Garden City Group executive ties Cobell payment delay to - TopicsExpress



          

Garden City Group executive ties Cobell payment delay to DOI WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014 Filed Under: Cobell | National | Politics More on: 113th, doi, land consolidation, michael connor, scia, senate Indian beneficiaries in Oklahoma demand release of Cobell settlement funds at this protest last year. Photo from Katherine Ware-Perosi / Change.Org Indian beneficiaries probably wont be seeing the final payment from the $3.4 billion Cobell trust fund settlement for a couple more months. In May, a federal judge approved distribution of the remaining funds while appeals from people who believe they are eligible are still being processed. The ruling gave hope to hundreds of thousands of beneficiaries who were originally told to expect a check around Christmas in 2013. The payments, however, depend on calculations being made at the Interior Department. Without that information, the Garden City Group -- the firm that was appointed by the court to administer the settlement -- cant mail out checks. DOIs calculations depend on information only available to DOI, Jennifer Keough, the chief operating officer at the Garden City Group, told the Senate Indian Affairs Committee this afternoon. Once those final numbers are provided to us and approved by the court, Garden City stands ready to issue to begin the process of issuing payments to the trust administration class, Keough added. Michael Connor, the second-in-command at the Interior Department, acknowledged that work was continuing on those calculations. However, he would only say that it would be completed in early fall. But then he said it was the Cobell plaintiffs who asked DOI to do some verification of information. No one from the Cobell team appeared at the hearing. The remainder of the hearing focused on the Land Buy-Back Program for Tribal Nations. The settlement authorized $1.9 billion for DOI to acquire fractionated interests from willing sellers. Since December, DOI has paid $72 million to landowners. More than 203,000 acres have been returned to tribes as a result of the program. The hearing lasted about 1 hour and 20 minutes. Audio can be found on the
Posted on: Thu, 17 Jul 2014 19:12:42 +0000

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