
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The land where the Willamette and Columbia rivers meet has been home to dozens of different Native nations since time immemorial. For thousands of years, tribes such as the Multnomah, Wasco, Cowlitz, Clackamas and many, many others created communities here. Since settlers first forcefully occupied this land in the mid-1800s, the city of Portland has failed to build trust with sovereign Tribal leaders and Indigenous residents.
In 2017, Portland created a Tribal Relations Program to bridge the relationship between Tribal governments and the city and to strengthen city government ties to its Native communities. It was a trailblazing program at the time, but in the years since it’s had three different managers and has been without a leader for months.
OPB reporter Alex Zielinski recently teamed up with Nika Bartoo-Smith, a reporter for Underscore Native News and ICT, to dig into the city of Portland’s relationship with tribal governments and Native communities. They join us to talk about what they’ve found.
For more Evergreen episodes and to share your voice with us, visit our showpage.
Follow OPB on Instagram, host Jenn Chávez and Oregon Field Guide.
You can sign up for OPB’s newsletters to get what you need in your inbox regularly.
Don’t forget to check out our many podcasts, which can be found on any of your favorite podcast apps:
Hush
Timber Wars Season 2: Salmon Wars
Politics Now
Think Out Loud
And many more! Check out our full show list here.
By Oregon Public Broadcasting4.9
7070 ratings
The land where the Willamette and Columbia rivers meet has been home to dozens of different Native nations since time immemorial. For thousands of years, tribes such as the Multnomah, Wasco, Cowlitz, Clackamas and many, many others created communities here. Since settlers first forcefully occupied this land in the mid-1800s, the city of Portland has failed to build trust with sovereign Tribal leaders and Indigenous residents.
In 2017, Portland created a Tribal Relations Program to bridge the relationship between Tribal governments and the city and to strengthen city government ties to its Native communities. It was a trailblazing program at the time, but in the years since it’s had three different managers and has been without a leader for months.
OPB reporter Alex Zielinski recently teamed up with Nika Bartoo-Smith, a reporter for Underscore Native News and ICT, to dig into the city of Portland’s relationship with tribal governments and Native communities. They join us to talk about what they’ve found.
For more Evergreen episodes and to share your voice with us, visit our showpage.
Follow OPB on Instagram, host Jenn Chávez and Oregon Field Guide.
You can sign up for OPB’s newsletters to get what you need in your inbox regularly.
Don’t forget to check out our many podcasts, which can be found on any of your favorite podcast apps:
Hush
Timber Wars Season 2: Salmon Wars
Politics Now
Think Out Loud
And many more! Check out our full show list here.

90,979 Listeners

43,915 Listeners

38,525 Listeners

6,916 Listeners

4,004 Listeners

7,858 Listeners

8,466 Listeners

2,243 Listeners

87,976 Listeners

113,095 Listeners

9,104 Listeners

10,335 Listeners

16,484 Listeners

16,492 Listeners

192 Listeners