
Seattle — On September 16th, Mayor Harrell joined Tribal leaders, City officials, and community partners at the second Biennial City of Seattle and Tribal Nations summit — a gathering where Tribal leaders engage directly with city officials to uphold sovereignty and Treaty rights, strengthen government-to-government relationships, and set shared priorities for the future.
The day’s agenda included a listening session with Mayor Harrell and City leadership, as well as moderated discussions shaped by priorities identified by Tribal leaders focused on practical actions to strengthen collaboration across governments and improve outcomes for the more than 46,000 American Indian, Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian residents who call Seattle home.
“The investments in my proposed budget reflect what we’ve heard — support for housing, cultural space, and health care — and reflect our commitment to supporting Tribal Nations and Native communities in ways that strengthen families, culture, and community.”
— Mayor Bruce Harrell
Mayor Harrell previewed more than $9 million in new investments in his proposed 2026 budget — supporting affordable housing, cultural preservation, and behavioral health care.
Key projects include:
Hon. Donny Stevenson, Muckleshoot Tribal Council and Indigenous Advisory Council (IAC) Board Member, attended the summit and shared his perspective on these investments.
“The vital importance of the tangible investment of real resources in Tribal and Native priorities with the City of Seattle’s budget, helps to directly serve Indigenous people by honoring legal obligations, addressing historical injustices, and fostering mutually beneficial economic growth between the City of Seattle, Indigenous people, and Tribal Nations. The policy of investing in self-determination, rather than relying on systems of external control, has always led to demonstrable positive outcomes for Native populations, Tribal communities, and surrounding regions. The legitimate commitment to Native priorities within the budget, should be applauded.
The City of Seattle’s Tribal Nations Summit is becoming a meaningful, legitimate forum where federally recognized Tribes, City and urban Native leadership can regularly come together in a spirit of collaboration to strengthen our regional community and better achieve mutual goals through authentic, collaborative government-to-government engagement with federally recognized Tribes and effective dialogue with urban Native leadership.
This is especially powerful and important given some of the challenges which history bears witness to in our region. The Muckleshoot Indian Tribe is proud to help host this Tribal Nations Summit in our homelands and supports the important step forward of keeping the lines of communication open for finding innovative solutions together in the present and for future generations.”

Members of the Muckleshoot Fish Commission met with Seattle Public Utilities General Manager Andrew Lee and his leadership team to tour the Cedar River Hatchery and discuss collaboration opportunities.

On Saturday, September 6th, Waterfront Park celebrated its historic grand opening. What was once the noisy Alaskan Way Viaduct is now a 20-acre civic waterfront — built for joy, connection, and community.

Tribal Councilwoman Virginia Cross was honored with the second ever D.R. Hanford Leadership Award at Green River College in August — this award honors visionary leaders whose impact ripples through their communities.

Tobi Iverson Halliday, a Tsimshian and Turtle Mountain Chippewa writer based in the Pacific Northwest, is gaining national and international recognition for her debut feature screenplay, Wild Woman of the Woods.
The Muckleshoot Messenger is a Tribal publication created by the Muckleshoot Office of Media Services. Tribal community members and Tribal employees are welcome to submit items to the newspaper such as news, calendar items, photos, poems, and artwork.