LRB-4812/1
SRM&RAC:cjs:pg
2005 - 2006 LEGISLATURE
March 7, 2006 - Introduced by Senators Brown, Zien, Coggs and Jauch,
cosponsored by Representatives Musser, Sherman, Bies, McCormick and
Pettis. Referred to Committee on Senate Organization.
SJR74,1,1 1Relating to: the life and public service of James H. Schlender.
SJR74,1,52 Whereas, James H. Schlender, Sr., was born March 5, 1947, was a member of
3the Lynx clan of the Lac Courte Oreilles band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians,
4and was also known by his Ojibwe name, Zaagajiiwe, meaning "man cresting the
5hill"; and
SJR74,1,76 Whereas, Mr. Schlender grew up in Milwaukee and on the Lac Courte Oreilles
7reservation; and
SJR74,1,108 Whereas, Mr. Schlender earned a bachelor of arts degree with honors from the
9University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee in 1974 and a juris doctor degree from the
10University of Wisconsin Law School in 1978; and
SJR74,1,1311 Whereas, Mr. Schlender served the Lac Courte Oreilles band as tribal attorney
12from 1978 to 1981 and was elected to the Tribal Governing Board for 4 consecutive
13terms from 1981 to 1987 serving as vice chairman and secretary/treasurer; and
SJR74,2,214 Whereas, Mr. Schlender played a leading role in litigation and negotiations
15regarding hunting, fishing, and gathering rights retained by the Chippewa in

1treaties with the United States, as tribal attorney and later as the first chair of the
2Voigt Intertribal Task Force; and
SJR74,2,63 Whereas, Mr. Schlender served as executive administrator of the Great Lakes
4Indian Fish and Wildlife Commission from 1986 to 2005, in which capacity he
5negotiated with the department of natural resources the implementation of court
6rulings regarding tribal natural resources rights; and
SJR74,2,87 Whereas, Mr. Schlender was a moderating influence in resolving conflicts with
8the state and with private citizens surrounding the exercise of those rights; and
SJR74,2,129 Whereas, Mr. Schlender worked closely with state officials to forge cooperative
10programs by which the department of natural resources and the Great Lakes Indian
11Fish and Wildlife Commission manage natural resources and conduct law
12enforcement in the ceded territories; and
SJR74,2,1513 Whereas, Mr. Schlender was instrumental in building the Great Lakes Indian
14Fish and Wildlife Commission into a highly professional agency providing biological,
15regulatory, legal, and other services to the Chippewa bands; and
SJR74,2,1716 Whereas, Mr. Schlender ensured that the commission acknowledged its unique
17tribal identity by infusing Ojibwe culture and values into all aspects of its work; and
SJR74,2,2018 Whereas, Mr. Schlender served from 1982 to 1989 as vice chair of the joint
19legislative council's American Indian study committee and as chair of 3 separate
20subcommittees of that committee; and
SJR74,2,2521 Whereas, Mr. Schlender served on the Wisconsin Supreme Court's board of bar
22examiners, the Wisconsin Supreme Court's appointment selection committee, the
23board of directors of the Indian law section of the Wisconsin State Bar, and the board
24of directors of the Environmental Health Laboratory of the Lake Superior Research
25Institute, University of Wisconsin–Superior; and
SJR74,3,5
1Whereas, Mr. Schlender was the first recipient of the Wisconsin Law
2Foundation's Belle Case LaFollette Award for Contributions to the Advancements of
3the Profession in 1992, earned a Bush Foundation Fellowship in 1992 for continuing
4legal education, and was named Tribal Leader of the Year in 2001 by the Native
5American Fish and Wildlife Society; and
SJR74,3,86 Whereas, Mr. Schlender was a frequent presenter to diverse audiences on
7principles of Indian law, tribal sovereignty, and the rights retained by American
8Indian nations in treaties with the United States; and
SJR74,3,129 Whereas, Mr. Schlender was a tireless advocate for the rights of American
10Indian nations and the exercise of tribal sovereignty, cresting many hills in his
11service to the Lake Superior Chippewa bands and the 3 states in which they are
12located; and
SJR74,3,1413 Whereas, Mr. Schlender suffered an untimely death on August 30, 2005, at the
14age of 58; now, therefore, be it
SJR74,3,17 15Resolved by the senate, the assembly concurring, That the members of the
16Wisconsin legislature commend the life and public service of James H. Schlender,
17also known as Zaagajiiwe; and, be it further
SJR74,3,23 18Resolved, That the senate chief clerk shall provide a copy of this resolution to
19Mr. Schlender's wife, Agnes Fleming, of Lac Courte Oreilles, and their children,
20Tammy Barber and Valerie Tribble, of Lac Courte Oreilles; James Schlender, Jr., of
21Madison, Wisconsin; Mary Tribble, Justin Schlender, and Melissa Crow, of Lac
22Courte Oreilles; Jason Schlender, of Red Cliff, Wisconsin; and Jenny and Margaret
23Schlender, of Lac Courte Oreilles.
SJR74,3,2424 (End)
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