Our Development

How We Started and Where We Plan To Go

Founding

In 2013, Tribal wildlife managers at a Native American Fish and Wildlife Society meeting identified sustainable financing as a major challenge facing Tribal natural resource programs in the Northern Great Plains. As a result, a Tribal working group formed in 2015, in partnership with World Wildlife Fund Northern Great Plains Program (WWF), to identify ways to support Tribal wildlife programs in the Northern Great Plains (NGP) through sustainable financing strategies. The working group included representatives from seven Native nations and called itself the Sustainable Financing Initiative for Tribal Wildlife Conservation in the Northern Great Plains.

In 2021, the working group applied for and gained formal recognition as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, renaming itself to Buffalo Nations Grasslands Alliance (BNGA). "Buffalo Nations" reflects the centrality of buffalo to all cultures across the Northern Great Plains’ 16 Native nations, and "Grasslands Alliance" reflects BNGA's commitment to building and strengthening this coalition to protect grasslands for generations.”

Timeline

The working group identified four priority financing mechanisms:

·       Increasing US government and state funding

·       Increasing tourism-based revenues

·       Increasing revenue from hunting fees and licenses

·       Establishing a conservation trust fund

Setting Goals

7 GENERATIONS: Making decisions that will benefit present and future generations

COLLABORATION: Enhancing collaboration between Native nations, Native-led organizations, and other like-minded stakeholders across the region

EQUITY: Plans and decisions improve the capacity of society to offer equality of opportunity to all

EMPOWERMENT: Enhancing the ability of citizens of Native nations to increase their economic resources in relation to sustaining natural resources, to protect natural resources, and to practice Native lifeways

EFFECTIVENESS: Plans and decisions are made according to high standards of design and implementation with quantifiable outcomes envisioned

RESPECT: Make plans and decisions in a way that fully respects the rights and dignity of the individual and Mother Earth

Six core value underpin BNGA’s goalsetting and decision-making

BNGA’s directors draw on the expertise and advice of a growing group of over 50 advisors across the 16 Native nations in the Northern Great Plains and partner organizations like the Native American Fish and Wildlife Society, First Nations Development Institute, Indian Land Tenure Foundation, and World Wildlife Fund. Advisors meet every month and participate in in-person workshops twice annually.

Please contact us if you are interested in participating in advisory meetings.