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Oregon joins Washington in having a full-time tribal affairs director on governor’s staff

 Shana McConville Radford is taking on the newly-formed position of tribal affairs director with the state of Oregon.
Courtesy of Shana McConville Radford
Shana McConville Radford is taking on the newly-formed position of tribal affairs director with the state of Oregon.

Oregon has created the fresh tribal affairs director position, while Washington has had a similar official in place since the early '80s.

Oregon’s governor Tina Kotek recently announced she hired a tribal affairs director for the first time. Washington has had a tribal affairs director in place since the early 80s.

Shana McConville Radford is stepping into the role for Oregon.

McConville Radford had recently served as the deputy executive director of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation in northeast Oregon. Communication and transparency are the cornerstone to the state’s relationship with the nine sovereign Oregon tribes, said Gov. Kotek.

McConville Radford is now in charge of consultation with tribes and directing state policies. She said she hopes her new position will help the nine sovereign tribes in Oregon be heard in the state’s policy-making and government.

“I think me stepping into this role is really me playing my part,” McConville Radford said. “...Keep our culture alive and keep our traditions alive. Restore our resources and make sure our people are healthy and thriving again.”

McConville Radford said this role has been a long time coming – with many sovereign tribes in Oregon. Washington has had a position like this since 1983. Before that, there was a tribal advisor role that was created in 1969. Although Idaho has people assigned to tribal affairs, there is no director position in the governor's office there.

 Shana McConville Radford is a citizen of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation in northeast Oregon.
Courtesy of Shana McConville Radford
Shana McConville Radford is a citizen of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation in northeast Oregon.

Craig Bill – Washington’s tribal director, under Governor Jay Inslee – said he thinks it shows a deliberate step by Oregon to elevate tribal engagement at the highest level of state government. He said Oregon’s tribes deserve government-to-government relations.

Since 1999, all agencies within Washington must have a tribal liaison position that reports to senior levels, according to the office of Gov. Inslee.

When asked if Washington’s Indian Affairs director had any advice for McConville Radford – Craig Bill has been in the role since the mid-2000s – he said, “Within this role, when we [Indigenous people] take these positions, we’re caught in a middle position — that’s kind of good. We raise and make sure tribal people are heard and facilitate that at the state level and make sure everyone has the same information.”

According to a state of Oregon press release, McConville Radford brings over 15 years of tribal relations, policy, tribal facilitation, negotiation, and intergovernmental relations experience to the role. Beyond her role with the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, McConville Radford served as the superintendent of the Flathead Agency working with the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes in Montana for the Bureau of Indian Affairs. She has also worked with the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs serving as the health and human services liaison and before that, a tribal consultant on energy, education and health. During the 2020 Decennial Census, McConville Radford was the U.S. Census Bureau’s tribal and congressional partnership lead in ensuring that Oregon and Idaho’s historically undercounted tribal nations were accurately counted.

“You have to be able to work and understand the systems that impact us essentially,” McConville Radford said. “Back to the very beginning, I have felt those impacts. I know what that feels like. I can see my neighbor or my cousin or my son or whomever, and everyone in Oregon, we all feel the impacts of policy and that’s just my forte, that’s what I’m interested in, that’s where I think I can make a difference, and that’s why I’m here.”

Copyright 2023 Northwest News Network. To see more, visit Northwest News Network.

Anna King loves unearthing great stories about people in the Northwest. She reports for the Northwest News Network, a journalism collaboration of public radio stations in Washington and Oregon that includes JPR.