Washington State Lawmakers Consider Adding Tribal Members to State Board Guiding Logging and Land Management

OLYMPIA, WA – Two Washington tribal leaders could soon snag seats on the state’s Board of Natural Resources, which guides logging sales and other management decisions for millions of acres of public land.

Sen. Claudia Kauffman, a Democrat from Kent who’s the first Native American woman to serve in the state Senate, proposed Senate Bill 5838. On Monday, it was voted out of the Senate Committee on Agriculture and Natural Resources. The bill originally called for only one tribal representative to be appointed to the board, but it was changed to two members as it moved through the committee process.

The proposal is backed by Public Lands Commissioner Dave Upthegrove, who chairs the board and leads the Department of Natural Resources. The department requested the legislation.

If enacted, the governor would appoint a tribal representative from each side of the Cascades, bringing the board’s membership from six to eight. Eligible tribal members must hold an elected position in a federally recognized tribe whose reservation or treaty-ceded lands are in Washington.

The board approves timber sales, manages conservation land, establishes sustainable forest harvest levels and oversees the sale and exchange of state trust lands. The board’s decisions guide the work of the state Department of Natural Resources, which manages about 6 million acres of public land in Washington.

Having stewarded Washington’s lands for thousands of years before statehood, supporters say the unique tribal perspectives would benefit the board’s decision-making.

“We can’t undo the past, but we could create a more just and inclusive future,” Upthegrove said in committee testimony.

It’s time to stop talking about tapping into Native American knowledge, he added in an interview with the Standard, and to “actually do it.”

A handful of the bill’s supporters testified at House and Senate hearings. Among them was Bill Iyall, chairman of the Cowlitz Indian Tribe and former Tacoma city engineer.

“We’re consulted late in the game oftentime after major decisions are made by the state,” Iyall said in an interview. “The bill supports proactive collaboration instead of reactive problem-solving.”

“We do as much restoration in southwest Washington as any single entity. We do that out of our own resources,” Iyall added.

Critics of the proposal worry that tribal members would sway the board away from timber sales that benefit counties and public schools.

“I’ve got timber mills that rely on jobs and children who rely on the food that comes from their parents having jobs in those mills,” said Sen. Keith Wagoner, R-Sedro Woolley. “You can understand my reticence to put somebody there who might be voting against my district’s interest.”

Wagoner’s concern partially stems from the commissioner’s directive to preserve about 77,000 acres of forests, he noted.

“I would not presume how any individual would vote,” Upthegrove said during a hearing, responding to Wagoner. “We have timber tribes, non-timber tribes. We have a lot of diversity of views in tribal government.”

The Cowlitz Indian Tribe is “in a position where we can economically gain from commercial timber harvests,” said Iyall. “Why can’t we be a part of that game? We can make it work for everyone as well.”

Another concern is that tribal members are not direct beneficiaries of logging sales on state lands, which fund schools and other local government services.

“As the fiduciary of state forest lands, DNR is obligated to act in the county’s best interests and no one else’s,” said Paul Jewell, government relations director of the Washington State Association of Counties.

But Upthegrove insisted the proposal does not change the legal responsibilities of the board.

Seven tribes signed in as pro for the proposal, including the Spokane Tribe of Indians, the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe and the Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakama Nation.

“We’ve just done a poor job as a state, historically, honoring that government-government relationship,” said Rep. Chris Stearns, D-Kent, who sponsored a House companion bill.

Last October’s Centennial Accord meeting, Stearns noted, started new progress in addressing that issue. During the event, Gov. Bob Ferguson signed an executive order requiring state agencies to create meaningful relationships with tribes and to establish tribal consultation policies.

If the bill is passed and signed by Ferguson, the tribal representatives would serve four-year terms and assume the responsibilities of any other board member.

Currently, the board includes a governor’s appointee, the state superintendent of public instruction, the commissioner, the director of the University of Washington’s School of Environmental and Forest Sciences, the dean of Washington State University’s College of Agricultural, Human and Natural Resource Sciences and a representative from a county with state forestlands.

The bill now awaits a Senate floor vote. If enacted, the governor would appoint tribal members to the board by July 1.

“We have vast monoculture forests, quite frankly, because of the past timber and logging practices,” said Iyall. “I think if the tribes had more of a voice in it over the last hundred years, we wouldn’t be in the position we’re in right now.”

This story first appeared on Washington State Standard.

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