Contents
Entity Profile
| Property | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Federally recognized tribe; ~3,500 enrolled members; 501-750 employees |
| Domains | nezperce.org, nptfisheries.org, nezpercewildlife.org, nezpercetourism.com, nezpercegis.org, nptwaterresources.org, nimiipuuhealth.org, nptenterprises.com |
| Jurisdiction | Nez Perce Reservation, Idaho — Lapwai (HQ), Kamiah |
| Hosting | Azure (main), AWS (fisheries), Squarespace (wildlife/tourism), on-prem (DNS, GIS) |
| Microsoft 365 + Proofpoint/Cisco IronPort | |
| SAM.gov UEI | N6M5CKJT8G71 / CAGE: 1T6Y2 |
| Business start | April 2, 1948 |
| Leadership | Chairman Shannon Wheeler (term through 2028) |
Budget Signals
The Tribe's federal funding portfolio exceeds $100M in individually identifiable awards across 10+ agencies:
Largest Single Awards
| Award | Amount | Agency | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| EPA CPRG Grant | $37,346,490 | EPA | Residential energy, renewables, EVs |
| HUD IHBG | $21,518,872 | HUD | Housing Authority, 2012-2033 |
| DOT BUILD Grant | $19,134,710 | DOT | Aht'Wy Interchange on US-95 |
| EPA CPRG Second Tranche | $8,707,461 | EPA | Pacific NW tribal allocation |
| HUD Affordable Housing | $4,798,703 | HUD | 16 affordable rental units |
Recurring Federal Relationships
- BIA P.L. 93-638 Self-Determination contracts — Social Services, Higher Education
- IHS Self-Governance Compact — Nimiipuu Health, two clinics since 2002
- BPA fish hatchery operations — Dworshak NFH lead management
- HHS CCDF, TANF, LIHEAP programs
- EPA CWA Section 106 water quality monitoring
Where Oahe Could Help Spend Better
- The $46M in CPRG grants requires tracking 650 home energy audits, 380,000 tree plantings, 72 EV chargers — data infrastructure for compliance
- New Department of Planning & Economic Development (est. 2025) is building institutional capacity for grants management
- Nimiipuu Energy scaling from 30 to 150 employees — workforce data management need
- 18 UST facilities and active Brownfields sites require environmental monitoring/reporting infrastructure
Technology Gaps
What They Have
- Mature IT: self-hosted DNS, LibreNMS monitoring, M365 + Proofpoint, multi-cloud
- In-house IT team with networking expertise
- Department-level web autonomy (fisheries on AWS, wildlife on Squarespace, GIS on-prem)
- Internal apps: CDMS, flex (scheduling/HR), enterprise (ERP?), webland (land management), support (help desk)
What They're Missing
- No .gov domain — operating on .org diminishes authority. CISA offers free .gov for tribes.
- Server disclosure — PHP 8.2.30 and PleskLin exposed in headers
- No unified web presence — 8+ domains across different platforms
- Content access control — sensitive docs publicly indexed through predictable WordPress paths
- Data sovereignty tooling — environmental monitoring, financial data, and legal data in silos with no visible unified platform
Oahe Fit
The Tribe has IT infrastructure but may lack the data integration layer. Environmental monitoring, grant compliance, and economic development each generate data in silos. A data platform or consulting engagement to unify monitoring/reporting across programs could position well.
Decision Makers
| Name | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Shannon F. Wheeler | Chairman, NPTEC | Primary public voice; testified before Congress 2025; term through 2028 |
| Ashton Picard | Vice-Chairman, NPTEC | Term expires 2026; faced primary challenger |
| Rachel P. Edwards | Secretary, NPTEC | Term expires 2026; faced primary challenger |
| Anthony Johnson | Interim Mgr, Planning & Econ Dev | Hired June 2025 — key entry point for data/consulting conversations |
| Jesse Leighton | NPTEC Member | Newly elected 2025 |
| Aaron Gould | NPTEC Member | Newly elected 2025 |
Key decision points: NPTEC meets 2nd Tuesday (8am-4:30pm) and 4th Tuesday (9am-12pm) monthly. Three seats contested in May 7, 2026 general election — leadership may shift.
Pain Points
- Federal funding cuts — Trump admin cut Kooskia hatchery 33% and Mitchell Act 16%. Chairman Wheeler warned Congress of "financial crisis." Active, visible pain point.
- Columbia Basin Agreement withdrawal — Trump withdrew June 2025, threatening salmon recovery framework. Active litigation and congressional testimony.
- Disaster vulnerability — Two FEMA declarations + two FMAGs + tribal disaster declaration in 2 years. Wildfire, flooding, straight-line winds. Infrastructure resilience concern.
- Environmental contamination — 114-acre asbestos site; 18 UST facilities; active Brownfields program. Ongoing monitoring and remediation burden.
- Scaling new programs — Nimiipuu Energy 30→150 employees; new economic development department; $46M in climate grants to implement. Data management and compliance reporting at new scale.
- VAWA implementation — Special Tribal Criminal Jurisdiction began October 2024. Requires court capacity, case management, data systems.
Competitive Landscape
Who Else Contracts With Them
- Engineering consultant RFP posted April 2025 for Nimiipuu Energy — they're looking for vendors now
- Grant writing services RFP posted October 2025 — they need grant support capacity
- USFS partnership on O'Hara Bridge maintenance
- BPA relationship for hatchery operations is deep and ongoing
Regional Peers
- Coeur d'Alene Tribe (Idaho) — has .gov domain, more consolidated web presence
- Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation (Oregon) — treaty partner in salmon
- Yakama Nation (Washington) — treaty partner
- Colville Tribes (Washington) — active in similar federal programs
Competitive Position
- The Tribe self-manages significant IT in-house (LibreNMS, self-hosted DNS)
- Plesk for web hosting suggests openness to managed services vs. fully in-house
- Grant writing RFP indicates they're open to external consultants for capacity
Timing Opportunities
| Window | Opportunity | Why Now |
|---|---|---|
| NOW | New department staffing | Dept of Planning & Econ Dev established June 2025 with Anthony Johnson — still defining toolset |
| Next 6 months | CPRG implementation ramp | $46M in EPA grants requires compliance data infrastructure for 650 audits, 380K trees, 72 EV chargers |
| After May 7 | Post-election stabilization | Three NPTEC seats contested; new members will champion initiatives. Wait for results. |
| Ongoing | Hatchery funding crisis | Need to demonstrate program value through data — monitoring metrics, species recovery, economic impact |
| 2026 | FEMA disaster recovery | DR-4878 declared April 11, 2026 — PA and HMGP funding flowing now; recovery needs data |
| 2027 | HUD IHBG nearing completion | $21.5M grant 66% complete — needs outcome reporting and renewal positioning |
Recommended Approach
The Nez Perce Tribe is a sophisticated, well-resourced tribal government with strong IT capacity and deep federal engagement — they are not a basic-needs prospect. The entry point is not "you need a website" or "you need email." It's:
"You have $46M in climate grants to implement, a new economic development department to equip, and 10+ federal reporting relationships to manage. Do your data systems connect?"
Position Oahe as a data integration and compliance reporting partner, not a general IT vendor. Lead with the Planning & Economic Development department (Anthony Johnson) as the initial contact — he's new, building a team, and likely needs tools.
The Nimiipuu Energy scale-up (30→150 employees) and CPRG implementation are the highest-value use cases. Avoid approaching NPTEC directly until after the May 7 election stabilizes.
The Tribe values sovereignty, self-governance, and doing things in-house. Frame any engagement as capacity-building that makes their internal team more effective, not as outsourcing.