Election day is right around the corner. With the nation living under the shadow of COVID-19, and an expectation that it will continue to be a presence well into autumn, officials are scrambling to ensure the November 2020 general election proceeds as smoothly and safely as possible. How are tribes involved with 2020 election processes?

Controversial changes to the U.S. Census Bureau’s operational plans mean hard-to-reach populations face an increased threat of being undercounted in the 2020 Census and therefore a greater potential of being underrepresented and underfunded in the next decade. 

Indian Country has been disproportionately affected by COVID-19, largely due to existing inequities exacerbated by the pandemic. Inadequate healthcare, a lack of housing, and underdeveloped infrastructure increased the severity of COVID-19 in Tribal communities. This resulted in an infection rate four times higher, and tragically, mortality rates twice that of other populations. The pandemic’s disproportionate impact emphasizes the importance of addressing underlying systemic inequality as the threat of COVID-19 slowly dissipates and we attempt a return to a ‘new normal’.

Broadband is critical for Indian Country, but it is often unavailable. In 2019, the American Indian Policy Institute (AIPI) found that 18 percent of Tribal reservation residents have no Internet access, while 33 percent rely on smartphones for Internet service. According to the FCC, about 72 percent of people on Tribal lands have broadband access at the FCC benchmark of 25 Mbps download and 3 Mbps upload. Even where broadband is available, cost can be a barrier to access.

Joe Biden won the 2020 Presidential Election. An ordinary fact and objectively unexceptional opening sentence instead represents a still contested issue in Arizona and the impetus for the influx of legislation targeting the voting rights of Americans across the country. President Biden won the electoral college in what his predecessor once described as a “massive landslide” and became the first Democrat to carry Arizona since 1996 and just the second since 1948, the year Native Americans in the state were extended the right to vote.

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Inno-NATIONS

Mission

Supporting native business owners and enterprises in building sustainable tribal economies through modernizing traditional trade networks.

We do this through leveraging partnerships and bringing together resources from ASU, the tribal community, and other community organizations.

Additionally, we offer the noted “First Innovations” culturally competent entrepreneurial curriculum for small business owners offered as a community training and as a two-semester course in American Indian Studies with a forthcoming undergraduate minor certificate program.

Vision

We are currently incubating our concept in The Department a (collaborative workspace in central Phoenix) while we build the infrastructure. We envision a culturally relevant place—both physically and conceptually—that will house a maker space, an incubator, a co-working space, with anchor businesses, and a community gallery where established businesses can mentor emerging entrepreneurs. This is a space where we’ll host community cohort trainings and workshops; and, where culture is the central defining value.

Connect with us

Email:   [email protected]

Facebook:  InnoNations

Instagram: @innonations

Twitter:  @Inno_Nations

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