Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon September 30, 2015 Signature gatherers near target number There is a voting process that allows for the amend- ment of the Constitution of the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs. The process involves col- lecting a certain number of signatures, which are then presented to the War m Springs BIA Agency superin- tendent. Working with the BIA re- gional office, the superinten- dent then determines whether a sufficient number of valid signatures have been pre- sented. If indeed the target number has been met, then the BIA will conduct a refer- endum on the proposed amendment. The referendum would be a BIA secretarial election, meaning the eligible voters would 18 or over. Tribal elec- tions are for people 21 and over, or married. A group of tribal mem- bers have been collecting sig- natures since December of last year, seeking a vote on whether to amend the tribal constitution. The proposed changes in- clude, for instance, eliminat- ing the three Tribal Council election districts. Council members instead would be elected by the membership at large, rather than by district. This is one of the proposed changes under the petition. Mike Clements, Wendell Jim and Sal Sahme have been the main signature gatherers. They have been gathering sig- natures for a few hours each day at places such as the Warm Springs Market, and on the sidewalk area outside the Post Office. They now are getting close to the point when they will present the signature petition sheets to War m Springs Agency Superintendent John Halliday. Last year, when they first began this process, they met with Superintendent Halliday regarding the number of sig- natures needed to call for an amendment vote. The number is one-third of the total number of eli- gible tribal member voters. At that time the number of eligible voters was about 3,600, so the number of sig- natures needed would be about 1,200. As of last week, the petition signature gather- ers had collected about 1,100 signatures. They have until December 4 to present the signatures to the superintendent, but they plan on presenting them sooner, said Mike Clements. The process then calls for posting the signatures in a public place for 15 days. Then, If enough valid sig- natures are verified, the BIA would conduct an election within 45 days. Dave McMechan River housing discussion at Lone Pine The Columbia River In- ter-Tribal Fish Commission recently hosted a visit to the Line Pine in-lieu site. CRITFC chairwoman Kathryn ‘Kat’ Brigham, and Yakama Nation Fish and Wildlife Committee member Wilbur Slockish Sr. met with Congressman Earl Blumen- auer at the fishing site. The visit provided an op- portunity for the tribal rep- resentatives to share their concerns about housing needs and public safety issues at the tribal fishing sites along the Columbia River. A resident at Lone Pine from a previous tour shared the reality an hardship of living at the site, which lacks proper services for long-term stays. Many of the sites are overcrowded like the North Bonneville Ft. Rains access site. Often this results in overwhelmed water and sewer systems and public safety problems. Photos/article courtesy CRITFC Howlak Tichum Sharon Lee (Rector) Penhollow Sharon Penhollow passed away in the pres- ence of her loving family at her home in Redmond on September 18, 2015 at the age of 77 after bat- tling congestive heart fail- ure and extreme arthritis. Sharon was born to Herbert Henry and Geneva Louise (Bewley) Rector on March 13, 1938 in Gypsum, Colo. She joined a brother, Bill, and brother Lloyd fol- lowed five years later. The family came to Central Oregon in 1948 when her father was re- cruited as a vocational-ag- riculture instructor in Crook County for return- ing World War II veterans under a federal education program. Later her father taught school in LaPine, Warm Springs and Sandy. They settled in Powell Butte, where she and her broth- ers grew up and attended the Powell Butte School. During that time, her mother worked at the Powell Butte Store for the Ayers family, later work- ing in the office of the Great Lakes Carbon Com- pany dicolite mine at Lower Bridge, and even- tually for the U.S. Depart- ment of the Interior’s Bureau of Indian Affairs in War m Springs and Portland. After graduating from Redmond Union High School in 1956 and attend- ing the University of Oregon for a short time, she returned to Redmond and married Carroll Penhollow on June 2, 1957. During and after high school she worked at the Odem Theater in downtown Redmond. Sharon then started fill-in and relief work at the Deschutes County Court- house. In 1966, she began a 30-year career with the Redmond School District as a librarian and audio-visual aide at M. A. Lynch and Jessie Hill schools. Then she became the financial secretary at Redmond Junior High and Obsidian Junior High schools, returning to M. A. Lynch to finish her career. Sharon was a member of the Powell Butte Community Christian Church having been baptized by her future father- in-law, D. L. “Penny” Penhollow on December 26, 1956. She served as the general cashier for the BBQ at the famous Lord’s Acre Day for many years until her health restricted her participation. Over the years, she en- joyed working crossword puzzles (something she had in common with her mother), watching soap operas and tele- vision sports, especially foot- ball, baseball and golf. She also enjoyed listening to music from the Gaither Gospel Se- ries. She is survived by her hus- band of 58 years, Carroll; her son, Clay; her daughter, Cathy Kohanes and hus- band, Kelvin, and their son, Andrew of Cornelius; her son, Cary and wife, Melinda, and their sons, Brock, Holden and Grant; her brother, Bill Rector of Chico, Calif.; her brother, Lloyd Rector and wife, Frances of Pacific, Wash.; several cousins, nephews and nieces; and her special friend and fel- low “Grammy,” Helen Haseman. She is preceded in death by her parents, Herb and Louise Rector. In lieu of flowers, con- tributions may be made to the Powell Butte Christian Church for the D. L. and Marie Penhollow Founda- tion Scholarship Fund, PO Box 2, Powell Butte, OR 97753 (541-548- 3066), or to Partners in Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, OR 97701 (541-382-5882). A family graveside ser- vice and burial was previ- ously conducted. A me- morial service will be held Saturday, October 3, 2015 at 11 a.m. at the Powell Butte Christian Church, 13720 SW Hwy 126, Powell Butte, OR 97753. Redmond Memorial Chapel is honored to serve the Penhollow fam- ily. Please sign our on-line guestbook at redmondmemorial.com The CRITFC leadership shared how tribal members are contending with substan- dard living conditions, as a consequence of displacement by the construction and op- eration of the federal Colum- bia River dams. They reiterated the tribes’ position that as long as the dams exist, the federal gov- ernment has the continuing obligation to address the im- pacts caused by the dams, in- cluding the loss of villages and homes along the river. The visit closed with a dis- cussion on how the tribes and Congress might work together to address these problems. Drivers class by AARP Refresh your driving skills with the AARP Smart Driver course. This is for drivers 50 and older. You’re learn: Defensive driving techniques, proven safety strategies, new traffic laws and rules of the road. Plus, there are no tests to pass. You simply sign up and learn. Upon completion you could receive a multi-year dis- count on your car insur- ance. The class will be from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Friday, October 2, with a one-hour lunch break. The location will be at the Family Resource Center. Call the library for more in- formation, 541-553- 1078. Registration cost is covered by the Warm Springs Health and Hu- man Services Branch. Class limit is 15. Call 541- 553-1182 Page 7 On Council agenda The Tribal Council worked on the 2016 bud- get proposal through Sep- tember, and was expect- ing to post the document this week. The Agency District then set a meeting on the proposal for Monday, Oct. 26. Seekseequa set their meeting for Tuesday, Oct. 27. The Simnasho District date was not yet available. The budget has to be finalized by Dec. 1. Council last week dis- cussed some other up- coming items on their October agenda. Council will meet with the Jefferson County School District officials in October to discuss the education memorandum of understanding. The current agreement is set to expire next summer. Council will meet in mid-October with Oregon Department of Transpor- tation officials to discuss the use of the Highway 26 Safety Corridor funding, already appropriated. Council has their regu- lar meeting on the first Monday of the month, October 5, with BIA and Office of Special Trustee updates; Realty items; con- ference calls, and a meet- ing with the Education Committee. On Tuesday, Oct. 6, Council is scheduled to meet with Utilities director Don Courtney regarding the water meter and other Utilities projects. Housing will give and update on October 13. Council has a meeting with CRITFC on Oct. 22- 23. Tribal Council summary September 22, 2015 1. Roll call: Chief Joseph Moses, Chief Alfred Smith Jr., Chairman Eugene Greene Jr., Vice Chair Evaline Patt, Reuben Henry, Scott Moses, Orvie Danzuka, Kahseuss Jackson, and Carlos Smith. Minnie Yahtin, Recorder. 2. Discussed and re- viewed the proposed 2016 budget, more information was needed from the follow- ing: · Land Services Adminis- trator for the Buy Back pro- gram and Inheritance Act budget. · Indian Head Casino · Ventures · A motion was made by Carlos modifying the agenda for Monday, September 23 to have the Secretary-Trea- surer and Executive Deputy Director to go back and re- work the 2016 proposed bud- get under current revenue and to modify the agenda to bring the budget presenta- tions in on Monday; Second by Reuben; Glendon: Before you take action on the motion, is it for departments? Carlos: I think the departments need to look at reducing, and we need to ensure the senior pension through 2016—I think every option needs to be presented, with all information, and then the table will decide what is to be done, considering any ideas from general managers, managers, accountant direc- tors, whatever they come up with; Chairman: Anymore dis- cussion? Question; Joseph/ yes, Evaline/yes, Carlos/yes, Kahseuss/yes, Scott/yes, Reuben/yes, Alfred/yes, Orvie/yes, 8/yes, 0/no, 0/ abstain, Chairman not voting; Motion carried. 3. Meeting adjourned at 3:35PM. 2321 Ollallie Lane (PO Box 6) Warm Springs, OR 97761