3A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 2018 Oregon may join national popular vote compact By PARIS ACHEN Capital Bureau SALEM — A bill intro- duced in the Legislature Monday would enlist Oregon in the National Popular Vote Compact contingent on voter approval in November. By joining the compact, states agree to cast their Elec- toral College votes only for presidential candidates who win the national popular vote. A national popular vote would have changed the out- come of the 2016 general election, which put President Donald Trump in office. Since 2009, state Sen- ate President Peter Court- ney has blocked similar pro- posals four times in Oregon. Last year, the Salem Demo- crat said he would support a bill to join the compact, only if the decision was endorsed by voters. “I would be open to … sending the question to the ballot,” Courtney said in May. “If you believe in the popular vote, then let the popular vote decide the issue.” This year’s bill, filed by the Senate Rules Commit- tee, meets that condition: It requires voters to approve or reject a referendum to enact the national popular vote. Ten states — including Washington and California — and the District of Columbia have already signed the com- pact. They represent 30.7 per- cent of electoral votes. The agreement takes effect when enough states have joined to cumulatively make up a majority of the electoral votes. The popular vote move- ment took on new life after Trump won election by a 77-vote margin in the Elec- toral College, but lost the popular vote to Hillary Clin- ton by almost 3 million votes. Rep. Bill Post, R-Keizer, said he opposes the bill. Any attempt to obligate votes to the national popular vote would likely face a challenge in court and be overturned. “Are you kidding? No, it is unconstitutional,” Post said. University of Washington groups work to keep indigenous languages alive Informal classes are a labor of love for volunteers By KATHERINE LONG Seattle Times Westport Winery New site of the Westport Winery in Seaside. Westport Winery gets OK for new tasting room Venue to open in Seaside By R.J. MARX The Daily Astorian SEASIDE — Westport Winery moved ahead with a new retail location in the Salmonberry Square build- ing Monday night. A winery sales license approved by City Council allows direct sales of beer and wine to consumers. “We’ve had a commit- ment to not only the qual- ity of our products, but also responsibility to our pub- lic and employees as well,” winemaker and co-owner Dana Roberts said in addressing the council. “We’re incredibly excited to be here.” The winery, based in Aberdeen, Washington, launched in 2008. Its success led to a satellite tasting room in Cannon Beach, which closed earlier this month. The Seaside venture brought co-owners Blain and Kim Roberts out of retirement after the sale of a commercial building in Hawaii, Kim Roberts said before the meeting. “It all kind of coalesced in Sea- side. We looked in Cannon Beach but couldn’t find any- thing affordable there. We looked in Seaside and found 810 Broadway. It provided us greater visibility, greater space and parking — the gold standard of retail.” Seaside’s tourism indus- try provided a draw, she added. “We’re a year-round business and we really want to be involved in a year- round community.” The location will repli- cate the Washington state tasting room, featuring fine wines, a line of oils and vinegars and gourmet food items. The winery will occupy one portion of the building. Three other shops will be available for rent. A parking lot on Oceanway is also owned by the winery. The two-story, 10,500-square foot Salm- onberry Square retail and office building, transferred this month for $868,000, was constructed in 1965 and renovated in 2006, accord- ing to county records. Two full-time employees from the Cannon Beach tast- ing room, Brian Hammock and Ben Hunter, will con- tinue at the Seaside location. The upstairs is rented to the nonprofit FosterClub. Kim Roberts said she hopes to team with other nonprofits in the community. “Our family’s been really devoted to nonprofits in our community here,” she said. “We’ve been able to donate $400,000 to local nonprofits in 10 years.” In reviewing the floor plan, Seaside Detective Cor- poral Bill Barnes observed an alcove by the front door in which there is not a clear line of sight for servers to see who is consuming alcoholic beverages. He suggested either eliminating this area for seating or taking precau- tions such as a security mir- ror or video surveillance. “It’s not a disqualifier, but there was concern about it,” Police Chief Dave Ham said. City councilors unan- imously endorsed the application. “On behalf of the coun- cil, I want to welcome you to Seaside,” Mayor Jay Bar- ber said. “Your organiza- tion has a great reputation and it’s going to be great to have you on Broadway and see the Salmonberry thriv- ing again.” The tasting room is sched- uled to open with an 11 a.m. Saturday ribbon-cutting. Feds make over $2 million available to reduce bycatch Associated Press Federal ocean manag- ers are making more than $2 million available to try to help fishermen catch less of the wrong fish. “Bycatch” is a long- standing issue in commer- cial fisheries, and fishermen have long sought solutions to the problem of catch- ing rare species when seek- ing exploitable ones. The National Oceanic and Atmo- spheric Administration says it is providing about $2.4 million for “projects that increase collaborative research and partnerships for innovation” in reducing bycatch. The agency says it is prioritizing projects such as gear modifications, avoidance programs and improved fishing practices. NOAA also says it wants to learn more about possible reduction of mortality of fish that are released. The agency is looking for pre-proposals by Jan. 31 and full proposals by March 30. SEATTLE — When Alyssa Johnston and members of her tribe speak to one another in Quinault, they are often moved to tears by the knowl- edge that, at the turn of the century, the language was all but dead. The last person who spoke fluent Quinault passed away in 1996. By using recordings of those who spoke the lan- guage in the 1960s, a hand- ful of people in the Olympic Peninsula tribe are slowly and painstakingly piecing it back together — and teaching it to a new generation. Last year, Johnston was the first person in recent mem- ory to earn a world-language credit at the University of Washington by showing she had achieved “intermediate low-level proficiency” in that language. “It’s everything to me,” Johnston said of the impor- tance of reviving her tribe’s native tongue. “Language is culture,” she said, and the tribe “right now is literally making history” by bringing it back. That history is also being written on the UW’s Seattle campus. Every two weeks, two sep- arate groups gather around a table in one building or another to practice one of two indigenous languages: South- ern Lushootseed, the common tongue of the Native American tribes that lived in this region, and Hawaiian, the native lan- guage of the indigenous peo- ple of Hawaii. Chris Teuton, chair of American Indian Studies at the UW, hopes students even- tually will be able to learn both those languages in for- credit courses, joining the 55 other languages already taught by the university. In the meantime, the infor- mal classes are a labor of love for the volunteers who teach them. Nancy Jo Bob, a mem- ber of the Lummi Nation, and Tami Kay Hohn, of the Puy- allup Tribe, both drive up from Auburn every month to offer several hours of lan- guage instruction, using a sys- tem they devised that helps students think and speak in complete sentences from the outset. Lushootseed was revived by Upper Skagit author, teacher and linguist Vi Hil- bert, who died in 2008 at the age of 90. Hilbert taught Lushootseed for credit at the UW until her retirement in Alan Berner/The Seattle Times Joe Concannon, left, Holly Shelton, Ashley Mocorro Powell, and Ken Workman practice Lushootseed, the common tongue of the Native American tribes that lived in the region, at the Burke Museum in Seattle. 1988, and it has been taught intermittently at the university since then, along with Navajo and Yakama. Lushootseed’s sentence structure is different from English, and includes sounds that don’t exist in English. “It’s like my tongue is tap-dancing,” one speaker marveled during a recent lan- guage table session. Sentences start with a verb, rather than a subject, and the form the verb takes, gives information about the man- ner and time of action, said UW English Professor Colette Moore, who is taking part in the language table. “By the time a speaker gets to the subject in a Lushoot- seed sentence,” she said, “he or she has already given a lot of other information.” The language’s history in the Puget Sound area dates back thousands of years. English, in contrast, has been spoken around here for fewer than 250. “Sometimes it can be a perspective shift for stu- dents to see English as an immigrant language,” Moore added, “but, of course, it is.” Forced English America’s past is threaded with a long, ugly history of white settlers separating Native Americans from their languages and cultures. In the 1900s, many Native American children were sent to board- ing schools, where they were forced to speak only English. Johnston, of the Quinault tribe, says her grandfather spoke the language, and her mother asked him to teach it to her. But he refused — the older generation feared their children wouldn’t be suc- cessful if they spoke a Native American language, she said. “By revitalizing lan- guages, that’s part of the heal- ing process,” said Teuton, who is Cherokee and began learning that language at the University of North Carolina, where he taught before he came to the UW. “We are try- ing to recover from that colo- nial history.” Native American knowl- edge, he said, “is really grounded in our language — the grounding of stories, our storytelling traditions, our words for the natural world, words that describe our social relations.” Language is also a vital cultural connection for many Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders, said Manuhuia Bar- cham, a UW lecturer who helped organize the Hawai- ian language table. Bar- cham hopes to also start one for Samoan and Chamorro, which is spoken in Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands. Both Pacific Islander and Native American populations have low levels of enrollment in higher education, and part of the goal of teaching lan- guages is to make the UW “a more open and friendly space for our youth and our commu- nity,” he said. Among the state’s other higher-education institutions, Lushootseed has been taught at Pacific Lutheran Univer- sity and at the UW Tacoma, as part of a summer insti- tute. Wenatchee Valley Col- lege in Omak teaches Salish; the Northwest Indian College in Bellingham teaches Native American languages. Credit requirement Johnston learned Quinault from Cosette Terry-itewaste, a linguist who is her tribe’s most fluent speaker, and who was able to administer the test that allowed Johnston to get UW credit for knowing that language. The UW requires enter- ing students to have com- pleted two years of a foreign language in high school, and to take a third quarter while in college — or to demon- strate that they have acquired “intermediate low-level pro- ficiency” in a language other than English. The university had to cre- ate a new way to test profi- ciency in languages that are not commonly taught. “This provides an aca- demic incentive and estab- lishes it as an equal language, a world language,” said Rus- sell Hugo, a linguist in the UW’s language learning cen- ter. “Hopefully more students can do this, so we can build stronger ties of support and recognition” for local indige- nous languages. Because she lives on the Olympic Peninsula and works full time with two young children at home, Johnston earned her undergraduate degree from the UW mostly online. She’s certified as a language apprentice, and she will be helping the Quinault tribe launch family language classes in January. While some tribal mem- bers grew up knowing the Quinault words for colors and other nouns, these language classes aim to teach them how to have simple conversations. “It’s amazing how it’s been almost lost,” Johnston said. “I can feel it getting back to nor- mal, and that’s a really sacred thing.” T he D aily a sTorian ’ s c utest B aBy c ontest WANTED Alder and Maple Saw Logs & Standing Timber Northwest Hardwoods • Longview, WA Contact: John Anderson • 360-269-2500 If your baby was born January 1st & December 31st , 2017 , between EMERALD HEIGHTS APARTMENTS 503-325-8221 2 & 3 BEDROOM APARTMENTS EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY All Rents Electricity · Garbage · Water Include: ASK ABOUT NEWLY REMODELED APARTMENTS you can submit your newborn’s picture either via email at: classifieds @ dailyastorian . com or drop by one of our offices in Astoria or Seaside and we can scan in the photo for you. 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