Housing Crisis on the Rez: Why Haul a Run-Down Shack From the Plains to DC? 
Sunday, 19 May 2013 11:08  By Mark Andrew Boyer, Yes! Magazine 

 
Tribal leaders trucked the battered old home to Washington to show the nation’s 
leaders what the housing crisis on reservations looks like in person.
Last month, a new building joined the Washington Monument and the 
Capitol building on the National Mall. The small, run-down shack had 
previously housed 13 people, and it was brought to Washington, D.C., 
from the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota to raise 
awareness about the critical need for housing on reservations around the 
country.
"It's very difficult to get anybody to leave Washington to see it 
first-hand, and until you see it first-hand, it doesn't have the 
impact," explained Thomas Boesen, a Washington-based housing lobbyist 
who was at the April 17 demonstration.
At 2.8 million acres, Pine Ridge is one of the largest Indian 
reservations in the country. It's also one of the poorest. Housing is in such 
short supply at Pine Ridge that multiple families are forced to 
cram into small trailers, and as many as 18 people have been recorded 
living in a single home.
A group of 10 fair housing advocates from the Oglala Sioux tribe 
transported the house to the National Mall in a demonstration that was 
dubbed The Trail of Hope for Indian Housing. Throughout the day, curious 
tourists and student groups wandered by and snapped photos, and in the 
afternoon North Dakota Senator Heidi Heitkamp stopped by to show her 
support.
"This is not a way that we would ever expect grandmas and grandpas to live," 
Heitkamp told a small group of demonstrators standing in front 
of the house.
The house used in the demonstration was a small, 52-year-old home 
that had two bedrooms and one bathroom before it was deconstructed and 
reconfigured so that it could fit on a trailer. With torn screens and 
crumbling window frames, the small gray structure was the first home 
built with federal assistance on Pine Ridge. After remaining on display 
on the National Mall for one day, the group donated the house to the 
Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian to be used in a 
future exhibit.
Red tape holds back the green
Indian reservations have some of the worst housing conditions in the 
United States, but not all tribes deal with the level of poverty and 
overcrowding seen on Pine Ridge. According to the Trail of Hope 
demonstrators, that’s partly because resources are generally not 
distributed among reservations according to need. The message that the 
Oglala Sioux brought to Washington is that more money needs to be 
allocated to the nation's poorest tribes, which don't have enough 
resources to meet their members’ basic needs.
Acquiring land isn't the problem on Pine Ridge; many families there 
already own property passed down from treaties. What they need is money 
to build houses. "We have three or four families living in one house," 
says Paul Iron Cloud, director of the Oglala Sioux Housing Authority. 
And those overcrowded living conditions affect everything from public 
health to education. "How do you think you could study with three 
families in one house?"
Iron Cloud testified before nine senators on the Senate Committee on 
Indian Affairs on April 10 to discuss the barriers to housing 
development on Indian reservations. Housing funds are tied up in a 
tangle of red tape that forces reservation housing advocates to compete 
with other transportation and housing lobbies for money, he said. As a 
result, Indian housing is often overlooked.
Nonprofit organizations and faith-based volunteer groups are 
increasingly stepping up on reservations to fill the void left by the 
federal government. One group that is working to improve housing 
conditions at Pine Ridge is the Oglala Sioux Tribe Partnership for 
Housing, a nonprofit organization that was founded in 1999 to help 
tribal members purchase homes. The Partnership helped to organize the 
Trail of Hope, and the group’s director, Emma "Pinky" Clifford, also 
sits on the board of directors of the tribe’s Housing Authority. In the 
14 years since the Partnership was formed, Clifford says the group has 
helped more than 100 families to acquire homes.
But it’s never easy, and each home presents unique challenges. 
Clifford says she approaches construction and fundraising projects one 
house at a time, often using different strategies to finance each 
project. If an approach works, the organization will try to replicate 
it; if not, they’ll try something else.
As I left the National Mall, Clifford handed me a flyer for her 
latest project, a single-family home that she hopes to complete and 
deliver by July 2013. A solid foundation and parking pad are already in 
place, but nothing else. A lumber company from Maine is donating all the 
building materials, and others will be providing labor and appliances, 
but Clifford says she’s still trying to figure out how to add 
electrical, plumbing, and heating systems.
"We have hope," Paul Iron Cloud said, wearing a big black cowboy hat 
while sitting in front of the house as it stood on the National Mall. 
"Bringing this house to Washington, hopefully that will show Congress 
and the people that there is light at the end of the tunnel."

http://truth-out.org/news/item/16460-housing-crisis-on-the-rez-why-haul-a-run-down-shack-from-the-plains-to-dc


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