CTUIR to host nuclear energy virtual town hall

MISSION — A virtual town hall will take place on June 17 to allow members of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation (CTUIR) the opportunity to voice their opinions to their elected officials about nuclear development — a longstanding issue since the Hanford Nuclear Reservation became the site of the first full-scale plutonium reactor in 1943.

“CTUIR leadership have felt that it’s important to have a community discussion about what U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright has called the ‘nuclear energy renaissance,’ and how to potentially update its policies to respond to that,” CTUIR Legislative Affairs Manager Sterling Cosper said.

In February 2025, Wright signed a secretarial order aimed at “Unleash the Golden Era of American Energy Dominance,” in accordance with President Trump’s executive orders.

“As global energy demand continues to grow, America must lead the commercialization of affordable and abundant nuclear energy,” Wright said in the secretarial order. “As such, the Department will work diligently and creatively to enable the rapid deployment and export of next-generation nuclear technology.”

Cosper said, with the Hanford site being within CTUIR ceded territory, nuclear energy has been a longstanding issue impacting treaty rights and the natural environment of First Foods.

In 1980, Ballot Measure 7 was passed by Oregon voters, halting the creation or storage of new nuclear waste until there was a permanent waste repository. As recently as 2025, there have been efforts to restore a focus on nuclear energy intended to repeal Ballot Measure 7; no bills have been passed in the state of Oregon.

Cosper said the motivation to set the revival of nuclear energy relates to the increasing number of hyperscale data centers in the region and across the country, intended to support artificial intelligence development.

“As from what we’ve gathered, they are placing a substantial new strain on a power system that has already faced longstanding challenges, which is why nuclear is back in the public conversation,” Cosper said.

The CTUIR is keeping the topic of nuclear energy at the forefront of tribal members’ minds by inviting them to participate in the town hall, set to take place virtually on June 17.

Cosper said CTUIR elected officials are doing the town hall and a related survey to get a better sense from tribal members about how they feel about nuclear energy and the first comprehensive CTUIR policy to address it.

“A big point of the town halls, I think, is to inform members specifically what the CTUIR government is trying to accomplish with this new policy effort, including what it actually states,” Cosper said.

The Draft Nuclear Policy Survey is intended to complement the town hall. Cosper noted that some tribal members would be more comfortable voicing their thoughts and opinions in an anonymous format or feel they can better communicate that way.

“This is not only to share their general take on the policy, but they may also think of something that the CTUIR team hasn’t,” he said.

Within the survey is supplemental information about the history the CTUIR shares with nuclear energy development, as well as a summary of the draft Policy. In the draft are the overarching goals of the policy, what the tribe opposes pertaining to nuclear energy development, plans for oversight, mitigation of negative impacts, monitoring and more.

Survey participants will have the opportunity to give their opinions on the CTUIR’s Nuclear Policy, the need for preparedness of strategic representation, their support or lack thereof pertaining to nuclear energy, the most concerning aspects of it and the most beneficial. In addition to the survey, survey participants can submit additional questions or comments they would like to see discussed at the June 17 virtual Town Hall.

To take the survey, participants can visit: https://rb.gy/6hfz4t

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