Wind River Development Fund lands $36M to generate jobs via bison restoration, ecotourism and food sovereignty

Byย Mike Koshmrl,ย WyoFile

Itโ€™s no secret the rural 2.2-million-acre Wind River Indian Reservation has received few major economic investments since its establishment a century and a half ago. 

Consequences for the communities contained within the tribal land have reverberated for generations: The reservationโ€™s three main small towns โ€” Fort Washakie, Arapahoe and Ethete โ€” are dropping in population, possess few local businesses and lack adequate infrastructure and housing. Poverty rates on the reservation are much higher than in nearby areas, according to U.S. Census Bureau data. Home values on the reservation are less than half of broader Fremont County. Around the third of tribal residents lack any health care. 

There are few upsides to the somber socioeconomic realities that have long saddled the Eastern Shoshone and Northern Arapaho tribes, who despite federal and state theft of their lands, have continued to survive in the region. 

Last year, however, the Wind River Development Fund identified one silver lining: The lack of economic vitality made the region eligible for the federal โ€œRecompeteโ€ pilot grant program, which targets areas where prime-age (25-54) employment significantly trails the national average.

โ€œIn Wyoming, this was the only area even eligible to apply,โ€ said Paul Huberty, who heads the Wind River Development Fund.

Paul Huberty, executive director of the Wind River Development Fund, in August 2024. (Mike Koshmrl/WyoFile)

Huberty, whoโ€™s a member of the White Earth Band of Ojibwe, started down the road of applying when he was less than a year into the job. Quickly, he learned there were long odds: the U.S. Department of Commerceโ€™s Economic Development Administration received 565 applications. Those applicants sought $6 billion, when just over $200 million was available. 

Nevertheless, Huberty and the Wind River Coalitionโ€™s application was selected as one of the 22 finalists around Christmas. They were awarded a $400,000 planning grant, part of which went toward a much more detailed application. 

The grant applicants sought to get nine projects funded to the tune of $47 million. 

Two weeks ago, Huberty and fellow Wind River Development Fund staffers Lisa Wagner and Erika Yarber were summoned for a phone call with the Economic Development Administration. 

โ€œWe thought they just wanted to ask a couple more questions,โ€ Huberty said, โ€œbecause they kept coming back and asking for additional information.โ€

Nope. 

The call was to inform them they were one of six awardees, and were receiving $36 million for eight job-creating projects. 

โ€œWe were shocked,โ€ Huberty said. 

Two weeks later, the Wind River Development Fundโ€™s executive director was using the word โ€œsurrealโ€ to describe the entire experience. 

Yarber, meanwhile, was sanguine. She spoke enthusiastically about the prospects that the infusion of capital will help Wyomingโ€™s most impoverished area turn a corner. 

โ€œAll these projects are for the entire reservation,โ€ she said. โ€œBoth tribes, the whole community. Theyโ€™re going to help Riverton, Fremont County and hopefully our state as a whole.โ€ 

The freshly funded โ€œWind River Indigenous-based Economy Recompete Planโ€ is designed to provide jobs and improve lives via infrastructure and business investments that touch on everything from bison restoration to ecotourism to health care to the Wind River Food Sovereignty Project.

โ€œTribal Buffalo Centerโ€ for Wind River Tribal Buffalo Initiative: $9.75 million

Bison restoration on the Wind River Indian Reservation has the goal of bringing back the species โ€” an effort thatโ€™s underway โ€” and also having bison be declared as a wildlife species under the tribal game code. Jason Baldes, who heads the effort, now has funding to build a 14,000-square-foot buffalo museum that will directly support 15 full-time and 6 part-time jobs.

The Northern Arapaho Tribeโ€™s bison herd grazes on the Wind River Indian Reservation near Ethete in August 2024. The Wind River Tribal Buffalo Initiative has been awarded $9.75 million in federal grant funds to build a buffalo museum. (Joshua Wolfson/WyoFile)

โ€œCultural Center incubationโ€ for Wind River Development Fund: $2.21 million

This project will create an โ€œincubation programโ€ for the Eastern Shoshone Cultural Center and the Tribal Buffalo Center, creating seven new full-time jobs in the process.

โ€œBringing ecotourism to Wind Riverโ€ for Eastern Shoshone Tribe: $6.5 million

This project will overhaul the Eastern Shoshone and Northern Arapahoโ€™s Tribal Fish and Gameโ€™s headquarters in Fort Washakie. A new 3.5-acre site will host an โ€œecotourism complexโ€ that includes a nearly 6,000-square-foot museum and office and a 7,200-square-foot storage facility. Itโ€™s expected to produce 16 full-time jobs. 

The Eastern Shoshone Tribe has been awarded $6.5 million to overhaul the Tribal Fish and Gameโ€™s headquarters. Pictured is the current office in Fort Washakie. (Mike Koshmrl/WyoFile)

โ€œCreating a path to land sovereigntyโ€ for Wind River Development Fund: $1.2 millionย 

This project will create an โ€œinnovative modelโ€ to help Indigenous residents understand the complexities of reservation-based land. The final product will be something like a master plan for the Wind River Indian Reservation, according to Huberty. โ€œWeโ€™ll do a comprehensive assessment of where the community wants to see future economic development,โ€ he said. 

โ€œGrowing resilient food systemsโ€ for Wind River Food Sovereignty Project: $4.2 million

On a 30-acre lot west of Fort Washakie, Wind River Food Sovereignty Project co-directors Kelly Pingree and Livy Lewis are leading the effort to train and build market infrastructure for small-scale agricultural producers on the reservation. The investment, which could produce 10 full-time jobs, will help pay for a commercial kitchen, hoop houses, plant nursery, youth and elder gardens, orchard, a โ€œfood forestโ€ of native plants and more. 

โ€œBuilding a healthier workforceโ€ for Eastern Shoshone Tribe: $3 millionย 

Six new full-time jobs are expected to be produced by an initiative that will target health care services for people who suffer from diabetes and struggle with substance abuse. Some 500 patients could benefit via increased employment and income. 

The Eastern Shoshone Tribe has been awarded $3 million for an initiative that will direct health care services toward individuals who suffer from diabetes and struggle with substance abuse. (Mike Koshmrl/WyoFile)

โ€œInvesting in human capitalโ€ for Central Wyoming College: $5 millionย 

Funding is supporting educational programs that will target underserved areas by creating pathways to jobs for 25-54 years-olds. The goal is for the funding to result in the graduation of 772 students who will enter the workforce. 

โ€œWind River Coalition Governanceโ€ for Wind River Development Fund: $5.4 millionย 

This funding will pay for a program that will manage the Recompete Plan activities and ensure performance measures are on track for success. Itโ€™s expected to create 11 full-time jobs. 

The Wind River Indian Reservation includes Wind River Canyon south of Thermopolis. (Katie Klingsporn/WyoFile)

In total, getting the projects off the ground will create 71 full-time and 14 part-time jobs that will pay well for the reservation, according to the application

Yarber, the fundโ€™s director of business development, said the overall structure of the economic revitalization plan is โ€œholistic.โ€  

โ€œEverything is intertwined โ€” every single project,โ€ she said. โ€œThatโ€™s what makes this so awesome.โ€ 

The intention is for the investments to pay dividends long into the future by laying the foundation for economic growth. By capturing a โ€œmodestโ€ amount of tourism, the planโ€™s long-term goal is for $147-$189 million of economic activity and 1,570-2,005 new jobs.

Art Lawson, the Shoshone and Arapaho Fish and Game director, is benefiting directly from the just-secured grant money: Itโ€™ll build him a new office and an ecotourism center for anglers and hikers. But he foresees benefits extending well outside of his profession. 

โ€œGood things are happening,โ€ Lawson told WyoFile. โ€œWeโ€™ve needed this for a long time. Hopefully itโ€™ll create more entrepreneurship and more businesses on the reservation, and generate some funding to help tribal members out.โ€


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