Quick stories, must reads

The Daily Spark

Small sparks from Indian Country, built to catch fire

MMIP
Dec 8, 2025

DNA testing in Rapid City for relatives with missing loved ones

The Bureau of Indian Affairs will host “Voices of the Unnamed” at the Civic Center on Dec. 18–19, offering families a chance to aid identification efforts.

The Bureau of Indian Affairs’ Missing and Murdered Unit will be offering voluntary DNA testing at its event “Voices of the Unnamed.” The testing will take place on Dec. 18 and 19 in room 206 at the Civic Center, 444 N. Mount Rushmore Rd., in Rapid City, South Dakota.

Family members with missing loved ones can get their DNA tested to check against unidentified human remains. Families can request removal of their DNA at any time, and it will be destroyed.

For more information, contact BIA MMU agents Allison Morrisette and Savannah Peterson at allison.morrisette@state.sd.us and savannahj.peterson@bia.gov

Jolan Kruse
Jolan Kruse
Education
Dec 8, 2025

Tribal college receives multimillion dollar gift

The historic funds will be used to improve physical infrastructure and expand student services on the Fort Peck Indian Reservation in Montana

A northeast Montana community college is celebrating its largest gift ever in its nearly half century history.

In a Nov. 25 press release from Craig Smith, president of Fort Peck Community College, the $11 million gift from the MacKenzie Scott Foundation was called a “momentous milestone.”

Smith said, “We are truly grateful to the MacKenzie Scott Foundation for this transformative gift, which will accelerate several projects that have been in our long-term plans for our campus.”

Smith added that the investment will strengthen FPCC’s physical infrastructure and also allow “our administration, faculty and staff to enhance services to our students and our communities across the Fort Peck Indian Reservation for generations to come.”

FPCC will mark its 50th anniversary in 2028. Its website describes the institution as a tribally controlled community college, chartered by the Tribal Executive Board of the Assiniboine and Sioux Tribes of Fort Peck Indian Reservation in 1978.

In closing, Smith said that on behalf of the FPCC board of directors, administration, faculty, staff and students, “I express the deepest gratitude to MacKenzie Scott and her Foundation for the contribution made to our institution, along with her contributions to other tribal colleges and Indian Country across the nation.”

Brian Bull
Brian Bull
Native issues
Dec 8, 2025

Intertribal Agriculture Council hosts its annual conference in Las Vegas

Event highlights include trade show exhibitors and panels on environmental stewardship

Tribal leaders, farmers, ranchers and agricultural organizations are gathering in Las Vegas, Nevada, Dec. 9-11 for the Intertribal Agriculture Council Annual Conference. Speakers will share resources about topics including regenerative farming, food sovereignty, land management and agriculture financing during the three-day event held at the Virgin Hotels Las Vegas. Attendees can also connect with businesses at the conference trade show, which features exhibitors including Farm Aid, InterTribal Buffalo Council and Women in Ranching.

Registration for Tuesday is sold out. To register for Wednesday and Thursday or for more information about the event, visit the IAC conference website.

Buffalo’s Fire environment reporter, Gabrielle Nelson, is attending the conference. Contact her at gabby@buffalosfire.com to introduce yourself or to offer story tips.

Gabrielle Nelson
Gabrielle Nelson
Native Issues
Environmental enforcement
Dec 7, 2025

Natural gas operator fined for Clean Air Act violation on Fort Berthold Reservation

Targa Badlands LLC was ordered Friday to pay a $500,000 fine and perform 500 hours of community service for a Clean Air Act violation that affected the Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara Nation, according to North Dakota Monitor. The company pleaded guilty earlier this year in U.S. District Court in North Dakota after failing to install required hazardous air pollutant monitoring systems at the Johnson Compressor Station near Mandaree between 2018 and 2022. Combustion engines at the site produce pollutants such as benzene and formaldehyde, Assistant U.S. Attorney Jonathan O’Konek said during the plea hearing.

Judge Daniel Traynor also imposed three years probation and a $400 fee. Prosecutors said Targa self-reported and installed monitoring equipment. MHA Nation Chair Mark Fox said in a statement quoted by North Dakota Monitor that tribal leaders appreciated the community service aspect of the sentence but were disappointed by the lack of consultation.

Education & Arts
Dec 7, 2025

College Fund and Pendleton open blanket design contest for tribal college students

The American Indian College Fund and Pendleton Woolen Mills are accepting submissions for the sixth annual Tribal College Blanket Design Contest, according to Daily Montanan.

Native American and Alaska Native students attending a tribal college or university may submit up to two designs by Jan. 15. The first-place winner’s design will be featured internationally and added to Pendleton’s American Indian College Fund collection. The top three winners will receive scholarships and cash prizes.

Native Issues
Tribal Governance
Dec 7, 2025

Crow Tribe considers legislation to redefine membership

Crow Tribal Chairman Frank Whiteclay has proposed legislation that would redefine tribal membership by granting all existing members 100% Crow “blood,” according to Montana Free Press.

Under current policy, members must have one-quarter Crow ancestry to enroll. Whiteclay said the change would “break a cycle of lost enrollment” and strengthen tribal identity. The tribe currently has 14,289 enrolled members, a decline of more than 300 since 2020.

Tribal Secretary Levi Black Eagle was quoted as saying the proposal, which will be discussed by the Legislature in January, aims to use “the leeway we have within that system and flex our sovereignty.” He said blood quantum limits personal choice and belonging.

Jill Doerfler, an American Indian studies professor at the University of Minnesota Duluth, said tribes using blood quantum “have an expiration date,” because the system reduces eligibility over generations.

Native Issues
Economic Development
Dec 7, 2025

New Mexico awards $3.2 million for outdoor recreation projects

The New Mexico Economic Development Department announced $3.2 million in grants for 18 outdoor infrastructure projects across 13 counties and three tribal communities, according to Source New Mexico.

The Trails+ Grants program will fund projects including bike parks, trail restoration and new campgrounds. The Navajo Townsite Community Development Corporation received $33,000 to build a kids’ bike pump track in McKinley County. The Zuni Youth Enrichment Project received nearly $100,000 to renovate nine trailheads and add cultural signage. Pueblo de San Ildefonso, in partnership with Rio Arriba County, received $85,534 to hire Indigenous youth to maintain trails near Fishing Lake.

According to EDD Secretary Rob Black, the projects will support 105 jobs and improve more than 700 miles of trails statewide.

Native Issues
Tribal Health
Dec 7, 2025

States decide how tribes benefit from $50B rural health fund

The Trump administration’s $50 billion Rural Health Transformation Program excludes federally recognized tribes from applying directly for funding, leaving it to states to determine whether to include tribal priorities, according to KFF Health News.

Some states, including Idaho, Nevada and Oregon, proposed setting aside 3% to 10% of their allotments for tribes, while Washington proposed $20 million annually. Others, such as North Dakota, identified tribes as partners but declined to reserve a portion of funds.

Liz Malerba, policy director for the United South and Eastern Tribes Sovereignty Protection Fund, said federal programs work better when tribes can access funding directly. “Even in a scenario where tribal consultation is required, the quality and quantity of that tribal consultation on a state-by-state basis is all over the place,” Malerba, a citizen of the Mohegan Tribe, was quoted as saying.

According to KFF Health News, states will be notified of their federal allotments by year’s end.

Sovereignty
Dec 3, 2025

Washington tribe appoints its first Tribal Conservation Law Enforcement Officer

Saturday gathering combines political organizing with community charity

The Samish Indian Nation is launching a tribal law enforcement program to protect its tribal citizens and natural resources, according to goSkagit. While other tribal law enforcement agencies work directly on reservation, Samish does not have a dedicated reservation, just trust lands spread across the region. The program’s first appointed officer, Brandon Bravo, is working with local jurisdictions, Skagit County officials and neighboring law enforcement agencies to build the Tribal Conservation Law Enforcement Program from the ground up.

Bravo is working on a 911 communication system as well as grant funding to expand the program. Samish Chairman Tom Wooten said the program is a show of tribal sovereignty and reflects the tribe’s commitment to partnering with state and local authorities.

Gabrielle Nelson
Gabrielle Nelson
Community
Dec 3, 2025

Dem-NPL to host grand opening for new Central North Dakota office

Local leaders establish a new community hub to foster organizing and support the Bismarck Dream Center

The Bismarck/Mandan District of the North Dakota Democratic-NPL Party has announced that it will host a grand opening for its new Central North Dakota office on Dec. 7 at the Kennedy Memorial Center. The event will run from 2 to 4 p.m., with a ribbon-cutting ceremony scheduled for 3 p.m.

According to an email from Chair Bob Valeu, the new office will serve as a hub for civic engagement, organizing and community building. Families and community members are invited to attend, with refreshments provided. Guests are encouraged to bring nonperishable food items to support the Bismarck Dream Center’s mission of helping families in need. The Kennedy Memorial Center is located at 1902 East Divide, Suite 101, in Bismarck.

Jolan Kruse
Jolan Kruse
Land Back
Dec 3, 2025

California Tribe regains some land lost over 170 years ago

Southern Sierra Miwuk Nation welcomes the return of ancestral grounds near Yosemite National Park

The Southern Sierra Miwuk Nation, a tribe from Central California, is regaining land lost over 170 years ago when Yosemite National Park was formed, according to reporting by The Sacramento Bee. The land is being transferred by Pacific Forest Trust, which obtained it two decades ago and began restoration practices for the land return.

“Having this significant piece of our ancestral Yosemite land back will bring our community together to celebrate tradition and provide a healing place for our children and grandchildren,” Southern Sierra Miwuk Nation’s Tribal Council Chair and elder Sandra Chapman was quoted as saying. “It will be a sanctuary for our people.”

Jolan Kruse
Jolan Kruse
  • Sacramento Bee, https://www.sacbee.com/news/california/article313322337.html ()
MMIP
Dec 4, 2025

Indigenous people are disproportionately impacted by lethal gun violence, new study reveals

Violence Policy Center report highlights alarming homicide and suicide rates, warning that underreporting masks the true scale of the crisis

A nationwide study by the Violence Policy Center finds that Indigenous communities experience high rates of gun deaths.

In 2023, Indigenous people were twice as likely as white people to die by homicide —- both gun-related and not gun-related — according to the study, which examined the most recent data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. That year there were 553 reported gun deaths in the Indigenous community — 246 homicides and 260 suicides. Indigenous communities face overall suicide and firearm suicide rates that are the second highest in the nation, surpassed only by the white population.

Previous VPC research shows the rate of Indigenous women killed by males since 2015 is the second highest in the nation, violence that is gaining international awareness in Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women movements. Because of numerous unreported and misclassified deaths among Indigenous women and the community at large, the study warns that the real number of Indigenous people killed by guns is likely higher than reported.

Josh Sugarmann, the executive director of the Violence Policy Center, states in a press release about the study’s findings that Indigenous communities face “a continuing crisis of lethal gun violence that outside of impacted communities rarely receives the attention it demands.” He calls for advocates, organizations and policymakers to use the report to help reduce gun violence in Indigenous communities.

Gabrielle Nelson
Gabrielle Nelson
Education
Dec 4, 2025

Tribal college students can submit blanket design to win money

Sixth annual competition offers $7,000 prize package and international distribution for winning student artist

The American Indian College Fund and Pendleton Woolen Mills are calling on tribal college and university students to submit original designs for their annual tribal college blanket design competition. Students have until Jan. 15 to submit designs expressing their culture and identity. The top three winners will receive scholarship money and cash. The grand prize is a $5,000 scholarship and $2,000 in cash.

The winning design will be added to Pendleton’s American Indian College Fund collection to be sold and distributed internationally. This is the groups’ sixth year holding the competition. Past winners have gone on to design for Pendleton and Nike, according to the Daily Montanan. No prior design experience is required. The blanket design application and guidelines can be found on the College Fund’s website.

Gabrielle Nelson
Gabrielle Nelson
Fort Yates
Dec 4, 2025

Sitting Bull College to hold holiday market

Fort Yates event will feature traditional medicine, beadwork, and crafts from local vendors

Sitting Bull College in Fort Yates, North Dakota, will hold a holiday market Dec. 11 at the college auditorium. The market will feature traditional medicine, beadwork, baked goods and more.

Interested vendors can contact Melanie Howard at Melanie.Howard@sittingbull.edu or 701-854-8061. More information can be found on Sitting Bull College’s Facebook page.

Jolan Kruse
Jolan Kruse
Environment
Dec 4, 2025

Teachers push for inclusion of Indigenous history

"Reclaiming Native Truth" initiative seeks to combat erasure and modernize school curricula across the U.S.

Indigenous history in the U.S. didn’t start with Columbus’s “discovery” in 1492, nor the arrival of Pilgrims at Plymouth Rock in 1620.

Spectrum News 1 reports that educators are taking part in a national project called “Reclaiming Native Truth,” which aims to teach accurate and culturally sensitive history about the Native people who were in what is now the U.S. before colonization.

A Native teacher, Trish Corcoran of Rochester, New York’s Harley School, told Spectrum News 1 that there are 27 states that don't have any Native American curriculum in their schools, “but those that do, it's pretty narrow.” Corcoran —who is Tonawanda Onondowaga Seneca, Bear Clan— added that most of that curriculum is in the 1800s or earlier. “So that would give you an idea of why 87% of high school students think we're all dead.”

Organizers with "Reclaiming Native Truth" reported that nearly half of Americans say what they learned in school was inaccurate, while 72% believe it’s necessary to improve school curricula on Native American history. Many others weren’t even aware Native people still exist today.

“It's really important for everybody to know more about everyone,” Corcoran told Spectrum 1 News. “It makes us all stronger and better to be in community with one another.”

Brian Bull
Brian Bull
Culture
Dec 2, 2025

Prehistoric canoe ‘parking lot’ found in Wisconsin lake

Archaeologists and tribal preservation officers uncover a 5,000-year-old underwater network that functioned like a modern "ride-share" system

Archaeologists have found 16 canoes submerged in Lake Mendota, in Madison, Wisconsin. The Associated Press reports that they range from 1,200 to 5,200 years old and that researchers believe early Indigenous people deliberately left them near a network of trails for anyone to use as they needed, comparable to a modern bike-share service.

The Wisconsin Historical Society made the announcement. The organization’s maritime archaeologist, Tamara Thomsen, said users would usually bury canoes in sediment in waist- to chest-deep water to keep them from drying out or freezing.

The discoveries began in 2021 and were accomplished with the help of Sissel Schroeder, a UW-Madison professor who specializes in Native American culture, and preservation officers with the Ho-Chunk Nation and the Bad River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa.

It’s believed that early Indigenous travelers may have been going to Lake Wingra, a large lake on the south side of Madison, Amy Rosebrough, the state archaeologist, said in a Wisconsin Historical Society release. Rosebrough added that the Madison area is part of the Ho-Chunk Nation’s ancestral homeland, and one of the springs that feeds into it was believed to be a portal to the spirit world.

AP reported that the Ho-Chunk’s tribal preservation officer, Bill Quackenbush, said in a news release, “The canoes remind us how long our people have lived in this region and how deeply connected we remain to these waters and lands.”

Brian Bull
Brian Bull
Image
One of the 16 dugout canoes submerged in Lake Mendota, Sunday, June 6, 2021. (Wisconsin Historical Society/Tamara Thomsen)
MMIP
Dec 2, 2025

MMIP Christmas tree displayed at State Capitol building

"Dear Santa, all we want for Christmas is for our relatives to come home"

Sacred Pipe Resource Center has put together an MMIP Christmas tree, which will be displayed at the State Capitol building until Dec. 19. The tree features pictures of local missing Indigenous people pasted over the red MMIP handprint.

Near the top of the tree is a photo of Renzo Bullhead, who went missing while crossing a bridge from Mandan to Bismarck on March 16, 2025. A sign next to the tree states, “Dear Santa, all we want for Christmas is for our relatives to come home.”

Jolan Kruse
Jolan Kruse
Federal aid
Dec 2, 2025

Tribes to receive delayed household energy aid

Following a government shutdown delay, the administration releases $3.7 billion in winter heating assistance for 149 tribes and organizations

The Trump administration is releasing $3.7 billion in Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program funds, according to E&E News. The funds were delayed due to the government shutdown. The program helps families pay electric and gas utility bills, and as winter begins, the funds will help keep families warm. In the most recent round of funding, 149 tribes and tribal organizations in 25 states received LIHEAP aid.

The allocation table dated Nov. 28 and released Monday, Dec. 1, shows tribes receiving $42,000 for fiscal year 2026. Tribes should receive the funds soon after they are processed by the Health and Human Services energy assistance division, the department spokesperson told E&E News.

Gabrielle Nelson
Gabrielle Nelson
Giving Tuesday
Dec 1, 2025

Support independent Native journalism: donate to Buffalo’s Fire today!

With less than one percent of major philanthropic aid reaching Indigenous-led non-profits, this Giving Tuesday initiative aims to secure the resources needed to keep vital community reporting alive.

December 2 is Giving Tuesday, and the Indigenous Media Freedom Alliance and Buffalo’s Fire are proud to join the national movement to #GiveNative.

This year’s campaign theme is “Woven Together in Solidarity.” For us, solidarity means amplifying Native voices and investing in the storytelling that keeps our communities informed and connected.

Why your support matters today:

Did you know that only 0.25% of philanthropic funding by large foundations goes to Native-led nonprofits? Despite this, Native-led organizations like ours possess the deep community knowledge and strength necessary to drive real change. Independent journalism is critical for holding power to account and sharing the stories that mainstream outlets often overlook.

Your contribution directly supports independent reporting across Indian Country.

You can make your tax-deductible gift through either of our secure platforms:

Donate via Buffalo’s Fire: www.buffalosfire.com/donate

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Thank you for weaving your support into our work. Together, we ensure that Native voices are heard, today and every day.

Spark image
Washington
Dec 1, 2025

SNAP program will undergo changes this week, many recipient could lose benefits

Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins cited unverified fraud statistics to justify strict new eligibility rules that experts warn could remove millions from food assistance rolls

Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said the Trump administration will implement structural changes to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) this week, according to NPR. Rollins points to “massive fraud” in the program to justify the changes, claiming hundreds of thousands of Americans are receiving double benefits and thousands of deceased people are receiving benefits. The validity of these statistics are unclear, as the USDA has not confirmed Rollins claims.

The changes come on the heels of the November SNAP interruption caused by the government shutdown, which Rollins said spurred the structural changes. Rollins did not specify what changes will occur. A USDA draft of regulation submitted last month suggests the changes may narrow the “broad-based categorical eligibility,” which some welfare recipients can qualify under. A senior policy analyst at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities told NPR an estimated 6 million people could lose benefits with a policy change this big.

Rollins also said all SNAP recipients would have to reapply to receive benefits. A statement from a USDA spokesperson seemed to walk back Rollins’s comment, saying the agency plans to use the standard recertification process.

Gabrielle Nelson
Gabrielle Nelson
Buffalo's Fire staff may use generative AI as a tool to assist in summarizing information for The Daily Spark. Every micropost is reviewed by our team to ensure accuracy, clarity and relevance to Native American communities. See our Standards & Policies.