MUCKLESHOOT MESSENGER

Muckleshoot indian reservation, wash.
From the Front Page

Councilwoman Virginia Cross Honored at Centennial Accord Meeting

Councilwoman Virginia Cross was an original signatory of the1989 Centennial Accord. She was honored by Governor Inslee andTribal leaders at a meeting that took place this Summer over two days at House of Awakened Culture, Suquamish Reservation.

SUQUAMISH — Muckleshoot Tribal Councilwoman Virginia Cross received recognition from Gov. Jay Inslee and Tribal leaders from around the state at the Centennial Accord meeting this year. Cross was an original signatory of the 1989 Centennial Accord, which was a formal commitment to implement government-to-government relations between Washington’s Federally Recognized Tribes and the State.

Governor Gary Locke and Christine Gregoire, who was Washington State Attorney General at the time, joined Tribal chairs from throughout the state in 1999, on the eve of the new Millennium, to reaffirm the Accord and agreed to implement the terms of the Accord on a day-to-day basis.

"It is critical for people to realize that the establishment and continued function of the state of Washington is based on contracts, or treaties, with the Native American nations. As we enter the new millennium, we must all understand that these contracts are the law of the land, as defined in the Constitution of the United States," Gregoire said.

The intent of the 1989 Accord continues today in no small part because Tribal leaders such as Cross, the Muckleshoot Indian Tribe’s longest serving Council member, have been unrelenting in holding the state accountable to its promises.

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October 2025
Edition

Muckleshoot Fisheries Meets with Seattle Public Utilities

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.

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October 2025
Edition

Waterfront Grand Opening

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.

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October 2025
Edition

Virginia Cross D.R. Hanford Award

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.

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October 2025
Edition

Local Native Writer Gains International Recognition for Indigenous Screenplay

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.

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About the Muckleshoot Messenger

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.


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