Coalition Supports a Full and Functioning NAGPRA Committee

The Coalition for American Heritage is pleased to see the National Park Service soliciting nominations for one member of the Native American Graves Protections and Repatriation Review (NAGPRA) Committee. It is vital that the NAGPRA Committee be fully staffed and allowed to meet regularly to ensure the protection of native peoples’ human remains, sacred objects and items of cultural patrimony.

Secretary of the Interior, Ryan Zinke, put a freeze on more than 200 advisory committees, including the NAGRA Committee, last May. For the past 10 months, the NAGPRA Committee has been forbidden to meet and monitor compliance with the law governing identification and repatriation of Native American cultural items. Nor has the committee been allowed to hear disputes between tribes, museums, federal agencies, and native peoples.

Halting the work of the NAGRA Committee risks a failure to settle existing disputes even as new cases continue to accrue. Furthermore, the recent federal recognition of 6 tribes in Virginia means that there are now tribes who have never had access to the NAGPRA committee’s assistance.

The Coalition for American Heritage urges Secretary Zinke to end his hold on advisory committees. Fully utilizing the collective expertise of America’s citizen advisory committees is crucial to good governance.