attention to some salient facts about the
Indian Claims Commission bill (H.R. 4497) which will shortly be presented
for your approval.
#
1. Substance. The bill emancipates our Indian citizens from an out-
worn and discriminatory statute which, since 1863, has barred them from
general access to the Court of Claims. For the future they will be per-
mitted to sue on the same basis as their fellow citizens of other races to
vindicate contract and property rights. In order to clear up the accumu-
lation of past claims, the bill sets up an adjudicatory commission, con-
sisting of three Presidential appointees, whose decisions will be subject
to review by the Court of Claims. The bill outlaws all existing claims
not submitted within 5 years and allows another 5 years for completion of
the Commission's job.
2. Status. The bill is generally viewed in the western States as
perhaps the most important of the measures sponsored by this Department
during the present Congress. It is certainly the most important Indian
legislation enacted in more than a decade. It is a fulfillment of specific
platform pledges of both parties and carries out recommendations made by
the Indian Affairs Committees of both Houses, the Department of the Interior,
the Department of Justice and all non-Government agencies that have studied
the problem during the past 15 years or more. The terms of the bill were
worked out after months of hearings and with the cooperation of all depart-
ments and agencies concerned. In the Indian Affairs Committees of the House
and Senate, in the Rules Committee of the House and on the floor of both
Houses of Congress the votes in favor of its consideration and passage were
all unanimous.
3. Expense. This measure, apart from the modest expenses of a 3-man
commission, estimated at not more than $200,000 per year, cannot affect
the national budget before 1952-3. Since it will be practically impossible
to pass finally upon any claim until the final date for filing, in 1951,
decisions and appropriations made thereafter can hardly become effective
until the fiscal year 1952-3. I am satisfied that this measure will not
entail any major increase in our Indian appropriations for 1952 and subse-
quent years. We are now appropriating approximately $30,000,000 a year for
Indian administration. The House Committee on Indian Affairs, after ex-
haustive studies, has estimated that by settling pending controversies with
x296
RECORDS
SERVICE
GOVERNMENT
Relations
belongs_to
belongs_to