Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 72 Part 1.djvu/332

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[72 Stat. 290]
PUBLIC LAW 85-000—MMMM. DD, 1958
[72 Stat. 290]

290

PUBLIC LAW 85-488-JULY 2, 1958

[72

STAT.

Public Law 85-488 July 2, 1958 [H. R. 6322]

Menominee Indians i

68 Stat. 251.

Management specialists.

Appropriation.

T r i b a l property control plan.

68 Stat. 250.

AN ACT To provide that the dates for submission of plan for future control of property and transfer of the property of the Menominee Tribe shall be delayed.

Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the Act entitled "An Act to provide for a per capita distribution of Menominee tribal funds and authorize the withdrawal of the Menominee Tribe from Federal jurisdiction", approved June 17, 1954, as amended, is further amended as follows: (a) Section 6 is amended to read as follows: "SEC. 6. The tribe is authorized to select and retain the services of qualified management specialists, including tax consultants, for the purpose of studying industrial programs on the Menominee Reservation and making such reports or recommendations, including appraisals of Menominee tribal property, as may be desired by the tribe, and to make other studies and reports as may be deemed necessary and desirable by the tribe in connection with the termination of Federal supervision as provided for hereinafter. Such reports shall be completed not later than February 1, 1959. Such specialists are to be retained under contracts entered into between them and authorized representatives of the tribe, subject to approval by the Secretary. Such amounts of Menominee tribal funds as may be required for this purpose shall be made available by the Secretary. I n order to reimburse the tribe, in part, for expenditures of such tribal funds as the Secretary deems necessary for the purposes of carrying out the requirements of this section, there is hereby authorized to be appropriated out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, an amount equal to all of such expenditures incurred prior to the date this sentence becomes effective, plus one-half of such expenditures incurred thereafter, or the sum of $275,000, whichever is the lesser amount." (b) Section 7 is amended to read as follows: "SEC. 7. The tribe shall as soon as possible and in no event later than February 1, 1959, formulate and submit to the Secretary a plan for the future control of the tribal property and service functions now conducted by or under the supervision of the United States, including but not limited to services in the fields of health, education, welfare, credit, roads, and law and order, and for all other matters involved in the withdrawal of Federal supervision. The Secretary is authorized to provide such reasonable assistance as may be requested by officials of the tribe in the formulation of the plan heretofore referred to, including necessary consultations with representatives of Federal departments and agencies, officials of the State of Wisconsin and political subdivisions thereof, and members of the tribe. The Secretary shall accept such tribal plan as the basis for the conveyance of the tribal property if he finds that it will treat with reasonable equity all members on the final roll of the tribe prepared pursuant to section 3 of this Act, and that it conforms to applicable Federal and State law. In the event the tribe fails to submit a plan approvable under the terms of this Act by February 1, 1959, the Secretary shall cause such a plan to be prepared and submitted to the tribe within three months thereafter. The tribe shall thereafter have three months within which to accept the plan of the Secretary or to submit to the Secretary tribal proposals for modification. If the Menominee Tribe and the Secretary cannot agree upon a plan within the aforementioned six months period the Secretary shall within the following six months transfer the tribal property to a trustee of his choice for management or disposition for the benefit of the Menominee Tribe. The responsi-