WA state tribal leadership & work crucial to salmon recovery | The Olympian
USDA Updates Watershed Programs to Improve Access for Tribal Communities | Natural Resources Conservation Service
NRCS updated its regulations for watershed projects to allow Indian tribes or tribal organizations to sponsor needed watershed projects.
In long-sought change, states must consider tribal rights when crafting water rules • Stateline
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency recently issued a revision to the Clean Water Act that requires states to consider tribal treaty rights when crafting water quality regulations.
U.S. and Canada update 60-year-old Columbia River Treaty | Cascade PBS News
Politicians are celebrating the tentative agreement, while activists and tribal leaders say it doesn’t do enough to protect endangered salmon runs.
Officials outline new Columbia River Treaty agreement | Water | capitalpress.com
The modernized Columbia River Treaty agreement-in-principle provides certainty hydropower certainty, flood risk management and salmon and ecosystem health, U.S. officials said in a July 11 media call. Changes include a new body to allow tribes and indigenous nations to make recommendations on the timing and quantity of flows for salmon in the Columbia River Basin, and more conservative flood-risk management in the U.S. in wetter years — changes which would have been more extreme without the modernized treaty.
USDA Seeks Partnerships to Expand Conservation on Grazing Lands | Natural Resources Conservation Service
NRCS is investing up to $22 million in partnerships that expand access to conservation technical assistance through GLCI.
The Boldt Decision’s impact on Indigenous rights, 50 years later | Crosscut
Medicine Creek Treaty, Boldt Decision are at history museum | The Olympian
WA’s energy ‘green rush’ could endanger cultural Indigenous lands | Crosscut
How the Boldt decision 50 years ago remade Pacific Northwest fishing | The Seattle Times
In a major shift, Northwest tribes — not US officials — will control salmon recovery funds - OPB
Federal funds boost tribal-led revival efforts for salmon in upper Columbia River Basin - Washington State Standard
USDA Announces 2024 Tribal Scholarships and Fellowships | USDA
An adult chinook is swimming in Hangman Creek for the first time in 108 years, a symbolic victory for the Coeur d'Alene Tribe | The Spokesman-Review
'New definition of progress': Nez Perce Tribe takes over management of national salmon hatchery | The Spokesman-Review
Inland Northwest tribes are using technology to track young salmon in hopes of returning runs to the Columbia and Spokane rivers | The Pacific Northwest Inlander
This will mark the final release of juvenile salmon whose journeys down the Spokane and Columbia rivers are being tracked by several Inland Northwest tribes
$3 Million Will Help Tribes Study Salmon Reintroduction In The Upper Columbia Basin - Northwest Public Broadcasting
Bringing salmon back to the Upper Columbia River will take a lot of time and a lot of money, according to the Upper Columbia United Tribes.
PNW tribe brings lawsuit against Seattle on behalf of salmon | Crosscut
After clashes over Skagit River dams and fish passages, the Sauk-Suiattle Indian Tribe is legally pushing for the fish's 'right to flourish.'
Gov. Inslee defends veto, talks climate change with Tribes | Bellingham Herald
Washington state Tribal leaders praised some of Gov. Jay Inslee’s actions at the annual Centennial Accord Meeting Wednesday, Oct. 27, but also criticized his decision to veto sections of the Climate Commitment Act supported by Tribes.
The annual meeting focuses on cementing the government-to-government relationship between the state and Tribes with representatives from the state’s 29 federally recognized Tribes and a few other Pacific Northwest Tribes.