S-209-116
Became Public Law No: 116-180.
Sponsored by John Hoeven (R-ND)
What it does
This bill converts the Tribal Self-Governance Demonstration Project — a temporary pilot program — into a permanent Tribal Self-Governance Program. It allows federally recognized tribes and tribal organizations to receive planning grants and negotiate funding agreements with the Department of the Interior (Interior). It also revises Interior's procedures for approving those agreements, sets accountability requirements (audits, conflict-of-interest rules, performance monitoring), and allows tribes to take on certain federal construction responsibilities. Interior would be prohibited from requiring a tribe to continue performing under an agreement that does not provide sufficient funding.
Who benefits
Federally recognized Native American tribes and tribal organizations that choose to participate in self-governance compacts — approximately 574 federally recognized tribes. Tribal members who receive services administered locally rather than through federal agencies. Tribal governments that gain greater administrative flexibility and control over federally funded programs. Tribes pursuing construction projects, who would gain the option to assume federal responsibilities for those projects.
Who is hurt
Federal employees at the Department of the Interior whose roles involve administering programs that tribes assume under self-governance agreements, as those positions could be reduced or eliminated. Federal contractors who currently perform construction or program work on behalf of Interior in Indian Country, who may lose contracts when tribes assume those responsibilities. Tribal members in cases where a tribe's self-governance administration of a program underperforms compared to direct federal delivery, though Interior retains authority to reassume programs in such cases.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that making the self-governance program permanent fulfills the federal government's long-standing policy of honoring tribal sovereignty and self-determination. They contend that tribes are best positioned to design and deliver services tailored to their own communities, and that local administration reduces bureaucratic inefficiency. They point out that the Demonstration Project has operated for decades, providing ample evidence that tribal self-governance works in practice, and that converting it to a permanent program simply reflects that proven track record. Supporters also argue that the bill's accountability provisions — audits, conflict-of-interest rules, and Interior's authority to reassume programs — protect against misuse of federal funds while still respecting tribal autonomy. Finally, they note that prohibiting Interior from forcing tribes to perform underfunded agreements is a basic fairness protection.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that making the program permanent and expanding tribal authority over federal functions could reduce federal oversight of how trust responsibilities and federal funds are managed, potentially harming the very tribal members the program is meant to serve. They contend that the accountability mechanisms in the bill — while present — may be insufficient to catch problems early, since Interior's monitoring role is limited once a tribe assumes a program. Some argue that the shift of construction responsibilities to tribes could expose tribal governments to legal and financial liabilities they are not equipped to handle. Others raise concerns that the negotiation process, which requires Interior to "maximize" self-governance implementation, could pressure federal negotiators into agreements that are not in the broader public interest or that inadequately protect federal trust assets.