NICE, Calif. – In a move that may be a first in Indian Country, the Robinson Rancheria Citizens Business Council has taken action to reinstate the membership of dozens of people who were the target of a bitterly contested 2008 disenrollment action.



Based on direction from a majority vote of tribal members, on Feb. 1 the tribal council, led by Chairman Eddie “EJ” Crandell, voted in favor of a resolution that allows for the reinstatement of about 60 individuals who had been ousted from the tribe following a disputed 2008 tribal election.



Crandell said notices will be sent out to the impacted individuals, who will then be asked to come and sign their reenrollment resolutions.



The tribe will conduct enrollment proceedings on Feb. 27, with Crandell adding that he hopes to have everything finalized on March 2.



On March 3, the tribe will hold a community dinner to discuss its five-year plan with a consultant. Crandell said the reenrolled members will be invited to participate so they can be a part of the tribe’s future development.



While it’s hoped that that the action will begin healing and reunite the tribe, Crandell acknowledges that there are some issues that will not be resolved, such as housing.



Some of these who were disenrolled lost their homes on the rancheria, as they were evicted subsequent to the previous council’s 2008 action, he said.



For Crandell and the families who found themselves stripped of membership and tribal identity – some of them Crandell’s close relatives – the effort to bring back those who were disenrolled has been a long time in coming.



Crandell said he had been trying to convince the membership to take the step for a long time.



“This was really the right path to take,” said Wanda Quitiquit, who along with many members of her family were removed from the tribal rolls. She added that such reinstatement actions are unheard of.



“This is a first and this is historic,” said Gabe Galanda, an attorney who has advocated to bring attention to the disenrollment issue confronting tribes on the West Coast.



The Robinson tribal council’s action appears unique in that the tribal council reversed itself as opposed to a court ruling against it.



That was the case in August, when the Grand Ronde Tribal Court of Appeals in Oregon reversed the disenrollment of 66 people, finding that the tribe had waited too long to correct an alleged enrollment error. Galanda represented the 66 people who had been targeted for disenrollment in that case.



Last week, Galanda was involved with launching a social media campaign titled #stopdisenrollment that included a number of celebrities, as well as tribal leaders like Crandell, speaking out against the practice.



The roots of the disenrollment



The roots of the disenrollment go back to June of 2008, when Crandell ran for the tribal chair seat against then-Tribal Chair Tracey Avila.



Crandell won the election, but the results later were thrown out following a dispute, allowing Avila to retain her seat.



In December 2008 – a month after the tribal council changed its enrollment ordinance – disenrollment proceedings were initiated by the council against members of the Quitiquit family, who had supported Crandell in the election.



Eventually, approximately 67 tribal members – including the Quitiquits’ deceased mother, elders and some of the tribe’s last native speakers, and even a 2-year-old child – were disenrolled in an action upheld by the Bureau of Indian Affairs in April of 2010.



In 2011, Avila was arrested following a federal investigation that found she had stolen more than $60,000 from the Elem Colony of Pomo Indians in Clearlake Oaks between February 2006 and September 2008, while she had worked as the tribe’s fiscal officer. Despite the arrest, she remained tribal chair, a post she held until her death in late 2013.



As members of the disenrolled families fought the BIA or even moved on to join other tribes, Crandell had worked quietly for years to try to put the broken tribal family back together.



In time, he was elected into the tribal leadership, becoming Robinson’s tribal chair in January 2015. Outside of the tribe he also has assumed a community leadership role, with Supervisor Jim Steele appointing him in September to the Lake County Planning Commission.



In 2016, the tribe had slowly started to bring back some of those who had been disenrolled. Crandell estimated about six or seven individuals were reenrolled at that time, including two of his aunts and the three adult children of former Tribal Chair Clayton Duncan.



Crandell said that the action the council took earlier this month was precipitated in part by in-depth research conducted by tribal member Adrien Malicay.



It was Malicay who, during a recent meeting of the membership, moved to bring the disenrolled members back home, Crandell said.



The vote was 54 to 25 to direct the tribal council to reenroll those who had their membership stripped in 2008, according to Crandell. That vote was ratified by the council’s resolution on Feb. 1.



The Quitiquits said that Crandell was in contact with them to let them know that a move toward reinstatement was under way.



“I’m somewhat elated over the decision to be reenrolled,” said Marion Quitiquit, Wanda Quitiquit’s brother.



However, the issues with the disenrollment and the BIA’s upholding of the action in 2010 have left him angry.



Marion Quitiquit, who lives with wife Dora in Lucerne, said he wasn’t totally dependent on the tribe for support, so he didn’t suffer as much damage as others did.



He said the disenrollment had no regard for those who had children or other dependents, adding that he believed the BIA ignored the appeals of those were were the target of the action.



“We did lose three family member due to this disenrollment,” he said, referring to brother Larry, and sisters Pat and Luwana.



Luwana Quitiquit, who had been a respected Pomo artisan and basketmaker as well as a former member of the tribal council, had been exhausted from fighting the Robinson Rancheria council, her brother said.



At the time of her death, she was fighting an effort by the tribe to evict her from her house. “I think that was the final thing that really stressed her out,” Marion Quitiquit said.



Several months after her death in December 2011, her family was evicted from the home.



Despite his anger at the treatment of himself and his family, Marion Quitiquit can see some hope ahead for the tribe. “I think we’re heading in the right direction as far as getting it back in order and the way it's supposed to operate.”



“The majority vote was the first step in healing,” said Wanda Quitiquit, who added that she and those who are being reinstated feel like they won’t believe it until it becomes a reality.



“It’s hard to get my feelings around it. This is bittersweet,” she said, also recalling her siblings who have died and “the fact that they didn't get justice.”



“Things could have been different for them,” she said. “That needs to be said.”



Now, it’s about healing. “I really salute the tribal members who voted to reenroll us. It's about the tribal members who need to do the right thing, be on the right side of history,” she said.



Over the last eight years, she said she has felt like a refugee, as with the disenrollment the federal government no longer recognized her American Indian status, which took away some of her civil rights as a tribal member.



For those who were disenrolled, there also was the loss of programs for elders and education, tribal jobs, per capita earnings and housing, she said.



A lot of California’s Indians are suffering due to disenrollment, Quitiquit said.



“Indian Country is going to be facing some big challenges these next few years, so it's important to do the right thing,” she added.



An important and unprecedented step



Tim Harjo, Robinson’s attorney, has experience working with tribal governments, their constitutions and governance, assisted Robinson Rancheria’s council with reviewing the constitutional issues associated with the disenrollment.



Disenrollment in general is a very uncommon thing, said Harjo, adding that it’s more common in California than other places.



Putting people who have been removed from their tribes back into membership also is rare, he said.



In the tribe’s latest action, Harjo said his role was to provide another set of eyes and review the constitution, and to assist the council in replacing language in the tribal constitution that the previous council had removed in November 2008.



The new resolution passed on Feb. 1 explains that in 2008 the tribal council claimed there was a conflict between the tribal constitution and the tribe’s enrollment ordinance regarding adding members through adoption.



While the constitution, drafted around 1980, didn’t contain specific language about adding membership through adoption, the tribe had desired to to add members whose families had been listed in the 1940s Robinson Rancheria census rolls, according to discussions Harjo had with tribal elders involved in drafting the document. He said the BIA had told them they didn’t need to add that language.



The enrollment ordinance, which like the constitution was approved by the BIA, did contain such language about membership through adoption in one of its sections. In 2008 the tribal council passed a resolution to strike that section of the ordinance, arguing that it had been an error to grant people membership in that way, Harjo said.



The new resolution says that the tribal constitution authorizes discretionary authority to the business council “to prescribe rules and regulations governing the adoption of members into the tribe.”



It said the council had properly exercised its authority in enacting the enrollment ordinance in 1982, and that the current council is restoring those rules.



The document ends by stating that the 2008 council’s action to amend the enrollment ordinance “was a lawful exercise of discretionary authority by the Business Council and individuals applying for membership who may have been removed from membership following the 2008 amendments shall have no claim or rights in tribal benefits or services following removal from membership.”



With those actions taken, Harjo said the tribe can now move forward and let the individuals who were disenrolled rejoin the tribe’s membership. “And that’s where we’re at.”



“What they’re doing is very remarkable,” Harjo said. “It’s very rare to see something like this happen.”



He added, “They’re doing the right thing,” and it shows in the tribe, where healing is starting to happen. “They’re coming back together as a community.”



Galanda, originally from Round Valley and an enrolled member of the Round Valley Indian Tribes, now lives and works in Seattle, where a large part of his practice is representing disenrollees.



He estimated that over the past four years he’s worked with 600 American Indians in Washington, Oregon and Idaho who have been targeted for disenrollment.



He also wrote an article published in 2015 in the Arizona Law Review titled, “Curing the Tribal Disenrollment Epidemic: In Search of a Remedy.”



The #stopdisenrollment effort that Galanda is involved with has had support from many opponents of the practice, who call it a kind of genocide that is self-defeating for tribes, a way of diminishing tribal sovereignty, a perpetuation of injustice and colonialism, and an act that leaves cultural resources and people extremely vulnerable.



In his experience, Galanda said the abuse of power and greed are the two common denominators in disenrollments. Often, gaming tribes are involved.



Capitalism and individualism have overcome tribalism, “and that’s by federal design of at least 200 years,” said Galanda.



He said foreign, nonindigenous notions of commerce and culture have been foisted upon tribes. When he comes into a community facing disenrollment, Galanda asks if their language has a word for it. He said there are no native words to describe the process.



“This is not something that has existed with tribes until the last, really, few decades,” he said. “California Indians made disenrollment a nationwide tribal trend.”



With Robinson’s action, Galanda said Northern California Indians, and Pomo tribes in particular, are now reversing that “horrific trend.”



“That’s the beauty of what Chairman Crandell and Robinson have accomplished, in my estimation,” Galanda said.



That’s empowering other tribal leaders to step up and speak out, which Galanda said is critical because he believes intertribal silence has allowed for the disenrollment epidemic.



While it’s historically been taboo for one tribe to speak out against another sovereign tribe, “They’re now saying enough is enough,” as disenrollment breeds more human rights issues, said Galanda.



“What Robinson has accomplished signals that the tide is turning on disenrollment nationally,” he said.



Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.

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