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Warm Springs Tribe petitions ODFW to repeal or fix rule giving Grand Ronde Tribe hunting, fishing rights in W. Oregon

Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs

(Update: Adding statements from ODFW, Grand Ronde Tribe)

WARM SPRINGS, Ore. (KTVZ) -- The Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs announced Wednesday they filed a petition with the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife this week, asking it to repeal or amend a rule implementing the August 2023 Tribal Memorandum of Agreement that authorized off-reservation hunting, fishing, trapping and gathering by the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde.

In the petition, the Warm Springs Tribe asserts that the MOA creates conflict with the terms of the Warm Springs Tribe’s Treaty, ignores the cultural connections to Willamette Falls and other areas in western Oregon that Warm Springs Tribe has customarily used since time immemorial, and places one Tribe’s interests over others’ in a way that clashes with tribal sovereignty.

Here's the rest of the Warm Springs Tribe's news release - we have reached out for any comment by ODFW or the Grand Ronde Tribe:

The petition further describes how the Commission’s rushed decision-making process failed to meaningfully and appropriately consult with Warm Springs Tribe or acknowledge its clear, sustained objections. It also points out the legal error underlying the Fish and Wildlife Commission’s vote, as two commissioners who voted to approve were acting on expired terms of office.

WHERE:

The MOA allows the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde to co-manage fish and wildlife resources throughout much of western Oregon, including areas where Warm Springs Tribe retains treaty-reserved rights to fish and hunt. Those areas include ODFW Wildlife Management Units 15 (Willamette) and 16 (Santiam), including but not limited to, the mainstem of the Columbia River, the Willamette River from the mouth to the top of Willamette Falls, and the Sandy River, as well as any property held in fee by another federally-recognized Indian tribe.

WHY:

Warm Springs Tribe has fished in the lower Columbia River and its tributaries, and has hunted on unclaimed lands in western Oregon, since time immemorial. Warm Springs Tribe’s members harvest lamprey and salmon at Willamette Falls, manage salmon fisheries below Bonneville Dam and harvest smelt in the Sandy River. Warm Springs Tribe retains treaty-protected rights to hunt and gather on unclaimed lands in western Oregon, particularly the western slope of the Cascades.

As the State was developing the MOA, Warm Springs Tribe expressed their concerns directly to the State about how this would impair their treaty-reserved rights to hunt and fish, yet the State proceeded despite these concerns.

According to Warm Springs Tribe, this marks the first time the State has made a decision to recognize the rights of one Tribe over the direct and sustained objections of another Tribe. This has resulted in the current MOA allowing Grand Ronde Tribe to regulate fishing, hunting and gathering activities of its members in all of these locations. This sets the stage for conflicts between the members of different Tribes when multiple parties are conducting fisheries or other activities in these areas, or any other area under the MOA.

HOW:

The petition details the flaws in the State’s decision-making process:

  1. Without meaningfully consulting with and addressing concerns raised by Warm Springs Tribe, the Commission’s deliberation was followed by a motion and rushed vote that approved the MOA.
  1. The vote to approve the agreement passed with the support of two commissioners whose terms had already expired. Had these two commissioners not continued to act on their expired terms, the vote would have failed 2-3.

To address these issues, the petition proposes either repealing or amending the rule implementing the MOA. It includes an amended geographic scope that would make the MOA consistent with many other tribal management agreements, rather than an isolated and unprecedented outlier, so as to minimize the risk of future inter-tribal conflict with respect to the management and harvest of fish and wildlife in western Oregon.

QUOTES:

Robert A. Brunoe, Secretary Treasurer/CEO of the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, said:

“Our people have always fished and hunted in Western Oregon beyond our ceded lands. Willamette Falls is a particularly important fishery for us. Why would the State want to privilege one Tribe’s rights to fish and hunt in this area over another and issue a decision that conflicts with existing rights and sovereignty? We’re giving the State an opportunity to fix its mistake, and to advance an agreement that can respect the sovereignty of all tribes affected. ODFW should initiate a new rule-making process and appropriately consult with all impacted tribes to adequately hear, understand and respect our concerns.”

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The Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs Reservation of Oregon is a federally-recognized, sovereign Indian tribe occupying the Warm Springs Reservation, which was reserved for its exclusive benefit by an 1855 Treaty with the United States. The Reservation stretches from the summit of the Cascade Mountains to the cliffs of the Deschutes River in Central Oregon.

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ODFW spokesperson Michelle Dennehy provided this response:

Members of the public who volunteer and are appointed to serve on Oregon’s various boards and commissions regularly continue to serve in these positions after their terms expire.   

Per the Administrative Procedures Act, the Commission now has 90 days from receipt of the petition to either accept or deny it. If they accept the petition, it begins a rulemaking process. (Acceptance does not automatically grant the petitioner their request, it begins a process to open the rules for Commission consideration at a future meeting.)

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Response from the Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde:

Rather than celebrating the expansion of hunting and fishing rights for a fellow federally recognized Tribe, the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs is threatening a restoration and expansion of rights that only concerns the state of Oregon and Grand Ronde.

In contrast to what the Warm Springs Tribe claims, our MOA with the state, which came after an open, public process, does not create a conflict with the treaties of any Tribes, nor does it ignore any other Tribe’s cultural connections to any ancestral lands or create exclusive rights for Grand Ronde. In fact, our MOA is nearly identical to agreements other Western Oregon Tribes have with the state. We were the last Tribe in Western Oregon to get an MOA with the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife; four others had already gone through the process and had been approved.

What our MOA does do is allow Grand Ronde Tribal Members to harvest for subsistence and ceremonial purposes in the Wilson, Trask, Willamette, Stott Mountain and Santiam wildlife management units using tribal tags. Contrary to Warms Springs’ opinion, the agreement does not include Willamette Falls and, on the bottom of page 5 of the agreement, it specifically “excludes state-owned land at Willamette Falls.”

From time immemorial, our people have maintained our connections and our relationship with these areas. This MOA expands access to areas of our historical homelands, honoring our connection to the land and our way of life. Since its implementation, we have seen this MOA touch the lives of more than 400 Tribal Members who now have harvest licenses under this agreement – an agreement that simply streamlines the process for our members and outlines a process for collaborating with the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife.

I hope that the Warm Springs Tribe would have bigger priorities than continually attacking the Grand Ronde Tribe and trying to pull us back from the important gains we have made in restoring and expanding our Tribal rights on our ancestral homelands.

More facts about the Grand Ronde’s MOA with ODFW are available on our website.

Article Topic Follows: Warm Springs

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