Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Rangeland on the Fort Belknap Reservation in Montana

Tribal Conservation Districts

Three tribal conservation districts are a part of the conservation partnership with NRCS in Montana, functioning alongside the 58 conservation districts that are organized under state law.

Conservation Districts

  • Blackfeet Conservation District, established 1997
  • Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes Conservation District, established 2012
  • Fort Belknap Indian Community Conservation District, established 1998

The primary objective of the tribal conservation districts is to support tribal efforts to provide for the utilization, protection, conservation and restoration of reservation lands for the benefit of the community in a partnership effort with USDA and NRCS. Tribal conservation districts provide a local voice in leadership efforts to address natural resources needs and concerns by providing assistance to land owners/users and managers in the conservation and wise use of land and natural resources. They also provide leadership for intra-tribal coordination between tribal governments, tribal natural resource managers and coordinate assistance from NRCS and other federal, state, local and private sources.

Map of the three tribal conservation districts in Montana

Although tribal conservation districts are relatively new to Montana’s landscape, tribal conservation districts have been around for 50 years. The Duck Valley Conservation District, organized under Nevada state law, was the first tribal conservation district formed on the Nevada-Idaho border in 1954. A number of Tribes in Arizona also organized conservation districts under tribal and state laws in the 1980s.

Nearly 3000 conservation districts are now in operation. To learn more about conservation districts and the conservation partnership with NRCS visit the following Web sites: