California Expands Tribal Sovereignty with New Cultural Burning Law and Landmark Agreement with Karuk Tribe

March 04, 2025 00:05:39
California Expands Tribal Sovereignty with New Cultural Burning Law and Landmark Agreement with Karuk Tribe
KMUD News
California Expands Tribal Sovereignty with New Cultural Burning Law and Landmark Agreement with Karuk Tribe

Mar 04 2025 | 00:05:39

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[00:00:02] Speaker A: California is taking a significant step towards honoring tribal sovereignty by passing a new cultural burning law and establishing the first ever cultural burning agreement with the Karuk Tribe, which continues to reside on and steward its ancestral lands in Humboldt and Siskiyou counties. Senate Bill 310 acknowledges the sovereignty of federally recognized tribes to conduct cultural burns, restoring ancestral practices to steward California's lands. Bill Tripp, the Director of Natural Resources for the Karuk Tribe, discussed the impact of Senate Bill 310, which expands tribal authority in fire management and eliminates the need for permits and burn plans. [00:00:55] Speaker B: Senate Bill 310 enables tribes to work with the state of California in a manner that is truly respective of tribal sovereignty, self governance and self determination. [00:01:09] Speaker A: Trippe explained that SB310 builds on previous legislation aimed at supporting the return of cultural fire to the land. [00:01:20] Speaker B: One of those being SB332, which formerly defined cultural fire practitioner in state law and started to enable a little bit of a difference there in tribes being able to determine who is, is able to, to conduct some burning. But, but what ultimately, you know, happened is there other laws were created around addressing the liability structures. It's really hard to get like insurance. It's hard to get anything done if you don't address liability up front. [00:01:54] Speaker A: In 2022, the state of California implemented a first of its kind approach to addressing the state's catastrophic wildfire cr. Senate Bill 926 was signed into law on June 19th of that year and created new protections for prescribed fire and cultural burning practitioners. As part of the initiative, the state allocated $20 million for the prescribed fire Liability Claims Pilot Fund, which covers losses in the rare event that a prescribed or cultural burn escapes control. [00:02:33] Speaker B: What ended up happening in that law passing was that some of the things in SB332, particularly the fact that cultural fire practitioners are not required to have a burn plan, a written burn plan, to conduct burning in order to access the prescribed fire and culture burning claims fund that ultimately ended up requiring a burn plant which basically took away, you know, kind of set that conversation backward when it came to cultural fire practitioners. [00:03:08] Speaker A: Tripp explained that in Karuk culture, people have lived in the region for thousands of years without a written language, and as a result, traditional fire stewardship has been passed down orally, and formal burn plans, permits and bureaucratic systems can feel foreign to the tribe. He emphasized that Indigenous knowledge practices and belief systems are deeply rooted in observing and responding to natural cues, rather than relying on written documentation to support the continued revitalization of these practices. Senator Bill Dodd of Napa, the same lawmaker behind the liability fund, authored SB310, which Trip says directly addresses these challenges. [00:03:59] Speaker B: You know, SB310 kind of helped to provide the fix for that. And so now we have an authority in the state of California for tribes to enter into an agreement in lieu of a permitting process. And so it makes it to where there are no permits required and there's no burn plan required and all those things. And there's when an agreement is in place. [00:04:32] Speaker A: Now the Karuk Tribal Council and the California Natural Resources Agency have established a groundbreaking agreement that empowers Karuk cultural fire practitioners to conduct burns under traditional ecological knowledge, practice and belief systems. This historic partnership allows Karuk practitioners to access the prescribed Fire and Cultural Burning Claims fund without requiring formal burn plans. The agreement reinforces the Karuk Tribe's traditional use of fire to enhance food systems, fiber resources and medicinal plants while preserving their cultural knowledge and belief systems. Additionally, these cultural burning practices contribute to wildfire resilience, promoting healthier ecological conditions for all. KMA News spent a half hour speaking with Bill Tripp, Karuk Tribal member and director of Natural Resources. We will air the full interview during Tuesday night's edition of public affairs at 5:30, just before the local news.

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