Week 2
Kevin Gover
As a ten-year-old child, Kevin Gover walked his first
picket line with his civil rights activist parents, at a swimming
pool in Oklahoma, where he grew up, a member of the Pawnee-Comanche
nation. While an undergraduate at Princeton University, he marched
to draw attention to the plight of American Indians.
In 1997, after a distinguished legal career, President Bill Clinton
nominated him for the position of Assistant Secretary for Indian
Affairs in the U.S. Department of the Interior. He was confirmed
one month later and served for three years. In that capacity he
oversaw the operations of the Bureau of Indian Affairs and the
Office of Indian Education Programs, including those related to
gaming, recognition, trust assets, self-determination, water rights,
tribal courts, law enforcement, and education.
He was responsible for a $2.2 billion budget and supervised about
10,000 employees. He advised and reported to the Secretary of
the Interior. Under his direction, the Bureau for Indian Affairs
worked with tribes to bring order to their accounting and financial
record-keeping, and the Bureau streamlined its procedures for
getting federal funds to the tribes. Among his greatest challenges
was the effort to keep in good communication with the more than
550 tribes recognized by the U.S. government.
In his September 1999 remarks acknowledging the 175th anniversary
of the establishment of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, Gover extended
an apology to Indian people, on behalf of the agency. He also
spoke candidly of the shameful acts that the Bureau had practiced
in years past, in its apparent effort to destroy American Indianstheir
culture, heritage, language and livelihoods. However, in his closing
comments, he earnestly requested that members of the audience
attempt to replace their anger, shame and fear, with hope and
love for their people, in an effort to "wipe the tears of seven
generations."
Gover graduated from Princeton University with an A.B. in Public
and International Affairs in 1978. In 1981 he earned his law degree
from the University of New Mexico, with honors. Following law
school, he clerked with the late Judge Juan G. Burciaga of Albuquerque.
From 1983-86, he practiced law in a Washington DC firmFried,
Frank, Harris, Shriver and Jacobsenwhere he focused on environmental
and resource law, as well as federal Indian law.
He returned to Albuquerque in 1986 and formed his own firm, which
specialized in federal Indian, natural resource, environmental
and housing law, and also had an extensive legislative practice.
After completing his term as Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs
in 2000, Gover became a partner in the firm of Steptoe and Johnson,
LLP, in Washington D.C., where his practice focuses on federal
law relating to Indians and Indian tribal law. He has testified
extensively before Congress and writes and speaks frequently on
issues of law and policy involving Indian tribes. In October 2000,
he received the University of New Mexico Distinguished Achievement
Award. In presenting him an honorary doctorate in law in June
2001, Princeton University lauded him as a model for members of
the American Indian Nations and for all Americans.
Among his personal efforts to improve the lives of Indians, Kevin
Gover campaigns vigorously against alcohol abuse, after addressing
and conquering his own difficulties with that issue. Married to
Anne Marie Gover, he has a stepdaughter and stepson. He is also
father of a son and daughter from a previous marriage.
The American Bar Association salutes Kevin Gover in honor of
National American Indian Heritage Month. As noted in his honorary
doctorate from Princeton, his is an exemplary "life in the nation's
service and in the service of all nations."
Photo Usage:
Permission to use the above photo granted by Kevin Gover.
American Indian Heritage
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