MINNESOTA INDIAN AFFAIRS COUNCIL

The 'Minnesota Indian Affairs Council' ('MIAC') was created by the Minnesota Legislature in 1963 to provide a liaison between the government of Minnesota and the Native American tribes in the state. The council also brings issues of concern to Indians living in urban areas to the attention of the state government. It was the first state-level Indian affairs agency to be established in the United States.
The council communicates with governments of the eleven Indian reservations recognized by the United States federal government:

Bois Forte Indian Reservation

Fond du Lac Indian Reservation

Grand Portage Indian Reservation

Leech Lake Indian Reservation

Lower Sioux Indian Reservation

Mille Lacs Indian Reservation

Prairie Island Indian Reservation

Red Lake Indian Reservation

Shakopee-Mdewakanton Indian Reservation

Upper Sioux Indian Reservation

White Earth Indian Reservation
Notably absent are the Ho-chunk Nation and the Minnesota Chippewa Tribe, though the six component members of the Minnesota Chippewa Tribe have been included in MIAC.

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