B2 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, MARCH 29, 2022 Jamie Hale/The Oregonian Kayakers paddle up the Willamette River toward Willamette Falls in Oregon City, seen from the old Blue Heron paper mill site, now owned by the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde. Willamette Falls riverwalk project on hold Grand Ronde tribe leaves partnership By JAMIE HALE The Oregonian Anyone hoping for a new public riverwalk to Willamette Falls in Oregon City will need to hold out hope for a little — or maybe a lot — longer. Despite roughly a decade of work and nearly $40 mil- lion of public funding that resulted in eye-catching render- ings once displayed proudly at public events, the Willa- mette Falls Legacy Project has yet to break ground on the much-anticipated riverwalk that would fi nally give the pub- lic a close-up view of Willamette Falls. The long-awaited project at the old Blue Heron paper mill site remains on hold indefi nitely, as partners work to reorganize the structure of the intergovernmental collabora- tion, which has comprised as many as nine local, state and tribal government entities. Earlier this month, the partnership received a blow when the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde announced it was leaving the Willamette Falls Legacy Project because of bureaucratic gridlock. The tribe owns the property where the public riverwalk will be built using an easement, and is working on a multiphase development that will include a separate cultural and community center of its own at the site. “For nearly 10 years, we have watched as little prog- ress at Willamette Falls occurred while signifi cant public resources have been spent,” Cheryle Kennedy, tribal coun- cil chairwoman for the Grand Ronde tribe, wrote in a letter to Willamette Falls Legacy Project partners on March 17. “As a result, and after careful consideration, the Confed- erated Tribes of Grand Ronde will no longer participate in discussions around the Willamette Falls Legacy Project.” Sara Thompson, spokesperson for the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde, confi rmed the tribe will continue to work with local government agencies on the various proj- ects at Willamette Falls — just not as a part of the Willa- mette Falls Legacy Project. “Grand Ronde has always collaborated closely with local, state and federal agencies engaged in projects within its ceded lands,” Thompson wrote in an email. “This move does not change that commitment.” The remaining partners, which include Oregon City, Clackamas County, Metro and the state, as well as the Con- federated Tribes of Siletz Indians, Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, and the Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakama Nation, have said they plan to continue work on the riverwalk — though details for that plan remain elusive. Organizing multiple government agencies and sover- eign nations on a large-scale public works project is hard enough, let alone doing so at a site of great cultural impor- tance that touches on simmering intertribal confl ict. The Willamette Falls Legacy Project partners expressed confi - dence that the riverwalk will eventually be complete, but the current roadblocks are hard to ignore. Clackamas County Commissioner Martha Schrader, who has been working with the partnership, said despite the setbacks she’s optimistic about the future of the Wil- lamette Falls Legacy Project. She said her two decades of experience in local government have shown that complex projects take time and usually endure complications along the way. “It is not out of the ordinary to see these kinds of blips happen. You take 10 steps forward and fi ve back,” she said. “I think of this not in terms of one or two years, I think of this in terms of fi ve, 10, 15 years — 20 years.” Schrader said while she remains confi dent about the future of the riverwalk, the partners need to address the complications that have the project stuck on hold – namely the partnership itself. 2021 The Oregonian An aerial view of Willamette Falls and the former Blue Heron paper mill. Yuxing Zheng, a spokesperson for Metro, said the agency is working through some challenging questions about the project’s governance following the departure of the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde. Metro’s involve- ment has hinged upon collaboration with all fi ve tribes, she said. “It’s really important that we try to get the approach right,” Zheng said. Kristin Brown, communications coordinator for Oregon City, said any decisions about the project will be unani- mous, and that the partners hope to sort out the lingering organizational issues at the next meeting — though no date for that meeting has been set. “Listening to what all our partners have to say is very important,” Brown said. “So it’s paramount that everybody get in the room together.” The Willamette Falls Legacy Project had fi nalized plans for the riverwalk before the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde purchased the land in 2019 for $15.25 million from Washington developer George Heidgerken, who had also been working with the partnership on redeveloping the site. After the land changed hands, the riverwalk was rede- signed to jibe with Grand Ronde’s new vision for the old Blue Heron site, and at the start of 2021, the partners agreed on a new plan. That summer, however, the project was put on hold as the Willamette Falls Legacy Project added all fi ve tribes to the partnership, following a request from the Willamette Falls Trust, a nonprofi t that has raised private money for the riverwalk and promotes intertribal collabo- ration to complete it. All fi ve tribes cite ancestral connections to Willamette Falls, and therefore have a vested interest in the site, they say, though the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde is the only tribe that owns property at the falls. In their recent announcement to leave the partnership, the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde complained that the addition of the other tribes led to prolonged gridlock, slowing down the project while “not yielding any benefi ts to the public.” THANK YOU to our members, donors and community for all your support and voting us #1 BEST MUSEUM Robert Kentta, Willamette Falls Trust board chair and coun- cilman for the Confederated Tribes of the Siletz Indians, issued a letter hours later in response to Grand Ronde’s announce- ment, arguing for the importance of inter-tribal collaboration. “The inclusion of all tribes with deep spiritual, historical, cultural and legal connections to (the) Falls is an import- ant step for this project and should be a common practice at this place,” Kentta wrote. “As with any multi-government collaboration, there have been challenges, yet participation in these conversations is key to success and healing.” Both letters prodded old wounds between the tribes involved, though neither addressed the confl ict directly. The Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde has long asserted that it has ancestral rights to control access at Willamette Falls, a claim the other four tribes contest. Regardless, Grand Ronde maintains greater control of the site as own- ers of the land adjacent to the Oregon City side of falls. Following its departure from the Willamette Falls Leg- acy Project, Grand Ronde said it maintains an open-door policy when it comes to working with other governments, including tribal governments, but stopped short of commit- ting to a full intertribal collaboration at Willamette Falls. Development of the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde’s planned cultural and community center at Willa- mette Falls, which could include restaurants, lodging and viewpoints, is coming along, though much work remains between the demolition of old mill buildings and the con- struction of new ones, the tribe said. Meanwhile, the Willamette Falls Legacy Project remains on hold, as partners try to fi gure out how to pro- ceed with what has proven to be an enormously complex undertaking. WANTED Alder and Maple Saw Logs & Standing Timber Northwest Hardwoods • Longview, WA Contact: John Anderson • 360-269-2500 OPEN DAILY 9:30 TO 5:00 • 1792 Marine Drive, Astoria 503.325.2323 • www.crmm.org