Essayer OR - Gratuit
Shutdown has caused tribes to kill bison for food
Los Angeles Times
|November 13, 2025
Native American communities depend on government aid such as SNAP.
BISON manager Robert Magnan prepares to load an animal onto his truck near Wolf Point, Mont., Monday.
(MIKE CLARK Associated Press)
On the open plains of the Fort Peck Reservation, Robert Magnan leaned out the window of his truck, set a rifle against the door frame and then “pop!” — a bison tumbled dead in its tracks.
Magnan and a coworker shot two more bison, also known as buffalo, and quickly field dressed the animals before carting them off for processing into ground beef and cuts of meat for distribution to members of the Fort Peck Assiniboine and Sioux Tribes in northern Montana.
As lawmakers in Washington, D.C., plod toward resolving the record government shutdown that interrupted food aid for tens of millions of people, tribal leaders on rural reservations across the Great Plains have been culling their cherished bison herds to help fill the gap.
About one-third of Fort Peck’s tribal members on the reservation depend on monthly benefit checks, Chairman Floyd Azure said. That's almost triple the rate for the U.S. as a whole. They've received only partial payments in November after President Trump's administration choked off funds to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program during the shutdown.
Fort Peck officials say they anticipated such a moment years ago, when they were bolstering their herd with animals from Yellowstone National Park over objections from cattle ranchers worried about animal disease.
“We were bringing it up with the tribal council: What would happen if the government went bankrupt? How would we feed the people?” said Magnan, the longtime steward of Fort Peck’s bison herds. “It shows we still need buffalo.”
Treaty obligations
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition November 13, 2025 de Los Angeles Times.
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