Friday,  Oct. 18, 2013 • Vol. 16--No. 94 • 22 of 37

(Continued from page 21)

are so focused on the harvest that the impact of the government reopening isn't that pertinent to them right now.
• Kevin Scott, of Valley Springs, says one major impact of the shutdown was the closure of Farm Service Agency offices, so West River ranchers haven't been able to report livestock losses from the early fall storm.
• Scott says otherwise the lack of a farm bill is the biggest concern for most farmers, and Congress hasn't been working on that because of the funding fight.
• He's also national director of the American Soybean Association national director and is on South Dakota Soybean Association and United States Export Council.

For tribes, shutdown's effects could linger
MATTHEW BROWN, Associated Press

• BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) -- Disruptions to some services for elderly American Indians and other needy residents of reservations could linger despite the end of the government shutdown, tribal officials said Thursday.
• It could take days or even weeks to get backed-up funds flowing to tribal programs that are under contract with the federal government, officials said. And for many reservations, the headaches brought on by the shutdown only compounded difficulties posed by budget cuts that kicked in even before the impasse in Congress shut off payments entirely.
• "When things like this happen, it usually trickles down to the poorest of the poor, and Native Americans, per capita, are in the lowest spectrum of income in the U.S.," said Brian Cladoosby, president-elect of the National Congress of American Indians and chairman of Washington state's Swinomish Tribe.
• "D.C. has to get their act together. They have to quit running the government by chaos," he said. "We are getting impacted by that type of government."
• There are more than 560 federally recognized American Indian and Alaska Native tribes. In addition to direct federal assistance for foster care, health, education and other programs, many of them rely on the U.S. government to oversee and disburse revenues generated by reservation activities such as oil and gas development. Those funds, too, were tied up by the shutdown because the federal Bureau of Indian Affairs lacked the manpower to process payments.
• On Montana's Crow Indian Reservation, about 30 home health providers were among employees that remained furloughed Thursday with no word on when they might return to work, said Todd Wilson, director of the tribe's health department.
• The indefinite loss of those jobs leaves families with elderly or disabled members

(Continued on page 23)

© 2013 Groton Daily Independent • To send correspondence, click here.