Chicago
Tribune -
February 2, 2001
LANDOWNERS IN FIGHT WITH TRIBE TO GET AID
NEW STATE LAW GIVES PROPERTY HOLDERS HELP WITH THEIR LEGAL BILLS
Author:
Joe Biesk, Tribune Staff Writer.
Dateline:
SPRINGFIELD
East-central
Illinois landowners whose property is under siege in a dispute with
an Indian tribe over rightful ownership will get help paying
legal fees under legislation signed by Gov. George Ryan Thursday.
The
Miami Indians
of Oklahoma want to reclaim about 2.6 million acres under a federal
treaty signed in 1805 when Thomas Jefferson was president. The tribe
believes the treaty entitles it to a wide swath of land stretching
across
15 counties.
Currently,
15 Illinois landowners are named in the suit, which state lawmakers
believe could have wide-ranging impact on the state if the tribe
prevails. The law authorizes state Atty. Gen.
Jim
Ryan to spend up to $100,000 to pay for the property holders' court
costs.
"This
legislation is consistent with the state's stance to fight for the
rights of these property owners," Gov. Ryan said.
Miami
Chief Floyd Leonard contended there was no need for the state to
spend
the money.
"Until
the state sits down and participates in meaningful negotiations to
discuss a settlement mutually beneficial to the tribe and
Illinois, lawyers are the only ones benefiting from this issue so
far," Leonard said.
Miami
tribe lobbyist Tony Leone suggested potential settlements could include
a cash payment
from the federal government, a portion of unsettled land or "some
type of economic opportunity." State officials say they believe
the tribe wants to open a casino on a smaller portion of the
land.
There
are 378,000 acres in Champaign County and 495,000 in Vermilion County
that the Miami tribe claims.
The
Miami also
seek portions of Clark, Coles, Crawford, Cumberland, Douglas, Edgar,
Effingham, Ford, Iroquois, Jasper, Livingston, Moultrie and Shelby
Counties.
Under
the Jefferson-era treaty, the tribe ceded ancestral lands
farther east in exchange for prairie in Ohio, Indiana and Illinois.
In subsequent treaties, Miami Nation tribes gave up
most of the land, but the tribe says it never relinquished
the tract in east-central Illinois.
Copyright
2001, Chicago Tribune
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