
Lisa Murkowski
43:11 - 44:21
"I have had an opportunity to work with various ranking members on this and now with Senator Heinrich as we work to again educate and, and try to, to reinforce, uh, the, the wrong that we are attempting to right here."
“I have had an opportunity to work with various ranking members on this and now with Senator Heinrich as we work to again educate and, and try to, to reinforce, uh, the, the wrong that we are attempting to right here.”
Well, thank you, Mr. Chairman, and indeed we are trying to fix this. And again, this has been one of those efforts that when you think about legislation that you have worked over the course of a legislative career, the engagement that goes on within the communities, the engagement that goes on with different groups, the engagement that goes on with legislators. This dais changes from time to time, from Congress to Congress, and so I have had an opportunity to work with various ranking members on this and now with Senator Heinrich as we work to again educate and, and try to, to reinforce, uh, the, the wrong that we are attempting to right here. And, and I think oftentimes when you think about the Alaska Native Claims Settlement, you think, okay, a settlement is settlement 50 years ago, one and done, and in fairness, it is all about ensuring that the terms of the settlement as were agreed to actually translate into the opportunities that that settlement was intended to do. So I mentioned the outreach that we have been engaged in.
The Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee voted July 16 to advance legislation that would let five Southeast Alaska Native communities excluded from the 1971 Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act form urban corporations and receive land entitlements, sending the bill to the full Senate.
