Title 43 › Chapter CHAPTER 33— - ALASKA NATIVE CLAIMS SETTLEMENT › § 1619
The Secretary of the Treasury must keep money in the Alaska Native Fund from the second year’s appropriation under section 1605 so payments below can be made. Attorneys, consultants, and others can file claims with the Chief Commissioner of the Court of Claims for work done before December 18, 1971 for any Native tribe, band, group, village, or association. Claims can cover work done to help prepare the settlement law or to prosecute Native land claims that were later dismissed under this law. Those fee and expense claims had to be filed within one year of December 18, 1971 in the form the Chief Commissioner required, or they are forever barred. A bona fide Native association could file a separate claim for actual costs (not attorney or consultant fees) for protests, preserving claims, pushing legislation, or testifying to Congress if filed within six months of December 18, 1971. The Chief Commissioner (or a delegate) will receive, decide, and settle claims under set rules. No claimant gets paid if already reimbursed. Awards for services are based on the type of work, time spent, need for the work, whether it was meant to be voluntary, whether there was a real attorney-client relationship, and how the work related to proposed legislation; they are not set by the claimant’s usual hourly rate. Out-of-pocket costs must be necessary, reasonable, unreimbursed, and actually paid, and may not include office overhead. Total payments for services are capped at $2,000,000, with no more than $100,000 for consultants; if approved claims exceed these caps, payments are cut pro rata. Association-cost claims are limited in the same way and are reduced pro rata if approved claims total more than $600,000. The clerk must notify interested parties and give them 90 days to contest. A trial commissioner and a three-member review panel handle hearings, have subpoena and audit powers, and issue findings that the panel adopts or changes. The Chief Commissioner certifies allowed amounts and names to the Secretary of the Treasury and to Congress; the Secretary pays from the Alaska Native Fund and awards earn no interest. No one may get any extra payment beyond these awards; contracts promising extra pay are void, and anyone who pays or receives extra may be fined up to $5,000 or jailed up to 12 months, or both.
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Public Lands — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
43 U.S.C. § 1619
Title 43 — Public Lands
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73