Honoring our Ancestors: Chippewa Flowage Joint
Agency Management Plan
Lac Courte Oreilles Band of Lake Superior
Chippewa Indians (Hayward, WI)
Contact:
Hon. Michael Isham
Lac Courte Oreilles Tribal Governing Board
Member
13394 W. Trepania Road
Hayward, WI 54843
Phone: (715) 634-8934
E-Mail: viish@cheqnet.net
In 2000, the Lac Courte Oreilles
Band of Lake Superior Chippewa righted half
a century of ineffective management of the
Chippewa Flowage by signing a Joint Agency
Management Plan with the Wisconsin Department
of Natural Resources and the United States
Forest Service. This Plan identifies not only
the common interests that direct the management
of the Flowage, but also the grim legacy of
loss resulting from the flooding of Lac Courte
Oreilles homelands and burial grounds. The
Plan brings together three sovereign governments
to preserve a valuable natural resource in
a culturally appropriate manner.
The
Chippewa Flowage, lying partially on the Lac
Courte Oreilles Reservation, is Wisconsin
's third largest lake. Speckled with over
two hundred islands, the Flowage stretches
across fifteen thousand acres. Its largely
pristine shoreline curves through a patchwork
of hills, valleys, and bogs. These lands are
mostly wooded and offer rich habitat to most
of the birds and animals indigenous to northern
Wisconsin including eagles, deer, and walleye.
While
the Chippewa Flowage is now regarded as a
treasure of natural beauty and recreational
opportunity, its creation marked a grim loss
for the Lac Courte Oreilles Band of Lake Superior
Chippewa. In creating the Flowage in the 1920
— an endeavor motivated by the prospect of
power generation — the federal government
authorized the flooding of a significant portion
of the Lac Courte Oreilles traditional territory.
These homelands included wild rice fields,
hunting and fishing grounds, the village of
Post , and tribal burial grounds. Unfortunately,
the Tribe's vehement objections were ignored,
and its lands were inundated. The Chippewa
Flowage decimated the tribal economy, forced
tribal members to relocate, and covered sacred
cultural and ceremonial sites. Tragically,
since the time of the flooding, Lac Courte
Oreilles ancestors' remains have washed up
onto the lake's shores.
Although
the Flowage brought tremendous sadness to
the Lac Courte Oreilles people, for years
they sought to obtain the rights to manage
the acreage bordering it. The tribal government
eventually won these rights in the 1970s.
Success in the courtroom, while satisfying,
was only a partial win, however. The tribal
government possessed neither the technical
capacity nor sufficient governmental influence
to manage the resource. Consequently, the
Tribe shared the management of the Flowage
with the state of Wisconsin and the United
States Forest Service. State and federal interests
were influenced by lessee landowners including
timber companies, resorts, and non-tribal
residents. In the absence of an effective
mechanism for coordinating governance, the
Lac Courte Oreilles' purposes were frequently
frustrated by the state and federal governments'
actions or, in many cases, inaction. In instances
when individual businesses or owners threatened
to develop the Flowage shoreline, for example,
the Tribe could only hope that the state and
federal governments would respond to its pleas
for aid.
Although
competing management over a natural resource
is a serious, yet familiar, problem in Indian
Country, the Flowage's complicated history
presented a further challenge for the Lac
Courte Oreilles. Over the years, the Flowage's
reputation as a top muskellunge fishing lake
and its attraction as a general recreational
destination resulted in the increased management
influence of the state and federal governments.
These powerful non-tribal interests valued
the Flowage for its aesthetic beauty and recreational
uses. The Lac Courte Oreilles, in contrast,
wanted to bring long-overdue honor to their
ancestors' graves. Although economic and political
realities made it challenging, the Tribe determined
that the grim circumstances of the Flowage's
creation needed to be brought to light and,
further, that the Tribe needed to exercise
its sovereignty by playing a key role in managing
what had become a common resource.
In
2000, following twelve years of negotiations,
the Tribe, the Wisconsin Department of Natural
Resources, and the United States Forest Service
signed the Joint Agency Management Plan for
the Chippewa Flowage. The Plan, which is hailed
as a model of intergovernmental cooperation,
protects the Chippewa Flowage as a natural
resource of compelling beauty while acknowledging
its legacy as the site of a profound human
tragedy.
One
of the principle reasons that the Plan took
root was that the three governments came together
to identify common ground. The three governments
recognized that each held an interest in maintaining
the wilderness quality of the Chippewa Flowage
and in preventing any development that might
threaten this quality. In acknowledging this
shared interest, however, the governments
also recognized the validity of their varied
interests and values — cultural, aesthetic,
and recreational. Therefore, the Plan incorporates
a history of the Chippewa Flowage as well
as baseline measurements of its resources
to serve as a basis of understanding for the
coordination of government management.
The
Plan also outlines long-term management goals
for the resources of the Chippewa Flowage
area. These goals include policies that detail
each government's responsibilities regarding
the management of land and real estate, flowage
area development, recreation, facilities development,
water resources, shoreline erosion, fisheries,
vegetation, wildlife, fire control, transportation
systems, cultural resources, public health
and pollution control, and law enforcement.
Although there are many issues about which
the three governments must make joint decisions,
the comprehensiveness of the Plan does allow
each government to undertake its specified
management responsibilities with a great deal
of independence. While the goals are shared,
the management responsibilities are appropriately
divided.
In
addition, the Plan provides principles for
coordinating management of Chippewa Flowage
resources when issues arise that have not
been addressed in the Plan's existing policies.
In these instances, the governments have agreed
to coordinate their management decisions through
a consensus-based approach. Representatives
from the three governments hold meetings to
discuss pending decisions. These representatives,
in turn, communicate with officials from their
respective governments—a system that fosters
candid discussion among a small number of
individuals while allowing information to
flow upwards to decision makers smoothly.
As importantly, the Plan allows for the continuing
solicitation of public input as the governments
themselves work toward consensus.
The
Joint Agency Management Plan for the Chippewa
Flowage has resulted in crucial successes.
Through the Plan, the tribal, state, and federal
governments have prevented two condominium
developments, a proposal to rent houseboats,
and a proposal to provide scuba diving tours
to Lac Courte Oreilles burial sites. All of
these proposals, if enacted, would have seriously
compromised the Plan's—and the Tribe's—vision
of how the Chippewa Flowage should look and
be managed. In each instance, government representatives
attended township meetings, zoning meetings,
and county meetings to discuss the risks posed
by such ventures to water quality, wildlife,
fisheries, and cultural sites. At these meetings,
the Plan's partners played a critical role
in achieving consensus against the proposals.
These successes in consensus building are
leading to additional successes. The Tribe
is now working with Sawyer County to bring
its zoning laws into accordance with the Plan.
The Plan has proven itself to be a powerful
force in guiding intergovernmental actions
and, in doing so, generating support from
other governmental and non-governmental agencies.
It
is important to note that the Plan has succeeded
both in coordinating the governments' management
efforts and in ensuring that their varied
interests are served. For instance, when it
became clear that one of the defeated condominium
development proposals would have required
a septic barge to transport waste, all three
governments argued against the proposal. The
state and federal governments immediately
expressed concern about water pollution; the
Tribe voiced its objection to transporting
sewage over burial sites. In the end, the
proposal was rejected on the grounds that
the condominium development would be environmentally
risky and culturally inappropriate. Although
the participating governments may have different
interests, they are able to make unified decisions.
The
success of the Joint Agency Management Plan
of the Chippewa Flowage in blocking undesirable
developments and unifying three governments
in the pursuit of individual and common goals
is the result of several factors. First, and,
arguably, most importantly, the Tribe possesses
a genuine commitment to intergovernmental
coordination. This is a mature expression
of sovereignty that reflects a self-determined
decision to co-manage the Flowage. The Lac
Courte Oreilles' anger and bitterness over
the existence of the Flowage are still very
real. However, when the Tribe recognized that
its desire to preserve the Chippewa Flowage
could only be achieved through the establishment
of an intergovernmental management plan, it
refused to act unilaterally. While the Lac
Courte Oreilles were unyielding in their demand
that the Plan acknowledge tribal sovereignty,
they were cognizant that the state of Wisconsin
and the federal government had legitimate
jurisdictional claims as well. The Tribe's
willingness to acknowledge other governments'
authority inspired a similar willingness on
the part of those governments. Now, with the
full support of the Wisconsin Department of
Natural Resources and the US Forest Service,
the Plan's preface alerts readers to the injustices
suffered by the Lac Courte Oreilles while
the Plan states that "all parties recognize
the treaty rights of the Chippewa." Representatives
of the state and federal governments to the
Plan have become staunch defenders of the
Tribe's sovereignty. In establishing the Plan,
the Tribe appropriately recognized that its
own sovereignty would not be compromised by
its willingness to acknowledge other governments'
sovereignty. By making the sovereign choice
to work cooperatively with these other governments,
the Tribe has been able to achieve goals that
it could not have achieved alone.
A second
factor that contributes to the Plan's success
is its institutionalization. The Plan's current
effectiveness and its long-term sustainability
are the result of the explicit articulation
of tribal, state, and federal interests regarding
the management of the Chippewa Flowage. The
Tribe refused to depend on informal “understandings”
that emerged over the course of its negotiations
with partnering governments. Its insistence
that the governments' shared vision be formally
expressed in the Plan now allows the partnership
to endure beyond the involvement of those
individuals who offered critical leadership
in its development. This is important, in
part, because tribal, state, and federal government
leadership positions invariably turn over.
Already, the Plan has outlived all but one
of the individuals who developed it. It is
also important because the Plan serves as
a tool of education for individuals who become
involved with its implementation. Of course,
the Plan is a dynamic document that responds
to the current interests of its partnering
governments, but its existence ensures that
revisions to the coordinated management of
the Flowage do not occur without their coordinated
input. The Plan proves that, as tribes assert
their sovereign rights to share management
with other governments over precious natural
resources, individual leadership is essential,
but the institutionalization of the resulting
vision is even more important.
A third
factor in its success is the astounding effectiveness
of the intergovernmental partnership that
implements the Plan. This partnership between
the Lac Courte Oreilles, the Wisconsin Department
of Natural Resources, and the US Forest Service
truly represents the pinnacle of coordinated
management. Several distinguishing features
set it apart from other intergovernmental
partnerships. First, in the twelve years that
this partnership was in development, the tribal,
state, and federal governments not only sought
to clarify their own interests, but to understand
the interests of the public. The governments
formed a task force that solicited public
opinion through questionnaires, surveys, meetings,
and citizen advisory committees. When the
governments signed the Plan in 2000, it had
already become a de facto agreement among
many others. Further, the intergovernmental
partnership benefited from the unique assets
of each individual government. The Tribe was
aggressive in offering those resources that
only it could offer. For instance, the Tribe
was able to initiate the nomination of the
Chippewa Flowage to the National Register
of Historic Places in order to add another
layer of protection against unwanted development.
This use of tribal resources to benefit all
Plan partners cemented the partnership. Finally,
while the Plan was being developed, the governments
did not shy away from drawing upon outside
expertise. The Tribe depended upon the Bureau
of Indian Affairs and the Great Lakes Indian
Fish & Wildlife Commission to enhance
the Plan's viability. This willingness to
draw upon outsiders' expertise did not imply
weakness, but strength in self-governance.
Now, as the partnered governments work to
implement the Plan, they are not afraid to
look beyond themselves to those parties who
have helped them and may continue to do so.
At every opportunity, the governments enlist
the support of sympathetic resorts and individual
owners in order to enhance their influence
at local government meetings, zoning commissions,
and other public forums in which development
proposals are being discussed.
Through the Joint Agency Management
Plan of the Chippewa Flowage, the Lac Courte
Oreilles Band of Lake Superior Indians exercised
their sovereignty to protect their homeland
from further degradations. Perhaps the most
important lesson to emerge from the Plan's
success is that even those governments that
have every historical reason not to work together
may realize win-win solutions through a willingness
to cooperate. Certainly, not every historical
and contemporary wrong can be made right through
cooperative agreements, but the Lac Courte
Oreilles prove that sovereignty and intergovernmental
cooperation are concepts that may work together
well.
Lessons: