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About Spilyay tymoo. (Warm Springs, Or.) 1976-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 2013)
T F Spilyay T ym o o , W arm Springs, O regon Page 12 A u g u s t 21, 2013 Tenino apts. to see improvements Jamboree Day W arm Springs H ousing has received an Indian Com munity D evelopm ent block g ra n t in th e a m o u n t o f $500,000. R , The funding will be used to rehab the Tenino A part ments on Deer Loop. There are about 30 units that will see im p ro v e m e n ts,;' said Sharon Jones, Housing Man ager. The. T enino A partm ent. units are relying on the origi said. nal heating, ventilation and air The apartments will also conditioning (HVAC) systems, see some im provem ents to installed 30-plus years ago, ,. the electrical system, and the Jones said. The ..system.has windows will be replaced. become hard to maintain, she The residents can continue said, because the replacement to live there while the work parts are hard to find. is going on. The funding will The HVAC system and be released in N ovem ber, wood stories will be replaced Jones said, “so we’re hoping with new qnes. This will help ■to start by the end o f the w ith te m p e ra tu re co n tro l year.” throughout the year, Jones Tribes open fall commercial fishery At the Columbia River ear M uch o f the harvest is lier this week, fishers from the sold to wholesale fish dealers Warm Springs, N ez Perce,- and can be found in stores I Umatilla and Yakama tribes and restaurants around the opened the first day o f gillnet N orthw est and beyond. fishing o f the 2013 commer Fisheries biologists esti cial season. , m ate th a t the 2013 fall During the fall fishery, In chinook return will be well dian fishers could harvest up above' average with 677,900 to 200,000 fish, or an esti fall chinook entering the Co mated 2.5 million pounds of lumbia and over 575,000 des salmon. , tined for. areas upstream of T he trib es o p en ed th e ' Bonneville Dam. com m ercial sales o f these Fishery managers also pre fish, allowing the public to dict a record return o f wild - purchase salmon, steelhead Snake River fall chinottk and and coho directly from Indian . over 130,000 coho. fishers. '' . , . “Many o f the salmon re . Sales to the public should turning to the Columbia River last into O ctober with peak are the direct result of tribal abundance from just before restoration efforts, joint state . Labor Day through mid-Sep and tribal programs and sev tember. eral tribal and federal partner- ships,” said Paul Lumley, exT Ccutive director for the Co lum bia R iver In ter-T rib al Fish Commission. During the harvest, man agers actively m onitor the returns so they can adjust the harvest levels as needed- to keep the fisheries within strict harvest limits established un der the US v, Oregon fisheries management agreement. The tribal fishery offers an ample supply o f fish for the public through over-the-bank sales. Commonsales'locations include: Marine Park in Cas cade Locks, Lone Pine in The Dalles, N o rth Bonneville - one mile east of Bonneville Dam, and Columbia Point in Washington’s Tri-Cities area. Yvonne Iverson/Spilyay The perfect way to cool off on a hot summer day. The water slide was a popular attraction at the Annual Family Jamboree Day. 911 O S U -C ascad es developing h o sp itality m a n a g e m e n t degree Oregon State University- primarily in revenue manage Cascades in Bend recently ment. He also has experience hired Todd M ontgomery as in pricing in travel sectors that an instructor and an execu include the airline, cruise, tive in residence in hospital ren tal car, re sta u ra n t and : gaming industries. . ; ity management. He launched his career As an executive in resi dence, Montgomery will lead with Hyatt Hotels and later the branch campus’s efforts joined Starw ood H otels as. to develop a four-year hospi corporate director o f revenue tality m anagem ent degree management for the Asia-Pa long sought by the region’s cific region. hospitality industry. In 2006 he joined PROS H e will alsc> teach in the Pricing, a provider o f pricing hospitality, business, and technology where he led the tourism and outdoor leader design and implementation of several multi-million dollar ship programs. M o ntgom ery has m ore revenue management i’n itia- than 15 years’ experience in ■ fives. Montgomery has a degree the hotel industry, focusing in hospitality m anagem ent Cascades announced that it had from the University o f N e received gifts totaling $320,000 vada, Las Vegas and earned 'from the Oregon Restaurant a master’s o f business admin and Lodging Association and istration from the^ University hospitality-related businesses o f Sydney’s Australia Gradu across the state to help launch a four-year hospitality degree ate School o f Management. In November 2012, OSU- program, ffi INDIAN HEAD LJH H I GET YOUR KICKS ON HIGHWAY U P C O M IN G A U G U S T P R O M O T IO N S • • • • • “Doors for Dollars" Fridays & Saturdays - Win Ca$h ‘‘$200 Tuesdays” - Hourly drawings from 2pm-6pm “ Name that Song” Fridays & Saturdays —Win Slot Points Time is Money - Mondays, hourly drawings from 2-8pm Outdoor Live Music, Beer Garden, BBQ and Door Prize giveaways. August 23rd & 30th Highway 26, Warm Springs indianheadgaming.com • Call 541- 615-0555 WARM SPRINGS TELECOM C h airm an G reen e said Suenaga should re port back to Council on the progress being made on this matter. Councilman Raymond T sum pti said the 2014 budget process will focus On essential services o f 1 the tribes, such as fire and safety. The Council and tribes need to keep in mind what truly are the essential services, as they work on next year’s bud get, Tsumpti said. M rs: H e rk sh an thanked Council for the.' help they have given her since thè fire. ' There will be a fire shower on Friday, August 30 at the Agency Longhouse. The shower-is for Charlotte Herkshan, and Gene and Alice Sampson. House hold item s appreciated. C ontinental breakfast at 8 a.m. Lunch at noon; close at 5 p.m.