S-211-116
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 84.
Sponsored by John Hoeven (R-ND)
What it does
The SURVIVE Act would require the Department of Justice's Office for Victims of Crime to award grants to federally recognized Native American tribes. These grants would fund victim services including domestic violence shelters, rape crisis centers, child abuse programs, child advocacy centers, elder abuse programs, medical care, legal services, relocation assistance, and transitional housing. The bill would also dedicate 5% of the Crime Victims Fund — a federal fund fed by criminal fines and penalties — specifically to these tribal grants.
Who benefits
Native American and Alaska Native crime victims living on or near tribal lands who currently lack access to victim services. Tribal governments and tribal organizations that would receive grant funding to build or expand service programs. Survivors of domestic violence, sexual assault, child abuse, and elder abuse within tribal communities. Tribal children who would gain access to child advocacy centers.
Who is hurt
Non-tribal victim service organizations and state-level programs that currently receive Crime Victims Fund allocations could see their share of funding reduced, since 5% of the fund would be redirected to tribal grants. Taxpayers and other fund beneficiaries bear the opportunity cost of the reallocation. Federal agencies administering the grants would face new administrative and compliance burdens.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Native American women experience murder rates more than ten times the national average in some areas, and that tribal communities face some of the highest rates of violent crime, sexual assault, and domestic violence in the country — yet have historically received a disproportionately small share of federal victim services funding. Because many tribal lands are geographically isolated and subject to complex jurisdictional rules, residents cannot easily access state or county services. Supporters contend that the federal government has a unique trust responsibility to tribal nations, and that dedicating a defined share of the Crime Victims Fund to tribes fulfills that obligation while giving tribal governments the flexibility to design culturally appropriate programs for their own communities.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that redirecting 5% of the Crime Victims Fund to a single demographic category reduces resources available to the broader population of crime victims served by existing state and local programs, potentially leaving other underserved groups with less support. Some contend that existing grant programs — such as those under the Violence Against Women Act — already provide pathways for tribal funding, making a separate mandatory set-aside duplicative. Others raise concerns that a federal mandate requiring grants to tribes, rather than allowing competitive allocation, may reduce efficiency and accountability in how limited victim services dollars are distributed across all communities in need.