Wednesday, May 14, 2025

 


A bipartisan group of senators with oversight on tribal and appropriations matters is calling on Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to immediately halt staffing reductions and resource cuts to the Indian Health Service (IHS).

In a letter sent Tuesday, Sens. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) and Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) stressed that efforts to reduce federal spending and hiring strain the agency’s already understaffed and underresourced facilities and impede the federal government’s obligation to provide healthcare to federally recognized tribes.

American Indians and Alaska Natives face staggering health disparities, with higher mortality rates from cardiac disease, respiratory illness, liver disease, diabetes, injuries, assault and suicide. Their life expectancy of 65.2 years falls more than a decade below the national average.

The IHS provides healthcare to 2.8 million Native Americans, despite a chronic 30% staffing shortage and an annual budget shortfall of $50 billion.

The letter notes that “IHS cannot deliver quality health care without sufficient personnel – not just physicians, nurses, dentists, and mental health professionals, but also laboratory technicians who perform tests and process and collect specimens, and administrative personnel who perform essential tasks, including billing, appointment scheduling, and ensuring IHS facilities maintain their accreditation.”

The lawmakers warn that losing accreditation would further limit healthcare access in Indian Country and jeopardize Medicare and Medicaid reimbursements, which provide 30-60% of funding at many IHS locations.

The letter urged Kennedy to engage in meaningful tribal consultation before taking any further action that could affect IHS’s capacity to provide healthcare to Native communities. It also addresses reports of senior officials from HHS agencies being reassigned to IHS positions in Alaska, Montana, and Oklahoma without consideration of tribal needs, Indian Preference requirements, or IHS service priorities.

“This foundational tenet of the federal government’s trust relationship empowers Tribes to be a part of policymaking on a government-to-government basis,” the letter read. It appears that HHS has failed to meaningfully consult with Tribes on recent actions, which have negatively impacted the federal-Tribal relationship, and we urge you to seek Tribal input and consult on any future federal action impacting their interests.”

In an email to Native News Online, Merkley said the administration should be filling open positions at IHS.

“Trump and his unelected billionaire sidekick Elon Musk are wreaking havoc on Tribal communities by forcing people out of the workforce at HHS and IHS and putting a hiring freeze in place,” Merkley wrote. “This administration should be doing everything it can to shore up vacancies, not create new ones.”

Merkley also addressed sweeping cuts made to other agencies operating under HHS that serve tribal nations.

According to the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) website tracking federal spending and staffing reductions, more cuts have been made to HHS since January than to any other federal agency.

“I hope that HHS and Secretary Kennedy will heed our call to reverse these dangerous decisions to arbitrarily cut programs not only at IHS but also at the NIH, SAMHSA, CMS, and the CDC, all of which impact care for Tribes,” Merkley wrote. “They must also engage in meaningful Tribal consultation, as is required by law.”

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About The Author
Elyse Wild
Elyse Wild
Senior Health Editor
Elyse Wild is Senior Health Editor for Native News Online, where she leads coverage of health equity issues including mental health, environmental health, maternal mortality, and the overdose crisis in Indian Country. Her award-winning journalism has appeared in The Guardian, McClatchy newspapers, and NPR affiliates. In 2024, she received the inaugural Excellence in Recovery Journalism Award for her solutions-focused reporting on addiction and recovery in Native communities. She is currently working on a Pulitzer Center-funded series exploring cultural approaches to addiction treatment.

Senate Committee on Indian Affairs to Host an Oversight Hearing on the Impact of Health & Human Services Cuts to Native Communities

By Native News Online Staff 
 May 13, 2025
Yahoo News


On Wednesday, May 14, at 3:30 p.m. ET,
U.S. Senators Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), Chair of the Committee and Brian Schatz (D-Hawaiʻi), Vice Chairman of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, and , will convene an oversight hearing titled “Delivering Essential Public Health and Social Services to Native Americans – Examining Federal Programs Serving Native Americans Across the Operating Divisions at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).” The hearing will take place in Room 628 of the Dirksen Senate Office Building in Washington, D.C.



U.S. Capitol (Photo/Levi Rickert for Native News Online)

This week, Senators Schatz and Murkowski wrote to HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to sound the alarm over his dismantling of HHS, as well as urgent staffing shortages at the Indian Health Service. Schatz has previously warned about the devastating potential impact that Republican plans to cut Medicaid would have on Native communities specifically.


Event Details:

WHAT:

Murkowski and Schatz to lead Senate Committee on Indian Affairs oversight hearing on HHS programs serving American Indian, Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiians

WITNESSES:
THE HONORABLE JANET ALKIRE, Chairwoman of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, Fort Yates, North Dakota (in-person)
THE HONORABLE LONI GRENINGER, Vice Chair, Jamestown S’Klallam Tribal Council, Sequim, Washington (in-person)
MS. MELISSA CHARLIE, Executive Director, Fairbanks Native Association, Fairbanks, Alaska (in-person)
MS. LUCY SIMPSON, Executive Director, National Indigenous Women’s Resource Center, Lame Deer, Montana (in-person)
MS. SHERI-ANN DANIELS, Chief Executive Officer, Papa Ola Lōkahi, Honolulu, Hawaiʻi (in-person)

WHEN:

Wednesday, May 14, 3:30 p.m. ET

WHERE:

Dirksen Senate Office Building, Room 628

Live video of the event will be available here.

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