Left to right: Moriah O'Brien (AIHEC), Liz Malerba (USET), Kitcki Carroll (USET), Larry Wright Jr. (NCAI), Secretary Linda McMahon (Dept. of Ed), Ahniwake Rose (AIHEC), Jason Dropnik (NIEA), Julia Wakeford (NIEA), Meghan Kearney (NCAI)
On April 23, leaders from the Coalition for Tribal Sovereignty (Coalition) met with U.S. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon as part of the ongoing efforts to maintain and strengthen the relationship between Indian Country and the federal government, and ensure the latter upholds its trust and treaty obligations.
The meeting followed a February 14 letter from the Coalition, comprising national Native advocacy organizations that serve the majority of sovereign Tribal Nations. In the letter, the Coalition requested urgent dialogue with the Department of Education (ED) leadership. Representatives from the American Indian Higher Education Consortium (AIHEC), the United South and Eastern Tribes (USET), the National Congress of American Indians (NCAI), and the National Indian Education Association (NIEA) met with the Secretary on Wednesday.
During the discussion, the Coalition emphasized the need to protect dedicated funding streams, honor tribal sovereignty, and ensure Native students have equitable access to high-quality, culturally relevant education. The Coalition requested that Secretary McMahon issue an affirmative statement clarifying that Indian Country programs and eligible funding are not DEI, but trust and treaty obligations that the U.S. government must uphold.
Secretary McMahon recognized the importance of ongoing dialogue with Tribal Nations on issues impacting Indian education.