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  • Native News Online Journalist Jenna Kunze is measuring the impacts of boarding school on the Rosebud Sicangu Oyate Reservation 
  • She’s working in partnership with tribal members and experts across Indian Country 
  • “This survey will help us better understand ourselves, as well as have better data on who and what we have been through,” said tribal member Christopher Eagle Bear. 
  • The results will be included in three articles, written by Kunze, to show non-Natives and policy makers the ripple effects caused by Indian Boarding Schools.
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The Department of Commerce’s National Telecommunications and Information  Administration (NTIA) announced today it has awarded three grants as part of the Tribal Broadband Connectivity Program. These grants of $500,000 each are being awarded to the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians in Lincoln, Ore., and two Alaska Native villages: the Village of Clarks Point  and the Native Village of Selawik. 

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WASHINGTON — In addition to articles already covered by Native News Online, here is a roundup of other news released from Washington, D.C. that impacts Indian Country during the past week.

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With President Abraham Lincoln in the White House, on January 29, 1863, the Bear River Massacre occurred near present day Preston, Idaho. Reportedly some 350 Shoshone were killed at the hands of the U.S. Army.

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Kevin Sharp, a former federal judge who serves as the attorney for Leonard Peltier, got word that his famous client tested positive for COVID-19 on Friday evening.

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American Indian activist Leonard Peltier (Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians), has tested positive for COVID-19 at the Coleman Federal Correctional Complex in Florida. Peltier is 77-years-old. 

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On Wednesday the Small Business Administration (SBA) signed a tribal consultation policy that says the agency will work to reach out to tribes to gather input into how to better serve tribal communities in Indian Country. Signing the policy for the SBA was its Administrator Isabella C. Guzman. 

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Justice Breyer was no tribal sovereignty warrior ala Sotomayor, but he was no Indian fighter, either. He was part of the Rehnquist Court Nine that stayed together more than a decade. And, as such, he was also a part of a Rehnquist Court that showed nothing but contempt for tribal interests in the 1990s and 2000s. Justice Breyer’s voting patters are striking for one reason only — he rarely dissented from the Court’s majority in the Indian law docket. He seems to have gone with the flow.

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Justice Stephen Breyer, 83, was joined by President Joe Biden on Thursday as he  announced his retirement from the U.S. Supreme Court in the White House’s Roosevelt Room.