Arizona Public Radio | Your Source for NPR News
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
KNAU 88.7 is operating on impaired low power. APS has shut off power to our tower atop Mormon Mountain to service another radio station's meter. APS estimates full power will be restored around midnight Sunday evening/Monday morning.

KNAG 90.3 FM Grand Canyon is back on-air. Our engineers have repaired transmitter equipment on the ground but suspect the tower-mounted antenna may have sustained damage & are working to locate the problem; further repairs to come... Thanks so very much to our dedicated listeners in the region for their patience & support!

KNAU Arizona Public Radio is integrating new audio software into both news and classical services. We thank you for your patience and support through the transition.

New constitution splits Hopi

By Daniel Kraker

http://stream.publicbroadcasting.net/production/mp3/knau/local-knau-948548.mp3

Flagstaff, AZ – Stretched across the Hopi reservation in far northeast Arizona are 12 villages perched high atop steep, sandstone mesas. These are ancient places, considered to be among the longest continually inhabited villages in North America. For centuries they've largely governed themselves, many still led by religious leaders known as kikmongwes. But some Hopi, including former tribal chairman Ben Nuvamsa, fear that a new constitution could change that.

"It gives a lot of power to the president, a lot of power to the council, and it dilutes the power of villages. So we don't have balance of powers, that's really compromised."

Nuvamsa says that under the current constitution, villages have supremacy over the tribal Council. He believes the new document would make villages essentially the 4th branch of the central government. Current Hopi Chairman Leroy Shingoitewa argues it doesn't change what's in the existing constitution he says it just clarifies the roles of each level of government.

"It clearly, clearly shows the roles of the TC, the exec office, our judicial system, and then also the villages as to their roles within the government."

Fewer than 15 hundred Hopi are registered to vote in the election, out of a total population of over 10 thousand. Critics say a lot of other people want to vote, but weren't given enough time to register. 30 percent of registered voters must cast a ballot for the election to be valid. That means a new Hopi constitution could pass with just over 200 votes.