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1103354
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Arizona Water Rights
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1103354
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document
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Arizona Water Rights
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Bradley H. Patterson Files (Ford Administration)
Bradley Patterson's Native American Programs Files
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Arizona
Water-supply
Indians of North America
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1976-09-01
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1976
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1976-08-01
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1976
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The original documents are located in Box 1, folder "Arizona Water Rights" of the Bradley H. Patterson Files at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Copyright Notice The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Gerald Ford donated to the United States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections. Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public domain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to remain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid copyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Digitized from Box 1 of the Bradley H. Patterson Files at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library GERALD FORD LIBRAR) Saturday Review AUG 16 1976 488 MADISON AVENUE NEW YORK, N.Y. 10022 DOROTHY RE (212) 751-5908 Cartoon Editor RN 5 Gerald Ford, President The White House 100 Pennstlvannia Avenue Washington, D.C. August 10, 1976 Dear Sir: I have written to you about somewhat more serious matters, Mr. Nixon's pardon, to which you most graciously replied. The enclosed article from the Times of last week is, to me, no less a matter of grave importance. The Indians have been mistreated for too long a time. It is one of Americas saddest errors. We cannot expect to maintain our freedoms and our way of life, our high standard of living, if we do not insure it for those whom we have conquored and now assimilate. We have abanoned a proud people. We have treated them disgracefully as history will show whether we do anything for them now or not. Their history has been a concern of mine since childhood when I lived in New Mexico and saw how they tried so hard to preserve their fine heritage. They must be helped in their effort to remain Indian and they must be aided in every way in their daily living needs. The enclosed article is a plea from the Indians of Arizona. It is my hope and prayer that you will be able to do something for Indians across this entire land. The fact that this is written on the eve of the Republican Convention is prompting me to say that this issue is a very important one to many of us and that without donning the Indian headdress and posing for the old political, and overworked, pictures you might just do something that would boost your slim margin, which incidently I think is another national disgrace. You should not have to do battle within your own party after your excellent performance as President. I must close with saying that your dancing with the Queen of England so graciously and handsomely was a highspot in our lives as Americans. Very sincerely, Donathy Wicker Re Re Award 8/24/76 WHITE HOUSE MAIL ROOM 1976 AUG I2 PM I 06 An Arizona Indian Asks Congress To Enact a Water-Rights Bill SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. - My people, and act expeditiously to bring about the Pima-Maricopa Indians of central By Gerald Anton a legislative settlement of our water Arizona, and our friends the Papagos rights. and Mohave-Apaches, are in the midst in 1908 held that Indian tribes were Congress has before it the Central of a desperate battle for enough water entitled to enough water to make Arizona Indian Tribal Water Rights to survive as a people. their reservations viable. However, the Act of 1976, introduced by Senator Our strength is in the law and in Interior Department, charged by law Edward M. Kennedy at our request. the good will of the American people to serve as trustee of Indian water This legislation would restore the law- and their elected representatives. rights, has in the past actively par- ful water rights of the 30,000 Pima- For 2,000 years the Pimas peace- ticipated in collusions to violate the Maricopas, Papagos and Mohave- fully farmed the Salt and Gila River law and rob the central Arizona tribes, Apaches of Arizona, allow our tribes valleys and we prospered. We irrigated of their water. Because of the shame- to be self-sufficient again, and relieve our crops of corn, pumpkins and ful acts and omissions of the Interior the taxpayers of the costs of welfare beans through a vast and complex Department, the Pimas and our neigh- for our people. system of earthen canals constructed boring tribes today have only enough The bill would also eliminate the with wooden and stone tools and a surface water to farm an average of need to build the $1 billion Wellton- high degree of engineering skill. We less than one acre per person. Mohawk desalting complex in south- had developed our famous cotton, and While it has impoverished the tribes, western Arizona-and save the Ameri- early travelers prized the silken Interior has been generous in bestow- can taxpayer from a staggering subsidy blankets woven from it. ing Indian water on powerful com- of $6.6 million per farm to the owners We shared our abundance generous- mercial interests. Some large corporate of 151 non-Indian farms. ly and no traveler left our land farms irrigated by Federal reclama- We petitioned the President to sup- hungry. When Kit Carson offered to tion projects use more surface water port the bill or to submit legislation of buy bread from the Pimas, our re- than all the 2,700 Salt River Pima- his own, believing that if the President sponse was: "Bread is to eat, not to Maricopas or the 18,000 Papagos. and the Congress acted quickly, there sell; take what you want." It is esti- Having reduced the Indian people would still be time this year for a mated that the Pimas fed, "with more of central Arizona from prosperity and water-rights bill to be enacted. than Christian charity," 60,000 suffer- abundance to poverty and deprivation, Hearings on the Kennedy bill were ling emigrants and gold-rushers on the the United States Government now scheduled before the Senate Interior trail to California, according to a pays out tens of millions of dollars and Insular Affairs Committee. The contemporary observer. per year to provide welfare and other five central Arizona tribes were invited A century ago settlers began divert- special services to us. But the real to testify next week. Suddenly every- ing the rivers that irrigated our farms. cost is reflected in high rates of un- thing has been called off. Once more Lush Indian farmland reverted to employment-about five times the cur- we are denied our constitutionally desert, and by the 1900's Indian rent rate in New York City-alcoholism protected right to petition for redress people noted for their prosperity and and family disintegration, and in gross- of grievances. Where can we turn when generosity were starving to death. ly substandard housing, poor nutrition, both the President and Congress fail Now we must depend on welfare to sickness and shortened lives. us? We appeal to our fellow Americans buy the very provisions that we once The past and continuing failure of to add their voices to ours, and maybe produced abundantly ourselves. the Interior Department to enforce then we will be heard. If we had the water to which we Indian water rights is ultimately the are legally entitled, we could become failure of the office of the President Gerald Anton is president of the Af-sufficient again. as well. We appeal to President Ford Salt River Pima-Maricop Indian com- The United States of dishonor munity Saturday Review Dorothy Wicker Re WORL MAGAZINE 488 MADISON AVENUE NEW YORK, N.Y. 10022 MEN YORK US POSTAG: AUG10'76- J ************* N.Y :- 6016704 METER Gerald R. Ford President of the United States The White House 100 Pennsylvannia Avenue Washington, D.C. (I Dear Mr. Trimble: The President has asked me to thank you for your letter of August 6 concerning S. 3298. In doing some checking, I find that your letter should really have been addressed in the first instance to the Congress, since whether or not hearings are held (as in the Senate) or whether or not a bill is introduced (as in the House) is a matter for decision at that end of Pennsylvania Avenue. As soon as hearings are in close prospect, the Administration will gear up to make a report on the bill. As NCAI knows, over the past 6 years the Admin- istration and the Office of the President have been in the forefront of protecting Indian natural re- sources rights; we are proud of that record and will continue to maintain it. Sincerely yours, Bradley H. Patterson, Jr. Mr. Charles E. Trimble Executive Director National Congress of American Indians 1430 K Street NW - Suite 700 Washington, D.C. 20005 BHP:msp FORD LIBRARY & SERVID THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON 116t withouse w House K introduced FORD is LIBRARY SERVID RALD Goldwater uptight "intersation" Hearings request was cousent buffees objected as GS request Nab the uschedated this session Megative report fevel The opened NATIONAL CONGRESS OF SUITE 700, 1430 K STREET, N.W., WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005 (202) 347-9520 AMERICAN -INDIANS- August 6, 1976 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE The Honorable Gerald R. Ford PRESIDENT President of the United States Mel Tonasket The White House THE GERALD 8. FORD Colville Washington, D. C. FIRST VICE-PRESIDENT Veronica Murdock RE: Denial of the Central Arizona Indian Mohave TREASURER Tribes' Right to a Hearing in the Ray Goetting Matter of Their Legal & Longstanding Caddo Water Rights Claims RECORDING SECRETARY Ramona Bennett Dear Mr. President, Puyallup EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR The attached New York Times editorial of Charles Trimble August 5 addresses the legal and longstanding water rights Oglala Sioux claims of 30,000 Indian people in Arizona, the ongoing failure AREA VICE PRESIDENTS of the Interior Department to enforce these water rights, and recent Administrative and Congressional actions which have ABERDEEN AREA thwarted the Tribes' attempts to legislatively settle these Joe Chase Mandan rights in a fair and orderly manner. ALASKA AREA Gordon Jackson We note with interest that numerous scheduled Tlinget hearings before the Senate Committee on Interior & Insular ANADARKO AREA Affairs are being conducted according to routine procedure and Juanita Ahtone commitment, while the hearing regarding the Central Arizona Kiowa Indian Tribal Water Rights Act of 1976 (S.3298, introduced by BILLINGS AREA Senator Kennedy and co-sponsored by Senators Hart, Hollings and Ray Spang Mondale) has been cancelled in sudden and unexplainable fashion. Northern Cheyenne We can only conclude that the Indian people have been singled GALLUP AREA out in this regard by the same forces within the Interior Commit- Victor Sarracino tee and within the Administration who vowed to the Tribes' Chair- Laguna men that their legislative endeavors would not be allowed to pro- MINNEAPOLIS AREA ceed through the Congress of the United States. Stanley Webster Oneida MUSKOGEE AREA Enforcement of the Tribes' legal entitlements to Katharine Whitehorn water would accord the opportunity for a return to self-sufficiency Osage through irrigation of their once-green farmlands which have been PHOENIX AREA dried to wasteland by a century of non-Indian diversion projects. Irene Cuch In Salt River President Anton's Times editorial, it is stated that Ute the failure to enforce the Indian water rights is "ultimately the PORTLAND AREA failure of the office of the President We appeal to President Roger Jim Ford to end a century of dishonor and act expeditiously to bring Yakima about a legislative settlement of our water rights." SACRAMENTO AREA Rachel Nabahe In your remarks of July 16, 1976, to Indian leaders Shoshone/Paiute gathered at the White House, you delivered a message of great hope SOUTHEAST AREA by stating that "(a)n important task we can help you with is the Jonathan Ed Taylor Cherokee challenge of economic development of your lands. I congratulate you on the initiative that you have shown. I pledge encouragement. I pledge help in your efforts to create long-term economic development." WHITE HOUSE MAIL ROOM 1976 AUG 10 PM I2 04 El CAED BOLID NATIONAL CONGRESS NCAI OF SUITE 700, 1430 K STREET, N.W., WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005 (202) 347-9520 AMERICAN -INDIANS- Correspondence / President Ford / Indian Water Rights 8/6/76 page 2 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE PRESIDENT The Central Arizona Tribes are asking for that promised Mel Tonasket help and encouragement. The National Congress of American Colville Indians adds its voice to the Tribes' appeal for economic FIRST VICE-PRESIDENT development and, indeed, survival. Veronica Murdock Mohave TREASURER Further denial of the Tribes' rightful and Ray Goetting lawful claims must end. Further denial can only continue in Caddo disregard of history, law and the high moral standard which RECORDING SECRETARY form the foundation of the United States. We respectfully Ramona Bennett urge that your actions in this matter comply with the basic Puyallup principles of treaties and the trust responsibility. EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR Charles Trimble Oglala Sioux Sincerely AREA VICE PRESIDENTS ABERDEEN AREA Joe Chase Mandan Charles E. Trimble ALASKA AREA Executive Director Gordon Jackson Tlinget ANADARKO AREA CET/ssh Juanita Ahtone Kiowa encl. BILLINGS AREA Ray Spang Northern Cheyenne cc: Members, Senate Interior & Insular Affairs Committee GALLUP AREA Sponsors, Central Arizona Indian Tribal Water Rights Act of 1976 Victor Sarracino Chairmen, Central Arizona Indian Tribes Laguna Secretary, Department of the Interior MINNEAPOLIS AREA Members, Congressional Delegation of Arizona Stanley Webster Oneida Editor, The New York Times MUSKOGEE AREA Katharine Whitehorn Osage PHOENIX AREA Irene Cuch Ute PORTLAND AREA Roger Jim Yakima SACRAMENTO AREA RALD GERALD, P. FORD Rachel Nabahe Shoshone/Paiute SOUTHEAST AREA Jonathan Ed Taylor Cherokee An Arizona Indian Asks Congress To Enact a Water-Rights Bill SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. - My people, and act expeditiously to bring about the Pima-Maricopa Indians of central By Gerald Anton a legislative settlement of our water Arizona, and our friends the Papagos rights. and Mohave-Apaches, are in the midst in 1908 held that Indian tribes were Congress has before It the Central of a desperate battle for enough water entitled to enough water to make Arizona Indian Tribal Water Rights to survive as a people. their reservations viable. However, the Act of 1975, introduced by Senator Our strength is in the law and in Interior Department, charged by law Edward ML Kennedy at our request. the good will of the American people to serve as trustee of Indian water This legislation would restore the law- and their elected representatives. rights, has in the past actively par- ful water rights of the 30,000 Pima- For 2,000 years the Pimas peace- ticipated in collusions to violate the Maricopas, Papagos and Mohave- fully farmed the Salt and Gila River law and rob the central Arizona tribes Apaches of Arizona. allow our tribes valleys and we prospered. We irrigated of their water. Because of the shame- to be self-sufficient again, and relieve our crops of corn, pumpkins and ful acts and omissions of the Interior the taxpayers of the costs of welfare beans through a vast and complex Department, the Pimas and our neigh- for our people. system of earthen canals constructed boring tribes today have only enough The bill would also eliminate the with wooden and stone tools and a surface water to farm an average of need to build the SI billion Wellton- high degree of engineering skill. We less than one acre per person. Mohawk desalting complex in south- had developed our famous cotton, and While it has impoverished the tribes, western Arizona-and save the Ameri- early travelers prized the silken Interior has been generous in bestow- can taxpayer from a staggering subsidy blankets woven from it ing Indian water on powerful com- of $6.6 million per farm to the owners We shared our abundance generous- mercial interests. Some large corporate of 11 non-Indian farms. ly and no traveler left our land farms irrigated by Federal reclama- We petitioned the President to sup- hungry. When Kit Carson offered to tion projects use more surface water port the bill or to submit legislation of buy broad from the Pimas, our re- than all the 2,700 Sale River Pima- his own believing that if the President sponse was: "Bread is to eat, not to Maricopas or the 18,000 Papagos. and the Congress act quickly, there is sell; take what you want." It is esti- Having reduced the Indian people still time this year for 2. water-rights mated that the Pimas fed, "with more of central Arizona from prosperity and bill to be enacted. than Christian charity," 60,000 suffer- abundance to poverty and deprivation, Hearings on the Kennedy bill were ing emigrants and gold-rushers on the the United States Government now scheduled before the Senate Interior trail to California, according to a pays out tens of millions of dollars and Insular Affairs Committee. The contemporary observer. per year to provide welfare and other five central Arizona tribes were invited A century ago settlers began divert- special services to us. But the real to testify next week. Suddenly every- ing the rivers that irrigated our farms. cost is reflected in high rates of un- thing has been called off. Once more Lush Indian farmland reverted to employment-about five times the cur- we are denied our constitutionally desert, and by the 1900's Indian rent rate in New York City-alcoholism protected right to petition for redress people noted for their prosperity and and family disintegration, and in gross- of griavances. Where can we turn when generosity were starving to death. ly substandard housing, poor nutrition, both the President and Congress fail Now we must depend on welfare to sickness and shortened lives. us? We appeal to our fellow Americans buy the very provisions that we once The past and continuing failure of to add their voices to ours, and maybe produced abundantly ourselves. the Interior Department to enforce then we will be heard. If we had the water to which we Indian water rights is ultimately the are legally entitled, we could become failure of the office of the President Gerald Anton is president of the self-suificient again. as well. We appeal to President Ford Sult River Pima-Maricopa Indian com- The United States Supreme Court to finally end a century o? dishonor munity. N.Y. Aug. 5,1976 GERALD ? FORD NATIONAL CONGRESS NONPROFIT ORG. WASHINGTON U.S.POSTAG! AUG-6'73 NCAI OF E.I 3 III AMERICAN D.C OMETER MC.567235 -INDIANS- The Honorable Gerald R. Ford 1430 K STREET, N.W. President of the United States SUITE 700 The White House WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005 Washington, D. C.