Paga 4 Portland Observar July 2.1181 Treaty rights protect steelhead, salmon A b ill cu rrently in Congress, S874, the •‘ Steelhead Protection A c t," would remove Indian treaty rights, cause the Am erican tax­ payers to pay millions of dollars to buy treaty-secured Indian property right to give it to sports fishermen, and would allow the destruction o f the environment. Among the spon­ sors o f the bill are Representatives Gorton and Bonker of Washington State and Representative Les Au Coin o f Oregon. The stated purpose o f S874 is to make Steelhead a game fish and thus remove it from the commercial fishery o f the Indian tribes, prohibiting Indians from fishing for Steelhead on or o ff the reservations. The Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Com m ission, made up o f representatives o f the Treaty Indian tribes, charges that the intent o f the bill is to abridge fundamental con­ stitutional rights of native people. TRADITION For thousands o f years the Indian people have used Steelhead along w ith the various types o f salmon that passed their fishing grounds. According to Nathan Jim, represen­ tative o f the Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs Reservation, the w inter run was used prim a rily for food during the period before the spring chinook arrived. Steelhead o il was also used to preserve salmon. The salmon was pounded powder fine and mixed with Steelhead oil, then stored in balls in Steelhead skin. These balls o f pemican could be stored fo r long periods and were used for trade with Indians from the Great Plains and the Coast. "The Steelhead is a brother to the salmon," he explained, “ To the In­ dian they are one fish .” Steelhead are used, along with the salmon, for ceremonial purposes - at naming ceremonies, weddings, and in feasts in respect to the food that provides for them. TREATY RIGHTS The Indians were declared “ human beings” and the owners of the land by the early Spanish Church. The U. S. Northwest O r­ dinance o f I787 guaranteed the liberty and property rights o f the Indians - the reason being that if the Indians owned the land it could be obtained from them. Early Supreme Court decisions determined that In­ dian tribes were sovereign nations - distinct, independent communities - that retained their identities as in ­ dependent nations within the United States, and that they have the right to self-government. Treaties "m ade in peace and frie n d sh ip ” transferred the land owned by the Indians to the American government - considered a necessity by the government in or­ der to protect Am erican citizens who were moving onto land owned by the Indians. The Indians retained their right to hunt and fish on the land remaining in their c o n tro l - the reservation lands. They also retained the right to fish " in com m on” w ith other citizens at their usual and ac­ customed fishing places. The US government has the responsibility to protect those rights. During the 1960s and 1970s a long series o f scriminishes among Indian and non-Indian fisherm an and between Indian fishermen and the States o f Oregon and Washington took place. This resulted in several BONELESS HAM federal court decisions outling the Indian’s fishing rights. The Payallup decision found that the treaty rights o f the tribes cannot be subordinated to the State laws, but that the State can make neces­ sary and reasonable regulations for conservation of the fish. These reg­ ulations can be applied only after all other alternatives have been used. 6-9 POUND WHOLE HA M The P uyallup Tribe v. D epart­ ment o f Game (1973) interpreted the treaty rights to include taking Steel­ head for commercial purposes. The B oldt Decision interpreted the words " in common w ith " to mean that the treaty tribes have a right to one-half o f the fish. In 1979 the US Supreme C ourt confirmed that the right meant one- h a lf o f all the fish o f each run destined to pass the usual and ac­ customed fishing places. Phase II o f U nited States v. Washington, states that the tribes have a right to one-half o f the hat­ chery fish since they are replacement fish. It also contained the far-reaching decision that the right to take fish means the right to have fish, so gives the treaty tribes the right o f freedom from degredation o f the habitat. This means that treaty tribes can prevent any construction, dams, forestry, road building, pesticide use or any other acitivity that would destroy the breeding grounds o f the fish. FIVE YEAR PLAN In 1977 the tribes agreed to a Five Year Plan where they w ould de- emphasize steelhead since it is im ­ portant to recreation fishermen, and in return would be guaranteed an increased harvest o f salmon. Since the agreement, the catch of Steelhead has declined from 32,000 in 1977 to 5,600 in 1080. However, the salmon catch has declined every year, dropping from 121,000 Chinook in 1976 to 23,(XX) in 1980. Even so, the tribes gave non-Indian fishermen 60 percent o f the Spring salmon catch. A lthough the Indians were guaranteed that the fish runs would increase, twenty year records show just the opposite. A t Bonneville Dam the steelhead run has decreased by 2.3 percent; fa ll chinook by 8 percent; spring chinook by 48.6 percent; summer chinook by 52.3 percent; coho by 64.7 percent, and sockeye by 14.6 percent. At the fish Snake River Dam, Ice H arbor, the statistics are even worse. Fall chinook has decreased 84.6 percent; spring chinook 75.2 percent; summer chinook 84.5 per­ cent; coho 96 percent, and sockeye 96.3 percent. The government has not provided the hatcheries promised to increase the salmon runs, has over em­ phasized steelhead hatcheries, and has shipped upriver chinook and coho eggs to other parts o f the US and to other countries. W hile salmon runs are being depleted by the dams, destruction of the habitat, and ocean harvest, the steelhead is surviving and should be used to make up the d e ficit in the Indians allowable catch. The steelhead is a hardy fish that can better survive the torturous passage over the Columbia and Snake River dams and futhermore, aren't sub­ ject to ocean fishing. Proline Beauty Products 917 S.W. Alder 224-8401 (across from I ha Galleria) PRO SHOP STYLING SALON GERALD TAYLOR NEW STYLIST Specializing in all curly perms, styling & trim m ing. B TCB • Care Free • Classy curt & California Curl. $48.50 ____________________________________Limited Tim e Only HALF HAMS 51.69 POUND TOMATOES RIPE FOR SLICING POUND l L____ SHOP K Native Americans protest introduction of S874 which attempts to remove treaty fishing rights. (Photo: Richard J. Brown) IMPLICATIONS FOR NON INDIANS S874 would take from the treaty tribes their property rights. The 5th Amendment to the US Constitution protects citizens against con- fis tica tio n o f property w ithout compensation. Therefore the b ill would force the taxpayers to spend billions to take the property o f In­ dian tribes, only to give it to sports fishermen for recreation purposes. This also has serious constitutional implications since private property can only be seized fo r public use. while this bill would seize property for private interests - sport fisher­ men. The bill is seen by Indians as just one o f a long series of efforts by the State of Washington and it officials to abrogate their treaty rights. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals and the U.S. Supreme Court have de­ cided the manner in which Wash­ ington resisted enforcement o f treaty rights. The bill is an attempt to remove those rights. Because steelhead travel with salmon, giving the right to regulate steelhead to the states would lead to an attem pt to regulate salmon fishing contrary to the treaty rights. I f the Indians lose the right to take fish, they also will lose the right to have fish to take. They will loose the right to protect the habitat. The Pyallup Phase II Rights - the right to protect the habitat - is a prime concern to all citizens. The right o f Indians to protect the fish is the only right to protect the habitat that exists. Hear jazz " Y o u r Zoo and A ll That Jazz" summer concert series at M etro’ s Washington Park Zoo continues. The th ird concert w ill be held on Wednesday, July 8 and will feature the Simon and Bard G roup w ith Paul Wertico and Larry Grey. Bring your blanket folding chair and pic­ nic dinner (or purchase food and beverages at the concert) and relax for an evening o f classical and straight ahead jazz. Concerts are free with regular zoo admission. Parking problems? Take the special Tri-Met shuttle bus from the Sylvan/Westgate business area parking lot right to the zoo for 25 « per person each way. " Y o u r Zoo and A ll That Jazz" concerts are presented as a community service by Meier & Frank Company. For more information call 226-ROAR. In the event o f rain, concerts w ill be held the following Thursday nights, same time. 639 7728 620 5199 CASCADE TREE SERVICE Topping. Trimming. Removals Hedge A Shurb work Free Estimates I f this right can be removed, the Corps o f Engineers can b u ild the 400 small dams it projects - dam­ ming every small trib u ta ry in the Northwest w ithout any effective political control. The states w ill be free to authorize forestry, agriculture, road b u ild in g , dams and nuclear plants that w ill destroy the environment and the fish. The image has been created that the Indians are the chief opponents o f the sports fishermen, when ac­ tu a lly , the Indians are the only group with the power to protect the fish o f all citizens. E ' 39 ____ IENOWS IEI BRA NDS you h n « w you lilio SISKS you w o o l A R irriK S n V r. The Fr»w>dl»«ftf I S tore* In T o w n S»n<< 1 9 0 9 • • • • • • M i l 9.1 MMwoWk.o 3SH» A ftwAitMo I 23n4 A M.I/Oti*«»» M. LimharN Rt Orwoloy R w U I r B H l|l* 193«id a* 9.1. OhrlMon • Ook •MMM* OR M M Ilie X O D U • • • • • • IBM* A 9.1. A * * « « 3 3 *4 A M .l. Memecli 3DtB A 9.1. Mvlaion 33rd A West t^ rm ld o la h a O»w*«e A A**« Kin« City OB OC IR I S educa/v » a / aru T f /tv i/ r n s n / fyenfey 1639 N.E. Alberta PORTLAND. OREGON 972 1 1 294 7997 From the Front Door By Tom Boothe From The F ro n t D o o r, I see th o se w h o fo llo w along th e co u rse o f; Cleanliness, Caring, Courtesy and Completeness. Even as in Nature the same courses are followed. We m ight equate W inter w ith an act of Cleanliness; Spring an act of Caring; Summer an act of Courtesy; Autum an act of Completeness. But, then I see those who do not follow this course. They are those who are not clean and they practice Dirtiness; there are those w ho do not care, and they practice carelessness; there are those w ho are not courteous, they prac­ tice rudeness and arrogance and are merciless; and there are those w ho do not complete what they start, and they practice incompleteness. These individuals w ill always Criticize, Complain, and find "B lam e F actor" excuses; but most will change given enough tim e and encouragement. I find that there is a great advantage in follow ing the course of Cleanliness, Caring, Courtesy and Completness. Even, as in Nature this is the course of Power, P ro d u ctio n and P erform ance, the p o sitio n of g iv in g . Those w h o follow this course are in charge and hold great power over those w ho are less clean, and those w ho do not care as much, and those who are not as cour­ te o u s , and th o se w h o do n o t co m p le te m u ch o f w h a t th e y s ta rt; th e ir position is one of consuming. It is better to give, than to consume, or be con­ sumed. W hen and if you feel oppressed and victimized, it may be that you are on the w rong course. The way to change courses in the Right direction, is to prac­ tice and dem onstrate m ore Cleanliness, m ore Caring, m ore C ourtesy and more Completeness. Exodus Clean Team Meeting each Wednesday at 7:00 P.M. 0