Land return ‘major step’ in addressing historical wrongs

Tule elk are native to the marsh lands in California. PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES
Tule elk are native to the marsh lands in California. PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES
Elk are again roaming on lands that California has returned to the Tule River Indian Tribe, Jessica Garrison, of the Los Angeles Times, reports.

In the scrub-brush foothills between the long flat fields of California’s San Joaquin Valley and the mighty peaks and Sequoia forests of the Sierra Nevada, state leaders and elders from the Tule River Indian Tribe gathered late last month to mark the return of 6880 hectares of ancestral land to Tule River Indian tribe.

Governor Gavin Newsom’s office called it "the largest ancestral land return in the history of the region and a major step in addressing historical wrongs against California Native American tribes."

The former cattle ranches, one known as the "Hershey Ranch" and the other as the "Carothers Ranch", include grasslands, oak woodlands and dark evergreen forests.

They sit just south of the 22,258ha Tule River reservation and about the Giant Sequoia National Monument. They were purchased in 2024 and 2025 with support of the private funders, the Conservation Fund, and the California Natural Resources Agency’s Tribal Nature-Based Solutions programme, which uses state bond funds to return ancestral lands to tribes.

The programme has awarded more than $US107 million ($NZ189 million) to support the return of tens of thousands of acres of land to California tribes, including 10,000 acres for the Hoopa Valley tribe to acquire the headwaters of Pine Creek, a tributary of the Klamath River. The initiative is part of a state plan to conserve 30% of lands and coastal waters by 2030 and are also part of what the governor’s office calls a "first-in-the-nation effort to address historical wrongs committed against California Native American tribes."

The Tule River acquisition restores some of the tribe’s sacred homeland, and will enable a host of conservation projects, including protecting the Deer Creek watershed, protecting habitat for California condors and reintroducing tule elk. The tribe last year worked with state officials to reintroduce beavers to the south fork of the Tule River.

"This land return demonstrates the very essence of tribal land restoration, which expands access to essential food and medicinal resources," Tule River Tribal Council chairman Lester R Nieto Jr said in a statement. Nieto added that the tribe "envisions this land located in the Yowlumne Hills as a place to gather, heal, and simply be" and that it is part of the tribe’s "long history of asserting and affirming its sovereignty".

In his own statement, Newsom said that "the historical wrongs committed by the state against the Native people of this land echo through the natural worlds of California ecosystems that lost their first and best stewards".

He added that the land return "marks a critical step in deepening the relationship between the state and the Tule River Indian Tribe".

State officials said funds for the purchase included $7.75 million from the Tribal Nature Based Solutions programme, $2.4 million from the Wildlife Conservation Board and a "sizeable amount" from private philanthropy.

The total purchase price was not immediately available.