HR-1722-118
Became Public Law No: 118-32.
Sponsored by Andrea Salinas (D-OR)
What it does
This law narrows the land claim extinguishment in the original Grand Ronde Reservation Act so that only the tribe's claims to a specific 84-acre parcel called the Thompson Strip are extinguished — not all tribal land claims within Oregon. It also prohibits the Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community from conducting gaming on any land acquired through a federally approved land claim settlement, including land purchased with settlement funds.
Who benefits
The Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community of Oregon benefit most directly, as the law restores their ability to pursue land claims within Oregon beyond the Thompson Strip. Oregon landowners and communities whose properties were previously clouded by the broader extinguishment language may also benefit from the added legal clarity. Federal and tribal legal teams gain a clearer statutory framework for future land negotiations.
Who is hurt
The Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community are restricted from operating gaming facilities on any land obtained through the settlement, which limits a potential economic development avenue. Tribal members who might have benefited from gaming revenue — often used to fund tribal government services, health care, and education — would not receive those funds from settlement lands. Competing gaming interests (e.g., nearby tribal or commercial casinos) face no new competition from Grand Ronde settlement lands.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the original Grand Ronde Reservation Act contained overly broad language that unintentionally extinguished all of the tribe's land claims in Oregon, far beyond what Congress intended. Correcting this error restores the tribe's legal standing to pursue legitimate land claims and honors the federal government's trust responsibility to tribal nations. The gaming prohibition, supporters contend, is a reasonable and standard condition attached to land claim settlements — it ensures that settlement lands are used for community and cultural purposes rather than commercial gaming, which is a separate process governed by the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act and requires its own federal approvals.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that reopening the tribe's land claims beyond the Thompson Strip creates legal uncertainty for private landowners, local governments, and other parties across Oregon who relied on the original extinguishment language. They contend that broadening potential tribal land claims — even if unintentional in the original act — could trigger lengthy and costly litigation. On the gaming prohibition, critics argue that restricting how a tribe may use settlement lands treats tribal nations unequally compared to other landowners and limits the tribe's economic self-determination, potentially undermining the very purpose of a land claim settlement by constraining what the tribe can do with recovered or purchased property.