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Salmon People: A Tribal Fishing
by Katie Campbell
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When the salmon are running up the Columbia River, Native fishermen are there with them. They live, eat and sleep at the river. Their children grow up at the river. They catch salmon for subsistence, for ceremonies, and for their living.
This is the life of the Wy-Kan-Ush-Pum, the Salmon People. It is a life Columbia River tribal people have lived since time immemorial and have fought for decades to protect. Over the last century and a half, they have watched as forces eroded their access to salmon. Treaties removed them from their traditional fishing areas; dams massively reduced the numbers of salmon that swam in the waters; environmental contamination further poisoned the well.
And now, as climate change threatens the salmon throughout its life, the stakes of that fight are existential.
Read all of our coverage about the threats facing salmon, the failure of hatcheries to save them, and the government's broken treaties that swore to protect them.
Related Pages:
The U.S. Has Spent More Than $2 Billion on a Plan to Save Salmon. The Fish Are Vanishing Anyway by Schick & Hwang, Oregon Public Broadcasting, 5/24/22
The U.S. Promised Tribes They Would Always Have Fish, But the Fish They Have Pose Toxic Risks Tony Schick & Maya Miller, Oregon Public Broadcasting, 12/28/22
The Racism, and Resilience, Behind Today's Pacific Northwest Salmon Crisis by Tony Schick, Oregon Public Broadcasting, 9/24/22
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