01/28/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 01/28/2026 20:09
U.S. SENATE - U.S. Senator Steve Daines today spoke with Councilwoman Joan Johnson from Harlem, Montana, in a Senate Indian Affairs Committee hearing. They discussed the Tiwahe program and the need to increase public safety resources for Montana tribes.
Watch the full exchange HERE.
Daines applauded the Trump administration's actions to help Indian Country:
Daines: I'd like to again welcome Councilwoman Joan Johnson from Harlem, Montana. Thank you for appearing before the Committee. I certainly appreciate the opportunity to discuss public safety for our Native communities, particularly Native youth. I applaud the Trump Administration's immediate actions to close the southern border and dispatch law enforcement personnel to Indian Country. The opening of the new FBI Field Office in Billings bodes well for future cooperation between state, tribal, and federal partners to address violent crime on our reservations. I'm really glad to have our new Attorney General Kurt Alme there in Billings, who I know is passionate about these issues. With more law enforcement resources certainly needed, there's still more of course that still needs to be done to address public safety than arrests and drug interdictions.
Daines and Johnson discussed the Tiwahe program:
Daines: Councilwoman Johnson, the Fort Belknap Indian Community were amongst the first tribes in the country to participate in the Tiwahe Initiative. Through this pilot program, the tribe received funding to strengthen and integrate services to better serve young people on the reservation, and as you mentioned also to help the parents and break some of the generational trauma that's passed on. One of the strengths of this program is that it puts tribal leaders in the driver's seat and relies on the principles of self-governance and self-determination. Councilwoman, what have been the biggest impacts that you've seen since implementing the Tiwahe framework?
Johnson: I'd answer that in a spiritual way- helping them find their culture, their identity, and knowing who they are.
Daines: You mentioned about the results, the efficacy of the program when we met this morning. In the first four years of the program, the Fort Belknap saw decreases in child abuse cases, family assault, and elder abuse cases. The juvenile recidivism rate decreased, I believe you told me from 80 percent to 35 percent, and the number of program participants increased. Has the Fort Belknap been able to sustain that success over the last four years?
Johnson: Yes we have.
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