Whiteclay,
Nebraska. There are bodies sitting together on sleeping bags, with blankets
draped over the front of their body to escape the chill that November brings.
Some people lie
down outside of a closed down convenient store with nothing except a sleeping
bag - others camp around a fire in a dirt field on the edge of the town.
Whiteclay is less
than a small town and more like a village with one road that slices through the
middle of town and also serves as the highway. The town covers a mere six or
seven blocks. It’s the kind of town that a driver might miss if you blink.
However, Whiteclay serves as a very specific purpose: to sell liquor to Native
Americans.
Every year around
four millions of cans of beer are sold in four Whiteclay liquor stores and most
of that alcohol ends up in the hands of the Ogallala Lakota, who live on the
nearby Pine Ridge Indian reservation. The Pine Ridge Indian reservation has
banned the sale and possession of alcohol because of rampant alcohol related
problems.
The alcohol percentage
in beer sold in Whiteclay is higher compared to other places. The Nebraska
Alcohol Commission allows beer in Whiteclay to be sold with an 8 percent
alcohol content. In comparison, the beer sold in Lincoln is 7 percent.
According to the
American Indian Humanitarian Foundation, one in four children living in Pine
Ridge suffer from fetal alcohol syndrome or other related effects from alcohol.
The life expectancy for residents living on the reservation is nearly 30 years
younger for the people who live outside of it.
The close
proximity of the liquor stores is drawing people from the reservation of more
than 40,000 to Whiteclay. The largest town in Pine Ridge is located nearly a
mile from Whiteclay and lays just across the border of Nebraska in South
Dakota.
The resulting impact
has been a staggering 75 percent unemployment rate, which is among the highest
in the nation. There simply is not the opportunity to work and earn money on
the reservation, so people turn to alcohol.
Nebraska Wesleyan
Native American studies major, Emily Clement, believes that the Nebraska liquor
license committee is simply not doing its job of enforcing its alcohol
consumption regulation.
Every day you’ll
find people on public property drinking from a can wrapped in a brown paper bag,
Clement said. To her, it simply doesn’t make any sense why there is also no law
enforcement in Whiteclay. Clement says these stores need to be held accountable
for selling to minors and persons who are already intoxicated.
There is no
presence of a police officer or sheriff in Whiteclay. The last time any law
enforcement presence was actively employed in Whiteclay was in the early
1970’s. Ultimately, a budget crisis led to the elimination of that position.
Until recently the issue has been largely ignored.
“Great Plains
Budweiser and Whiteclay's beer merchants are sweating bullets,” said John
Maisch, a Whiteclay documentarian.
Not only are
Nebraskans starting to ask why taxpayers have been footing the bill for those
incarcerated or hospitalized as a result of Whiteclay beer sales, but also Whiteclay's
other merchants are complaining that the unincorporated town's beer stores are
bad for business Maisch said.
Lance Moss, a
business owner in Whiteclay whose business does not permit the sale of alcohol says
the sale of liquor doesn’t help the local businesses.
“They knock out
two birds with one stone coming to get alcohol and groceries,” Moss said. “It
definitely has a negative effect on other business in Whiteclay.”
People don’t feel confortable.
Ultimately, it leads them to stop somewhere else to make their purchases Moss
said.
A Nebraska
Department of Revenue employee who wished to remain anonymous says Nebraska may
not do anything at all. The reason: the four liquor stores in Whiteclay might
possibly be in the realm of Nebraska’s top earners for income state tax.
In 2014, the
Nebraska state tax revenue from the four retailers that sell alcohol in
Whiteclay totaled $113, 814. The federal government earned a total of $212, 942.
The Pine Ridge
Indian reservation is barren of civilization. There is no resemblance of an
economy. The reservation lacks basic functions of society that allow it to
flourish. There is no public transit. The residents of Pine Ridge live in poor
or cramped situations. There is an absence of modern housing and professional
establishments. Medical care is inadequate and Pine Ridge lacks an economy that
has the ability to grow.
Trash and litter around
Pine Ridge are as common of a sight as is stars in the night sky. Businesses were
built out of sheet metal and wood. Each unit typically contained a phone number
and name spray painted on the front of the building.
“Whiteclay is just a f***** up situation.
People are getting rich of off the suffering of other people.” Isaiah Lahm
said.
Lahm is a 26-year-old
resident of Lincoln but also an active tribe member in the Sisseton Wahpeton
Dakota (Sioux). Lahm’s extended family lives on the Rosebud reservation a
couple of hours away from Pine Ridge in South Dakota where he has spent a lot
of time during the past five years.
“Being closer to
Pine Ridge is clearly the difference maker,” Lahm said.
The Rosebud
reservation isn’t affected nearly as bad because of distance Lahm said. However
he believes that Whiteclay’s impact to families extends all the way to Rosebud.
“All they’re doing
is selling alcohol to people that have the intention of doing something illegal
with it. I can’t believe the amount of
money they’re making,” Lahm said.
Lahm was speaking
about the roughly $75,000 per year in profit and the estimated value north of a
million dollars that the liquor stores are valued in at.
“There’s only 15
people in Whiteclay,” Lahm said. “For a town that size to sell millions of cans
of beer is astronomical. Who do you think is buying the beer?”
Lahm’s only
logical answer can be the nearby tribe members. Tribe members purchase the
booze in Whiteclay and bring it back to the reservation, which is illegal, Lahm
reiterated.
Whiteclay made it
cheaper for the Oglala Lakota to buy beer. The very existence of the town
promotes poverty and alcoholism amongst the tribe, Lahm Said.
“The Nebraska
Liquor Commission Control is continuing to allow addicts to kill themselves,”
Lahm said. “I don’t know anyone who wants to go to Pine Ridge. It’s a third
world country.”
Isaiah’s mother, Renee
Lahm believes the problem is the bootleggers. Her solution is to get rid of all
of them. In order to do that she believes tribal police and Sheridan County
Sheriffs need to step up and make a better effort of catching them red handed. She
believes the presence of law enforcement will help deter these criminals.
“There’s only supposed to be two
ways inside and out of Whiteclay and road blocks have failed because these
people will find the means necessary to getting it back to the reservation.”
Mrs. Lahm said.
The problem of
people lingering around Whiteclay drinking has been evident for a long time.
People only began to take notice when a body was left on the sidewalk for days Mrs.
Lahm said.
“Families are
probably waiting for loved ones to come home and they won’t because they’d
rather wait for their next beer or people to come through so that they can beg
for money.” Mrs. Lahm said
Recently there has
more push than ever to finding a solution the problem in Whiteclay. People are
starting to spread awareness via social media and through documentaries of
Whiteclay.
“I just try to
educate my fellow Nebraskans,” Clement said.
Clement attends
candle light vigils and also plans to write to Nebraska governor Pete Ricketts.
She recently had a documentary shown in one of her courses at school and
strongly encourages people to post on social media about the topic.
A meeting between
the Omaha, Winnebago, Santee Sioux and Ponca tribes, Nebraska Commission on
Indian Affairs and State Senator Brett Lindstrom took place with Nebraska
State Senator Tyson Larson in Lincoln on Nov. 12, 2015 to discuss a variety of
issues including economic development, education and social services.
Even though Pine
Ridge is rampant with alcohol abuse, the reservation only has one seven-bed
impatient treatment facility.
“This is shamefully
inadequate,” said Alexander Mallory, senior, political science and history
major at the University of Nebraska. “It is imperative that funding is
increased for impatient treatment facilities and substance abuse counseling on
America’s Indian reservations. This is a simple step that would surely garner
bipartisan support in both Nebraska’s and South Dakota’s legislative bodies.”
The next
legislative session for Nebraska lawmakers begins Jan. 6. More meetings between
the groups are in place before the session starts to brainstorm ideas with the
hopes presenting a bill to legislature that will address the concerns over
Whiteclay. As of right now, there is no planned legislation that addresses the
issue.