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Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah
Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah
from Wikipedia

The Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah is a federally recognized tribe of Southern Paiute and Ute Indians in southwestern Utah.[1]

Key Information

Reservation

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The Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah (PITU) has a reservation composed of ten separate parcels of land, located in four counties in southwestern Utah.[2]

History

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Two Ute bands were absorbed into the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah. The Pahvant band originally lived in the deserts near Sevier Lake, west of the Wasatch Mountains of western Utah. Many Pahvants were removed by the US government to the Uintah Reservation, but some joined the Kanosh, Koosharem, and other settlements in Utah. The second band was the Moanunts, who traditionally lived near Sevier River and Otter Creek, south of Salina, Utah.[3]

Termination and restoration

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During the period from the 1940s to 1960s, in which the Indian termination policy was enforced, The Paiute Indian Tribe was targeted for termination. On 1 September 1954 the US Congress passed Termination of Federal Supervision over the Paiute Indians of Utah U.S. Code, Title 25, Sections 741–60. The legislation at §742 specified that the included bands were the Shivwits, Kanosh, Koosharem, and Indian Peaks Bands of the Paiute Indian Tribe (omitting the Cedar Band).[4] As with other termination agreements, the Act provided for termination of federal trusts and distribution of tribal lands to individuals or a tribally organized entity. It had provisions to preserve the tribal water rights and a special education program to assist tribal members in learning how to earn a living, conduct affairs, and assume their responsibilities as citizens.[5] The Bureau of Land management terminated tribal trusts on 1 March 1957[6] as did the Indian Health Service.[7]

On 3 April 1980, Congress passed the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah Restoration Act, Public Law 96-227 94 Stat. 317, which restored the federal trust relationship of the Shivwits, Kanosh, Koosharem, and Indian Peaks Bands of the Paiute Indian Tribe and restored and reaffirmed that the Cedar Band was part of the Tribe. The law acknowledged that the Kanosh, Koosharem, and Indian Peaks Bands had lost their lands as a result of termination and that the Cedar Band had never had any. It proposed to develop within two years of enactment a plan to secure reservation land for the tribe not to exceed 15,000 acres.[8] The Bureau of Land management reinstituted the federal trust on 43,576.99 acres concurrent with the enactment of the statute.[6]

Today

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The Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah's tribal headquarters is located in Cedar City, Utah. As of 2006, 840 people were enrolled in the tribe.[2] The Utah Paiute's tribal chairperson is Tamra "Tami" Borchardt-Slayton and their vice-chairperson is Patrick Charles.

The Paiute Tribe made national news when former Chairperson Gari Pikyavit Lafferty was impeached in 2015.[9] After accepting gifts from Washington Redskins owner Dan Snyder which were ostensibly made in an attempt to induce the tribe to publicly endorse the team's controversial name, the Tribal Council charged Gari Pikyavit Lafferty, then tribal chairperson, on March 26, 2015, with violating the tribe's Ethics Ordinance, Constitution and Standards of Conduct as well as ignoring the express directives of the Tribal Council, interfering with internal band matters and misusing her title.[10]

The Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah operates its own programs for health, behavioral care, housing, education, and economic development.[2] Proposed economic development enterprises include geothermal plants, agricultural projects, convenience stores, gift shops, restaurants, hotels, and cultural centers.[11]

Bands

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The tribe is made up of five constituent bands, who have been independent communities for centuries.

Cedar Band of Paiutes

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The "Cedar Band of Paiute Indians" or Suh’dutsing ("Cedar People") received federal recognition on April 3, 1980, under the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah Restoration Act. Their band headquarters is located in Cedar City, Utah.[12] Their band chairperson is Travis N. Parashonts.[13]

Kanosh Band of Paiutes

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The "Kanosh Band of Paiute Indians" or Kawnaw’os ("willow [water] jug") first received federal recognition on February 11, 1929. Their band headquarters is located in Cedar City, Utah. An additional tribal office is located in Kanosh, Utah, near their traditional ancestral home.[14] Their Band Chairperson is Corrina Bow.[13]

Koosharem Band of Paiutes

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The "Koosharem Band of Paiute Indians" or Paw goosawd’uhmpuhtseng ("Water Clover People") first received federal recognition on March 3, 1928. Their band headquarters is located in Richfield, Utah.[15] Their Band Chairperson is LaTosha Mayo.[13]

Indian Peaks Band of Paiutes

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The "Indian Peaks Band of Paiute Indians" or Kwee’choovunt ("Peak People") first received federal recognition on August 2, 1915, and have lands in Beaver County, Utah. Their band headquarters is located in Cedar City, Utah.[16] Their Band Chairperson is Jeanine Borchardt.[13]

Shivwits Band of Paiutes

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The first reservation of the "Shivwits Band of Paiutes" or See’veetseng ("Whitish Earth People") was established in 1891. They received federal recognition on March 3, 1891. They have lands in Washington County, Utah. Their band headquarters is located in Ivins, Utah.[17] Their Band Chairperson is Patrick Charles.[13]

Tribal flag

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The Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah has a flag that was officially confirmed in 1997. Within it are several symbols for the tribe. First the colors, white symbolizes purity, the red and black are both for strength and power, and the yellow for healing and life. The biggest symbol is the eagle which represents their deity, then there are a series of images that relate to traditional songs and games the Southern Paiutes would play, the arrowheads that they were known for. Overall the image is supposed to represent a warrior's shield with the five eagle feathers hanging on the bottom representing the 5 modern-day bands that comprise the tribe.[18]

Notes

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References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Paiute Indian Tribe of is a federally recognized tribe of Southern Paiute Indians consisting of five constituent bands—Cedar, Indian Peaks, Kanosh, Koosharem, and Shivwits—whose ancestral territory encompasses parts of southwestern , , southern , and southeastern , with current reservations totaling approximately 4,770 acres across Iron, Millard, Sevier, and Washington counties in . The tribe's members, numbering about 920 enrolled individuals as of , maintain cultural practices rooted in stewardship of the arid landscape, including hunting, gathering pinyon pine nuts, and limited historical agriculture adapted to desert conditions. Federal recognition for these bands was terminated in 1954 under Public Law 762, severing government-to-government relations and leading to loss of services and land; restoration occurred on April 3, 1980, via the Restoration Act (Public Law 96-227), which reestablished trust status and authorized modest land acquisitions far short of the originally promised 15,000 acres. Prior to European contact, the Southern Paiutes, known to themselves as Nung’wu, sustained small, mobile bands through resource management in a harsh environment, with population declines from thousands to a low of around 800 by the late due to , conflict, and displacement following the arrival of Mormon settlers in the and U.S. military expeditions. Today, the tribe governs through a Tribal Council headquartered in , focusing on , health services, and cultural revitalization efforts such as language documentation and annual pow-wows, while navigating challenges from a fragmented land base and historical underfunding. The Paiutes' persistence reflects adaptation to policy shifts, including the formation of a tribal in to advocate for restoration, underscoring a trajectory of amid federal oversight.
The Shivwits Band's reservation in Washington County exemplifies the tribe's dispersed holdings, supporting community programs amid broader regional growth.

Historical Background

Pre-Colonial Society and Territory

The Southern Paiute bands ancestral to the modern Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah migrated into the region around AD 1100–1200 as part of the Numic expansion within the Uto-Aztecan language family. Their pre-colonial territory covered southwestern Utah at the interface of the Great Basin desert and Colorado Plateau, encompassing over 30 million acres that extended into adjacent parts of southeastern California, northern Arizona, and southern Nevada. Key areas included riverine corridors along the Virgin, Santa Clara, Muddy, and Sevier rivers, where resources were concentrated, as well as arid springs and valleys supporting seasonal foraging. This landscape dictated a dispersed pattern of occupation, with historical groups centered around sites later associated with Parowan, Santa Clara (encompassing 3–7 subgroups), Cedar City (two groups), and other locales now in Iron, Millard, Sevier, and Washington counties. Social organization revolved around small, autonomous units of 3–5 households forming fluid bands, typically numbering 16 major groups and up to 35 smaller ones named for leaders, resources, or geography. emerged through consensus via a niave (headman) with task-specific or limited authority, rather than hereditary or centralized rule; riverine bands occasionally recognized chiefs for coordination, while groups emphasized egalitarian decision-making. Seasonal aggregations drew bands together for harvests in fall or fish spawning runs at sites like Fish Lake in spring, enabling dances, marriages, trade, and ritual observances. Family structures favored , though or occurred sparingly, with beliefs centered on a supreme spirit alongside nature entities influencing rituals for birth, puberty, and death. Subsistence relied on a foraging economy adapted to the arid environment, utilizing knowledge of 96 edible plant species such as , , berries, and pine nuts, which formed dietary staples gathered through seasonal rounds tracking plant cycles and animal migrations. Hunting targeted rabbits, small game, fish, and infrequently larger prey like deer or using bows, traps, and communal drives, while limited in fertile river valleys involved rudimentary for corn, squash, melons, , and sunflowers. Dwellings were impermanent and resource-driven: summer windbreaks of or hides for mobility, and winter cone-shaped frames covered in reeds or bark for insulation, later supplemented by adopted forms like teepees in some areas. Pre-contact population across Utah's Southern Paiute territory numbered in the thousands, supporting this decentralized, resilient adaptation to ecological variability.

European Contact and Early Conflicts

The first recorded European contact with the Utah Paiutes occurred in 1776, when the Spanish expedition led by Francisco Atanasio Domínguez and Silvestre Vélez de Escalante traversed their territories in southwestern Utah during an attempt to find a route to . This encounter was brief and involved limited interactions, with the explorers noting Paiute presence near present-day St. George but not establishing lasting ties. Earlier indirect Spanish influence from the 16th-17th centuries introduced horses to the region, which transformed Paiute mobility and subsistence patterns by enabling greater access to distant resources. The Old Spanish Trail, active from the to , brought further disruption as pack trains trampled Paiute seed fields and prompted the abandonment of traditional farming sites, occasionally leading to minor skirmishes over passage rights. Mormon pioneers, arriving in the Salt Lake Valley in July 1847 under Brigham Young, initiated sustained contact through southward expansion into Paiute lands starting in 1849. By 1858, settlers had founded 11 communities in prime Paiute territories, appropriating fertile farmlands, water sources, and grazing areas essential to Paiute foraging and agriculture. Initial relations involved trade and Paiute employment in Mormon labor, including field work and herding, as settlers viewed them as potential allies against other tribes. However, rapid settlement growth intensified resource competition, with Mormon livestock overgrazing destroying Paiute staple plants like mesquite and sego lilies. Early conflicts remained sporadic rather than large-scale wars, but escalated pressures contributed to severe demographic collapse; diseases such as , , and , introduced post-1851, combined with starvation from habitat loss, reduced the Paiute population by approximately 90% within 25 years of intensive Mormon contact—from an estimated 10,000 in 1776 to a few hundred by the 1870s. Tensions peaked during the , where some Paiutes allied with Ute forces in raids on settlements, driven by shared grievances over land encroachment. The September 1857 Mountain Meadows Massacre, involving the killing of over 100 emigrants southwest of Cedar City, saw disputed Paiute participation, with tribal accounts asserting disguised themselves as Indians to incite or frame them. These events underscored causal pressures from demographic invasion and ecological disruption, forcing Paiutes into dependency or marginalization without decisive military victories for either side.

19th-Century Settlement Pressures and Reservations

The expansion of Mormon settlements into southern during the imposed significant pressures on Paiute communities, whose traditional territories encompassed much of the region's arid lands suitable for , hunting, and limited . Pioneers established communities such as Santa Clara in 1854 and St. George in 1861, claiming prime water sources and farmlands essential to Paiute subsistence, thereby disrupting seasonal migration patterns and access to resources like piñon nuts and small game. herds accompanying these settlers overgrazed native vegetation, further diminishing wild food supplies and compelling many Paiutes toward dependency on wage labor for Mormon farmers, including tasks like field preparation and herding. Epidemics introduced via contact with settlers accelerated demographic collapse; diseases such as in the 1850s and ravaged populations already strained by resource scarcity, resulting in an estimated 90 percent decline among Southern Paiutes within 25 years of Mormon arrival in 1847. Pre-contact estimates placed Paiute numbers at around 1,500 to 2,000, but by the 1870s, surviving bands numbered in the low hundreds, with groups like the ancestors of the Kanosh Band—descended from Pavant Paiutes near —particularly affected as settlers occupied Corn Creek farmlands in the 1850s. Chiefs such as Kanosh initially permitted Mormon encroachments, as in 1851 near Pahvant lands, fostering relatively amicable ties compared to Ute conflicts, yet cumulative land alienation eroded tribal autonomy without direct warfare. Federal responses to these pressures materialized late in the century amid broader assimilation policies. In 1891, established the Shivwits Reservation—initially about 25 square miles along the Santa Clara River near St. George—as the first formal land base for Paiutes, recognizing the Shivwits band's displacement but providing minimal acreage relative to lost territories. Earlier proposals, including a 1865 treaty suggesting relocation to the and a 1873 commission's recommendation for the Moapa Valley in , met Paiute resistance, as bands prioritized ancestral homelands over distant allotments. Other constituent groups, such as the Kanosh and Koosharem ancestors, received no dedicated reservations until the , remaining scattered on fringes of communities or temporary agencies. This patchwork approach reflected limited federal commitment, prioritizing expansion over comprehensive Paiute land security.

Federal Recognition and Policy Shifts

Initial Reservations and Recognition (Late 19th-Early 20th Century)

In the late , increasing Euro-American settlement in pressured Southern Paiute bands, leading the federal government to establish small reservations to mitigate land dispossession and provide for their subsistence. The Shivwits Band received the first such reservation on March 3, 1891, through an that set aside approximately 7,000 acres near St. George in Washington County along the Santa Clara River. This legislation marked initial federal recognition for the Shivwits as a distinct band, though the land was later formalized as a reservation by the Secretary of the Interior in 1903 and expanded by executive order in 1916. Subsequent reservations followed in the early for other bands, reflecting piecemeal federal efforts amid advocacy from local agents and Mormon leaders who had integrated some Paiutes into settler communities. The Indian Peaks Band gained recognition on August 2, 1915, via an executive order by President designating land in central . The Koosharem Band received federal acknowledgment on March 3, 1928, with a small reservation established shortly thereafter. The Kanosh Band's reservation was created in in Millard County, expanded in 1935 and 1937, providing about 3,600 acres. The Cedar Band, however, was overlooked and lacked a formal reservation during this period, with members dispersed among areas or other bands' lands. These initial designations offered limited acreage—often insufficient for traditional livelihoods—and placed the bands under oversight, but they affirmed a degree of federal trust responsibility without unifying the groups into a single tribal entity. Population estimates placed the Utah Paiutes at around 1,000 individuals by 1900, scattered across these nascent reservations and adjacent territories.

Termination Era (1950s)

The federal , initiated by House Concurrent Resolution 108 in 1953, aimed to end the ' trust responsibilities toward certain tribes by dissolving reservations, distributing assets, and promoting assimilation into mainstream society. For the Southern Paiute bands in Utah, this policy culminated in targeted legislation despite assessments indicating their economic and social unreadiness. Utah Senator , a key proponent of termination, advocated for applying the policy to the Paiutes, framing it as a path to independence, even as (BIA) reports documented the bands' dependence on federal protections for land taxes, health, education, and agriculture. On September 1, 1954, President signed 83-762, formally terminating federal supervision over the Paiute Indians of Utah. This act explicitly affected the Shivwits, Kanosh, Koosharem, and Indian Peaks bands, revoking their federal recognition and trust status, while the Cedar Band experienced termination through cutoff of assistance, though not named in the bill. The legislation distributed minimal tribal assets—primarily small land holdings and per capita payments of around $1,000 per member—but failed to provide adequate transition support, ignoring BIA evidence that the Paiutes lacked the resources for self-sufficiency. The termination inflicted severe hardships, including the abrupt loss of federal health, education, and welfare services, leading to widespread and a sharp decline in to approximately 42 years, with birth rates overshadowed by mortality at a ratio of three deaths per birth. Nearly half of the tribal population perished between 1954 and 1980, attributable largely to untreated illnesses and inadequate living conditions without government aid. An estimated 15,000 acres of former reservation lands were lost as bands could not pay property taxes, exacerbating economic marginalization and cultural erosion, including diminished access to traditional practices, language, and sacred sites. Children faced removal through or adoption, further fragmenting communities. These outcomes underscored the policy's misalignment with the Paiutes' actual capacities, as later federal acknowledgments in the 1970s critiqued termination's failures.

Restoration Act of 1980 and Immediate Aftermath

The Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah Restoration Act ( 96-227) was signed into law by President on April 3, 1980, restoring the federal trust relationship previously terminated in the to the Shivwits, Kanosh, Koosharem, and Indian Peaks Bands of Paiute Indians of , while confirming or restoring it for the Cedar Band. The established the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah (PITU) as the unified, federally recognized governing entity comprising these five constituent bands, without requiring an immediate reservation but designating Iron, Millard, Sevier, and Washington Counties as the tribe's service area for federal benefits. Key provisions mandated the development of tribal enrollment criteria, a constitution and bylaws, and plans for health services delivery within one year, alongside a proposal from the Secretary of the Interior for reservation enlargement to be submitted to within two years. The Act restored eligibility for federal programs and services available to other federally recognized tribes but explicitly excluded reinstatement of aboriginal hunting, fishing, or trapping rights and preserved existing state property and taxation obligations. In the immediate aftermath, an interim tribal council was elected on May 31, 1980, to oversee implementation, with members including Marguerite Pikyavit Lane as chair and Elvis Wall among the representatives. The established the Paiute Restoration Project Office in Cedar City in November 1980 to assist with administrative setup, which later transitioned to a field station on October 1, 1983. These steps addressed the Act's tight deadlines amid the bands' limited prior experience with federal tribal governance processes and scarce resources. By mid-1981, the tribe completed an enrollment roll listing 503 members, adopted a constitution and bylaws on October 1, 1981, and held elections for a permanent tribal council on October 24, 1981, replacing the interim body. The Secretary of the Interior met the two-year by submitting a reservation enlargement proposal to by April 3, 1982, though initial acquisitions remained pending due to constraints on available public lands and local opposition. Early economic conditions reflected ongoing challenges, with high rates persisting among able-bodied members and limited for self-sufficiency.

Tribal Governance and Structure

Overall Tribal Government

The Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah's government is vested in the Tribal Council, which serves as the primary governing body exercising both legislative and executive powers consistent with federal law and the tribe's constitution. The Council enacts ordinances, manages tribal funds, employs personnel including legal counsel (subject to approval by the Secretary of the Interior), negotiates with federal, state, and local governments, and may levy assessments up to 15% on band income to fund tribal services. The Council comprises six members: one representative elected from each of the five constituent bands (Cedar, Indian Peaks, Kanosh, Koosharem, and Shivwits) and a tribal chairperson elected tribe-wide by from among the council members. Band representatives must be enrolled tribal members aged 21 or older with no convictions, nominated by their bands at least 30 days before elections held every four years in March, and sworn in on April 3. The chairperson and vice-chairperson are selected by majority vote of the Council within 20 days of band elections, also serving four-year terms. Council officers include the chairperson, who acts as the tribe's official representative, presides over meetings, and votes only to break ties; the vice-chairperson, who assumes duties in the chairperson's absence; , responsible for and minutes; and the , who oversees finances and provides semiannual reports, with possible subject to approval. and are appointed by the and need not be voting members. Members may be recalled via from 30% of band voters requiring 50% turnout and a majority vote, or removed by the after a hearing for cause such as or malfeasance. A separate judicial branch, including a trial court and appellate court, handles disputes with judges appointed by the Council for fixed terms (four years for the chief judge, two years for associates) and removable only for cause. Voter initiatives and referendums allow enrolled members to propose or repeal non-budget ordinances via petitions from 20% of voters, subject to 35% turnout and majority approval. This structure derives from the tribe's 1997 amended constitution, enacted following federal restoration under the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah Restoration Act of April 3, 1980. As of the latest available records, the Council is chaired by Laurel Yellowhorse, with representatives from each band.

Constituent Bands

The Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah comprises five constituent bands: the Cedar Band (Suh’dutsing), Indian Peaks Band (Kwee’choovunt), Kanosh Band (kawnaw’os), Koosharem Band (Paw goosawd’uhmpuhtseng), and Shivwits Band (See’veets eng). These bands represent distinct historical groups of whose traditional territories spanned central and southern , including areas now within Iron, Millard, Sevier, , and Washington counties. The bands coalesced in the late amid pressures from Euro-American settlement and were individually acknowledged by the federal government at various points between 1891 and 1929, prior to their collective termination under the Utah Termination Act of 1954. The Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah Restoration Act of April 3, 1980 (Public Law 96-227), restored federal recognition to the Shivwits, Kanosh, Koosharem, and Indian Peaks bands, while extending equivalent status to the Cedar Band, thereby reconstituting them as a unified tribe with shared governance. This legislation established a tribal council structure incorporating band representation, allowing for coordinated administration of trust lands totaling approximately 1,606 acres across dispersed reservations, while maintaining each band's autonomy in cultural and community matters. As of 2021, the tribe's enrolled membership stood at 920 individuals distributed among the bands. Each band retains unique historical narratives tied to specific leaders and locales—such as Chief Kanosh for the Kanosh Band or the Shivwits' early interactions near the Santa Clara River—but operates under the overarching Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah framework for federal dealings, , and . This confederated model balances collective decision-making with band-level initiatives, as evidenced by separate band offices and ongoing efforts to revitalize Paiute language and traditions.

Cedar Band of Paiutes

The Cedar Band of Paiutes, known traditionally as Suh’dutsing or "Cedar People," constitutes one of the five bands comprising the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah. Their ancestral territory centered in the Cedar City area of southern , where they historically subsisted through , small game, and gathering piñon nuts and seeds in the region's arid landscape. Federal recognition for the band was restored on April 3, 1980, through the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah Restoration Act (Public Law 96-227), which reestablished the trust relationship severed during the mid-20th-century termination policies. The band's headquarters is located at 600 North 100 East, P.O. Box 235, in Cedar City, Iron County, Utah, encompassing approximately 2,144 acres of trust land in southeastern Iron County. As of December 2021, the Cedar Band had 285 enrolled members, representing a portion of the tribe's total enrollment growth from 516 in 1980 to over 700 by the late 1990s. The band exercises jurisdictional authority over its lands, focusing on self-governance and economic development amid challenges like historical land loss and integration into modern economies. Governance is handled by a five-member Cedar Band Council, elected directly by band members to manage internal affairs, including enrollment, , and services. The current band chairperson is Delice Tom, who leads council deliberations and represents the band in tribal and intergovernmental matters. Economic initiatives include the Cedar Band Corporation, a federally chartered entity established to pursue business ventures in , contracting, and environmental services, reinvesting profits into welfare such as and . These efforts address persistent issues like a 2020 median household income of $39,297 and unemployment around 6.6%, with diversification into sectors like and healthcare.

Kanosh Band of Paiutes

The Kanosh Band of Paiutes, one of the five constituent bands of the Paiute Indian Tribe of , descends from Paiute peoples whose traditional territories spanned central and southwestern , northern , southwestern , and northern . The band takes its name from Chief Kanosh (c. 1821–1884), a prominent 19th-century leader of the Pahvant Utes in the region who negotiated peacefully with Mormon settlers starting in the 1850s, facilitating their establishment in the Fillmore area and earning him a reputation for amid broader Ute-Paiute-settler tensions. Kanosh's efforts included relocating his people to accommodate settlers and converting to in 1857, which secured temporary protections but did not prevent land encroachments. Federal recognition for the Kanosh Band occurred on February 11, 1929, following the establishment of small reservations in the early 20th century, including lands set aside between 1903 and 1929 near Kanosh, Utah. These holdings were terminated under the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah Termination Act of August 27, 1954 (Public Law 83-762), which dissolved tribal status, distributed assets, and subjected members to state jurisdiction, resulting in significant land loss and cultural disruption. Restoration came via the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah Restoration Act of April 3, 1980 (Public Law 96-277), reinstating federal recognition and enabling land acquisition, with the band receiving approximately 1,342 acres initially in Millard County, later expanded to 2,039 acres including Kanosh Village, Cove Fort West, and Cove Fort East parcels. Located in southeastern Millard County, approximately 153 miles south of and 26 miles from the I-15/I-70 interchange, the band's headquarters is at PO Box 116, Kanosh, 84637. As of 2021, the enrolled membership stood at 151 individuals, representing about 15% of the broader tribe's population, with an on-reservation population of 435 per 2020 estimates; the band is the northernmost of the PITU bands, with 65% of members aged 16–65 and 11% residing off-reservation. Governance operates through the Kanosh Band Council, a five-member elected body under the tribe's constitution, the of 1934, and the 1980 Restoration Act, handling local administration while coordinating with the overarching Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah Tribal Council. The council, chaired by Darlene Arrum as of 2022, oversees via a $2.5 million trust fund, focusing on , a proposed and campground, education, and cultural events like pow-wows. Economic challenges persist, with a 2020 median household income of $39,297, a 27% rate, and at 6.6%, though 84% of adults over 25 hold a or equivalent.

Koosharem Band of Paiutes

The Koosharem Band of Paiutes, known traditionally as Paw goosawd’uhmpuhtseng or "Water Clover People," received initial federal recognition on March 3, 1928, through legislation reserving public domain lands for their use (45 Stat. 162). This recognition was terminated in 1954 under federal policy, with restoration occurring on April 3, 1980, via the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah Restoration Act (P.L. 96-227). The band's ancestral territories lie in central and southwestern Utah, reflecting historical connections to areas rich in water clover and other resources essential to Paiute sustenance. The band's headquarters are located in , within Sevier County, approximately 180 miles south of . Their reservation comprises 1,273 acres distributed across three parcels in , , and near Koosharem Reservoir, with additional lands allocated in 1984 totaling 4,770 acres under P.L. 98-219. As of December 2021, the band enrolls 119 members. Governance is handled by a five-member Band Council, elected to serve the band's interests as a constituent unit of the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah. The council is chaired by Toni Kanosh, who oversees band-specific administration, including coordination with the broader tribal council on matters such as enrollment and . This structure supports local decision-making while integrating with the tribe's overarching framework established post-restoration.

Indian Peaks Band of Paiutes

The Indian Peaks Band of Paiutes, traditionally known as Kwee’choovunt meaning "Peak People" in reference to soul, spirit, or heart, received initial federal recognition on August 2, 1915, through No. 2229 signed by President , which reserved lands in , for the band and another Paiute group. This recognition was part of broader efforts to establish small reservations for Paiute bands amid historical displacement and land loss in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The band's original campsite, located southeast of a later village site demolished by the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources, underscores its deep ties to the region's mountainous terrain. Federal recognition for the Indian Peaks Band was terminated in 1954 as part of the broader policy under the Utah Paiute Termination Act, but restored on April 3, 1980, via the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah Restoration Act (Public Law 96-227), which reestablished the tribe comprising five bands including Indian Peaks. Reservation lands totaling 424 acres were subsequently established in southeastern Iron County, Utah, adjacent to Cedar City, on February 17, 1984, under Public Law 98-219. The band maintains its headquarters at 4377 Old US Highway 91, Cedar City, Utah 84720. As a constituent band of the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah, the Indian Peaks Band operates under the tribe's overarching governance structure while retaining band-specific leadership, currently headed by Chairperson Tamra Borchardt-Slayton. Enrollment stands at 42 members as of 2021, reflecting modest growth from 30 in 1980, with the band's small size influencing its focus on integrated tribal resources for administration and development. Governance emphasizes economic strategies outlined in the band's 2022 Comprehensive Economic Development Strategy, addressing challenges like high median age (50 years) and reliance on sectors such as , healthcare, and .

Shivwits Band of Paiutes

The Shivwits Band of Paiutes, known in their language as See’veets eng meaning "Whitish Earth People," is one of the five constituent bands of the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah, with traditional territory encompassing southern Utah, northern Arizona, southern Nevada, and southeastern California. The band is headquartered in Ivins, Washington County, Utah, at 6060 West 3650 North, Ivins, UT 84738. Their reservation spans approximately 28,000 acres in the region, established initially in 1903 along the Santa Clara River following congressional authorization in 1891 for land purchases for the "Shebit tribe" under 26 Stat. 1005. Expansions occurred in 1916 and 1937, bringing the land to its current configuration, which includes a confirmed water right of 4,000 acre-feet per year secured in 2000. The band maintains 311 enrolled members. Federal recognition for the Shivwits Band dates to March 3, 1891, with formal reservation establishment in 1903; they adopted a constitution and bylaws under the in 1940. Termination under 762 in 1954 severed federal services and trust status, though land ownership was retained. Restoration came via the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah Restoration Act ( 96-227) on April 3, 1980, reinstating recognition and services; in 1981, the Shivwits joined the overarching Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah while preserving their distinct band governance. The band's governing body is the Shivwits Band Council, a five-member elected council serving staggered four-year terms, with members chosen by enrolled band members. The council, currently led by Chairperson Tina Gonzales and Vice Chairperson Hope Silvas, along with members Sherwin Tillahash, Carmen Clark, and Alexis Ortega, handles coordination with federal, state, and local governments; safeguards tribal sovereignty; delivers ; and advances , , and cultural preservation. Supporting structures include advisory Band Committees that report monthly and align terms with the council, as well as appointed directors overseeing areas such as cultural affairs, , , resources, , and . Economic activities are managed through the Shivwits Band Corporation, a for ventures including a .

Lands and Resources

Current Reservation Configuration

The reservation of the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah comprises ten discrete parcels totaling 33,935 acres of trust land situated in four counties of southwestern Utah: Iron, Millard, Sevier, and Washington. These holdings, administered under federal trust status, are allocated primarily among the tribe's five constituent bands, reflecting their historical affiliations and post-restoration land designations. The Cedar Band administers 2,000 acres in Iron County; the Indian Peaks Band, 425 acres in Iron County; the Kanosh Band, 2,039 acres in Millard County; the Koosharem Band, 1,273 acres in Sevier County; and the Shivwits Band, 28,153 acres in Washington County, the largest single allocation. An additional 45 acres in Iron County fall under general tribal administration. This fragmented configuration originated from the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah Restoration Act of 1980, which authorized up to 15,000 acres but initially delivered 4,770 acres via congressional action in , with subsequent expansions through acquisitions and adjustments to reach the current extent. The recorded the baseline figures as of May 13, 2010, incorporating later verified additions, though the lands remain marginal in quality—often arid or isolated—limiting contiguous development. No major boundary changes have been documented since, preserving the dispersed structure across non-contiguous sites that span approximately 100 miles north-south.

Historical Land Loss and Compensation Claims

The Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah, comprising the Cedar, Kanosh, Koosharem, Indian Peaks, and Shivwits bands, historically occupied extensive territories across western , including areas now encompassing much of the state's southern and central regions, prior to Euro-American settlement in the mid-19th century. ' arrival from 1847 onward led to rapid encroachment, resource competition, and violent conflicts, such as the 1866 Circleville Massacre, where Paiute individuals were killed by settlers, resulting in significant displacement and loss of traditional lands. By 1865, unratified treaties negotiated with Utah's tribes effectively ceded vast aboriginal lands to the , confining Paiutes to small reservations totaling around 15,000 acres across scattered sites, often unsuitable for sustained habitation or . Further land diminishment occurred under the federal of the 1950s, which aimed to assimilate tribes by ending federal recognition and trust responsibilities. In 1954, Congress enacted Public Law 762, terminating the Kanosh, Koosharem, and Indian Peaks bands—while the Shivwits and Cedar bands retained limited status—leading to the sale of their remaining reservation lands and dispersal of tribal members. This stripped approximately 3,000 Paiutes of federal services and resulted in the loss of over 10,000 acres, exacerbating poverty as lands were transferred to non-Indian owners without adequate tribal consent or compensation at the time. To address pre-termination land takings from settlers, the Paiutes filed claims with the Indian Claims Commission (ICC) in 1951, seeking redress for aboriginal territories appropriated without fair payment. In 1965, the ICC awarded the tribe approximately 27 cents per acre for lands lost to settlement, a valuation criticized as undervaluing the economic and cultural significance of the territories but providing a modest financial settlement distributed among band members. Restoration efforts culminated in the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah Restoration Act of 1980 (Public Law 96-227), which reinstated federal recognition on April 3, 1980, explicitly acknowledging the wrongful termination and land losses of the affected bands. The act allocated 4,770 acres of fragmented, marginal public lands in southwestern for new reservations—far less than the pre-termination holdings—and established a small federal trust fund for , though deemed insufficient by tribal advocates for fully compensating prior dispossessions. Subsequent claims have focused on reacquiring select parcels through purchases and trust transfers, with limited success in restoring contiguous ancestral landscapes.

Culture and Traditions

Traditional Paiute Practices and Adaptation

The of traditionally relied on a mixed centered on , gathering, and limited floodplain , adapting their practices to the arid environment through seasonal mobility and resource management. They cultivated crops such as corn, squash, beans, melons, gourds, sunflowers, and using ditches along rivers like the Virgin and Santa Clara, primarily during spring floods, while harvesting wild plants including seeds, roots, tubers, berries, and pine nuts throughout the year. focused on rabbits, deer, sheep, , and smaller game, with tools like , nets, and agate-sourced stone implements facilitating procurement and . Basketry, sealed with pine pitch for , and wickiup dwellings constructed from brush and hides supported these mobile foraging patterns, with families relocating to valleys in spring-summer for planting and to s in winter. Social organization emphasized small, autonomous family bands named after local resources or , forming loose alliances for cooperative hunts or seasonal gatherings rather than rigid tribal hierarchies. Fall assemblies facilitated dances, games, marriages—typically monogamous unions establishing joint households without formal ceremonies—and trade of goods like stone tools and foodstuffs, fostering economic interconnections across territories spanning southern , , and . was consensus-based among riverine groups or task-specific in desert bands, reflecting adaptive flexibility to environmental variability. Religious beliefs featured a supernatural pantheon including as creator and as , with winter storytelling transmitting oral histories, and post-harvest feasts honoring deities like Tabats and Shinob to ensure future abundance; medicinal practices involved herbal remedies and, increasingly, shamanic rituals incorporating songs and prayers for healing. Adaptations to external pressures began with early European contact in the late , accelerating in the with Mormon settlement, which restricted water access critical to and , compelling shifts from independent mobility to dependency on farms for survival amid and epidemics. By the late 19th century, fragmented reservations—such as Shivwits in —necessitated further modifications, including wage labor and reduced traditional planting, though core practices like persisted. These changes preserved elements of and seasonal resource use, enabling cultural continuity despite territorial losses exceeding 30 million acres historically controlled.

Cultural Preservation Efforts Post-Restoration

Following federal restoration in 1980, the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah established a Cultural Resources Department dedicated to preserving tribal culture and history through of ancestral remains from Southern Paiute homelands, engagement with local schools via visits to culturally significant band areas, and archiving of resource materials including recordings. These efforts emphasize reacquiring lands tied to traditional practices and supporting cultural and religious gatherings across the five bands. A key initiative is the Southern Paiute Language Preservation Project, launched collaboratively in 2022 with community kick-off meetings, input sessions, and surveys to document and revitalize the endangered Southern Paiute language. The project integrates language instruction into youth programs, such as the Kwanants Pi’yum Camp held August 2–4, 2024, which taught Paiute language skills alongside history and customs to participants. Annual events reinforce these preservation activities, including the Fall Gathering, created to honor Southern Paiute culture and language through educational presentations, youth tracks, and community sharing; the 2024 edition on November 22 featured a premiere on water rights. Other gatherings, such as Paxetsi Pai Day on September 14, 2024, drew approximately 60 attendees for presentations and meals focused on cultural reconnection. The Mukuntuweap Zion Prayer Run, held April 25, 2025, reconnects tribal members with ancestral homelands via and song. Band-specific supports include elder-focused activities to maintain traditions, as implemented by the Cedar Band to preserve cultural values. Federal assistance through the National Park Service's Tribal Heritage Grant Program has aided Southern Paiute tribes, including the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah, in protecting and promoting sites and practices. These post-restoration programs address historical disruptions from termination-era assimilation pressures, prioritizing empirical documentation and community-led transmission over external narratives.

Economy and Self-Sufficiency

Pre-Termination and Termination Economic Impacts

Prior to termination, the Paiute bands in maintained a supplemented by low-wage seasonal labor, such as farm work and unskilled tasks for non-Indian settlers, with annual family incomes averaging $150 to $200 and limited federal assistance from the . Church-sponsored initiatives provided minor supplements, such as craft projects yielding $1,107 in employment value from a $500 investment, but overall self-sufficiency remained elusive due to small reservation allotments and historical land encroachments. The termination policy, enacted via 762 on September 1, 1954, ended federal trust status for the Kanosh, Koosharem, Indian Peaks, and Shivwits bands, despite their failure to meet congressional criteria for economic readiness, resulting in the immediate cessation of federal services including , , and economic aid. Trust lands were distributed to individuals, exposing them to state property taxes they could not afford, which led to the loss of approximately 15,000 acres of former reservation lands through foreclosure and sales, including the Indian Peaks reservation sold for $39,500. During the termination era (1954–1980), these changes exacerbated poverty and unemployment, with failed Bureau of Indian Affairs relocation and training programs—such as a 1955 University of Utah initiative that saw no completions—offering little relief and contributing to increased and social fragmentation. Economic stagnation persisted, as the bands lacked capital or infrastructure for development, leading to a demographic with three deaths per birth and plummeting to years due to inadequate , , and medical access. A 1965 Indian Claims Commission award of $7,253,165 for 26.4 million acres of aboriginal territory provided some distributions but was largely mismanaged, failing to foster sustainable growth. Overall, termination diminished tribal and heightened dependency on inconsistent state and local support, marking a period of profound economic decline.

Post-Restoration Development Initiatives

Following the restoration of federal recognition on April 3, 1980, through the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah Restoration Act ( 96-227), the tribe prioritized land acquisition to establish viable reservations, securing approximately 15,000 acres across its five bands by 1984 under 98-219. This legislation also created the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah and Tribal Fund, an irrevocable trust with principal allocated equally between economic initiatives and tribal governance, providing a foundational resource for self-sustaining projects. These funds supported initial development, including trust land expansions in counties such as Iron, Millard, Sevier, and Washington, enabling subsequent economic activities. In 1984, the tribe established the Paiute Economic Development Committee to coordinate business ventures and , focusing on revenue-generating enterprises to foster and reduce dependency on federal . Key outcomes included the launch of tribally owned retail and service businesses, such as the Cedar Band Travel Plaza in Hamilton Fort, the Kanosh K-Rez C-Store in , and the Shivwits Convenience Store, which provided local jobs and diversified income streams from convenience sales, fuel, and related services. These initiatives emphasized small-scale, community-oriented operations suited to the tribe's rural locations, with operations yielding measurable gains amid an on-reservation rate of 44% in 2020 and an unemployment figure of 6.6%. Subsequent efforts integrated workforce training and enhancements to bolster long-term self-sufficiency, including partnerships with universities and trade schools for skill-building programs and expanded tribal scholarships to increase member participation in the broader . projects, such as a tribal maintenance shop, youth and senior centers, and the Paiute Play Park in Cedar City, supported while attracting limited tied to cultural preservation. A comprehensive land use plan, targeted for completion by September 30, 2025, further aims to optimize reservation resources for sustainable , reflecting ongoing to post-restoration realities.

Current Economic Challenges and Achievements

The Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah faces persistent economic challenges stemming from its small land base, fragmented reservations across five bands, and historical termination effects, which have constrained revenue generation and development. Limited access to developable land due to arid , poor , and hampers and large-scale enterprises, while workforce gaps in and restrict job creation in sectors like and healthcare. affects 27% of the tribal population, with median household income at $39,297 as of , and reliance on federal grants remains high amid fluctuating external funding. varies by band, reaching 17% for the Kanosh Band in recent assessments, though reservation-wide figures stood at 6.6% in ; these rates exceed state averages and reflect broader barriers to off-reservation commuting and skill mismatches. Despite these hurdles, the tribe has pursued diversification through targeted initiatives. The Department focuses on incubation, , and community projects to foster jobs and local commerce, including convenience stores, RV parks, and cultural arts enterprises. Bands like Shivwits have established the Shivwits Band Corporation in 2017 as a for economic entities, enabling investments in and , with ongoing talks in 2025 for partnerships to boost revenue. The Cedar Band has expanded into a broader portfolio, contributing to tribal-wide growth. Federal support, such as a $153,000 U.S. grant in 2024 for a diversification roadmap, underscores progress in planning resilient strategies. Legislative efforts, including a 2025 bill granting jurisdictional clarity for contracts, aim to accelerate engagement. Health and education advancements represent key achievements in self-sufficiency. Under tribal administrator Shane Parashonts, the development of the center has enhanced service delivery and created employment opportunities, earning recognition in 2025. Post-1980 restoration, per capita distributions from judgment funds and trust investments have supported band-level operations, though scaling remains incremental given the enrolled membership of approximately 920. Strategies outlined in the 2022 Comprehensive Economic Development Strategy emphasize partnerships with universities for workforce training and land-use optimization to mitigate vulnerabilities like , positioning the tribe for sustainable growth in and .

Contemporary Status

The Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah determines enrollment eligibility through a blood quantum requirement of at least one-quarter degree Paiute Indian ancestry, a criterion applied uniformly across its five bands: Cedar, Indian Peaks, Kanosh, Koosharem, and Shivwits. As of December 31, 2024, total enrolled membership stands at 909 individuals, with distribution varying significantly by band: Shivwits (317 members), Cedar (276), Kanosh (151), Koosharem (123), and Indian Peaks (42). Enrollment activity in 2023 included eight new members added—primarily in Shivwits (five) and Cedar (two)—offset by eight deaths, yielding no net change for the year. Despite annual fluctuations, the tribe's overall enrolled population has expanded modestly since the late , when figures approximated 741 members, a trend attributed to improved outcomes and cultural revitalization efforts following federal restoration. Historically, the Utah Paiutes experienced severe demographic decline during the federal termination era (1954–1980), marked by mortality rates exceeding birth rates threefold and an average of 42 years, with nearly half the population lost to diseases worsened by inadequate housing, nutrition, and access to services. Restoration via the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah Restoration Act of 1980 (Public Law 96-227) facilitated population stabilization, though current enrollment remains constrained by the blood quantum rule and off-reservation dispersal, with U.S. data indicating reservation-based populations far below tribal totals. Recent estimates from tribal programs have cited figures around 928 members, aligning with observed growth amid ongoing challenges like geographic fragmentation across Utah's Iron, Millard, Sevier, and Washington counties.

Health, Education, and Social Services

The Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah operates FourPoints Health, a tribally managed providing preventive and primary medical care, dental services, behavioral health including counseling and treatment, and services to enrolled tribal members at no cost, with a sliding fee scale for other uninsured patients. Facilities are located in Cedar City, Richfield, Kanosh, St. George, and Shivwits (Ivins), serving the tribe's five bands across southern and central . In 2022, the tribe entered an self-governance compact, enabling direct management of federal health funds, and opened a new $6 million facility in Cedar City to expand services. American Indian and Alaska Native populations in , including those served by FourPoints Health, experience elevated rates of diabetes-related visits and mortality compared to other groups, reflecting broader disparities in chronic disease prevalence linked to socioeconomic factors and historical underfunding of tribal health infrastructure. The tribe supports higher education through the "Soaring for Education" scholarship program, offering up to $2,500 per semester for full-time enrolled members (12+ credits) pursuing accredited postsecondary degrees, with funding prioritized for continuing students maintaining a 2.3 GPA and covering tuition, fees, and textbooks; part-time students receive $200 per credit hour, limited to five years for undergraduates. Applicants must complete the and provide transcripts, with deadlines of June 30 for fall and November 30 for spring semesters. To promote cultural awareness, the tribe has partnered with Utah educators to introduce a high course on Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah starting in spring 2026, available statewide for grades 9-12. While specific tribal graduation rates are not publicly detailed, American Indian students in have seen gradual increases in high school completion, aligning with state trends from 83% in to higher adjusted cohort rates in recent years. Social services are coordinated through the tribe's Family Services Department, which administers programs such as the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (approving 90 applications in 2024 for utility aid), childcare for 37 clients, the Welcome Baby initiative providing car seats and newborn supplies, and distribution of 62 food boxes to members. The Behavioral Care Department addresses and via counseling and integrated support within FourPoints Health. Member Services assists with enrollment, for referred care, and eligibility verification for spouses, children under 19, and foster youth, including appeals for denied services. A memorandum of understanding with Utah's Division of Child and Family Services ensures early tribal involvement in interventions affecting Paiute families. Additional supports include the Low-Income Household Water Assistance Program for water and wastewater access, and the Paiute Tribal Housing Authority, established in 1974, managing units across band areas to promote stable housing. The Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah (PITU) maintains sovereign status as a federally recognized Indian tribe, with its federal trust relationship restored through the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah Restoration Act ( 96-227), enacted on April 3, 1980. This legislation reaffirmed federal recognition for the Shivwits, Kanosh, Koosharem, and Indian Peaks Bands, while subsequent actions incorporated the Cedar Band, enabling the tribe to exercise self-governance over its five constituent bands through a tribal council and constitution amended in 1997. The tribe's sovereignty is limited by the terms of restoration, including a modest land base of fragmented parcels totaling approximately 11,000 acres across Iron, Millard, Sevier, and Washington Counties, without initial provisions for gaming or expansive . Key legal issues have centered on resource and jurisdictional boundaries. The Shivwits Band's water claims were settled via the Shivwits Band of the Paiute Indian Tribe of Water Rights Settlement Act ( 106-263), signed August 18, 2000, which allocated 4,500 acre-feet annually from the Santa Clara River system and authorized $12 million in federal funding for , extinguishing prior aboriginal and Winters doctrine claims outside the reservation. In jurisdictional matters, the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in Shivwits Band of Paiute Indians v. (428 F.3d 966, 2005) that the state lacked authority to regulate billboard advertising on tribal lands, upholding tribal regulatory primacy under federal Indian principles. More recently, internal tribal disputes over band led to a 2021 federal court decision affirming the Shivwits and Kanosh Bands' sovereign against actions by PITU's tribal council, reinforcing congressional intent from the 1980 restoration. External relations with the federal government occur primarily through the ' Southern Paiute Agency, which administers trust responsibilities, while state-tribal interactions with involve both cooperation and friction. Government-to-government consultations, as outlined in 's tribal consultation , facilitate on and , though disputes over taxation and land-use authority have persisted, contributing to litigation like the billboard case. In May 2025, the Shivwits Band of Paiutes Jurisdictional (H.R. 3073) was introduced to grant concurrent civil jurisdiction over Shivwits lands, aiming to address longstanding ambiguities that have impeded tribal economic growth without waiving . These dynamics reflect broader tensions between tribal and state interests in arid regions with overlapping claims.

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