For our Jackson School of International Studies capstone class, Task Force, we created a strategic communications plan tied with a digital story to create a social media campaign. The goal of this campaign is to communicate Tribal Treaty Rights between tribal and non-tribal millennials in the Puget Sound area. The Treaty Rights target issues in the Puget Sound caused by climate change, including decreasing salmon populations and managing non-tribal fishing rights around the region. Most millennials are unaware of these rights, or these issues in general, despite living in the Puget Sound. Our research, primarily self-hosted surveys and focus groups, show a trend in millennials to be sensitive to cultural diversity and climate change acceptance, making them a prime demographic for a marketing campaign. After data collection, we created social media groups, including Facebook, Instagram, and a digital story for potential use in the Tulalip Tribes website. We worked closely with the Tulalip Tribes in Marysville, and visited their location, supervised by Tulalip Tribes' Public Affairs Coordinator Francesca Hillery. UW campus resources will be invaluable in our pursuits; we will contact the school newspaper "The Daily", as well as collaborate with various departments, such as the Intellectual House, to spread awareness and to set up relevant lectures. Millennials are apt to be interested in this topic, therefore, one of our main campaign goals is to create the knowledge in the first place. If successful, our social media campaign will grow towards increasing implementaion on campus and for the tribes themselves. Overall, this can lead to future, independent student involvement and efforts to make a change for themselves, for the tribes, and for all in the Salish Sea region.