SACATON — More than four in five Native American women will experience violence in their lifetime, according to one federal study.
In another report, Arizona counted the third-highest number of missing indigenous women and girls.
Those statistics are part of the reason federal officials met Tuesday with tribal leaders in Sacaton in the Gila River Indian Community.
The listening session gave local tribal leaders a chance to tell federal officials like Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs Tara Sweeney what’s happening in their communities.
“What we learned today is there is a need for improved partnership across the federal government and improved partnership with tribal law enforcement, tribal communities and federal agencies,” Sweeney said.
GRIC Gov. Stephen Lewis said while each of the state’s 22 tribes is unique, there are opportunities to work together.
“Common themes emerged … around allowing tribes to determine where resources are needed in their communities and to the need of better sharing of information and data,” Lewis said.
The Gila River tribe is starting to collect its own data from law enforcement, hospitals and its court system.
Arizona will soon convene a task force of tribal leaders, police and victim advocates to study missing and murdered indigenous women and girls.
Existing data does not show the full scope of violence against women in Native American Communities.
One woman, Annita Lucchesi, has documented more than 100 missing or murdered women from Arizona’s Navajo Nation alone.
A federal law that funds programs that help communities address domestic violence and sexual assault expired earlier this year.
The Violence Against Women Act re-authorization passed by the House includes some protections for Native American women.