2A | WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 2022 | APPEAL TRIBUNE Lake Continued from Page 1A that was before the Labor Day Fires im- pacted the town. For now, with the rain still falling the Corps expects a good year, but they’ve started dumping water from the lake more quickly to get the reservoir back down to 1,558.5 feet. If May and June prove exceptionally dry, that could have an impact on the area’s recreation. “We want to limit the number of days that we’re above that 1,558 mark,” Gaylord said. Zach Urness has been an outdoors reporter in Oregon for 15 years and is host of the Explore Oregon Podcast. To support his work, subscribe to the Statesman Journal. Urness is the au- thor of “Best Hikes with Kids: Oregon” and “Hiking Southern Oregon.” He can be reached at zurness@StatesmanJournal.com or (503) 399-6801. Find him on Twitter at @ZachsORoutdoors. Address: P.O. Box 13009, Salem, OR 97309 Phone: 503-399-6773 Fax: 503-399-6706 Email: sanews@salem.gannett.com Web site: www.SilvertonAppeal.com Staff News Director Don Currie 503-399-6655 dcurrie@statesmanjournal.com Advertising Westsmb@gannett.com Deadlines Shutoff Continued from Page 1A person for the utility commission, said. Asked what type of data that was, Young said several utilities have mete- orologists on staff. “They can better determine how that weather issue or incident is going to impact their system because they know their system the best,” Young said. The commission calls power shut- offs a tool “of last resort” because shut- ting off power can have wide-ranging effects. Hospitals and nursing homes Heat Continued from Page 1A Heat rules Last summer, Oregon experienced historically-high temperatures. More than 100 people statewide, in- cluding more than a dozen in Marion County, died during a late June heat- wave when temperatures in Salem reached a record 117 degrees. Sebastian Francisco Perez, a nursery worker who had recently arrived from Guatemala, died on a 104-degree day at Ernst Nursery and Farms. Advocates had for months prior called for the state to establish emer- gency heat rules to protect farmworkers and other outdoor workers. OSHA re- leased temporary heat rules in July, af- ter the June heatwave. A list provided to the Statesman Journal of the heat-related complaints OSHA received from mid-June to the end of July shows 19 of the 219 com- plaints were from agricultural or pro- cessing sites. One alleged a Yamhill County nurs- ery denied workers the ability to leave work early on a hot day. Another alleged a Mid-Valley nursery was not providing workers water in triple-digit temper- Legacy rely on power for medical equipment, and people on well water use electric pumps. Temporary rules around shutoffs were approved for last year’s fire sea- son but these new rules are permanent. The commission doesn’t regulate co-ops owned by customers, like Salem Electric, so these new rules about how and when the utilities have to publicize shutoffs don’t apply to them. The investor-owned utilities also have to submit plans to the commission for dealing with the risks of fire every year. The commission approved the 2022 plans last month. News Tips The Appeal Tribune encourages suggestions for local stories. Email the newsroom, submit letters to the editor and send announcements to sanews@salem.gannett.com or call 503-399-6773. Missed Delivery? Call: 800-452-2511 Hours: until 7 p.m. Wednesdays; until 3 p.m. other weekdays To Subscribe Call: 800-452-2511 $21 per year for home delivery $22 per year for motor delivery $30.10 per year mail delivery in Oregon $38.13 per year mail delivery outside Oregon Main Statesman Journal publication Suggested monthly rates: Monday-Sunday: $22, $20 with EZ Pay Monday-Saturday: $17.50, $16 with EZ Pay Wednesday-Sunday: $18, $16 with EZ Pay Monday-Friday: $17.50, $16 with EZ Pay Sunday and Wednesday: $14, $12 with EZ Pay Sunday only: $14, $12 with EZ Pay To report delivery problems or subscribe, call 800-452-2511 To Place an Ad Published every Wednesday by the Statesman Journal, P.O. Box 13009, Salem, OR 97309. USPS 469-860, Postmaster: Send address changes to Appeal Tribune, P.O. Box 13009, Salem, OR 97309. PERIODICALS POSTAGE PAID: Salem, OR and additional offices. Send letters to the editor and news releases to sanews@salem.gannett.com. atures. OSHA’s permanent heat rules say when the heat index passes 80 degrees, employees must establish and maintain one or more shaded areas that are avail- able to outdoor workers nd supply work- ers with at least 32 oz. of cool or cold drinking water per hour. When the heat index reaches 90 de- grees, employers must: h Monitor workers for signs of heat illness, including regular communica- tion with employees working alone or creating a mandatory buddy system. h Designate and equip one or more employee at each worksite to call for medics. h Develop a written heat rest break schedule that provides a minimum 10- minute break every two hours when temperatures reach 90 degrees and a 15- minute break every hour when temper- atures reach 100. h Develop training on heat illness prevention, including how workers can recognize symptoms of dehydration and how to respond to others who may be experiencing heat-related illnesses. Wildfire smoke rules Thousands of agricultural workers in the Mid-Valley worked in smoky condi- tions during 2020’s Labor Day fires. Farmworker advocates reported hearing tutions. Ongoing quest for answers Continued from Page 1A Boarding School Initiative, a series of examinations into the generational im- pact of 408 federal boarding schools and more than 1,000 religious and pri- vately run schools upon Native peoples, and how to address those impacts. Deborah Parker, the CEO of the Na- tional Native American Boarding School Healing Coalition, spoke during an of- ten-tearful news conference outlining the report’s release and next steps. “Our children had names,” Parker said. “Our children had homes. They had families. They had their languages, their regalia, their prayers and reli- gions.” But as Parker, a member of the Tula- lip Tribes, pointed out, a system of fed- eral, private and religious-run boarding schools over more than 150 years did its best to wipe out thousands of years of Native languages, cultures and family ties. The damage done to these children, and to the generations that followed, was immense, she said. The report was commissioned by Haaland in 2021 following the discovery of hundreds of unmarked graves of chil- dren in Canadian residential schools. Like the U.S. schools, the Canadian resi- dential school system sought to wipe out Native cultures, languages and tra- ditions, and assimilate Indigenous chil- dren. Just as the U.S. government’s failure to consult with and respect the prac- tices of Indigenous peoples’ land stew- ardship may have led to the environ- mental tragedies of the 20th and 21st centuries, Haaland said, federal policies moved to exterminate, eradicate and as- similate Native Americans, Alaska Na- tives and Native Hawaiians. “The languages, cultures, religions, traditional practices and even the histo- ry of Native communities was targeted for destruction,” Haaland, a member of the Laguna Pueblo, said. “Nowhere is that clearer than in the legacy of federal Indian boarding schools.” Haaland said her own grandparents were taken from their parents and placed in boarding school at age 8. They joined tens of thousands of other Indig- enous children as young as 4 who were forced into boarding schools run by the Interior Department and religious insti- News: 4 p.m. Thursday Letters: 4 p.m. Thursday Obituaries: 11 a.m. Friday Display Advertising: 4 p.m. Wednesday Legals: 3 p.m. Wednesday Classifieds: 4 p.m. Friday Classifieds: call 503-399-6789 Retail: call 503-399-6602 Legal: call 503-399-6789 Oregon Gov. Kate Bown called the re- port a “somber reminder” of the “na- tion’s legacy of colonialism, violence and intergenerational trauma against Indigenous and tribal students and their families” in a tweet. “We must recommit ourselves to building a just and equitable country, to ensure that our Indigenous communi- ties are able to grow & heal from these terrible acts,” Brown added. Chemawa Indian School was one of the 408 federal schools across 37 states that operated between 1819 to 1969 iden- tified in the Department of Interior’s in- vestigation. The official list of Federal Indian boarding schools lists nine schools in Oregon: h Grand Ronde Boarding School. h Kate Drexel Industrial Boarding School. h Klamath Agency Boarding School. h Siletz Boarding School, Simnasho Boarding and Day School. h Umatilla Boarding and Day School. h Warm Springs Boarding and Day School. h Yainax Indian Boarding School. Families of former Chemawa Indian School students have long called for an- swers. They spoke to the Statesman Journal last year about their desire to discover precisely what happened to their ances- tors and their hope for a public apology for the trauma endured. An emotional great-niece of Tillie Franklin recounted her experience dis- covering Franklin’s burial site near the entrance of Chemawa’s cemetery. Franklin’s siblings were put into differ- ent off-reservation boarding schools af- ter their family home burned down in 1916. “I can still hear my grandmother say to me that she never saw Tillie again,” Medina said. It took decades for her to find out Franklin had been sent to Chemawa. School records identified Franklin’s family as unknown. Advocates organized a run last year to raise awareness for unidentified chil- dren buried at Chemawa. The school’s cemetery was established in 1886, a year after the school was moved from Forest Grove to its current location. SuAnn Reddick, a former volunteer from countless people describing head- aches, nausea, loss of appetite and oth- er smoke-related symptoms, as well as pressure to continue working in danger- ous conditions. OSHA issued guidance, but no rules, during the Labor Day fires. Air quality in Salem during wildfires in 2020 topped 400 on the air quality in- dex (AQI) scale, and in Bend topped 500. Levels over 100 are considered un- healthy. Members of sensitive groups may experience more serious health ef- fects when the AQI is over 151. Levels over 300 are considered hazardous, ac- cording to the U.S. Environmental Pro- tection Agency’s air quality index. A report from the Oregon Depart- ment of Environmental Quality high- lighted that there’s been an increase in the number of days that wildfire smoke creates unhealthy air conditions for sensitive groups. Climate change also is expected to make wildfires more frequent and intense. OSHA established temporary smoke rules last year that required employers to train employees on wildfire smoke hazards. Similarly, the permanent rules re- quire employers whose workers are ex- posed to wildfire smoke to take precau- tions when the ambient air concentra- tion for fine particulate matter is at a PM2.5 or an AQI of 101. A PM2.5 are solid particles and liquid droplets suspended in air, known as fine particulate matter, with an aerodynam- ic diameter of 2.5 micrometers or small- er and measured in micrograms per cu- bic meter. Employers must: h Monitor wildfire smoke when em- ployees are exposed to an air concentra- tion of 2.5 particulate matter above a 101 AQI. h Provide information and training to employees on addressing wildfire smoke, including symptoms of expo- sure and the chronic effects of exposure. h Train workers on the importance of using a filtering facepiece respirator and requiring employers to make them readily accessible to workers for no charge. h Communicate wildfire smoke in- formation to employees, such as changes in air quality and health symp- toms that may result from exposure to smoke. Former Statesman Journal and Re- port for America reporter Dora Totoian contributed to this story. Virginia Barreda is the breaking news and public safety reporter for the Statesman Journal. She can be reached at 503-399-6657 or at vbarreda@states- manjournal.com. Follow her on Twitter at @vbarreda2 historian for Chemawa, conducted re- search for 25 years to compile a list of names of those buried at the cemetery. Her research was published last year in partnership with Eva Guggemos, an ar- chivist and associate professor at Pacif- ic University. According to the website: h At least 270 students died in the custody of the schools at Forest Grove and Chemawa between 1880 and 1945. h 175 of those children were buried in the school cemetery. h The remains of approximately 40 students were returned home near the time of their deaths. h The locations of approximately 50 student remains are unaccounted for. Maps indicate there could be up to 40 plots in the cemetery that contain re- mains of unidentified students or staff. Reddick said she had reached out to the Bureau of Indian Affairs and Depart- ment of Interior to offer her research but neither she nor Guggemos received any inquiries from the DOI about their work in publishing the new website with deaths at Chemawa. tices and relatives,” Newland, an Ojibwe and a citizen of the Bay Mills Indian Community, said. “There’s not a single American Indi- an, Alaska Native or Native Hawaiian in this country whose life hasn’t been af- fected by these schools. We haven’t be- gun to explain the scope of this policy era until now.” Haaland and Parker referenced a re- cent study by researcher Ursula Run- ning Bear that found adults who attend- ed boarding schools now suffer from poor physical health. They also said Na- tive people have the highest rates of sui- cides, children in foster homes and in the criminal health system. Jim LaBelle Sr., an Inupiaq from Alaska and vice-chair of the Native American Boarding School Healing Co- alition, said Alaska Natives are 18% of the state’s total population, yet repre- sent 40% of people in the state’s crimi- nal justice system. Effort to locate graves, acknowledge trauma The federal report stipulates that due to missing records, the exact numbers may never be known, but Haaland said one goal of the new initiative is to enu- merate them as fully as possible. Many of these children never made it home. The report seeks to locate those children and bring them home. To date, the Interior Department and its partner, the Native American Board- ing School Healing Coalition, has identi- fied 53 burial sites, both marked and un- marked, and hopes to locate all of them. The department will not make public the specific locations of the iden- tified burial sites to protect them against grave-robbing, vandalism and other disturbances, Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs Bryan Newland said during the news conference. Another legacy of these schools was the intergenerational trauma inflicted on children, families and communities. Newland said the impacts of the board- ing schools have left lasting scars on In- digenous peoples. “That impact continues to influence the lives of countless families from the break up of families and tribal nations to the loss of languages and cultural prac- Report sets out next steps Newland and Haaland said an all-of- government approach will be necessary to rebuild the bonds within Native com- munities that the boarding school sys- tem set out to break. Haaland added that President Joe Biden supports the initiative. “We have begun working through the White House Council of Native Ameri- can Affairs on the path ahead to pre- serve tribal languages, invest in survi- vor-focused services, and honor our trust obligations to Indigenous commu- nities,” Haaland said. The report identifies the next steps that will be taken in a second volume, aided by a new $7 million investment from Congress through fiscal year 2022. In addition to locating the remaining burial sites, the agency will determine an approximate amount of federal fund- ing directed to support boarding schools, produce a list of students brought to the schools over the years, including tribal affiliations, from exist- ing records and a deeper investigation into the impacts of the schools on Indig- enous communities today. On Thursday, the Indigenous Peoples Subcommittee of the House Natural Re- sources Committee will hold the first hearing on a bill to establish a truth and healing commission on Indian boarding See LEGACY, Page 3A