Restoring the land to federal ownership in trust for the Tribes, for continued bison conservation purposes, makes sense in this situation due to the highly-unique circumstances involved, including the following:
In the 1870’s, CSKT Tribal members sought, and eventually received, consent from Tribal leaders to bring several of the country’s last remaining wild bison over the Continental Divide to
start a bison herd on the Flathead Indian Reservation. This was essentially for the purpose of maintaining a conservation herd in response to what appeared to be the plains bison’s imminent extinction. These bison grew into a small herd, which was later acquired by Tribal members Michel Pablo and Charles Allard, who increased it to a much larger bison herd commonly referred to as the “Pablo-Allard herd”. The Pablo-Allard herd ranged freely on the Reservation for decades before having to be sold to off-Reservation interests in the early 1900’s due to the opening of the Reservation, over strong objection from the Tribes, for non-Indian settlement. In the early 1900’s, 18 bison from the Pablo-Allard herd were brought to Yellowstone National Park to augment its dwindling bison herd, which had consisted of an estimated 22 animals by 1902. In the Hellgate Treaty of 1855, the United States promised that the Flathead Reservation would forever be the Tribes’ permanent homeland. In exchange, the Tribes agreed to relinquish millions of acres of their aboriginal territory. The Tribes lived up to their promise. Sadly, the United States did not. In 1908-1909, over the strong objection of the Tribes, the United States unlawfully took the land from the Tribes for what is now the NBR. The United States had paid about $1.56 per acre for it, which the U.S. Court of Claims held, in 1971, did not constitute fair market value at the time the land was taken. The court therefore held it to be an unconstitutional taking under the Fifth Amendment and awarded CSKT around $231,548 in compensation for what the government should have paid the Tribes when it took the NBR land ( approximately $14 per acre, based upon the 1912 fair market value rate). Tribal members have for generations believed that no amount of money could compensate them for removal of the NBR from their permanent homeland. After the National Bison Range was established in 1908, the federal government needed to obtain animals for its initial bison population. An enduring irony is that most of the bison acquired for the NBR’s initial herd consisted of the recently-ejected bison from the Pablo-Allard herd, or their descendants, that were bought back from their recent off-Reservation purchasers. The Tribes’ special relationship and history with these particular bison are the sources of continued pride and an ongoing sense of responsibility for their well-being. From 1933 through 1959, Tribal members paid many visits to a white bison born at the NBR. He was called Big Medicine in recognition of the esteem in which he was held. Big Medicine, a descendant of the Pablo-Allard herd, was a touchstone for Tribal members’ ongoing relationship with the bison at the NBR. From 1994 through 2016, CSKT engaged in extensive and repeated efforts towards entering into partnership agreements with the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service for management participation at the NBR. These contracts are authorized by the Tribal Self-Governance Act and two such agreements were in effect from 2005-2006 and 2008-2010. CSKT’s NBR Self-Governance agreements are exceptional in the country. No other tribe has had similar contracts outside of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, under which tribal employees performed the same scale and scope of federal work as CSKT performed at the National Bison Range. Under its Self-Governance agreements, CSKT employed over a dozen employees at the NBR. Under the 2008-2010 agreement, CSKT managed all or part of the NBR’s biology, maintenance, fire and visitor service programs and also staffed one of the Deputy Refuge Manager positions. Under the 2005-2006 agreement, CSKT had also employed staff in those same programs. The Tribes’ Natural Resources Department has extensive experience in wildlife and natural resources management, including the establishment and management of the country’s first tribally-designated wilderness area (the 91,000 acre Mission Mountains Tribal Wilderness), as well as special management districts for large animals (Little Money Bighorn Sheep Special Management District, Ferry Basin Elk Special Management District) and the restoration and management of bighorn sheep populations, peregrine falcons and trumpeter swans on the Reservation. After amendments, in December 2020 the Montana Water Rights Protection Act was incorporated into the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2021 (HR 133), which was passed by the House and Senate on December 21, 2020 and signed into law by the President on December 27, 2020 as Public Law 116-260.