OR COLL E 75 ,C68 v. 11 no. 26 Dec 19, 1906 ,CU"'' ifarm Springs News U.S. Potttgt Bulk Rat Permit No. 2 Warm Springs, OR 97701 Address Correction Requested 25c A SipnllyaQy TrynnncBaD a - VOL 11 NO. 26 WARM SPRINGS, OREGON 97761 DECEMBER 19, 1986 ' A - ' nnn l mm' 1 hi L ii) ? r Committees appointed by Council Tribal Council, on November 1 7, appointed tribal committee mem bers. Following are the appoint ments. - Fish and Wildlife-Bernice Mit chell, Claude Smith, Sr., Mickey Brunoe, Delbert Frank, Sr. and ; Eugene Greene, Sr., and Jewell Van Pelt is secretary. Health and Welfare Janice Clements, Rita Squiemphen, Karen Wallulatum and Mary Ann Mea nus. Rowena Begay is secretary. Education Liz Tewee, Evaline Patt, Irene Towe and Ellen John son. Jewell Van Pelt is secretary. Range, Irrigation and Agricul ture Buford Johnson, Jr., Wilson Wewa, Sr., Perry Greene, Vincent Wallulatum and Rita Squiemphen. Nadine Calica is secretary. Land Use Alfred Smith, Jr.,. Dennis Starr, Warren Clements, Cyrus Katchia and Vernon Henry. Paula Moses serves as secretary. Water Control Alvin Smith, Elmer Scott, Jr., and Pierson Mit chell. Nadine Calica is secretary. Timber Max Jackson, Ellison David, Sr., Arthur Mitchell and Delton Switzler. Paula Moses is secretary. MOIHS Bernice Mitchell, Lil lic Heath, Warren Clements, Emily Waheneka, Betty Lou Lucio, Del bert Frank, Sr., Janice Clements, Donald Kerr, Donna Behrend and James Southern. Beulah Wahpat serves as secretary.' Culture and Heritage Orin John son, Karen Wallulatum, Madeline Mclnturff, Delbert Frank, Sr., Ver bena Greene and Gladys Thomp son. Rowena Beeav is secretary. Committee chairmen will be selected at a later date. Annual cut topic of discussion Christmas ballet A traditional Christmas ballet, the Nutcracker suite, will be performed at Bend High, December 20 at 2.-00 and 7M p.m. Sunmiet Minnick is one of the dancers from the Central Oregon School of Ballet who will be performing. "If the emphasis changes and the priority for other resources is raised the growth rate would be affected." In a presentation to Tribal Coucil December IS regarding the annual allowable cut Warm Springs Bureau of Indian Affairs forest manager Bob Harned stressed the need for foresters to know what the Tribe (wants in the way of both,timber nAtirttAn an4 timkar tiatict i Attention to the future of the ,Warm Springs timber resource based on two concerns in particular prompted Tribal Council to meet with BIA agency and area fore sters. The first involves the feelings expressed by many tribal members that resources other than timber are also important including cultu ral and archaeological sites, fish and wildlife and simple visual beauty. The other issue related to the economy of the reservation through Warm Springs Forest Products Industries. Equipment at the mill is proving inefficient in handling small log sizes that are brought for mil ling. An investment in a small log facility has been proposed to Tri bal Council. The allowable annual cut for Warm Springs was figured in the 1982 10-year Forest Management Plan. The cut was calculated math- matically by the Austrian formula. It included old growth along with second growth timber stands. The Forest Management Plan also gave consideration to other resources with allocations made for conditional use areas and recrea tional areas as well as guarantees for both water and visual quality. Tribal Council adopted this alter native "with the stipulation that the special concerns of the Natural Resources Department be taken into consideration." Since then some commercial acres have been put into conditional use status. "It has had an impacfon the allowable annual cutv and the amount of timber to be cut,'' says BIA Port land area forester George Smith. In determining the allowable an nual cut the forestry department operated under the premise that timber production is a priority and will be maximized. The forest will be operated as a tree farm for grea test productivity. The assumptions on which the allowable annual cuts are based are eight. ,, 1 . The total commercial forest, minus the Conditional Use Areas, would have the production of timber or fiber maximized. This original assumption was modified in the Forest Management Plan particu larly by the Streamside Manage ment Plan to protect the Tribe's water, fisheries, game and aesthetic resources. 2. The evenflow of timber from the Warm Springs Block is a Tribal goal. 3. The cut on the McQuinn Strip was calculated for a ten year period so that the cut could be varied by year to optimize income to the tribes. 4. The allowable annual cut is a maximum figure. Less volume could EDITH useful in teaching fire safety A smoke detector buzzes an alarm, a child in bed quickly crawls to the bedroom door, feels the door to make sure it isn't warm, opens the door and crawls in the hallway. The child then closes the bedroom door, continues to crawl down the hallway to the exit door and feels the second door which is warm. If the child opens the door, smoke will flood the hall and he will see WEATHER DEC. HI LOW 1 50 25 2 38 24 3 39 33 4 32 28 5 36 26 6 38 32 7 45 30 S 34 27 9 36 26 10 36 17 11 27 24 12 29 25 13 31 26 14 49 26 15 31 23 16 28 27 flames. The only safe way out is through a window in the hall. The child crawls back to the window and jumps out into the arms of a firefighter. At the Warm Springs Elemen tary School children went through that experience with the aid of the Warm Springs Fire and Safety department December 14, 15 and 16. The flames were simulated with flashing lights and the smoke was produced by a machine. The expe rience was made possible with the use of EDITH, Exit Drill In The Home. EDITH is a program which teaches children via a video and a movie, how to correctly exit a home during a fire. Following the Calendars available ' Each year the Spilyay Tymoo puts together an arrangement of old photographs depicting the lives of various Indian people of Warm Springs. During each month on the calendar, special events, tribal holi days and deadlines for articles to be placed in Spilyay is listed. Pat Leno-Baker t-l Priscilla Squiemphen gathered the material and information for the calendars. The calendars -.--r priced at $2.00 and can be pur. :v.sed at the office. visual matter a child is taken to a specially designed mobile unit con sisting of a hallway and a bedroom. Personnel from the Warm Springs Fire and Safety department were in the trailer with the children during the drill and one was at the window. The drill gives the child actual practical experience in a home fire drill. As the child prepares to enter the trailer a firefighter ask the child's name, if fire drills are prac ticed at home and what type of. windows are at his home-vertical or horizontal. The information is than passed on to personnel in the trailer. The specially constructed trailer is equipped with a smoke detector, smoke generator, exhaust fan and simulated fire. It was built with donations from various organiza tion in Central Oregon. The trailer is used at schools but has been used at shopping malls to give adults and children of all ages experience in a home fire drill. From information collected from children at the Warm Springs school, it is estimated that nearly 50 per cent of their families do practice exit fire drills in the home. Accord ing to one of the firefighters, the children, for the most part, went through the drill with ease. There were some children who had been through a real home fire and the experience was realistic enough that they showed a real urgency to get out of the trailer. Return elk, deer tags Notice The hunting season on the reser vation is over for 1986. Deer sea son ended October 3 1, bear and elk season both ended November 30. The tribal Natural Resources depart ment would like all State Ceded and Reservation deer and elk tags returned to their office located behind the Old Administration building. The only hunting season open at this time is the Upland Bird Sea son, it opened September I and will close December 31. The bag limit by species is as follows: grouse three per day; quail-ten per day; pheasant-two per season, roosters only, chukars-ten per day, turkey one per month. The bird season on the reservation is for tribal enrolled FT members only. If you have any questions con cerning the hunting seasons con tact the Natural Resources depart ment at 553-1 161 . ext. 233 or 234. The Upland Bird population is healthy where there is good habitat and the weather conditions have made major influence on the bird populations. The hunting impact on the population is generally so small that it warrants little attention. All migratory birds and water fowl; geese, ducks and doves are classified as migratory birds which makes them governed by the migra tory bird act. Federal hunting regu lations should be followed concern ing the above named birds. To Tribal Members of the Con federated Tribes of Warm Springs. Farmer's Home Administration's Home Preservation Grant "State ment of Activities is available for review at the following locations: The Warm Springs Planning office or the Tribal Housing Department office located in the main Administra tion Building, in Warm Springs, Oregon. be cut and not significantly alter the long range return from the Tri bal Forest resource. 5. The future forest would look like a tree farm being composed of young fast growing trees. The old growth forest, except in Conditional Use Areas, would be gone. 6. Tribal Council could add to subtract areas from the commer- ' ciaf forest base to meet changing Tribal demands and or changing forest technology. 7. In order to supply an evenflow of logs to Warm Springs Forest Products Industries the cut from the Warm Springs Block was set on a yearly basis. There is no reason that this cut could not, be varied to take advantage of market conditions. 8. The cut is based on the assump tion that the present intensive forest management activities in the form of thinning, planting, site prepara tion, etc. will continue at the pres ent rate. It was emphasized by Harned and other attending forest manag ers that any consideration for other resources must be indicated by Tribal Council. Removing commercial forest acreage from production to allow buffer strips along streams or for protection of other resources redu ces the number of acres available for logging operations. This, accom panied with the harvest of trees with a smaller diameter, could have an effect on the Warm Springs economy. A chart presented to Tribal Council by Presale Officer Jim Akerson indicated that the average 16-foot tree diameter in 1995 will be 9 inches. In 1940 it was 20 inches. Logs as small as 6 inchs can be commercially utilized at this time, explained Akerson. George Smith stated, "If the forest is to be managed for timber production we will end up with smaller logs." With this in mind "there may be a need to reconsider the facilities. The resource is changing and needs to be treated as such," emphasized Harned. Other reservations and communities have had to make this change. If it is determined that a small log facility is feasible, flexibility is important, says 1 nbal Consultant Ken Smith. To that George Smith added, "You dont want to stray too far from what industry is doing as far as log size." Smith con tinued. "You must have the maxi mum efficienty in handling the product to capture the profit. You will lose if the facility doesnt han dle the log efficiently." To contribute to log production, experimental tree stands on the Continued on page 2 Holiday events calendar December 19 December 22 Buff Elementary Christmas program, 6th grade, 2:00 p.m. in gym. W.S. Community Christmas Ray 7:00 p.m. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON LIBRARY Received on: 12-23-Sb ewssinyy Spilyay tyrooo. a save no