HR-42-119
Became Public Law No: 119-22.
Sponsored by Nicholas Begich (R-AK)
What it does
This law excludes certain payments made through Alaska Native settlement trusts from being counted as income or assets when determining whether an Alaska Native — or a descendant of an Alaska Native — who is aged, blind, or disabled qualifies for need-based federal programs such as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). It applies only to individuals who meet those specific demographic and disability criteria.
Who benefits
Alaska Natives and their descendants who are elderly, blind, or disabled and receive payments from Alaska Native settlement trusts — a population estimated in the tens of thousands. Settlement trust administrators and Alaska Native corporations, who may see greater uptake and utility of trust distributions. Social service organizations serving Alaska Native communities.
Who is hurt
Federal and state program administrators who must update eligibility systems and rules to reflect the new exclusion, bearing implementation costs. Taxpayers broadly, to the extent that expanded eligibility increases federal program expenditures. Other low-income groups not covered by similar exclusions who may perceive an unequal treatment in how their assets or income are counted for benefit eligibility purposes.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Alaska Native settlement trusts were established under the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act of 1971 as compensation for the extinguishment of aboriginal land claims — not as ordinary income — and that counting these payments against benefit eligibility effectively penalizes recipients for receiving what is rightfully theirs. They contend that similar exclusions already exist for other tribal trust payments under federal law, and that this law simply extends consistent treatment to a vulnerable population of elderly, blind, and disabled Alaska Natives who face unique geographic and economic hardships.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that need-based federal programs are designed to target limited resources to those with the fewest financial means, and that excluding any category of income or assets — regardless of its source — undermines the integrity of means-testing by allowing individuals with meaningful financial resources to qualify for benefits intended for the poorest Americans. They contend that creating source-specific carve-outs sets a precedent for further erosion of eligibility standards and that the same policy goal could be achieved through direct adjustments to trust distribution amounts rather than through federal benefit rules.