About the Programs
.Real Estate
The Tribal Real Estate Program provides land leases in coordinating
land use activities to tribal members and to other entities. The
land leases provided are agricultural, house sites, trailer sites,
individual businesses, Tribal entity businesses, rights of way,
and Tribal administrative sites. Real estate also provides vehicle
affidavit services to Tribal members that reside on Tribal land.
A land lease is provided with a survey plat and description. A field
survey is conducted to collect data and description. A field survey
is conducted to collect data and recordation for the lease.
.Forestry
Activities
The
Tribal Forestry Department is involved in all aspects of forest
management. One area is timber harvesting. Tribal timber resources
are managed to maintain long term forest health. In an effort to
accomplish this goal, selective timber harvesting is don periodically
based on current stand conditions. Community and industrial developments
also increase timber harvesting activity.
Determining the timing and scheduling of timber harvests involves
forest measurements such as tree diameters, heights and growth rates.
The method of measuring trees with a diameter tape.
The Forestry Program is also responsible for conducting
prescribed burns, herbicide applications for site preparation, reforestation,
timber stand improvements, and forest pest management.

.GIS (Choctaw
Geographic Information Services)
GIS is a computerized system designed to efficiently capture,
store, update, manipulate, analyze, and display all forms of geographically
referenced information. Any object or feature on the surface of
the earth that occupies space has coordinates and can be included
and described in a GIS.
Kind of Questions that GIS Can Answer
- What is there? It searches for what is there at a particular
location.
- Where is that? It seeks to find out a location where certain
conditions are met. For example: a non-forested area at least
21,528 square feet in size, within 300 feet of a road, and with
the right soils to support construction.
- What has changed? This question might need the input from the
first two questions and it is basically looking at the difference
within an area over time.
Applications of GIS
GIS
is a general purpose tool with many applications. Some of them are
land registration systems, environmental databases, utility systems,
topographic databases, computerized description of transportation
networks, automated mapping and facilities management for electricity,
water, sewer, gas and telecommunications. Resource managers use
GIS for wildlife, forest, agricultural, coastal land management,
as well as energy and mineral management. GIS is also widely used
in education and research.
How the Tribe Developed Choctaw GIS
It
started in 1992 as a pilot study of the MBCI Natural Resource Department,
to provide effective information for the tribal natural resource
management. The preliminary equipment and technical assistance were
financed through a grant, by the Bureau of Indian Affairs, In 1994
the Tribe decided to hire a fulltime GIS coordinator. At the beginning,
all of the GIS work was done via a telephone line through the BIA
Geographic Data Service Center in Denver, Colorado. Later in 1995,
based on the effectiveness of the information generated by the Choctaw
GIS to fulfill the new objective: provide effective geographic information
to all tribal offices or businesses.
For more information contact the CGIS Coordinator at 601-650-7300
or send an e-mail to CGIS@choctaw.org
.Environmental
Program
Mission Statement : To provide services
to protect the environment, incorporating traditional values and
culture.
The Environmental Program Office coordinates a reservation-wide
testing of tribal homes and buildings for Radon gas as part of a
Radon Pilot Project funded by the U.S. Environmental Program Office.
Radon field technicians, deploy, collect, and tag Radon test canisters
before shipment to the Radon National Laboratory in Las Vegas, Nevada.
The Environmental Program Office operates a very successful recycling
program located in the Pearl River Indian Reservation community.
Cardboard and white office paper are baled at the Choctaw Recycling
Center with the assistance of Environmental Technicians. Aluminum
cans are also bought from the public. This is an income generating
project and substantially reduces the Tribe's solid waste disposal
costs.
Environmental
Program
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