Court reversal lets DAPL oil flow

Pipeline construction shown along the Missouri River breaks in 2016: “We look forward to showing why the Dakota Access Pipeline is too dangerous to operate,” Standing Rock Sioux Tribal Chair Mike Faith said in 2020. Photo by Talli Nauman WASHINGTON, D.C. – On Aug. 5, a three-judge panel here reversed

Read More
Shared by Native Sun News Today August 12, 2020

Calabrese runs for District 32

Michael Calabrese (running for Senate in District 32) RAPID CITY – When Michael Calabrese decided to run for South Dakota senate in District 32, there was no democratic nominee. Calabrese, 10 days before the filing deadline, gathered enough signatures in 2 days. “I am constantly frustrated when there are unopposed

Read More
Shared by Native Sun News Today August 12, 2020

Native women lead 70-mile ride

Native women motorcyclists led the 70-mile ride from Bear Butte, through the scene of the annual 10-day Sturgis Motorcycle Rally, to Crazy Horse Memorial in the Black Hills. Photo by Talli Nauman PART I BEAR BUTTE – About 100 people from all across the land gathered at this Native sacred

Read More
Shared by Native Sun News Today August 12, 2020

Oyate serves pipelines with ‘eviction notice’

Buffalo, at the center of this pipeline map prepared for the Native Sun News Today, has received state permission for a new municipal well providing public water to the private TC Energy Corp., which seeks to build the Keystone XL Pipeline across the tribes’ unceded Ft Laramie Treaty territory.Map by

Read More
Shared by Native Sun News Today August 6, 2020

Where are the feathers?

Students from American Horse School on the trip to Minneapolis posing with the 57 eagle feathers that were gifted to them. In 2015, a group of 57 Lakota students from American Horse School travelled to a minor league Rush hockey game as a reward for their academic achievements. Three men

Read More
Shared by Native Sun News Today August 6, 2020

They call her the Rosa Parks of Indian Country

  Charlene Teters ALBUQUERQUE – When Charlene Teters, (Spokane), enrolled in graduate school at the University of Illinois in 1989, her teenage children asked to go to a University basketball game. They were enjoying the game when at half time a non-Native man dressed in buckskin, beads, paint and a

Read More
Shared by Native Sun News Today August 6, 2020

Lawlessness and violence at Northern Cheyenne

LAME DEER, Mont. – Within the past few months, four unsolved murders, several home invasions, the rise of bold drug operations in broad daylight on Cheyenne Avenue (Main Street in Lame Deer) ; the increased presence of intoxicated persons also hanging out in that area and finally the rise of

Read More
Shared by Native Sun News Today July 29, 2020

Tribes jump on census bandwagon

Supaman promoted the tribal census response as a means to “holding the government accountable for the treaties we made,” saying, “We need to do our part for our people.” DENVER – The Chocktaw Nation missed out on many millions of dollars in federal aid for Covid-19 relief and other programs

Read More
Shared by Native Sun News Today July 29, 2020

Free masks available at Western Dakota Tech

Free masks available at Western Dakota Tech RAPID CITY – Free masks and mask-making kits can be picked up by residents of Rapid City every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday within the main entrance of Western Dakota Tech (WDT) from 9 a.m. to noon. The masks and mask kits are a

Read More
Shared by Native Sun News Today July 29, 2020