Title 43 › Chapter CHAPTER 33— - ALASKA NATIVE CLAIMS SETTLEMENT › § 1606
Divide Alaska into 12 geographic regions within one year after December 18, 1971. The regions should, when possible, match areas served by 12 existing Native associations. At the request of those associations made within one year of that date, the Secretary may merge regions, but there must still be at least seven regions and at least seven Regional Corporations. If a majority of eligible Natives living outside Alaska vote to form a thirteenth non-resident region, the Secretary must create it. Five people named by each region’s Native association must incorporate a for‑profit Regional Corporation under Alaska law. The corporation’s articles must be sent to the Secretary for approval within eighteen months after December 18, 1971, and may not be changed in the first five years without the Secretary’s OK. The company is run by a board of directors; after the initial board, directors must be shareholders at least 18 years old. Each enrolled Native gets 100 shares of “Settlement Common Stock.” Corporations may later issue extra stock to certain groups (for example, Natives born after December 18, 1971, eligible but not enrolled Natives, or Natives age 65), but no one may get more than 100 shares extra. Settlement Common Stock normally gives voting rights and dividends and cannot be sold, pledged, or used as collateral except in a few family or court-ordered situations. On a holder’s death, the stock passes by will or state inheritance law, and if there are no heirs it returns to the corporation. Seventy percent of revenue from timber and patented subsurface estate must be divided each year among the twelve Regional Corporations by how many Natives are enrolled in each region (common sand, gravel, and similar sales after October 31, 1998, are excluded). For five years after December 18, 1971, at least 10% of corporate funds from the Alaska Native Fund, those resource revenues, and net income must go to stockholders; at least 45% of such funds in that first five‑year period (50% thereafter) must go to Village Corporations and non‑village stockholders. Village distributions are based on shares held by village residents. Village funds can be withheld until a village provides an acceptable plan; disputes go to arbitration. Regional Corporations may act for Village Corporations, must have annual independent audits and send results to each shareholder, follow this federal law over Alaska law, may share management services, and may give benefits for health, education, or welfare to Native shareholders or their Native family members without requiring equal shares or share ownership.
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Public Lands — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
43 U.S.C. § 1606
Title 43 — Public Lands
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73