Title 43 › Chapter 33— ALASKA NATIVE CLAIMS SETTLEMENT › § 1606
The Secretary must divide Alaska into twelve geographic regions within one year after December 18, 1971, mostly matching the areas of these Native associations: Arctic Slope, Bering Straits, Northwest Alaska, Association of Village Council Presidents, Tanana Chiefs’ Conference, Cook Inlet, Bristol Bay, Aleut League, Chugach, Tlingit‑Haida Central Council, Kodiak Area, and Copper River. Leaders of those associations can ask, within one year of December 18, 1971, to merge regions but there must still be at least seven regions. If most eligible Alaska Natives who live outside Alaska vote to join, a thirteenth region for non‑residents can be created. Five people named by each regional association must form a for‑profit Regional Corporation under Alaska law. The Secretary must approve the original articles and bylaws (submitted within 18 months after December 18, 1971) and can block changes in the first five years. Boards are run by directors who, after the initial board, must be shareholders age 18 or older. Each enrolled Native gets 100 shares of “Settlement Common Stock.” Corporations may issue extra or different classes of stock under limits (including special shares for people born after December 18, 1971, elders age 65, or other groups), and some shares can have restricted voting, transfer, or inheritance rules. Settlement Common Stock is generally not sellable or usable to pay debts, with limited exceptions (gifts to close relatives, court orders, or professional practice limits). When transfer limits end, stock is exchanged for “Replacement Common Stock” under stated rules. Regional Corporations must share certain resource revenues: 70% of revenues from timber and patented subsurface lands are divided each year among the twelve regions by number of enrolled Natives (with limited exceptions after October 31, 1998). During the five years after December 18, 1971, at least 10% of corporate funds from the Alaska Native Fund, those resource revenues, and other net income must go to shareholders; at least 45% of such funds in that first five‑year period (50% after) must go to Village Corporations and the class of non‑village shareholders (50% for the thirteenth region if organized). Village distributions follow the number of shares held by village residents and may be withheld until a satisfactory village plan is given; disputes over plans go to arbitration if the articles require it. Regional Corporations may do projects for villages, must have annual independent audits, and federal rules here override Alaska law. Two or more regions may use the same management group. Regional Corporations are allowed to give health, education, and welfare benefits to Native shareholders, descendants, or immediate family members without basing eligibility on share ownership or strictly pro rata.
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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 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60