Environmental justice and climate change is multi-dimensional for Indigenous people

SIOUX FALLS – Dr. Kyle Whyte, White House Environmental Justice Advisory Council member, spoke to the Oceti Sakowin Caucus about environmental injustice, environmental equity, consultation, tribal regulatory authority, and President Joe Biden’s initiative to combat climate change. Whyte is a member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation and has written numerous

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Shared by Native Sun News Today June 11, 2021

Treaty protestors score largest pipeline gathering ever

June 7: Indigenous leaders and allies are staging nonviolent demonstrations, calling for Biden to honor treaties, stop construction of Enbridge Energy Inc.’s Line 3, protect water, and defend land. Photo by Darren Thompson PARK RAPIDS, Minnesota — During the largest anti-pipeline action ever mobilized here in Anishinaabe treaty jurisdiction, self-proclaimed

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Shared by Native Sun News Today June 11, 2021

The flood of 1972

Photo courtesy of Perry H. Rahn, SDSMT RAPID CITY—Every year just about every newspaper in the Black Hills is obliged to do a story about the 1972 Rapid City Flood. If you look closely, you will see they sometimes hardly bother to change the wording in the opening sentence. After

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Shared by Native Sun News Today June 11, 2021

Lakota mourn Kamloops children

“Unfortunately, the unmarked graves at the Rapid City Indian Boarding School are a common finding for most Indian boarding schools,” Remembering the Children said. COURTESY / Remembering the Children RAPID CITY – Remembering the Children held a prayer offering here June 4 in tribute to 215 Native Kamloops Residential School

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Shared by Native Sun News Today June 11, 2021

Spotted Wolf Memorial Highway opens in Montana

LAME DEER, Mont. – The scorecard for wins by Indian legislators in the 2021 MT Republican dominated Legislative session was bleak.  But, Representative Rena Whiteman Pena, Northern Cheyenne pulled off a home run when HB 810 was passed on a near unanimous vote late in the session. HB 810 establishes

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Shared by Native Sun News Today June 3, 2021

White Plume inspires ‘New Green Revolution’

Alex White Plume and Winona LaDuke (center) pose with contributors to recent hemp education forum in Indian country. COURTESY / Kerri Pickett OSAGE, Minnesota – Oglala Lakota hemp farmer Alex White Plume co-hosted a  “New Green Revolution” Pre Party here in mid-May. The educational event stressed economists’ assertion that his

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Shared by Native Sun News Today June 3, 2021

Remains of missing girl discovered after 15 years

When the FBI completed the facial approximation of the skull of Durham’s Jane Doe, the resulting image was that of a white woman with red hair. Police released the drawing to the public and received no credible leads on missing Melissa “Missy” Poitra. BELCOURT, N. D. — Relatives held a

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Shared by Native Sun News Today June 3, 2021

Sicangu Lakota face the (Climate) Future

The Sicangu Lakota Oyate (Rosebud Sioux Tribe) have begun planning for its future in a changing climate, according to Tribal President Rodney Bordeaux. Led by the Sicangu Climate Crisis Working Group, the tribe will examine “every aspect of community life — our water, our air, our food, our sacred lands

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Shared by Native Sun News Today June 3, 2021

Tenth Annual Kids’ Carnival

RAPID CITY – Come one, Come all! Clown around at Main Street Square’s Kids’ Carnival on Saturday, June 5 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. The tenth annual Kids’ Carnival is sponsored by Black Hills Parent and Vast Broadband. The Main Street Square Kidz Zone is sponsored by Monument Health.

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Shared by Native Sun News Today June 3, 2021