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Cultural center bill goes to Senate
by Bob Shiles
Staff writer
Charles Graham
Charles Graham
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RALEIGH — A bill that will provide for the Lumbee Tribe to purchase the N.C. Indian Cultural Center property breezed through the state House on Monday and is now on its way to the state Senate.

The bill, which is co-sponsored by Reps. Charles Graham and Ken Waddell, both Democrats whose districts touch Robeson County, takes the property away from the nonprofit North Carolina Cultural Center Inc. that for years has had difficulty coming up with the financial resources to maintain the property. House members voted to approve the bill 112-0, according to Graham, who himself is a member of the Lumbee Tribe.

The center property consists of four parcels, the largest being 387 acres and including the now closed Riverside Golf Course. According to the bill, the state will appraise that parcel and first offer it for sale to the Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina. The tribe has 90 days to accept the offer or negotiate a price based on the appraisal.

The legislation as proposed would not allow the tribal government to subdivide the land or sell or lease its natural resources. The tribe would also have to keep the property open to the public and allow North Carolina tribes and tribal organizations to use the property at cost or free.

If the tribe declines to purchase the property, the state can dispose of the property through public sale.

According to the bill, the three other parcels — totaling 144 acres — would become part of the Lumber River State Park.

The N.C. Indian Cultural Center Inc. has leased the property for $1 a year. Since 1994, it has been working to raise money to build a recreational and cultural facility to celebrate the heritage of North Carolina’s Indian tribes.

In addition to the golf course, which was shut down after buildings on the property were found not to meet state safety standards, the property includes a lake, a swimming pool, an outdoor amphitheater and other buildings, some of which have been damaged by fire.

A state analysis in December estimated the property needs $2.1 million in repairs plus $1.1 million to enclose it to prevent theft and vandalism.

The legislature’s Program Evaluation Oversight Committee studied the property last year and recommended the sale and other provisions in the legislation. According to the committee’s report, the N.C. Commission of Indian Affairs should develop another concept, rather than the current N.C. Indian Cultural Center, to promote the state’s American Indian cultures.

“I am very pleased that we are giving the tribe the opportunity to get control of the property,” Graham said. “This is a chance for the development of the center as it was originally intended. It also is an opportunity for economic development and the promotion of culture.”

Comments
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Alvaro820
|
June 13, 2013
I hope the tribe can find a way to turn it into something special. It would be great to have all the powwows out there.

The Cultural Center property is a special place in itself. This is where the Federal trust land or reservation was to be located after some of the Lumbee were "recognized" by the Dawes/Indian reorganization act in 1938. Monies/services promised and never delivered by the government!
Rogey
|
May 29, 2013
previous commenter if we are to judge purchases on who built them ,then African American worked and built this Nation,the United State and most of the Carolinas unpaid as free slave labor,So African Americans deserve first offer at almost every sale then! or have you forgotten who built the USA based former slave economy in North Carolina,there are still people alive whose Grands and Great Grands were slaves,just ask a few centenarians(people 90-100years of age)
sed22900
|
May 29, 2013
Just so u no Rogey the Lumbee people build that place that is why we have 1st choice. Oh and news flash no Casino!
Rogey
|
May 18, 2013
The Lumbee are just state citizens exactly the same as the rest of the public in North Carolina so why is there a bill to give this self-claimed group a preference based on a race claim over the general public

The Lumbee are not a Sovereign Indian nation so what gives them first choice over the general public and why is the state passing any law to favor this group over another for a sale of anything,

whatever happen to fairness in business. I have never heard of any bills in the state senate being passed to give African-Americans a sale first offer preference.

this smells of an attempt to gain some land for a future CASINO or reservation of some type!
justthere
|
May 18, 2013
Maybe this is an attempt to get a casino. Do you know anyone who needs a JOB?
citygray
|
May 29, 2013
Probably a lot of African Americans can claim Native if you go by blood quantums. In the 1700s there was so much mixing with Native and African American, that the colonist had to find a way to turn them against each other. Hell Snoop Dogg is 1/4 Native American and he didn't even know it. Seems this may set a precedent for the future judging NC past............

Library.uncg.edu Petition Analysis Record #11279002; Location:Gates Co. NC year:1790

The petitioners request the legislature to pass a law validating acquisition of land by a group of descendants of Indians and blacks. In 1724 the Chowan Indians received 11,360 acres of land in Chowan County, later Gates Co. The Indians sold most of the land. The Indian men all died, and the women "mixed with negroes." The free blacks and their mixed-blood children served as soldiers for the colonials in the Revolution. Supported by William Lewis, Samuel Harrell, and other white men, they seek title to "small remnants of the aforesaid tract of land."

Library.uncg.ed
Alvaro820
|
June 13, 2013
Rogey, Twelve US governmental studies, Smithsonian anthropologists, and historians such as Ella Deloria, Ethel Arnett, et al. all support our oral history. A law in 1957 declaring us as Lumbee Indians of NC signed by President Eisenhour and ratified by both houses of Congress. If you state a "self-claimed" group, then you are purposefully ignoring the facts or are just plain ignorant.
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Happy 236th
Thousands of people were dazzled by the fireworks display at the annual Lumberton Family Fourth celebration at the Lumberton High School football stadium on Tuesday. Many watched the display from parking lots and sidewalks around town and from their own front yards. Before the show, attendees were treated to a performance by the Carolina Breakers, and a stunt by the Army Rangers, who parachuted onto the football field.

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