The Weekly Brief

Indian Country news for Patty Loew

Topic

Manoomin and water protection

Wild rice stewardship, climate threats to rice beds, sulfide mining adjacent to wild rice waters, and the legal personhood of manoomin in tribal law.

Coverage in The Weekly Brief

Issue 001 · May 10, 2026

Federal Judge Blocks Lac du Flambeau from Restricting Fishing on Nearly Twenty Lakes

A federal judge ruled this week that the Lac du Flambeau Band cannot restrict non-tribal fishing on approximately twenty lakes within its territory, a decision that touches directly on the ongoing tension between tribal resource management authority and off-reservation public access claims. WPR reported the ruling. The legal reasoning matters here: whether the court grounded its decision in treaty rights, state law, or something else will shape how far the ruling reaches and whether it invites further challenges to tribal fisheries management across the ceded territories.

Issue 001 · May 10, 2026

Tribal Leader on Northern Wisconsin Priorities: 'North of Highway 29' Is Its Own Country

WPR's conversation with a northern Wisconsin tribal leader this week surfaced the persistent frustration that state and federal policy is made by people who rarely travel north of Highway 29, let alone understand what treaty-protected resources mean to communities whose livelihoods and spiritual lives depend on them. The framing is one Patty, you will recognize from your own fieldwork: the geography of neglect is not accidental. The piece is worth reading alongside the Line 5 and fishing-restriction stories as a reminder of the political context in which those legal fights unfold.

Issue 001 · May 10, 2026

South Dakota's Missouri River Water Plan Ignores Tribal Ownership, Native Sun News Reports

Native Sun News Today flags that South Dakota Congressman Dusty Johnson's federal bills to expand Missouri River water use for the state do not address the question of who actually holds water rights in that river system, a question that implicates multiple Oceti Sakowin nations whose treaty territories the Missouri runs through. The piece is a good example of the kind of story that only a Native publication is likely to frame this way: the mainstream coverage of the same bills would almost certainly not lead with tribal water rights.