Florida State Hands Back Native Human Remains to Rightful Communities
Published Date: 8/22/2025
Notice
Summary
The Florida Department of State finished checking old human remains and related items and found they belong to certain Native American tribes or Native Hawaiian groups. This means these items can be returned to the right communities. If you’re part of these tribes or groups, keep an eye out for the next steps—no money changes hands, but timing matters for claiming these important cultural items.
Analyzed Economic Effects
1 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.
NAGPRA Inventory: Cultural Affiliation
If you are a member of the Indian Tribes or Native Hawaiian organizations named in this notice, the Florida Department of State completed an inventory and determined a cultural affiliation for certain human remains and associated funerary objects. The notice indicates those items are affiliated with those tribes or organizations, no money changes hands, and timing matters for claiming these cultural items.
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Key Dates
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Previous: 2025-16120 — Notice of Inventory Completion: University of Alabama Museums, Tuscaloosa, AL
The University of Alabama Museums finished checking their collection and found some Native American human remains and items that belong to certain tribes. This means these remains and objects will be returned to the right Native groups. If you’re part of these tribes, now’s the time to connect and claim what’s yours—no money changes hands, just respect and return.
Next: 2025-16122 — Notice of Inventory Completion: Salt River Project Agricultural Improvement and Power District, Phoenix, AZ
The Salt River Project in Phoenix finished checking their collection of Native American human remains and funeral items. They found these items are connected to certain Indian Tribes and Native Hawaiian groups. This means they’re ready to return these important cultural items to the right communities, following the law.