- Targeted stakeholdersProvides a $137,500,000 payment to the Quapaw Nation and specified individual members.
- Targeted stakeholdersFunds could finance tribal economic development, infrastructure, health, or education programs.
- Targeted stakeholdersAuthorizes individual distributions to named members under a claimant-established distribution plan.
Quapaw Tribal Settlement Act of 2025
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Indian Affairs.
The bill authorizes a one-time payment of $137,500,000 from the U.S. Treasury to settle claims by the Quapaw Nation and identified individual claimants, establishes the Quapaw Bear Settlement Trust Account within the Department of the Interior Bureau of Trust Funds Administration to hold the funds, and directs that distributions follow the Court of Federal Claims Review Panel Report.
The bill requires the claimants to attempt third-party mediation over allocation within set deadlines, sets procedures for Secretarial Allocation if mediation fails (including hearings and timelines), allows use of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service for technical support, and directs the Secretary to implement a final distribution plan and disperse funds accordingly.
Limited scope and clear procedures raise chances; a $137.5M outlay and potential intra-claimant disagreement or fiscal objections are the main risks.
How solid the drafting looks.
Size and source of the federal payment: seen as rightful compensation vs taxpayer cost.
Who stands to gain, and who may push back.
- Federal agenciesAppropriates $137.5 million from the Treasury, increasing federal outlays.
- Federal agenciesPermits federal allocation decisions, which may constrain tribal self‑governance over distributions.
- Targeted stakeholdersDisagreements could trigger the Secretarial Allocation process, causing hearings and lengthy delays.
Why the argument around this bill splits.
Size and source of the federal payment: seen as rightful compensation vs taxpayer cost.
Likely supportive because the bill implements a court-backed monetary settlement to compensate a tribal nation and named individuals.
The structured distribution and mediation requirements recognize intra-community disputes while directing funds into a DOI trust for administration.
Generally supportive but cautious: the bill settles a court-recommended claim and sets administrative timelines, which provides finality; however, it creates a $137.5 million federal outlay and gives the Secretary significant procedural authority if parties cannot agree.
Skeptical: while settling claims has value for finality, the bill authorizes a sizable taxpayer payment and empowers federal officials to allocate funds among tribal parties, raising concerns about precedent, federal overreach, and fiscal responsibility.
The path through Congress.
Reached or meaningfully advanced
Reached or meaningfully advanced
Still ahead
Still ahead
Still ahead
Limited scope and clear procedures raise chances; a $137.5M outlay and potential intra-claimant disagreement or fiscal objections are the main risks.
- No CBO cost estimate or identified offsets in text
- Whether claimants will reach a mutually agreed distribution plan
Recent votes on the bill.
No vote history yet
The bill has not accumulated any surfaced votes yet.
Go deeper than the headline read.
Size and source of the federal payment: seen as rightful compensation vs taxpayer cost.
Limited scope and clear procedures raise chances; a $137.5M outlay and potential intra-claimant disagreement or fiscal objections are the m…
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