New law allows school districts to transfer land to the Housing Authority of the Cherokee Nation

by Jun 13, 2018NEWS ka-no-he-da

SIGNING: Shown (left-right) front row – Cherokee Nation Secretary of State Chuck Hoskin Jr., Cherokee Nation citizen Nancy Gilbert, Jasmine Hoskin, Governor Mary Fallin, Cherokee Nation Vice President of Government Relations Kim Teehe, Choctaw Nation Director of Government Relations Sara Jane Smallwood-Cocke and Choctaw Nation intern Morgan Anderson; back row – Executive Director of Cherokee Nation Housing Authority Gary Cooper, Executive Director of Housing for Choctaw Nation Bobby Yandell, and Manager of Government Relations for Cherokee Nation Businesses Adam McCreary. (Cherokee Nation photo)

 

 

TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – A new bill signed into law Tuesday, June 12 now allows Oklahoma School districts to transfer surplus land to the Housing Authority of the Cherokee Nation. Transferring surplus land will allow communities to grow and help their local school districts.

 

Gov. Mary Fallin signed House Bill 1334 into law on Tuesday, allowing school boards to transfer land to tribal housing authorities. Two Cherokee Nation citizens authored the bill, Representative  Chuck Hoskin of Vinita and Senator John Sparks of Norman.

 

“School districts often have undeveloped acreage with no plans to build and which is difficult to sell for market value. This law is a win-win solution for local school districts and for tribal governments. Tribal housing authorities can construct good, quality homes for tribal citizens and that provides economic growth locally as more jobs contribute to the local tax base,” said Hoskin, who also serves as Chief of Staff for Cherokee Nation.  “This law will help so many schools, rural communities and Cherokee families prosper.”

 

Another benefit is federal impact aid, which means school districts receive $2,800 per year for every tribal student living in a Cherokee Nation-built home.

 

“The Housing Authority of the Cherokee Nation is excited to see this law passed. We’re thankful to Representative Hoskin and Senator Sparks for drafting the bill, the legislators who supported it and Governor Fallin for signing it into law,” said Gary Cooper, executive director of the Housing Authority of Cherokee Nation. “The Cherokee Nation has helped schools receive thousands of federal dollars in impact aid with the homes built since 2012 and that amount will climb even higher with the passage of this bill.”

 

The Cherokee Nation’s New Home Construction Program began in 2012 under Principal Chief Bill John Baker. The tribe has built more than 660 homes since then, and about 100 are under construction in northeast Oklahoma.

 

For more information on the bill, visit www.okhouse.gov.

 

For more information on the Cherokee Nation New Home Construction Program, visit www.hacn.org.

– Cherokee Nation release