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User:Poebraxton/Scotts Valley Band of Pomo Indians of California

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History

After severed ties with the United States, there is limited research and Information about the Scotts Valley Band of Pomo Indians. The Band lived peacefully throughout the Bay Area and Northern California. This changed when settlers arrived, and the band of natives were killed, beaten and turned into slaves1. They were forced to move to the Mendocino and Round Valley Reservations1. In 1972, a federal task force concluded that the Scotts Valley Band of Pomo Indians was the only Pomo Indian Tribe that should be entirely relocated, and the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) relocated a vast majority of Tribal Members to the Bay Area.4

Tribe Status

They are currently recognized as an ordinance of the Sugar Bowl Reservation in California. The band has a current membership of nearly 300 Tribal members in the Bay Area of California.


Tribal Code

.Due to the fact that they have been misrepresented and dismissed as a tribe for many years, they have included tribal codes and tribal traditions on websites, in order to continue to express the importance of their tribe. Their tribal code contains procedures for tribal council meetings, gaming ordinance, establishing regulations and procedures governing enrollment of members into the Scotts Valley band of Pomo Indians2. Tribal codes are traditions that have been passed along with tribes such as the Choctaw and Cherokee, and the Pomo Indians should be no exception. It is stated by the Scotts Valley Tribal TANF that the Pomo Indians is the “Health and Human Services (HHS) Administration for Children and Families (ACF) designated social services provider for Contra Costa County and provides assistance under the Tribal TANF program to all eligible Native American Families residing in the country.3


Present Day

In 2011, there was a project to help develop a Scotts Valley Energy Development Office. The purpose of the project was to further support the mission of the tribe’s existing leadership position as the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Tribal Multi-County Weatherization Energy Program (TMCWEP) in creating jobs and providing tribal homes and buildings with weatherization assistance to increase energy efficiency, occupant comfort, and indoor air quality.6 By training tribal members in energy efficiency, they are continuing to change and adapt with the modern world while also following their tribal traditions.


Resources

  • Glidden, J. (2019, August 29). Federal government rejects Scotts Valley Indian casino in North Vallejo.

Retrieved from https://www.timesheraldonline.com/2019/08/27/federal-government-rejects-scotts-valley-indian-casino-in-north-vallejo/.