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The Confederated Salish-Kootenai Tribal Nation has endured significant challenges throughout history, including forced relocation and the loss of their lands due to federal policies aimed at assimilation. Although treaties promised them land and rights, these promises were repeatedly undermined, particularly by laws that allowed non-tribal settlers to purchase tribal lands and encouraged the breakdown of communal ownership.

Today, the Tribe continues to face the consequences of those policies, especially regarding their rights to natural resources like water and fish. Despite having legal fishing rights, many of the fish in their traditional waters are now contaminated with dangerous pollutants, making them unsafe to eat. This environmental degradation not only threatens the health of tribal members but also calls into question the real value of rights that cannot be safely exercised.

The situation highlights ongoing failures in both treaty enforcement and environmental protection, demonstrating how historical injustices continue to impact Indigenous communities — and how those same issues have broader implications for everyone who relies on clean water and a healthy environment.

Learn more: https://www.yahoo.com/news/good-treaty-rights-fish-poisoned-101154958.html