Volume 26, Number 2 ● February 23, 2018
Potential Permit Delays:
Tribes Gain Recognition, Including Consultation Rights
Six Virginia-based tribes won a 19-year battle for federal recognition in January when H.R. 981, the Virginia Federal Recognition Act of 2017, won Congressional and Presidential approval. This historic move by the federal government could delay projects across Virginia, as well as the District of Columbia, Maryland, and beyond into other states where the tribes have potential areas of interest if the projects involve federal funding or require a federal action (e.g. wetland permitting).
The Chickahominy, Eastern Chickahominy, Upper Mattaponi, Rappahannock, Monacan, and Nansemond now join the Pamunkey in Virginia’s list of federally-recognized tribes. Federal law requires tribal consultation under Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966, as amended, when development projects that involve Clean Water Act permitting or other federal licensing, permitting, or funding, could impact tribal cultural resources or ancestral landscapes. There are other federally recognized tribes with interests in Virginia, Maryland, neighboring states, and the District of Columbia, however they rarely consult on Clean Water Act permitting projects in the region.
The Pamunkey tribe became Virginia’s first federally recognized tribe in 2016; WSSI wrote about the tribe and recognition in Field Notes articles:
- Virginia's Pamunkey Tribe Almost Gains Federal Recognition (January 2016)
- Pamunkey Tribe Secures Recognition: May Change the Landscape for Historic Review Process (February 2016)
For more information about the ramifications of federal recognition and how they may relate to your projects, please contact John Mullen, Boyd Sipe, Doug Chapin, or Mike Klebasko.