SILETZ NEWS Delores Pigsley, Tribal Chairman Mike Kennedy, Interim General Manager and Editor-in-Chief Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians Vol. 49, No. 4 Presorted First-Class Mail U.S. Postage Paid - Permit No. 178 Salem, OR Siletz News Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians P.O. Box 549 Siletz, OR 97380-0549 April 2021 ‘Moccasin Telegraph’ finds new life as source of vaccine information for Tribes Once leery of federal health initiatives, Native Americans embrace COVID-19 vaccines as way to protect communi- ties and families By Brian Bull, Underscore.news; origi- nally posted March 10, 2021 While the U.S. as a whole is just find- ing its stride administering the COVID- 19 vaccine to its citizens, many Native American Tribes – including the Confed- Madam Secretary Deb Haaland is confirmed as the coun- try’s Secretary of the Interior, blazing a trail as the first Native American to ever lead a Cabinet agency By Aliyah Chavez, Indian Country Today; originally posted March 15, 2021 A fierce Indigenous woman is now the caretaker of the nation’s public lands and waters for the first time in U.S. history. Deb Haaland was confirmed as the nation’s 54 th Secretary of the Interior in a 51-40 vote Monday, making her the first Native American to lead a Cabinet agency. Republican Sens. Susan Collins, Lindsey Graham, Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan broke from party lines to vote to confirm Haaland, a notable choice given other Republican senators publicly saying she was not the right candidate. It is not known when Haaland will be sworn into office. But when she is, Haaland will become the highest ranked Indigenous person in an executive office across the country. Incoming Interior Secretary Haaland stands eighth in line to the presidency. She is also only the third woman to serve in the position – a low number in stark com- parison to the 50 men who have served – an accomplishment fitting for March’s National Women’s History Month. Haaland is a citizen of Laguna Pueblo and has ties to Jemez Pueblo through her grandfather, which she frequently cites. She spent her career in New Mexico as a former small business owner, organizer and Tribal administrator before running for Congress. In November, Haaland was re-elected for a second term in Congress represent- ing New Mexico’s 1 st Congressional Dis- trict in the U.S. House of Representatives. In 2018, she made history as one of the first two Native women elected to Congress. Now Haaland will be at the helm of the Interior, a sprawling government agency in charge of 70,000 employees, one-fifth of the nation’s land and key offices in natural resources. The agency also oversees national parks and wildlife refuges, and works with endangered spe- cies conservation. A key role of the Interior’s duty is to respectfully manage the government’s federal trust responsibilities promised to See Haaland on page 8 erated Tribes of Siletz Indians – are on a mean streak. According to Cherity Bloom-Miller, the Tribe’s clinical services director, CTSI has vaccinated roughly one-quarter of the 5,547 enrolled members, and about one- third of those who live in Oregon. As of Friday, the Tribal government had given the Moderna vaccine to 3,000 people 18 and over, members and otherwise. Dee Pigsley, chairwoman of the Con- federated Tribes of Siletz Indians, says she was concerned the initial vaccine rollout was moving too slowly. But by late Janu- ary, they had enough Moderna vaccine allocated from the state for 300 people. “So we’ve been setting up appoint- ments for tribal members,” Pigsley con- tinues, noting that the Tribe was due to get another 100 doses the following week. “We’ve vaccinated the clinic staff, our essential staff, elders. So we’re working down that priority list.” The CTSI is now looking to inoculate casino workers over the next three weeks. The Chinook Winds Casino Resort has just reopened, boding well for one of the Tribe’s biggest sources of revenue. See Vaccine on page 11 Tribe helps provide much-needed housing in Lincoln City Above: Reggie Butler Sr. cuts the rib- bon at new workforce housing units. Tribal staff and council members attending incuded (l to r) Brett Lane, Isaac DeAnda Jr., Sami Jo Difuntorum, Lillie Butler, Lisa Norton, Loraine Butler, Angela Ramirez, Delores Pigsley, Selene Rilatos, Darlene and Bill Stotts of Stotts Construction Company, Rob Smith and Tracy Bailey. Photo above by Diane Rodriquez; photo below by Andy Taylor Right: Sixteen manufactured housing units are ready for occupancy in early March for victims of the Echo Moun- tain Complex fire. This property is near the Logan Road RV Park and was leased by the Siletz Tribe to FEMA, the first FEMA housing to be located on Tribal land. The American Rescue Plan and Native Communities From the Democratic National Commit- tee; dnc.org Native Americans face persistent and systemic inequities and COVID-19 has exacted an especially high toll in Indian Country. People living on reservations are four times more likely to have COVID-19 and American Indians and Alaska Natives are nearly twice as likely to die from COVID-19 than white Americans. Native American families and small businesses also face severe economic chal- lenges associated with the pandemic. And the loss of Native elders threatens the sacred preservation of language, tradition and cul- ture. Tribal governments and Native com- munities urgently need additional support and assistance from the federal government. The American Rescue Plan will change the course of the pandemic in Indian Coun- try, deliver immediate relief for hard-hit Native American families and Tribal busi- nesses, and build a bridge toward economic recovery and resilience for Tribal Nations. These investments build on actions President Biden has taken in his first weeks in office to rebuild the nation-to- nation relationship, including signing a Presidential Memorandum that directs the whole of federal government to rein- vigorate formal consultation with Tribal nations, expanding access to the Strategic National Stockpile for Native communi- ties and expanding FEMA assistance for See Rescue on page 18