Title 25 › Chapter CHAPTER 45— - PROTECTION OF INDIANS AND CONSERVATION OF RESOURCES › § 5117
When the Bureau of Indian Affairs or the Indian Health Service must cut jobs, they must combine the competitive and excepted service retention lists and keep employees who have Indian preference ahead of non‑Indian employees in the same retention group, after accounting for military preference. Indian preference does not apply to reassigning a non‑Indian employee (except when moving to a higher grade) if the move is needed to protect the employee’s or a household member’s health or safety, is part of a reduction in force, or is needed because the employee’s working relationship with a tribe has broken down so they cannot serve effectively. The Secretary of the Interior (for the Bureau) and the Secretary of Health and Human Services (for IHS) must make those decisions and may only delegate them to a Deputy or Assistant Secretary. If every tribal organization involved gives a written waiver, Indian preference does not apply to that personnel action, and 5 U.S.C. 8336(j) and 25 U.S.C. 2011(f) do not apply to someone who accepts such a waiver. The Office of Personnel Management must help place non‑Indian employees from those agencies into other federal jobs, and other agencies must cooperate. Definitions: tribal organization — a tribe’s governing body or an Indian organization the tribe has authorized to act; Indian preference laws — laws that give hiring or promotion preference to Indians; Bureau of Indian Affairs — the Bureau and related Interior units that serve Indians.
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Indians — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
25 U.S.C. § 5117
Title 25 — Indians
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73