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On Sunday, June 29, the Navajo Nation Incident Command Team, Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) Navajo Region Fire Management, and the Navajo Nation Forestry Department held a briefing at the Wellness Center in Window Rock to provide the latest updates on the Oak Ridge Fire burning southwest of the St. Michaels Chapter.

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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 recently.

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Breaking News. A wildfire that ignited on Saturday southwest of the St. Michaels Chapter on the Navajo Nation has scorched at least 200 acres and forced evacuations as it moves aggressively to the southeast.

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U.S. Senators Brian Schatz (D-Hawai‘i), vice chairman of the Indian Affairs Committee, Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.), ranking member on the Energy and Natural Resources Committee, and Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), ranking member of the Finance Committee, released the following statement on Republicans’ proposed budget reconciliation bill that harms Tribal communities:

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MARKSVILLE, La. — Tunica-Biloxi Chairman Marshall Pierite wants to see Indian Country play a role in future economic development over the next four years, with opportunities being presented by the Trump administration.

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More than $38 million in unclaimed funds are still available through the historic Cobell settlement, but the window to apply is closing fast. 

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On Wednesday, Governor Gavin Newsom and the California Jobs First Council announced $15 million in grants to 14 Native American tribes, tribal coalitions, and tribally led organizations across California. These investments aim to drive economic growth, expand job training, support business development, promote environmental stewardship, and fund research and development initiatives.

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On Monday afternoon, Darcy McGrath joined thousands of others in Santa Fe’s De Vargas Park to express her opposition to taking U.S. lands out of public hands. “One of the reasons I moved to Santa Fe from the Midwest was to be closer to the wilderness, to public lands — not only in New Mexico, but Colorado and in Utah,” she said. “I don’t want them destroyed.”

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Red Hoop Talk, the Association on American Indian Affairs’ signature Native news and talk show, continues to serve as a dynamic platform for conversation, cultural celebration, and collective healing. Relaunched in 2024 with a renewed vision and a new host, the show centers Native voices—highlighting lived experiences, humor, and wisdom across generations and Nations.