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Montanas K-12 public schools are constitutionally required to recognize the distinct and unique cultural heritage of American Indians, and districts receive annual funding from the state to enact that mandate. But plaintiffs in an ongoing lawsuit allege a majority of Montana school districts dont properly implement the pedagogy known as Indian Education for All. 

In the class action lawsuit, brought by a group of Montana students, families and tribes against the state Office of Public Instruction and Montana Board of Public Education, plaintiffs argue that school districts have improperly used funds meant to support Indian Education for All efforts. 

In a victory for tribes and other advocates, the Montana Board of Public Education recently reached a settlement agreement, promising to improve how the state teaches Native American history and culture. Despite the settlement, however, the lawsuit continues against the Office of Public Instruction the agency generally responsible for providing state funding, including for Indian Education for All.

When Joseph Hammar, manager of the new media arts program at , heard news of the settlement, his first thought was, Its about time.

Its pretty obvious that theres not a whole lot of schools that are implementing this, he told 勛圖窪蹋 in a recent interview.

Located on the Fort Peck Reservation in northeast Montana, Poplar Middle School serves about 243 students, ranging from fifth to eighth grade. 

Hammar and his colleague Jacob Turcotte, an English teacher at the middle school, say incorporating Indian Education for All into curricula is vital not just for student success, but for instilling a sense of pride and belonging.

Turcotte manages the schools , a two-week curriculum each fall where students learn from knowledge-keepers about Assiniboine and Sioux culture and participate in a buffalo harvest. Turcotte says the students use geometry to set up tipis. In science class, they learn about genetics. In Hammars media arts program, students produce short films on topics like the in Native cultures or the importance of . 

During the project, Turcotte said attendance is at its highest and behavioral issues decrease. Last fall, the school invited students from , a majority-white community, to participate, too. 

Prior to launching the project, Turcotte said he could tell students struggled with identity.

A lot of our students here, theyre from Fort Peck, the home of the Assinibione and Sioux people, but we would ask students what kind of Indian they were and they couldnt answer that question, he said. That was very alarming. These kids know theyre Indian but dont know what tribe they come from. By reconnecting our people to who they are and where they come from, it gives them something to be proud of.

Its not just majority-Native schools that stand to benefit from Indian Education for All, Turcotte said, adding that Montana is home to seven reservations and 12 tribes. 

Its important that non-Native students understand how things were, how things played out with the Native Americans and to teach the truth, he said. Dont teach the whitewashed version. When we teach truth, I think were less likely to repeat it.

Turcotte and Hammar know it can be difficult for non-Native teachers, in particular, to teach others about Indigenous history and culture. 

My advice to them is reach out, ask questions, Turcotte said. I know its kind of scary and intimidating for a non-Native to ask certain questions, but honestly, if you ask with your heart in the right place, nobody will be offended because what people are trying to do is educate. Just reach out. Reach out to the tribal cultural department. Reach out to the Office of Public Instruction. There are resources out there, just dont be afraid to ask.

READ MORE: Under settlement, Montana Board of Public Ed vows to improve how state teaches Native American history and culture.

Nora Mabie


Wildlife Watch

Gov. Greg Gianforte and Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks this week traveled to south-central Montanas Ruby Valley to highlight the states work to mitigate conflicts with grizzly bears.

Heart of the Rockies, a Missoula-based conservation nonprofit, plans to work alongside 12 landowner-led groups, two tribes and about 10 communities to deploy conflict prevention tools, including electric fencing, range riders, carcass disposal programs and bear-resistant garbage cans. The work is supported by a $2.25 million grant from the U.S. Interior Department and the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation.

Six formal agreements with landowner-led groups are in place, according to a press release the governors office issued Tuesday highlighting Gianfortes trip to the Barnosky Ranch in Madison County to talk about the states partnership with Heart of the Rockies.

Montana ranchers are on the front lines of wildlife conflict, and they need the resources to safely prevent contact before it happens, Gianforte said in the release. With grizzly bears on the move again this spring, Montana landowners and local partners are utilizing investments to prepare and protect livestock across 1.2 million acres.

If all goes according to plan, the program will allow for the installation and maintenance of approximately 40,000 feet of electric fencing and the deployment of about 3,000 bear-resistant garbage cans.

Next year, the livestock loss board administered by the Montana Board of Livestock will distribute approximately $525,000 to make mitigation measures such as livestock guard dogs and carcass compost programs available to agricultural producers. The boards hope is that preventing conflicts on the front end will reduce the need for payments made for cattle or sheep losses attributed to grizzly predation.

For now, grizzlies remain federally protected under the Endangered Species Act, though the Trump administrations remains unclear.

Amanda Eggert


Tough Nut to Crack

The committee tasked with overseeing the transfer of patients with Alzheimers disease, dementia and traumatic brain injuries out of the Montana State Hospital met this week to assess just how improbable achieving that mandate is before a July deadline. 

The Transition Review Committee which includes state lawmakers, health care experts and patient representatives launched after a bipartisan group of legislators passed in 2023. The bill, sponsored by , directed the state health department to move this difficult-to-care-for group of patients out of the adult psychiatric facility and into settings that can provide more appropriate care for people with severe memory and cognitive conditions. 

Gov. Greg Gianforte originally vetoed the bill, calling its 2025 deadline for transferring patients unworkable. The 2023 Legislature later overrode that veto, a maneuver that requires a two-thirds majority from the combined House and Senate chambers.

This week, after nearly two years of work, state hospital and health department representatives from Gianfortes administration indicated that the bills mission is still inherently Sisyphean. 

There are some [people] that you’re just not going to be able to place, said Dr. Kevin Flanigan, the Montana State Hospital CEO, during a Wednesday presentation to the committee. I can’t just turn them out. They’re not ready to be out in the community We’ll have to figure out: How do we help these patients? Where are they best served?

The puzzle, as described by Flanigan and other Montana health care experts who testified to the committee Wednesday, is akin to solving a Rubiks cube with one hand. Typically, state hospital staff appeal to a nursing home or assisted living facility with the memory or behavioral health expertise necessary to care for a particular patient. Those facilities, in turn, often ask the state to give them additional Medicaid reimbursements to cover a higher level of care. The add-on payments sometimes get denied, leading local facilities to turn down new patients.

Flanigan said his team was still striving to achieve the metrics laid out in HB 29. In January, the hospital had roughly 15 patients who fell under the legislations definitions. As of Wednesday, Flanigan said the number had decreased to eight. 

He had only general suggestions of where the remaining patients might go, not to mention any new patients who might fall under HB 29s directive. Perhaps private nursing homes at the community level. Perhaps the Montana Mental Health Nursing Care Center in Lewistown. Perhaps, even, other parts of the state hospital.

In that scenario, Flanigan said, some patients who continue to stay at the hospital may be regularly monitored by two dedicated staffers, a setup he described as an enormous cost. As to what unit the patients would live on? Flanigan said he wasnt sure.

We’d have to design that operational plan to be sure that we still fall within the intent of HB 29 and not just become a long-term placement facility for patients with dementia. That’s a slippery slope. You could slip back to that, and that is something we absolutely have to design intentionally not to regress to that, Flanigan said.

Other dysfunctional parts of the state hospital make patient discharge more complicated. Ongoing construction means patients are already being moved around various units, including a leased facility in Helena that the health department has christened Grasslands. Staffing continues to be inadequate, with temporary contract staff cycling through open positions. 

Committee members on Wednesday also asked about the ongoing efforts to secure a vendor to create an electronic health records system for Warm Springs. The hospitals medical records and note system is largely paper-based, a fact that has long hampered continuity of care for newly admitted and recently discharged patients.

Electronic records are at the center of a modern communicating set of agencies and a coordinating plan I would consider that one of the highest priority bullets coming out of this, said during the meeting. Theyre still using computers that are from 1980.

The committee added that topic to its agenda for its next and last meeting, which is scheduled for July.

Mara Silvers


Follow Up 滮湛

Gov. Greg Gianforte found success this year in shepherding most of the provisions of his November budget proposal through the state Legislature &紳莉莽梯;with prison expansion funding, teacher pay boosts, a hefty income tax cut and a landmark property tax relief package making it to his desk.

One item that didnt pass muster with lawmakers, though? A further cut to the states business equipment tax, a property tax that applies to high-value equipment like tractors and industrial machinery.

Historically, the business equipment tax was a hearty slice of Montanas property tax pie, about 13% of the states property tax base in 1996, according to archival figures from the state Department of Revenue. However, that share has since shrunk by about two-thirds, both as the state has shifted from equipment-heavy natural resource industries toward backpack-heavy scenery ones and as and Republican governors alike have cut the equipment tax, arguing it poses a drag on small businesses.

Under current law, the first $1 million of equipment owned by each business is exempt from the tax, something that keeps many smaller businesses from paying it entirely. Gianforte had proposed pushing that exemption threshold up to $3 million.

implementing that increase, sponsored by , was scaled back to a $1.5 million exemption threshold before passing the Senate with bipartisan support. It then stalled at the House Appropriations Committee.

The committees senior Democrat, , criticized the cuts $2.5-million-a-year price tag shortly before the April 23 vote where the bill was voted down.

If were looking for a place to save General Fund [money], I would say this would be the place to do it, Caferro said. They dont need it and theyre doing business anyway and at a certain point we might as well eliminate the whole business equipment tax.

In a Thursday email to MTFP, Gianforte spokesperson Kaitlin Price credited the governor for successfully advocating for prior business equipment cuts in 2021 and 2023, raising the exemption threshold up from $100,000 when he took office.

The governor is disappointed some legislators didn’t share his commitment to help small business owners and family farmers and ranchers by further reforming the burdensome business equipment tax, Price wrote, though he is grateful to those who did support that pro-jobs, pro-business, pro-investment policy.

Eric Dietrich


Closeup

Gov. Greg Gianforte May 7 theatrically announcing his veto of . The governor called the bill costly government overreach. 

Like many Montanans, I enjoy hot coffee in a Styrofoam cup because it keeps it hot. And this bill is a hot mess, Gianforte said in the video before sipping from a Styrofoam cup emblazoned with the word VETO in bold red letters.  

As of May 8, Gianforte, a Republican, has vetoed five of the 805 bills passed by the Legislature this year. In 2023, Gianforte successfully vetoed 22 bills, roughly 3% of the 804 transmitted to his desk. Four of the governors vetoes two years ago were overridden by a two-thirds majority of the Legislature, which retains its ability to overrule vetoes by mail polls even after the session concludes.

Its not uncommon for governors to use vetoes as occasions for political theater. In 2011, for example, then-Gov. Brian Schweitzer, a Democrat, used in front of the Capitol. 

Bill signings offer governors a similar opportunity to make public statements. On April 24 Gianforte signed in East Helena. Some bill vetoes and signings, though, are conducted without fanfare. In late March, for example, Gianforte signed without a ceremony or press release

Zeke Lloyd


Highlights 儭

In other news this week

School levy votes delivered mixed outcomes for Montanas largest school districts. Kalispell voters passed a high school general fund levy for the first time in nearly two decades.

President Trumps budget proposal would cut federal spending on public land management, shifting some responsibilities to states. The proposal, which is subject to congressional approval, would also consolidate federal wildland firefighting efforts under the Department of the Interior.

State and federal efforts have for years sought to address the disproportionate rate at which Native Americans in Montana are reported missing or killed by violent crime. As May 5, the National Day of Awareness for Missing and Murdered Indigenous People, came this year, groups led marches, panels, protests and other events in Montana and across the nation.


On Our Radar 

Alex With my eyes no longer fixed on the Legislatures MPAN feed every day, Ive gotten absolutely hooked on An old-fashioned sitcom at heart, the AppleTV show throws slapstick humor and a barrage of cameos in a blender in its relentless quest to poke fun at the franchise-obsessed nature of modern filmmaking. 

Brad It was a happenstance of a recent room rearrangement that led me to read a Kurt Vonnegut novel for the first time in 20 years, an unread copy of Mother Night thats been following me around in cardboard moving boxes for ages. So I finally read it, and whadddya know, its feels as contemporary as anything on the New Releases shelf or in the national news, for that matter. I dont have the same hope for based on the book, but now I feel duty-bound to find out. 

Jacob I’ve been on quite a journey with my great-grandmother’s century-old cast-iron pans. After inheriting these family heirlooms recently the same ones that cooked every meal for my grandfather as a kid I decided they needed a full restoration. convinced me that soaking them in oven cleaner inside garbage bags was the way to go, but I wildly underestimated the timeline. After nearly a month of countless disappointing checks and scrubbing sessions, the faint factory polishing marks absent from today’s mass-produced cast iron are finally emerging, leaving these treasures ready for their next century of service just in time for Mother’s Day.

Holly &紳莉莽梯;My mom told me to read years ago. I should have listened (and read) sooner.

Zeke &紳莉莽梯;, Ive been saving my last can of Busch Light Apple, also known as Bapple, since the promotional product was discontinued after the summer of 2022. (, introduced in the interim, served as a delicious reminder of what we were missing.) But the . .   

Mara Ive been celebrating the end of the Legislature by listening to Jonathan Haidts book, The Anxious Generation, on Audible (shamelessly acquired with a family members book credit, which Im sure they had other plans for). Its been revelatory for me and now I cant stop telling anyone and everyone about the power of discover mode and unstructured play for children.

Eric Spring is in the air. Heres .

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