Long-sought court ruling restores Oregon tribe's hunting and fishing
rights
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[November 27, 2024]
By CLAIRE RUSH
LINCOLN CITY, Ore. (AP) — Drumming made the floor vibrate and singing
filled the conference room of the Chinook Winds Casino Resort in Lincoln
City, on the Oregon coast, as hundreds in tribal regalia danced in a
circle.
For the last 47 years, the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians have
held an annual powwow to celebrate regaining federal recognition. This
month’s event, however, was especially significant: It came just two
weeks after a federal court lifted restrictions on the tribe's rights to
hunt, fish and gather — restrictions tribal leaders had opposed for
decades.
“We're back to the way we were before,” Siletz Chairman Delores Pigsley
said. “It feels really good.”
The Siletz is a confederation of over two dozen bands and tribes whose
traditional homelands spanned western Oregon, as well as parts of
northern California and southwestern Washington state. The federal
government in the 1850s forced them onto a reservation on the Oregon
coast, where they were confederated together as a single, federally
recognized tribe despite their different backgrounds and languages.
In the 1950s and ‘60s, Congress revoked recognition of over 100 tribes,
including the Siletz, under a policy known as “termination.” Affected
tribes lost millions of acres of land as well as federal funding and
services.
“The goal was to try and assimilate Native people, get them moved into
cities,” said Matthew Campbell, deputy director of the Native American
Rights Fund. “But also I think there was certainly a financial aspect to
it. I think the United States was trying to see how it could limit its
costs in terms of providing for tribal nations.”
Losing their lands and self-governance was painful, and the tribes
fought for decades to regain federal recognition. In 1977, the Siletz
became the second tribe to succeed, following the restoration of the
Menominee Tribe in Wisconsin in 1973.
But to get a fraction of its land back — roughly 3,600 acres (1,457
hectares) of the 1.1-million-acre (445,000-hectare) reservation
established for the tribe in 1855 — the Siletz tribe had to agree to a
federal court order that restricted their hunting, fishing and gathering
rights. It was only one of two tribes in the country, along with
Oregon’s Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde, compelled to do so to
regain tribal land.
The settlement limited where tribal members could fish, hunt and gather
for ceremonial and subsistence purposes, and it imposed caps on how many
salmon, elk and deer could be harvested in a year. It was devastating,
tribal chair Pigsley recalled: The tribe was forced to buy salmon for
ceremonies because it couldn’t provide for itself, and people were
arrested for hunting and fishing violations.
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Kimberly Jurado holds her daughter, Delia Rubi Jurado, as they walk
during a dance at a powwow at Chinook Winds Casino Resort, Saturday,
Nov. 16, 2024, in Lincoln City, Ore. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane)
“Giving up those rights was a terrible thing,” Pigsley, who has led
the tribe for 36 years, told The Associated Press earlier this year.
“It was unfair at the time, and we’ve lived with it all these
years.”
Decades later, Oregon and the U.S. came to recognize that the
agreement subjecting the tribe to state hunting and fishing rules
was biased, and they agreed to join the tribe in recommending to the
court that the restrictions be lifted.
“The Governor of Oregon and Oregon’s congressional representatives
have since acknowledged that the 1980 Agreement and Consent Decree
were a product of their times and represented a biased and distorted
position on tribal sovereignty, tribal traditions, and the Siletz
Tribe’s ability and authority to manage and sustain wildlife
populations it traditionally used for tribal ceremonial and
subsistence purposes,” attorneys for the U.S., state and tribe wrote
in a joint court filing.
Late last month, the tribe finally succeeded in having the court
order vacated by a federal judge. And a separate agreement with the
Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife has given the tribe a greater
role in regulating tribal hunting and fishing.
As Pigsley reflected on those who passed away before seeing the
tribe regain its rights, she expressed hope about the next
generation carrying on essential traditions.
“There’s a lot of youth out there that are learning tribal ways and
culture,” she said. “It’s important today because we are trying to
raise healthy families, meaning we need to get back to our natural
foods.”
Among those celebrating and praying at the powwow was Tiffany
Stuart, donning a basket cap her ancestors were known for weaving,
and her 3-year-old daughter Kwestaani Chuski, whose name means “six
butterflies” in the regional Athabaskan language from southwestern
Oregon and northwestern California.
Given the restoration of rights, Stuart said, it was “very powerful
for my kids to dance.”
“You dance for the people that can’t dance anymore,” she said.
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