April 2019 Tribal Disbursement Duplicate Checks

April 23, 2019

Greetings MHA Members,

There was an error during the processing of the April 2019 Tribal Disbursement checks dated 4/19/2019. Some members were sent two disbursement checks. The two checks are identical with the same check number. The bank that the checks were written from will only allow one of the checks to be cashed. If you have received a duplicate check, please mail one of the checks back to the People’s Fund at the address listed on the check itself. Please feel free to contact the People’s Fund at (701) 627-8779 or toll free (844) 684-0205 with any questions. We apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused.

MHA People’s Fund

Celebrating Women: Dr. Monica Mayer

Screen Shot 2019-03-25 at 10.01.16 AM_DocM.jpg

By: Jim Olson 

Posted: Mar 25, 2019 11:42 AM CDT
Updated: Mar 25, 2019 10:25 PM CDT

New Town, ND - She was an all-state basketball player in the earliest years of the sport in North Dakota.
She's a doctor.
And she's helping shape her people's future.
Tribal council member Dr. Monica Mayer of New Town is in the spotlight tonight as we continue our salute to women making a difference in North Dakota.
Jim Olson has the story.

Dr. Monica Mayer is proud of her Native American heritage, provided to her by her mother.

(Dr. Monica Mayer, Tribal Council Member) "MHA Nation has been a great nation for hundreds and hundreds of years on the great plains."

But she also honors the European heritage of her father.

(Dr. Monica Mayer, Tribal Council Member) "My father was German so, work, work, work!"

In fact, it was a stunt her father pulled when Monica and her two sisters were in school that may have been the turning point in her life. She says the three girls were not exactly bearing down in school when dad took them out to some family land one morning, left them there with water and lunch and orders to pick rocks. When he returned at day's end, he delivered his message - take school seriously or be ready for a hard life.

(Dr. Monica Mayer, Tribal Council Member) "You mean if we get good grades in school we don't have to come out and work this hard? He says yes. He didn't have to bang our heads against a brick wall. We all went to school and became educated."

Did they ever. Monica is a UND doctorate graduate, sister Holly has a masters in public health nursing from UND, and Renee, now deceased, who earned a masters in social work at UND.
Dr. Monica Mayer put her education in action immediately.

(Dr. Monica Mayer, Tribal Council Member) "I finished my residency on a Friday and I started on a Monday right here in New Town, my hometown."

And her work ethic pushed her far beyond her work in the local clinic. She became chief medical officer at the hospital in Belcourt, saving it from closure.

(Dr. Monica Mayer, Tribal Council Member) "That's a real success story over there, I'm very proud of that."

She was promoted to Chief Medical Officer for 19 hospitals and clinic in four states for the Indian Health Service and was offered a position in the Washington office of IHS when family pulled her back to New Town.

(Dr. Monica Mayer, Tribal Council Member) "My mother, she asked me if I would come home and spend what little time she had." 

Soon after, she decided on a new avenue for her energies - politics - running to represent the New Town area on the MHA Tribal Council.

(Dr. Monica Mayer, Tribal Council Member) "Much to my surprise I landslided in."

Since then, she's led the fight against addiction among tribal members - especially the men of the tribes.

(Dr. Monica Mayer, Tribal Council Member) "I'm very hard on them. You have to work to take care of your family, your flesh and blood. Because there's nothing more important than your family."

And now, two years into her four-year term, she sees parallels between her work as a doctor and serving on the tribal council.

(Dr. Monica Mayer, Tribal Council Member) "I miss medicine terribly. Every day. But I always feel strongly and am satisfied that I'm serving in a different capacity so, it works out."

It works out, thanks to hard work. A lesson learned in a rocky field near New Town so many years ago. 
Jim Olson, KX News.

Dr. Mayer's mother died in recent months.
Monica says she proudly shares her mom's philosophy: love the Lord, love your family, and love to serve others.
 

Copyright 2019 Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

https://www.kxnet.com/news/minot-news/celebrating-women-dr-monica-mayer/1875650589

 

Icy Plunges Raise Funds to Fight Cancer

plunge_1552510593106_77219314_ver1.0_640_360.jpg

By: Jim Olson 

Posted: Mar 13, 2019 03:57 PM CDT

Updated: Mar 13, 2019 09:23 PM CDT

New Town, ND - Dozens of people stripped down to swim gear and jumped into the ice-cold water of Lake Sakakawea this morning.
As Jim Olson shows us, they did it to raise money to battle cancer.

"Are you worried about this at all?"

(Kim Marcucci, Plunge Participant) "Yes." 

And why not? They had to saw through thick ice to open up a slice of Lake Sakakawea for this.

(Mark Fox, MHA Tribal Chairman) "This is the fourth annual, number four."

This is the Ice Water Warrior Plunge. And MHA Tribal Chairman Mark Fox is the first one into the icy water.

"1, 2, 3..."

But many others followed, including a fellow tribal leader - from the Turtle Mountain Chippewa.

"Splash"

And there were groups of jumpers - such as eight guys from an oil and gas pipeline company.

(Trent Howard, Mandan) "I think it will be brisk." (You guys agree with that?) "Yeah! I think it'll be a little brisk, yeah."

And when you're jumping into 33-degree water, you need a strategy, right?

"I'm going traditional cannonball, it's my first year so I'm a little nervous."
"This is my fourth year doing this and I might go with the belly flop again."

But no matter the style, or the background of the jumper, every one did this for a very good reason.

(Mark Fox, MHA Tribal Chairman) "The major thing is to raise money for the American Indian Cancer Foundation. 
(Ayla Salamanca, Minot) "My grandpa is the main reason I do this. He had throat cancer. He passed a couple of years ago. But my grandma beat it so I'm gonna keep fighting for her and do this for her every year."

Ayla raised a huge sum of money for the cause - and delivered on her promise to jump again.

"Splash"

And so one after another splashed into the icy lake - surviving a few minutes of cold to give hope to cancer victims in Indian country. At Four Bears, Jim Olson, KX News.

Chairman Fox says today's event brought in close to $70,000.

Copyright 2019 Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

https://www.kxnet.com/news/minot-news/icy-plunges-raise-funds-to-fight-cancer/1846312651

 

Information About the Proposed Amendment to the Gross Production Tax

The MHA Nation Tribal Business Council requested that information be provided to the public via the MHA Nation website to address concerns about the taxation of royalty interests in response to the MHA Nation Tax Department’s proposed Tax Code changes to section 804 of the gross production tax. The MHA Nation Tribal Business Council has never taxed Indian landowner royalty interests and the proposed code changes do not change the Council’s position. 

The proposed code changes to section 804 relate only to the increase in the tax rate and nothing else. The rest of the language in section 804, including the language regarding the taxation of royalty interests, has been in the Code since it was first approved in 1988. In 1990, the Tribal Business Council adopted Resolution No. 90-103-TL, which made it clear that landowner royalty interests are exempt from taxation. 

Resolution No. 90-103-TL, states that “all landowner royalty interests in oil and gas produced within the exterior boundaries of the Fort Berthold Reservation shall be exempt by Tribal Law from imposition of the oil and gas gross production tax of the Three Affiliated Tribes.” Resolution No. 90-103-TL supersedes the original language in section 804 that referenced royalty interests. 

In order to make the Gross Production Tax Ordinance consistent with Resolution No. 90-103-TL, an additional amendment will be proposed to section 804 to remove any language suggesting that landowner royalty interests are not exempt from taxation.