Spilyqy Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon September 15, 2005 Summit: discussion ofVentures (Continued from page 1) Discussion turned to the space issue at the mill site, tucked between Highway 26 and the Deschutes River. Though W'SI 'PI and Composite Products currently coexist there, Potts said, "I think for some of the things that Composite has the opportunity to go after, and looking at the things WSl'l'I is working on today, wc have a real land and building space is sue that we need to start address- Jim Manion, general manager of Warm Springs Power Enter prises, said the power business is profitable now, but an impor tant task, he said, is to leverage it into stability for the Warm Springs tribal government. "There are good days in the power business, and there are bad days," Manion said. "We've got good days right now, but anybody who's in the market of selling this product knows bad days arc always out there. I low do wc mitigate, and try to avoid bad days or terrible days?" Manion said Power Enter prises is working with Portland General Electric, its partner at the Pelton-Roiind Butte com plex, considering ways to expand the value that the dams bring to the tribes. Ace: rare feat at tourney (Continued from page 6) She also won a net-skin for the hole, for making the hole in no strokes, based on her handi cap. "As long as I win enough, to eei me ra tne next tournament and cover my entry tees, 1 m happy," she said. Dawn Smith of Warm Springs, who just started a new school year as principal at Warm Springs Elementary School, won the tournament. "She shot her best round," Chase said. "I was happy for her because she's actually a new golfer.",,.. ; , Smith shot a 91 on Sunday. Chase said her handicap has been increasing this summer as she has been shooting rounds in the 100s, and she's missed more tournaments than she's played. "In prior years, I'd pretty much placed every time I'd played," she said. Chase has played competi tively for seven years, starting only one year after she started playing at all. "I got bored," she said. "I had a friend who played in tourna ments, and I went along and watched, and then that got bor ing." Her friend was left-handed, and while he and his group ' would putt out of a hole, she'd practice chipping with his clubs. "And finally, I just' started playing, and I thought, 'Y'know, when I go to these tournaments, I just need to get in them," she said. Golf was also a good way to take her mind off health prob lems she was experiencing at the time. She was going dirough che motherapy and radiation. She said she averages about eight tournaments a season and has been to as many as 14 tour naments in a season that can extend into December, includ ing tournaments in the Phoenix area and Palm Springs, Calif. In fact, she helps put on a tourna ment in Palm Springs. Chase plans to play in the Northwest Indian Invitational Tournament at Kah-Nee-Ta Oct. 8-9. "Each year we gain a little. I think v e've been averaging 60 He said Power Enterprises has considered pump storage units at Lake Billy Chinook. These units, he said, have a "large potential" but could pos sibly have a heavy environmen tal impact. The idea could war rant a look, he said, depending on the market and the need. The Confederated Tribes, he said, also has the oldest water right in the Deschutes-Metolius basin. The tribes could lease out as much as 200 cubic feet per second, about equivalent to the flow of the Warm Springs River during summer months. "The tribes got this water right through a long negotiation process and would never sell the water right. The water could only be leased under long-term use," Manion said. "What does that mean? Right now, we have municipalities in the Deschutes Basin that are probably going to be interested in talking to us." Manion also addressed the issues of solar, wind, geother mal and biomass energy. For biomass, he said, the means of generating power through burn ing waste wood, a steady fuel source, should be available by the end of this year. Solar is the most expensive means. of generation, although the other methods also have costs, he said. Additionally, each method power generation has an aesthetic effect that would have to be acceptable to the tribal membership, whether it's to 70 players," she said. The field may be diminished some what this fall, as several players usually drive from Canada but may be discouraged by the re cent high fuel prices. Chase is the purchasing con tracting manager for the Warm Springs tribal government. Her biggest current, project is the re- placement' of the' rpof. of the Warm Springs Lunic. Her job includes overseeing the bidding process. Oh, and that yelling from the course at Circling Raven? Chase said it wasn't her that fellow tournament players heard cel ebrating from the course, but a player who found his own kind of success that day. "It was an eight-handicapper named Tom Rodriguez, who fi nally hit his first par on his eighth hole," she said. EAGLE-TECH if PC installation and service for most PC desktop and laptops Network Installation and Management Office Wireless systems Peripheral Service Data backup and recovery service Network Security Microsoft Office Support Internet Security Planning to Protect Against Online Threats Certified staff including Microsoft Certified Professional, A, Cisco, Linux, .... TECHNICAL SERVICE TO THE WARM SPRINGS & MADRAS AREAS wind propellers on the north end of the reservation or plumes of steam over Mount Jefferson during cold-weather months. The tourism group consid ered ways of keeping Kah-Nee-Ta occupied, even as the Indian I lead Casino leaves after devel opment of the Columbia Gorge casino. Ways to accomplish this could include employing a number of tribal members to provide a variety of tourist activities, both cultural and recreational, for visitors. This venture may in clude more vigorous marketing of Kah-Nec-Ta, perhaps the sole standout resort between Portland and Bend along I ligh way 26, and the selling of timeshares at Kah-Nec-Ta. Another idea, one that would provide more job skills for tribal members, would be to offer training at Kah-Nec-Ta, through Central Oregon Community College, in the hospitality industry. ri PoDu 7DDDagG I " I I "r94iSEP " i TV Jm Kumar ni.it mA I mwiM i IB r" j v tii 1 'TTT .1 s r-m-mtft II R II ' V A V. K SS - II wmt mm l UM n i ii v.1! - 1 1 1 1 iii i iW-iAii .. i" r ujh ."? ,vi'v vircvT ii i i 1 1 if m. -n 1357 N. mMm i i in m yw During the Wednesday ses sion of the economic summit, Clyde llamstreet, serving as chief restructuring officer dur ing the recent restructuring of Warm Springs Ventures, cx plained the restructure of an entity that lost $.V3 million since its establishment in 2001. "The need for an organiza tion like Ventures to meet the tribes' objectives is even greater now than when it was formed, yet Ventures has failed to meet the five objectives," he said. I lamstreet, a certified turn around professional, attached letter grades to five objectives based on Ventures' investments and speculations. Its best grade was a C; its worst was an E The most important criterion might have been its duty to be the tribes' trusted financial ad visor. Ventures' assessed grade was a D-, according to the re port. As part of the restructure, most of Ventures' board mem G 01 SB B B "T 3 1 Hwy. 97, Redmond, OR Phone (541) 504-1402 Eagle-Tech Systems now offers cost effective on-site business PC and Network Services in the Warm Springs and Madras area. bers, and its chief executive and financial officers, were' replaced by an interim board, including Chairman Ken Smith of Ken Smith and Associates, the tribes' chief financial officer Ray Pot ter, Secretary-Treasurer Jody Calica, and, the sole holdover from the former board, James Eitzhcnry, a Portland attorney. Kibak Tile, a specialty tile company based in Redmond, would be retained, but Cort Software, which creates payroll accounting software and is based in Bend, should be sold within the next year or two, I lamstreet said. llamstreet said the restruc ture would place a mandate on fiscal accountability and a sense of priority. Warm Springs Tribal Coun cil Chairman Ron Suppah spoke of a "sense of apathy" among the tribal membership concern ing a shrinking tribal budget and a community-wide discourage ment over what he described as $35 Square Foot! Huge 4-bedroom, 2-bath Only one available Huge Island Kitchen J' 'I.!.-)-!' I fit :-h;T 40 percent unemployment on the reservation. "For the last three or four years, wc have been fighting a very severe problem of trying to maintain an unbalanced trilij budget for tribal government," he said. Next year could see addi tional reductions of another $2.5 million. "And if you talk to any branch of our government, you knew we're pretty border line already, to the point of be ing down to the bone." Suppah said, "We can't hon estly recommend any further cuts, because with that comes consequences, and the conse quences really affect our tribal members." The recommendations from the summit were gathered up to be used as points of discussion for the groups at a future date. The results of those discussions will then be submitted to Calica. raarmai Z R mm wi. I M V !' ," '.(') Ii (I'M- I91 191! 97756 . mm w