Transcript Document
Upper Snake River Tribes Foundation &
Climate Change
ATNI Tribal Leaders Summit on Climate Change
Portland, Oregon
March 10, 2015
Upper Snake River Tribes (USRT)
Membership
Burns Paiute Tribe
Burns, Oregon
Paiute-Shoshone Tribe
Ft McDermitt, Oregon/Nevada
Shoshone-Bannock Tribes
Fort Hall, Idaho
Shoshone-Paiute Tribes
Duck Valley, Idaho/Nevada
USRT Charter
Restore the Snake River Basin to a natural condition and
facilitate tribal unity to protect and nurture all
compacting tribes rights, languages, cultures, and
traditions
USRT Charter Objectives
Provide technical assistance and coordination of:
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Fish and Wildlife
Land, Water, and Air
Cultural Resources
Federal Trust Responsibility
USRT office in Boise, Idaho provides a focused location for
member tribes; increasing and improving communication to
coordinate activities
USRT Commission Meeting – Fort Hall, Idaho, November 2013
USRT Commission
USRT Commission is composed of two Council members from
each of USRT’s four tribes
USRT Commission meetings are held monthly either in Boise, by
conference call/webinar, or on member tribes’ reservations
Current Commission:
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Charlotte Rodrique, Chair of Burns Paiute Tribe
Eric Hawley, Council Members of Burns Paiute Tribe
Tildon Smart, Chair of Fort McDermitt Paiute-Shoshone Tribe
Eddie Smart, Council Member of Fort McDermitt Paiute-Shoshone Tribe
Nathan Small, Chair of Shoshone-Bannock Tribes
Lee Juan Tyler, Vice Chair of Shoshone-Bannock Tribes
Buster Gibson, Vice Chair of Shoshone-Paiute Tribes
James Blossom, Council Member of Shoshone-Paiute Tribes
2015 USRT Commission-Directed
Priorities
Fish Passage in Blocked areas
Bonneville Power Administration Fish &Wildlife Program
Coordination
Columbia River Treaty Review
Climate Change Planning
Hells Canyon Coordination
Water Quality Improvement Issues
Education and Outreach
ESA Listings and Recovery
USRT Staff
Heather Ray - Executive Director
o Boise office
Scott Hauser– Environmental Program Director
o Boise office
Bob Austin – Fish & Wildlife Program Director
o Portland office
Petroglyph at Fort McDermitt
USRT delegation in Washington, DC, Dec. 2013
USRT - Current Issues
Fish Passage
Bonneville Power Administration Fish & Wildlife Program Implementation
Columbia River Treaty Review
Hells Canyon Complex Relicensing
Idaho Fish Consumption Process
Northwest Power & Conservation Council
Outreach and Education
State Issues
Climate Change
Snake River Birds of Prey National Conservation Area
USRT – Climate Change
USRT Environmental Program Director (EPD) hired in
2012
Funded under the Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) Indian General Assistance Program (GAP)
GAP work plans for USRT’s EPD include a climate
change component
Lake Billy Shaw – Shoshone Paiute Reservation
USRT – Climate Change
USRT’s original climate change GAP work plan
called for:
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Review, assessment, and synthesis of current data and data
gaps surrounding the effects of climate change on USRT
member tribes
Collection and synthesis of information identified in data gaps
Identification of needs and actions
Prioritization of actions and identification of projects
Funding and implementation of projects
Assessment and evaluation of project results
USRT – Climate Change
USRT’s EPD has obtained climate change training
through:
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Climate Change Vulnerability
Assessment Workshop
Institute for Tribal Environmental Professionals Climate
Change Adaptation Planning
Climate Change Science for Effective Resource Management
and Public Policy in the Western United States
USRT – Climate Change Curriculum Project
Originated the project in early 2013 (still in
process)
High
School
Curriculum
on
Changing
Environment
Goal to emphasize heritage and cultural
strengths/resiliency - history that can offer
lessons and teachings for the future
Incorporate knowledge of how ancestors of the
USRT member tribes adapted to changing
environment of Snake River Basin over great
periods of time/through many generations
USRT – Climate Change Curriculum Project
Multimedia/interactive teaching modules with examples
of how ancestors of USRT tribal communities were likely
affected by climate change in specific historical periods, to
the extent this can be known and in a form that can be
kept confidentially by the user/tribe
https://vimeo.com/78436483
USRT – Proposed Vulnerability Assessment
USRT crafted a proposal for the Bureau of Indian Affairs
(BIA) climate change funding announcement in 2014
Proposal calls for conducting a climate change
vulnerability assessment within the entire Upper Snake
River Basin
The vulnerability assessment will be a broad, regionalscale assessment covering 81,167 square miles
(51,946,880 acres)
USRT estimates, with technical assistance, it will take
eight months to complete the vulnerability assessment
Boise
USRT – Proposed Vulnerability Assessment
Project area ecotypes/habitats include but are not limited to
Great Basin sagebrush steppe, forest communities, riparian
zones, and the culturally significant Camas Prairie
Rivers of focus will include the Upper Snake, Bruneau,
Malheur, Owyhee, Portneuf, and Salmon
Terrestrial species of focus will be big game, small mammals,
and upland birds
Aquatic species of focus will include both anadromous and
resident fish, as well as freshwater mussels and other species
Tribal enterprises of interest include but are not limited to
agriculture/aquaculture, ranching, recreation programs, and
fish and wildlife enhancement programs and harvest
management
USRT – Proposed Vulnerability Assessment
Vulnerability to climate change has three specific components:
sensitivity, exposure, and adaptive capacity
USRT’s vulnerability assessment will be structured so that resources
within the study area, particularly those of cultural significance, are
assessed for their sensitivity, exposure, and adaptive capacity to
the effects of climate change now and into the future
Ecotypes/habitats and aquatic/terrestrial species sensitivity, for
example, is based on physiology, habitat requirements, life history,
dispersal ability, population growth rates, location, ecological
climate effects, and disturbance regime effects
Upon completion of a climate change vulnerability assessment,
USRT will be poised to craft an adaptation plan that will be
implemented within the four tribes’ cultural, environmental, fish
and wildlife, natural resource, and tribal enterprise programs
USRT – Potential Climate Change Threats
Timing shifts in water
Water temperature and availability
Loss/reduction of culturally-significant plants
and animals
Proliferation of invasive species
Increase in fire frequency/intensity
Loss of revenue from tribal enterprises
Negation of restoration/reintroduction
projects
USRT – Proposed Vulnerability Assessment
BIA has delayed awarding the climate change grant
funding (new grant announced February, 2015)
USRT has proposed to EPA to do similar work under
FY 2016 GAP Supplemental funding
USRT will continuously seek climate change funding
sources/opportunities
Shoshone-Bannock Encampment near Pocatello, Idaho
USRT/Member Tribes Climate Change Capacities
Currently, USRT is a small organization with limited
resources
Capacity & resources among USRT’s four member
tribes are disparate
There is general awareness of climate change and
impending impacts within the tribal councils, less so,
however, among the membership
Regardless the level of awareness, climate change is
of low priority among USRT’s member tribe given
other immediate priorities and concerns
USRT – Consortia/Tribal Climate Change Needs
Financial Resources
General/high-level funding opportunities
Technical Expertise
Education & Community Outreach
Time Urgency
o Loss of tribal elders & traditional cultural practices
Relevancy to Tribal Members
Baseline Information & Inventories
o Many tribes data poor or have data by analysis poor
Training to Identify Study Needs for Recognizing
Climate Change Impacts
Thank You
Questions?