The Daily Spark
Small sparks from Indian Country, built to catch fire
NCAI announces passing of former Executive Director JoAnn K. Chase
The National Congress of American Indians announced the passing of JoAnn K. Chase, a citizen of the Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara Nation and former executive director of the organization, according to a statement from NCAI.
Chase served as executive director of NCAI and the NCAI Fund from 1994 to 2001. During her tenure, she tripled the organization’s staff, operating budget and tribal membership and expanded its advocacy for tribal sovereignty in Washington, according to NCAI. She previously served as director of governmental affairs and policy analyst, helping to develop the organization’s governmental affairs program and legislative advocacy on behalf of tribal governments.
After leaving NCAI, Chase served as director of the American Indian Environmental Office at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, where she led national efforts on environmental protection and tribal consultation, according to the statement. NCAI Executive Director Larry Wright Jr. said her leadership strengthened the organization’s voice for tribal nations.
Ancient Native canoes in Lake Mendota spur tribal collaboration
More than a dozen ancient dugout canoes have been identified in Lake Mendota in southern Wisconsin, inspiring collaboration between scientists and Native nations to preserve Indigenous history, according to PBS Wisconsin and ICT.
Tamara Thomsen, a maritime archaeologist with the Wisconsin Historical Society, discovered the first canoe in 2021 during a dive. Radiocarbon analysis dated it to about 1,200 years old. Two additional canoes found the following year were dated at 3,000 and 2,000 years old. A total of 16 canoes were identified in the lake between 2022 and 2025, with the oldest estimated at 5,200 years old, PBS Wisconsin and ICT reported.
Thomsen said consultation with Wisconsin’s Native nations began before any canoes were recovered. Lawrence Plucinski, tribal historic preservation officer for the Bad River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa, said the canoes reflect long-standing Indigenous use of inland waterways for harvesting, hunting and fishing. Two recovered canoes are being stabilized at the State Archive Preservation Facility in Madison.
Little Earth housing community faces immigration crackdown in Minneapolis
The Little Earth Native housing complex in Minneapolis became a focus of federal immigration enforcement efforts during a surge in January and early February, according to ICT.
Parents at the 212-unit housing community said they feared their children could be detained as nearly 3,000 armed federal agents, including Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Border Patrol personnel, were sent to the city as part of Operation Metro Surge, ICT reported. Donavan Begay Postier, Diné and director of adult and family empowerment programs for the Little Earth Residents’ Association, said agents entered the community several times and questioned parents near the Little Earth Neighborhood Early Learning Center.
On Jan. 6, ICE agents attempted to enter Little Earth but were turned away by property managers, according to ICT. Begay Postier said residents organized to monitor enforcement activity and provide food deliveries and space for tribal ID services while some families kept children home from school.
After typhoon remnants devastate Kipnuk, tribal leaders weigh relocation
Four months after the remnants of Typhoon Halong devastated Western Alaska communities, tribal members in Kipnuk are considering whether to permanently relocate, according to reporting by the Alaska Beacon. The tribal government collected votes from enrolled adult members on whether to rebuild or move to one of two potential sites at least 40 feet above sea level. Rayna Paul, environmental director for the Native Village of Kipnuk, told the Alaska Beacon the vote is intended to serve as a final decision. Bryan Fisher, director of the Alaska Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management, estimated damages from the October storm at $125 million as of early February.
Experts from the University of Alaska Fairbanks said at the Alaska Forum environmental conference that repeated powerful fall storms, including ex-typhoons, have increasingly caused severe damage in populated areas of Western Alaska, the Alaska Beacon reported.
Judge says he will order Greenpeace to pay expected $345 million in pipeline protest case
The Associated Press reports that a North Dakota judge said he will order Greenpeace to pay damages expected to total $345 million in connection with protests against the Dakota Access oil pipeline in 2016 and 2017.
In court papers filed Tuesday, cited by the Associated Press, Judge James Gion said he would sign an order requiring several Greenpeace entities to pay the judgment to pipeline company Energy Transfer. He set the amount at $345 million last year after reducing a jury’s original $666.9 million award by about half, but the latest filing did not specify a final total. The order is expected to begin an appeal process in the North Dakota Supreme Court from both sides.
Last year, a nine-person jury found Netherlands-based Greenpeace International, Greenpeace USA and Greenpeace Fund Inc. liable for defamation and other claims brought by Dallas-based Energy Transfer and subsidiary Dakota Access. The jury found Greenpeace USA liable on all counts, including conspiracy, trespass, nuisance and tortious interference, and assigned it $404 million of the original judgment before it was reduced.
Supreme Court hears Line 5 case with implications for treaty rights
The U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments Tuesday in Enbridge v. Nessel, a case that could determine whether Michigan or federal courts decide the fate of the 73-year-old Line 5 oil pipeline, according to reporting by Grist. The 645-mile pipeline runs from Superior, Wisconsin, through Michigan to the province of Ontario in Canada, and carries more than 500,000 barrels of oil and natural gas daily. All 12 federally recognized tribes in Michigan have called for it to be shut down, citing threats to treaty-protected fishing and hunting rights in the Straits of Mackinac.
The justices are considering whether a lower court properly allowed Enbridge to move the case from state to federal court more than two years after the standard 30-day deadline. Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel sued in 2019 to shut down the pipeline. Tribal nations are not parties in the case, but advocates say the outcome could affect how courts handle disputes involving treaty rights and state authority over natural resources.
New Mexico bill allowing Native American ID designation dies
A bill that would have allowed tribal citizens in New Mexico to request an optional Native American designation on state-issued identification cards failed to advance before the legislative session ended Feb. 19, according to reporting by New Mexico In Depth. Senators debated the House bill for about 30 minutes before Majority Floor Leader Peter Wirth said they would move on to other legislation.
Supporters said the designation would have helped tribal citizens prove U.S. citizenship if questioned by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents. “We’ve had instances in other states where Native people have been arrested by ICE and scrambling to figure out how they can get out of it to prove that they’re Native American,” Sen. Benny Shendo, D-Jemez Pueblo, was quoted as saying on the Senate floor. Co-sponsor Sen. Angel Charley, D-Acoma, said the proposal was brought at constituents’ request.
Feds approve $2B Goldendale project on Yakama sacred site
Federal energy regulators last week approved a roughly $2 billion renewable energy project on a Yakama Nation sacred site overlooking the Columbia River in Klickitat County, according to reporting by The Columbian. The 40-year federal license allows the Goldendale Energy Storage Project to move toward construction, though opponents have 30 days to challenge the decision in court, according to Simone Anter, senior staff attorney at Columbia Riverkeeper. Erik Steimle, who is leading the project for Rye Development, said construction could begin in 2027.
Yakama leaders and environmental groups oppose the project, which would transform the hillside known as Pushpum into a pumped storage hydropower facility. Yakama Tribal Council Chairman Gerald Lewis called the approval “rewarding bad actors,” while Elaine Harvey, a member of the Yakama’s Kamíłpa Band, told The Columbian the project would cause “a total desecration of our sacred site.”
Oglala Lakota Telecommunications announces $54.5M broadband expansion on Pine Ridge
Oglala Lakota Telecommunications announced a $54.5 million investment to expand broadband access across the Pine Ridge Reservation, with construction scheduled to begin this spring and service launching in 2026, according to a company news release issued Feb. 23. The tribally owned provider said the expansion includes a $19.6 million NTIA Fixed Wireless Project supported by fiber optic backhaul and a $34.9 million Fiber-to-the-Home project funded through the USDA ReConnect Program.
The fiber project will serve Swett, Batesland, Denby, Wounded Knee, Manderson, Porcupine, Sharps Corner and the outskirts of Kyle, reaching about 4,137 people, 846 households, 13 businesses and nine community anchor institutions, according to the release. Petra Wilson, chairperson of the OLT Board of Directors, was quoted as saying the investment will “close the digital divide for nearly every unserved location on Pine Ridge.” Construction is scheduled to begin in the spring, with service offerings launching in 2026, according to Jeff Little, vice president of the western region of Palmetto Engineering and Consulting LLC.
Two Spirit, MMIWR photo exhibit begins state tour
A traveling photo exhibit highlighting Two Spirit people and Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Relatives opens Friday at the Carnegie Art Center in Mankato, Minnesota, before heading to Minneapolis in June, according to MPR News. “Two Spirit and MMIW/R Voices” marks its first showing outside the Bemidji area and features 25 photographs blending PRIDE flag colors with traditional Indigenous regalia and imagery associated with the MMIWR movement.
Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe member Arnold Dahl-Wooley, a lead organizer and model in the exhibit, told MPR the project aims to raise awareness about violence and misunderstanding faced by LGBTQ+ and Indigenous communities. The exhibit runs in Mankato through March 7 and will be displayed in Loring Park in Minneapolis June 27-28.
BIA Missing and Murdered Unit finds remains during Oklahoma search
The Bureau of Indian Affairs Missing and Murdered Unit and the Chickasaw Lighthorse Police Department conducted a large-scale search this week in southern Oklahoma as part of the ongoing investigation into the 2013 disappearance of Molly Miller, a citizen of the Chickasaw Nation, and Colt Haynes, according to an official announcement.
The search began Feb. 17 and covered more than 1,000 acres in Love County. On Feb. 18, teams working in an area between Oswalt Road, Pike Road and Long Hollow Road discovered two sets of human remains. The remains were collected by the FBI Evidence Response Team and the Oklahoma Office of the Chief Medical Examiner for forensic examination and identification. Officials said the identities are unknown and it has not been determined whether the remains are connected to Miller and Haynes. The investigation remains active.
Indigenous-owned Tootsie’s Tea prepares to open Milwaukee storefront
Tootsie’s Tea, an Indigenous-owned tea company founded by Lizz Tsosie-Stachura, is preparing to open a brick-and-mortar storefront just west of downtown Milwaukee in spring 2026, according to ICT.
Tsosie-Stachura, who is Diné and Lenca, created the business in December 2020 and has operated it online while selling at local Indigenous markets. She said the company’s name comes from a common mispronunciation of her maiden name, Tsosie. With a grant from Feeding America, she purchased equipment to craft her own blends.
Tsosie-Stachura said she sources ingredients from Indigenous foragers when possible, including suppliers on the Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Chippewa and Bad River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa reservations. She said 15% of profits will go back into the Milwaukee community and that the storefront will include space for community gatherings.
Idaho Indian Affairs council urges protection for Medicaid
The Idaho Council on Indian Affairs voted Wednesday to draft a letter urging state budget writers to protect Medicaid funding, including Medicaid expansion, and exempt Native American tribal members from cuts, according to the Idaho Capital Sun.
Michael Steele, a policy analyst for the Shoshone-Bannock Tribes, told the council the federal government reimburses 100% of Medicaid service costs for tribal members. “The past year that I’ve worked for the Shoshone-Bannock Tribe, I’ve seen firsthand the importance of Medicaid,” Steele was quoted as saying. He said 54% of tribal members living on the Fort Hall Indian Reservation are enrolled in Medicaid and Medicaid funding represents 82% of the Tribal Health and Human Services budget.
The council voted unanimously to draft the letter. Rep. Brandon Mitchell, R-Moscow, said he would want to see the letter before adding his name.
Supreme Court tariff ruling may bolster Blackfeet lawsuit
A recent U.S. Supreme Court decision overturning tariffs imposed by the Trump administration could aid a lawsuit filed by Blackfeet Nation tribal members challenging similar tariffs, according to the Daily Montanan.
Attorney Monica Tranel, representing state Sen. Susan Webber, Jonathan St. Goddard, Rhonda Mountain Chief and David Mountain Chief, was quoted as saying the high court’s 6-3 ruling in Learning Resources, Inc. v. Trump “helps our argument because it was a very clear delineation of the separation of powers.” The Supreme Court found that Congress alone holds the power to tax and that the administration was not justified in invoking the International Economic Emergency Powers Act to impose tariffs.
The plaintiffs sued the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, the United States of America and Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem, arguing the tariffs against Canada violate treaty rights and exceed presidential authority, according to the Daily Montanan. The federal government has asked the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals to dismiss the appeal and uphold the transfer of the case to the Court of International Trade.
Native Education Cabinet raises concerns over IEA Act implementation
Members of the Wyoming Department of Education’s Native Education Cabinet raised concerns about the implementation of the Indian Education for All Act during a recent meeting of the Wyoming Legislature’s Select Committee on Tribal Relations, according to County 10. The 2017 law requires the department to ensure American Indian history, culture and contributions are included in state social studies standards and to provide resources to school districts.
According to a WDE report presented last month, the agency created an online repository with 22 resources, including nine tied to Wyoming’s tribes. Only 18 of 48 school districts responded to a survey about the materials. Cabinet members Scotty Ratliff and Veronica Miller cited concerns about outreach, communication and the impact of a 2025 state law restricting diversity, equity and inclusion programs. The WDE updated a Dec. 15 memo to clarify an exemption for federally recognized tribes, according to Chief Communications Officer Linda Finnerty.
Investigation Discovery’s “Lost Women of Alaska” to debut Feb. 25
The true crime show tells the story of murdered Indigenous Alaskan women
Investigation Discovery is releasing a true crime show about murdered Indigenous women in Alaska. The show, titled “Lost Women of Alaska,” will debut on Feb. 25 at 7 p.m. CST. According to Us Weekly, It follows the stories of two Native women who were murdered and the investigation that led to the arrest of their killer.
The show will be produced by Oscar-winning actress Octavia Spencer. The show is part of the “Lost Women” franchise, which raises awareness for crimes against women.
“Expanding the Lost Women franchise allows us to shine a light on cases involving underrepresented women,” Spencer was quoted as saying in a statement, “and “Lost Women of Alaska confronts the devastating intersection of race and systemic failures that perpetuate violence against Indigenous women.”
Jocelyne Larocque becomes most-decorated Indigenous Olympian from North America
Métis hockey player Jocelyne Larocque earned her fourth Olympic medal after Canada fell 2-1 to the United States in overtime during the women’s gold-medal game Feb. 19 at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan, Italy, according to ICT. The silver medal adds to her two golds and one silver from prior Olympics, making her the most-decorated Indigenous Olympian from North America.
Larocque, who grew up in Sainte Anne, Manitoba, has represented Canada since 2008. She made her Olympic debut in 2014 in Sochi, Russia, where she won gold, according to ICT. She also won gold in 2022 in Beijing and silver in 2018 in Pyeongchang. In addition to her Olympic medals, Larocque has won four gold and five silver medals at world championships and received the Tom Longboat Award in 2018.
Red Lake leaders discuss boundaries, federal funding at State of the Band
Red Lake Tribal Chairman Darrell Seki Sr. highlighted efforts to restore the tribe’s historic boundaries and addressed federal funding during the 2026 State of the Band Address on Feb. 20 at the Oshkiimaajitahdah Community Center in Redby, Minnesota, according to the Duluth News Tribune. Seki said reclaiming the eastern portion of Upper Red Lake remains a priority and that the tribe is urging the U.S. Department of the Interior Solicitor’s Office and the Office of Tribal Justice to resume work on a legal opinion related to the intended 1889 boundaries.
Seki also discussed funding for the Bureau of Indian Affairs, Bureau of Indian Education and Indian Health Service, describing recent levels as essentially flat, according to the Duluth News Tribune. Tribal Secretary Sam Strong spoke about unity and said he will not seek reelection. The tribal council also passed a Jan. 13 resolution requiring a court order for Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers to enter Red Lake Nation, the newspaper reported.
Chiefs remove four Northern Cheyenne Council members
A group of traditional Northern Cheyenne Chiefs removed four tribal council members during a February meeting, according to Native Sun News. The officials targeted for removal were Tory Davies and Rueben Roundstone of the Busby District and Cory Spotted Elk and Wade Red Hat of the Lame Deer District. The chiefs reportedly acted because the council members missed too many meetings.
Native Sun News reported there has been no official notice of the action. Llevando “Cowboy” Fisher, a two-term former tribal president, and Lynwood Ewing, a former council member and tribal treasurer, verbally confirmed the removals to activist Amanda White Shirt, Native Sun News reported. President Gene Small did not provide an official comment, and council members removed from office were not present at a Feb. 17 council meeting.
Naytahwaush artists featured in multigenerational exhibit
More than 100 people attended a reception on Feb. 14 for “Minwaajimowinan — Good Stories” at the Watermark Art Center in Bemidji, according to MPR News. The exhibition features artwork spanning generations by members of the Ojibwe village of Naytahwaush. Guest curator and artist Kent Estey told MPR the show fulfills a longtime goal of displaying his family’s work, including baskets by his grandmother, Josephine Robinson, an Ojibwe black ash basket maker born in 1893.
Estey said Robinson attended boarding school and later Carlisle Indian Industrial School before returning to the White Earth Reservation. He said basketry “carried her through” life. The exhibition also includes eight families and a music showcase featuring Steve Turner and Doyle Turner. The show runs through March 28, according to MPR News.