Navajo government meeting in downtown Phoenix Hyatt Regency hotel

Navajo Council Resources & Development Committee Subcommittee on Proposed Agreement between Navajo Nation and Uranium Resources Inc. members Leonard Pete and Leonard Tsosie at the Navajo Nation Museum in Window Rock, Ariz., on March 17, 2014. Photo by Marley Shebala

Navajo Council Resources & Development Committee Subcommittee on Proposed Agreement between Navajo Nation and Uranium Resources Inc. members Leonard Pete and Leonard Tsosie at the Navajo Nation Museum in Window Rock, Ariz., on March 17, 2014. Photo by Marley Shebala

Greetings Relatives/Frens/Humans,
I was at the meeting of the Navajo Nation Council Resources & Development Committee’s Subcommittee for Proposed Agreement between the Navajo Nation and URI-Uranium Resources Inc. for a Demonstration Project involving In-Situ Uranium Mining. The Subcommittee members are RDC Delegates Leonard Tsosie, who serves as subcommittee chairperson, and Leonard Pete, who serves as subcommittee vice chairperson.

That was yesterday, March 17. I asked Tsosie why the RDC had asked for a work session of the Naabik’iyati Committee to be held at the downtown Phoenix Hyatt Regency on the Proposed Navajo Rangeland Management Act of 2014 instead of on Navajo land, especially since the focus of the work session is Navajo rangeland, which is of great concern to the constituents of the Navajo Council.

Tsosie’s answer: It’s just a work session.

I added that the Navajo Council would be casting a negative image of itself to the People by meeting in downtown Phoenix on the proposed Rangeland Management Act. I also asked Tsosie about the cost to the People for their Public Servants to travel from their home towns to Phoenix, stay at the Phoenix Hyatt Regency for either two or three nights, have meals and probably work session snacks, receive meeting stipends, and conference room fees?

Tsosie’s answer: If you want, I’ll pay for my meals.

According to Public information from the Navajo Legislative Branch, the Naabik’iyati Committee will receive a POWER POINT presentation on the Proposed Rangeland Management Act of 2014 from the Navajo Nation Division of Natural Resources Department of Agriculture, which means the People will also be paying for the travel, lodging and meals of those tribal employees. The Division of Natural Resources director is Fred White, who is a political appointee of President Ben Shelly.

And since this is a Work Session, there is no need for a quorum of the Naabik’iyati Committee. Please note that the request for the work session in Phoenix came from RDC Chairperson Katherine Benally to Speaker Johnny Naize, who approved Benally’s request. And don’t forget that Benally was the MOST vocal supporter of Naize when Delegate Alton Shepherd sponsored two pieces of legislation on Jan. 28, 2014, to the Council for the removal of Naize as speaker after Naize was indicted for 11 criminal charges involving bribery and conspiracy to commit bribery. Shepherd filed new legislation, NUMBER 0069-14, for the Council to remove Naize after former Council Delegate Raymond Joe admitted in his Feb. 18, 2014, guilty plea that he and Naize conspired to commit bribery with the People’s Financial Assistance Program or Discretionary Fund. The Feb. 18, 2014, guilty plea of Joe is attached to 0069-14.

I bring this bit of history up because there is no reason for our Public Servants to be meeting off reservation on an issue that is of the utmost concern to the People – our Homeland, livestock, and grazing permits… And when RDC Chairperson Benally made her request to Naize to meet in downtown Phoenix, she did not provide a reason to justify why the People’s elected officials needed to meet in downtown Phoenix and the expense of meeting in downtown Phoenix. BUT Naize, as speaker, approved her request.

And will Naize be traveling to downtown Phoenix? Of course, because Naize, as speaker, presides over the Naabik’iyati Committee. And will any of Naize’s political appointees, such as his Chief of Staff Jarvis Williams, staff assistants Anthony Peterman, Darrell Tso Sr., and Ansley Curley, and public information officers Jared Touchin, Jolene Holgate and Chrissy Largo be traveling with Naize? Well, your guess is as good as mine. But if I was to guess, I would put my bet on Chief of Staff Williams and staff assistant Ansley Curley because they were both with Naize when Naize was arraigned on his 12 criminal charges before the Navajo Nation Window Rock, Ariz., District Court on March 11, 2014. And after Naize pleaded not guilty to all of his 12 charges, Curley left a few minutes before Williams and Naize walked out of the court room. I was wondering why Curley did that until I saw Curley drive up to the front of the court house behind the wheel of the black tribal government SUV assigned to the speaker. According to Navajo law, Naize is prohibited from using tribal government property and tribal employees for personal business and being arraigned on 12 criminal charges is definitely not tribal government business. Yes, an additional criminal charge of bribery was added to Naize’s 11 charges.

Naize is abusing the speaker’s position. And the position of speaker, like ALL the tribal government’s elected positions and political appointments, belong to the People. The People have a right to know how their elected officials are conducting tribal government business in our name. We also have a right and responsibility to have our Law Makers conduct business according to Navajo laws.

And current Navajo laws are riddled with loopholes created by our Law Makers, the Navajo Nation Council. And after these laws are approved by the Council, they are then sent over to the Navajo Nation Government’s Executive Branch, where those laws are reviewed by the President and Vice President with the assistance of the Attorney General and the attorney of the President and Vice President before the President or Vice President puts his or her stamp of approval on the new law or laws or amended law or laws. By the way the attorney for the President and Vice President is a political appointee, as well as the Attorney General. And all the attorneys working under the Attorney General, which is basically the Navajo Nation Department of Justice, are political appointees of the Attorney General.

Yes, folks, we have a run-away Navajo government…

And before I end this post to begin working on my video of the RDC Subcommittee on Proposed Agreement between URI and the Navajo Nation for a Demonstration Project of In-Situ Uranium Mining near Church Rock, N.M., I almost obtained copies of a federal Environmental Impact Statement involving URI and a long awaited report from URI on its cleanup of Section 17 that URI handed out to the RDC, Navajo Department of Justice, and Navajo Environmental Protection Agency. But seconds before I had my hands on it, political appointee Stephen Etsitty, director of the NEPA, told NDOJ attorney Robert Taylor that I needed to make a WRITTEN request for the reports.

Navajo Nation Division of Natural Resources Director Fred White, Navajo Environmental Protection Agency Director Stephen Etsitty and Navajo Department of Justice attorney Robert Taylor at Resources & Development Committee's Subcommittee on Proposed Agreement between Navajo Nation and URI meeting at the Navajo Nation Museum in Window Rock, Ariz., on March 17, 2014. Photo by Marley Shebala

Navajo Nation Division of Natural Resources Director Fred White, Navajo Environmental Protection Agency Director Stephen Etsitty and Navajo Department of Justice attorney Robert Taylor at Resources & Development Committee’s Subcommittee on Proposed Agreement between Navajo Nation and URI meeting at the Navajo Nation Museum in Window Rock, Ariz., on March 17, 2014. Photo by Marley Shebala

I wish Etsitty showed the same concern for protecting our Navajo homeland and following Navajo laws that protect our homeland. I say that because not once during the March 17 meeting of the RDC Subcommittee did Etsitty explain to the RDC Subcommittee that the Proposed Agreement violated two Navajo laws and that the RDC legislation that created the Subcommittee also violated those two laws.

Thank Creator that Council Delegate Danny Simpson and former Council Delegate Daniel Tso showed up at the March 17 meeting of the RDC Subcommittee and advised the RDC Subcommittee, as well as NDOJ attorney Robert Taylor and legislative attorney Mariana Kahn, that the RDC Subcommittee meeting was illegal because it violated those two laws.

But all that information will be in another post. So stay tuned to stay informed about the Navajo Nation government. May Peace Prevail on Mother Earth!

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