The Confederated Tribes have 5,600 enrolled members, 70% of whom live in Oregon and only 8% of whom live near on the reservation. An additional 6% live in the town of
Siletz and 22.6% live in
Lincoln County. There are 445 households in the city of Siletz and 143 households on the Siletz Reservation. The tribe owns and manages about 16,000 acres total, about of which is a
reservation located along the
Siletz River in the
Central Oregon Coast Range of central
Lincoln County, Oregon, approximately 15 mi (24 km) northeast of
Newport. In total, they own a checkerboard of approximately in and around the original 1.1 million acre Coast Indian Reservation, established Nov 9, 1855 – which was quickly whittled down, and the tribe terminated by act of Congress in 1956. The Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians became the second tribe terminated by an act of Congress to regain federal recognition by passage of the Siletz Restoration Act Nov 18, 1977. The tribe owns and operates the
Chinook Winds Casino and Convention Center, the Chinook Winds Golf Resort in
Lincoln City (including the Chinook Winds Resort hotel purchased from
Shilo Inn hotels in 2004), the oceanfront Lot 57 north of Chinook Winds Casino, Hee Hee Illahee RV park in Salem, the Logan Road RV Park, the Salem Flex Building where the Salem Area Offices currently exist, the Portland Stark Building which was purchased in August 2007, which is the site of the tribe's Portland Area Office, the Eugene Elks building which houses the Eugene Area Office, the Siletz Gas & Mini Mart, the old Toledo Mill site, and a commercial building in Depoe Bay. The tribe also owns and runs the Siletz Community Health Clinic. A $7.5 million plan is underway to expand the clinic. $2 million of the funding will come from the Federal government's
IHS Small Ambulatory Grant funding. The clinic is currently but will grow to between 2006 and 2016. The Siletz Tribal Police department was discontinued, but the tribe now contracts with the nearby
Lincoln County Sheriff's Office to provide law enforcement services to the Siletz area. The tribe is gradually accumulating additional property into the reservation, as part of its Comprehensive Plan. This includes entrusted to the tribe in 2007 by the state and federal governments as part of the
New Carissa oil spill settlement, on the condition that the Confederated Tribes will manage it as a
marbled murrelet habitat. The tribal government is attempting to get its 1850s treaties with the United States recognized by referencing them in the tribe's constitution, and also by mentioning the treaties in a work by Charles Wilkinson, who was hired by the
tribal council to write a history of the Siletz. There have also been attempts to retrieve the remains of tribal ancestors from the
Smithsonian Institution, and to retrieve various other tribal artifacts distributed throughout the
United States of America. The current Tribal Council includes Chairman Delores Pigsley, Vice Chairman Alfred "Bud" Lane III, Secretary Judy Muschamp, Treasurer Robert Kentta, Reggie Butler Jr., Gerald Ben, Loraine Butler, Alfred "Buddy" Lane IV, and Selene Rilatos. The tribal government's Public Information Office publishes the monthly
Siletz News. ==Cultural activities==