November
is Native American Heritage Month, so it seems a suitable time to
highlight the NRC’s current efforts to develop a Tribal Policy Statement
and improve our interactions with Native Americans.
Throughout
the regulatory process, the NRC works in cooperation with other
governmental entities, including federal, state and local governments –
and tribes. This cooperation helps to ensure effective communication and
to promote greater awareness of the policies, activities and concerns
of all parties involved.
Native
American tribes have a unique relationship with the NRC and the federal
government. There are 566 federally recognized tribes that are
“sovereign”— that is, they have the legal authority to govern
themselves. As a result, when the NRC meets or consults with tribal
representatives, it does so on a “government-to-government” basis, much
as it does with the leaders of foreign countries.
The NRC recently published a
draft Tribal Protocol Manual to
provide more clarity, and to obtain feedback, on how the agency
conducts its meetings with tribes. The manual, originally developed as
an internal document to provide guidance to NRC staff participating in
tribal consultations and interactions, has been published to explain how
the NRC conducts these consultations. It will help to create more open
and productive working relationships between the NRC and tribal
governments. It will also serve as a starting point for the staff to
develop a policy statement on tribal consultations.
The
manual contains information NRC staff collected from many sources,
including Native Americans, NRC staff with experience in interacting
with tribes, and other federal agencies with established tribal outreach
programs. It will help NRC staff to work more effectively with Native
American tribes by providing both sides with a clear roadmap to the
regulatory process and the opportunities for interactions within it.
Anyone
interested in NRC’s interactions with tribes is invited to comment on
the draft and to provide input to the policy statement.
Michelle Ryan
Project Manager
Intergovernmental Liaison Branch
No comments:
Post a Comment