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In It to Win It

(12,319 posts)
Wed Jun 18, 2025, 01:08 PM Jun 2025

"A Law Without a Way to Enforce It" - BOLTS

https://boltsmag.org/voting-rights-act-natives-north-dakota/

The water system that provides for the entire Spirit Lake Reservation in North Dakota has been contaminated with dangerous levels of manganese that have made the water undrinkable since May.

For Lonna Jackson-Street, chair of the Spirit Lake Tribal Council, which is now scrambling to provide bottled water to residents and install a filtration system, the crisis underscores the need for Native voices in government. The federal government fails to properly maintain infrastructure it’s supposed to be managing, and state leaders don’t dedicate enough resources to reservations they see as outside their jurisdiction. “Native representation is so important,” she said, “because they understand the gaps in these services and how they are administered to our tribal nations.”

A member of Spirit Lake Nation was elected to North Dakota’s legislature for the first time last fall thanks to a redistricting lawsuit filed by Jackson-Street’s tribe, alongside the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa. The suit claimed that the districts drawn by North Dakota in 2021 violated the Voting Rights Act, and the tribes’ initial success in court triggered a new map and increased representation in 2024.

But last month, a federal appeals court tossed out their victory and declared that only the federal government can sue over violations of the Voting Rights Act, a devastating blow to the ability of these tribes—and others in the region—to seek legal recourse.

The decision was a major win for the conservative lawyers who’ve been trying to gut the VRA, and it came just as the Trump administration is signaling that it has little interest in enforcing voter discrimination laws.

NEW: A federal appeals court tossed out a redistricting lawsuit filed by tribes in ND, saying they weren't allowed to bring a suit under the VRA — only the DOJ can.

That's just the tip of the iceberg of really escalating threats against Native voters.

Must-read, quite distressing reporting:

Taniel (@taniel.bsky.social) 2025-06-18T17:50:41.341Z
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"A Law Without a Way to Enforce It" - BOLTS (Original Post) In It to Win It Jun 2025 OP
It's unclear what caused the manganese levels to go up, Alberts said. -- https://www.inforum.com/news/north-dakota/spiri eppur_se_muova Jun 2025 #1

eppur_se_muova

(40,968 posts)
1. It's unclear what caused the manganese levels to go up, Alberts said. -- https://www.inforum.com/news/north-dakota/spiri
Wed Jun 18, 2025, 03:31 PM
Jun 2025
https://www.inforum.com/news/north-dakota/spirit-lake-nation-to-be-without-drinkable-tap-water-for-2-extra-weeks

Almost every article I could find online covered the public safety and political aspects of this, but no one seemed willing to speculate where the increase in Mn came from. Could be mine runoff, leaching, or illegal dumping -- all preventable and subject to regulation and legal penalties. They need to find out, so they can know if this will recur, or even become a permanent condition.

One particularly frightening possibility is that there has been acidification of local rainfall. Low pH can convert many Mn ores into soluble Mn salts. Mn(II) carbonate (a naturally occurring ore) and phosphate are more soluble than I expected, so Mn can't be precipitated from solution effectively with any of the common chemicals used for water treatment -- saturated solutions of either salt are near or in excess of the recommended safe exposure level.

Ash from coal-burning plants is another potential source that cannot be overlooked, especially if there are ash ponds upstream from the lake.
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