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No events on calendar for this bill.
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Representative Edward C. Goodwin(R)
Representative Pricey Harrison(D)
Representative John Autry(D)
Representative Zack Hawkins(D)
Representative Renée A. Price(D)
Representative Bill Ward(R)
Representative Allison A. Dahle(D)
Representative Nasif Majeed(D)
Representative Stephen M. Ross(R)
Representative Donna McDowell White(R)
Representative Howard Penny, Jr.(R)
Representative Frank Sossamon(R)
Representative Kanika Brown(D)
Representative Ken Fontenot(R)
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Ref to the Com on Appropriations, if favorable, Rules, Calendar, and Operations of the HouseHouse2024-05-06Passed 1st ReadingHouse2024-05-06Filed
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FiledNo fiscal notes available.Edition 1No fiscal notes available.
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ADMINISTRATION DEPT.
APPROPRIATIONS
BUDGETING
COMMISSIONS
INDIAN AFFAIRS COMN.
LOCAL GOVERNMENT
MEMBERSHIP
MINORITIES
PUBLIC
TRIBES & TRIBAL GOVERNMENT
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143B-407
71A-7.3 (Sections)
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No counties specifically cited.
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H970: State Recognition for The Tuscarora/Funds. Latest Version
Session: 2023 - 2024
AN ACT to grant state recognition to the tuscarora Of Eastern North carolina, to provide representation of the tuscarora on the State commission of indian affairs, and to appropriate funds to the Department of Administration, north Carolina commission of indian affairs, to update the department's website and publications to include the tuscarora of eastern north carolina.
Whereas, The Tuscarora of Eastern North Carolina, also known as Skaru:re, hemp gatherers, the shirt wearing people, and the people of the sunken pines, are a pre‑contact, First Nation Indian Tribe of North Carolina and are documented in North Carolina's and Virginia's Colonial records; and
Whereas, they are blood kin to the Haudenosaunee, People of the Longhouse, who are the Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, and the Seneca: The Five Nations that created the Iroquois Confederacy, which is one of the greatest and most powerful Native American groups in North American history. The Iroquois Confederacy abides by the Great Law of Peace that united the five tribes and brought peace to the people. The Great Law of Peace is the first form of democracy on the North American continent and was one of the founding principles for the United States Constitution. (U.S. Senate Resolution 76, 1987; U.S. House Concurrent Resolution 331, 1988); and
Whereas, The Tuscarora of Eastern North Carolina have demonstrated organized continuity spanning to precolonial times and have formally organized no fewer than 20 years ago with provided documentation and have maintained the core governing bodies of Tuscarora people to this day; and
Whereas, The Tuscarora of Eastern North Carolina have adopted The Tuscarora Council of the Great to unify and govern their people with one mind; Now, therefore,
The General Assembly of North Carolina enacts:
SECTION 1. Chapter 71A of the General Statutes is amended by adding a new section to read:
§ 71A‑7.3. The Tuscarora of Eastern North Carolina; rights, privileges, immunities, obligations, and duties.
The Indians comprising three core communities: The Tuscarora Indian Nation of North Carolina Prospect Longhouse, Tuscarora Nation of North Carolina, and the Tuscarora Tribe of North Carolina, whose ancestors, in 1718, entered a treaty with the government of North Carolina and were granted Indian Woods, a 56,000‑acre tract of lands on the Roanoke River in what is now Bertie County, and who are of the same linguistic stock as the other tribes of the Iroquois Confederacy of New York and Canada, shall, from and after July 1, 2024, be designated and officially recognized as The Tuscarora of Eastern North Carolina, and they shall continue to enjoy all their rights, privileges, and immunities as an American Indian Tribe with a recognized tribal governing body carrying out and exercising substantial governmental duties and powers similar to the State, being recognized as eligible for the special programs and services provided by the United States to Indians because of their status as Indians. The Tuscarora of Eastern North Carolina shall maintain individual enrollment criteria, providing an opportunity for unenrolled Tuscarora descendants to enroll and shall govern themselves in a manner that will benefit and unify all Tuscarora that come under their governance.
SECTION 2. G.S. 143B‑407 reads as rewritten:
§ 143B‑407. North Carolina State Commission of Indian Affairs – membership; term of office; chairman; compensation.
(a) The State Commission of Indian Affairs shall consist of two persons appointed by the General Assembly, the Secretary of Health and Human Services, the Assistant Secretary of Commerce in charge of the Division of Employment Security, the Secretary of Administration, the Secretary of Environmental Quality, the Commissioner of Labor or their designees and 21 23 representatives of the Indian community. These Indian members shall be selected by tribal or community consent from the Indian groups that are recognized by the State of North Carolina and are principally geographically located as follows: the Coharie of Sampson and Harnett Counties; the Eastern Band of Cherokees; the Haliwa Saponi of Halifax, Warren, and adjoining counties; the Lumbees of Robeson, Hoke and Scotland Counties; the Meherrin of Hertford County; the Waccamaw‑Siouan from Columbus and Bladen Counties; the Sappony; the Occaneechi Band of the Saponi Nation of Alamance and Orange Counties, The Tuscarora of Eastern North Carolina, and the Native Americans located in Cumberland, Guilford, Johnston, Mecklenburg, Orange, and Wake Counties. The Coharie shall have two members; the Eastern Band of Cherokees, two; the Haliwa Saponi, two; the Lumbees, three; the Meherrin, one; the Waccamaw‑Siouan, two; the Sappony, one; the Cumberland County Association for Indian People, two; the Guilford Native Americans, two; the Metrolina Native Americans, two; the Occaneechi Band of the Saponi Nation, one, one; the Triangle Native American Society, one. one; The Tuscarora of Eastern North Carolina, two. Of the two appointments made by the General Assembly, one shall be made upon the recommendation of the Speaker, and one shall be made upon recommendation of the President Pro Tempore of the Senate. Appointments by the General Assembly shall be made in accordance with G.S. 120‑121 and vacancies shall be filled in accordance with G.S. 120‑122.
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SECTION 3. There is appropriated from the General Fund to the Department of Administration, North Carolina Commission of Indian Affairs, the sum of twenty thousand dollars ($20,000) in nonrecurring funds for the 2024‑2025 fiscal year to update the Department's website and publications to include The Tuscarora of Eastern North Carolina, as recognized by Sections 1 and 2 of this act.
SECTION 4. This act becomes effective July 1, 2024.