
Oskar Agredano/Cronkite News
Ramona Button started Ramona Farms in 1974 using her mother’s 10-acre allotment on the Gila River Indian Community.
Arizona's tribes — who have extensive water rights — played a critical role in the negotiations that led to the recent passage of the Drought Contingency Plan for Arizona. ... Read more»
Oskar Agredano/Cronkite News
Ramona Button started Ramona Farms in 1974 using her mother’s 10-acre allotment on the Gila River Indian Community.
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1 comment on this story
No faux federally recognized Indian tribe in the sovereign state of Arizona owns the land they reside-on. They are merely tenants with rights of ‘use and occupancy’ only. The land is owned by We, the People according to federal documents. Tenants have no say whatsoever in dealing with flowing water on land owned by We, the People.