Page 10 Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon March 30, 2016 Agency District candidates John Katchia Sr. Jeff Sanders I have worked in tribal government for 49 years. I worked all my adult life for the tribes, from 1960 to December 2009, in one capacity or another. My years of employ- ment include six years as a line supervisor within the department and/or offices, and 10 years as a department head supervi- sor (six or more offices or departments supervised). I served eight years as a general manager with over four or more depart- ments. This totals 24 years of work experience as a supervisor or manager within the tribal organiza- tion. I have received over 200 hours of manage- ment training that was spe- cifically related to senior management. This train- ing included but was not limited to strategic plan- ning, executive manage- ment courses, executive forum training, total qual- ity management, work life training, team building, BIA budget training/ workshops, general man- ager workshop training, budget training and inter- nal audit. I am a lifetime mem- ber of the Elliott Palmer VFW Post 4217, with ser- vice in Germany in the U.S. Army, serving in the Sixty-Eighth Armored Division, 1957-1959. In addition to organi- zational training I have been a part of other or- ganizational related com- mittees and appoint- ments: I served 21 years on the Jefferson County 509-J School District Board of Di- rectors. I served a number of terms as the board chair- man, in addition to being on the 509-J budget committee for 21 years. I also served on the Education Service Dis- trict budget committee. I have been elected to the Oregon State School Board Association, and served two 4-year terms. I held the po- sition of secretary treasurer, vice chairman, president- elect, and president of the Oregon School Board Asso- ciation. While on this board I was also appointed to the National School Board, as the Oregon minority repre- sentative for the state of Oregon. I have served on the tribal Alcohol and Drug Council for 20-plus years, and was chairman for nine years. We administered a $600,000 grant from the Robert Woods Johnson Foundation for Substance Abuse Preven- tion. The governor of the state of Oregon appointed me to two 2-year terms on the state Alcohol and Drugs Council. This coun- cil has the oversight re- sponsibility for reviewing all state agencies, depart- ments, programs and ser- vices on alcohol and drug matters. I have served on three Oregon State task forces on education and school board issues, minority is- sues, and state Vocational Rehabilitation reform. I also served as the co- chairman for the Jefferson County Community Task Force on race relations be- tween Native American and Hispanic, and the non- Indian communities. Positive changes I would like to see in War m Springs over the next 10 years: Development of a positive cash flow from current and future tribal enterprises. To have tribal mem- bers with four-year college degrees, and/or two-year AA degrees that reflect the needs of tribal govern- ment, its enterprises, and private business needs of the community. Solutions to, or signifi- cant results to our drugs and alcohol problems, with partnerships between tribal programs and ser- vices, Indian Health Ser- vices, and outside alcohol and drug providers. Jeff Sanders Jason Smith Good day, Warm Springs. My name is Jason Wesley Smith. I am a 49 year old Wasco tribal member (2451). My truly amazing wife Snuffy is a Umatilla tribal member who was raised on the Yakama Reser vation. We have two beautiful daughters who are 27 and 23. Both of them have recently graduated from college. We are very proud of the accomplish- ments that our children have achieved, and grateful that they strived to please their parents and come home for a bit after college. This means so much as a parent. My parents are Buck and Susie Smith of Warm Springs. They are very well known in our community. I believe I have the best parents in the entire world, and I’m so proud to be their son. I lost my brother, Troy, in 1983, and can’t imagine our relation- ship and partnerships if we were given the opportunity to grow into adults together. My family is a huge part of who I am; my late grandparents are Dorothy and Stanley Smith Sr., and great grandparents are Anne and Wesley Smith of Dry Hollow. I also have a brother and sister, Butch and Lori Smith of Madras, along with my nieces, nephews, aunts and uncles that are all a part of me as well. Last, but probably first, are all my favorite cous- ins. I want to name them all but not enough ink (aye). As you can see, I am very fam- ily oriented, and think family is the cornerstone and back- bone of our reservation. We should strive to become one Big Happy Family. Education/work history I graduated from Madras High School in 1985. I went on to receive my Bachelor of Science Degree from Oregon State University in June of 1991. I started working for the tribe in September of 1991 as a Range Specialist for the Range and Agriculture Department. After seven or eight years in that position I was promoted to the Range and Ag Manager from within the Branch of Natural Re- sources. I have been work- ing on the range my whole life as a rancher with cattle and horses. In the ‘90s I served two terms on the Range and Ag Committee. I also served on the Inter-tribal Agriculture Council (IAC) Board of Di- rectors for eight years, and five years as the vice presi- dent of the Northwest Inter- Tribal Ag Council (NWIAC). From 1999-2006 I owned and operated the very well known Deschutes Crossing Restaurant. I have served as the Warm Springs Baptist Church trea- surer for 12 years. I have been the president of the Warm Springs Rodeo Asso- ciation since the early 2000s. I was appointed by Pres. Obama to the Farm Service Agency Oregon State Tech- nical Committee. One of my lifelong com- mitments has been being a member of the Professional Wild Horse Racers Associa- tion (PWHRA) for 33 years. I have been the president of the PWHRA the last five years. I was appointed by Tribal Council to the Warm Springs Casino and Resort Enterprises board for five years, and served as chair- man from 2014-2015. I am also a member of the Na- tional Tribal Horse Coalition, which is an organization close to my heart for the protec- tion and management of our tribal horse population since its inception in 2009, and have served as their president since 2011. Enough about myself, now I would like to talk about serving our membership, our community, and the Confed- erated Tribes of War m Springs. My name is John Katchia Sr., and I am seeking your vote for Tribal Council for the Agency District. I have worked in logging, and at War m Springs Forest Products Industries. At WSFPI I worked as a saw filer, oiler and mill- wright helper, then as moulder set-up and qual- ity control technician. My other positions at the mill include quality control su- pervisor, production co- ordinator, operations manager, and chief execu- tive officer. On a personal note I have coached teen club basketball, t-ball and Little League baseball. Tribally I have partici- pated as Housing board commissioner, and on the Timber Committee, and the WSFPI board. I have hunted for the longhouse, first with my uncles Harvey Tohet and Perry Greene. Later on Isaac Mitchell and I were appointed as head hunt- ers for the longhouse. From 1999-2006 I was on Western Wood Products Association Technical Ser- vices, Quality Assurance, and grade rules commit- tee. My wife is Lupe Katchia. Children are Damion, John Jr., Rodney, Kara Katchia and Danni Herkshan. The tribes’ per capita has gone from $100 to $25, and a similar event happened with our Senior Pension. A number of our enterprises are teetering on the edge of bank- ruptcy. A long series of events have occurred to get us in this predicament. When the membership voted for the Gorge ca- sino, the wheels came off. There were visions of $100 million a year, with My vision When thinking of running for Tribal Council, I believe we need to be on a quest to serve our people. We need to keep our youth and elders in the forefront of our deci- sions. How do we do this? We do this with Love, Spiritual- ity and Unification! We must have love for one another, and care for all our people. From the begin- ning of my existence I’ve al- ways heard of reasons, ru- mors and recommendations of how people should feel, think or act towards differ- ent families or groups of people. In my mind we are all good people. We can be slow to anger, and be open to discussions, with well thought out solutions before a quick knee jerk reaction. We can change our mindsets to that frame of thinking. We can help one another over the hurdle, through the hard times, on to a promotion, with our sincere support and encouragement for the good will of our people. Our good will bring others to join our team. We as Indian people have always been spiritual people. I believe we need to step back and take a look and see where, and perhaps why we prudent budgeting being for- gotten. The thought process at the time was the tribe would easily become fiscally solvent with gaming profits. Dollars from the mill and Power and Water Enter- prises were greatly reduced at the time of the Gorge vote. The price of whole- sale electricity dropped, and the price of logs in the mar- ketplace dropped by as much as 600 percent. Spending by the tribe in- creased dramatically. Mil- lions were spent to try and gain favor for the Gorge casino. The revenue spend- ing imbalance quickly emp- tied the coffers of the tribe. Winning a mismanagement of the forest lawsuit gave a brief reprieve. Unfortu- nately, prudent budgeting was not done, and the rainy day buffer was emptied. The enterprises bank accounts were drained. There are bright spots to look forward to, such as the cannabis initiative, with a $28 million revenue stream anticipated. The cultivation of hemp should also be con- sidered. The Moody and Culpus farms should be a jump- start in the use of our se- nior water rights. Central Oregon has almost reached the limits of water usage. It appears we are in a use-it or lose-it situation. Groundwa- ter use has to be considered also. have wandered, and strive to start a path back to where our Elders have once had us. Unification is strength. We are weak if we are divided and not one. No matter the district, the tribe, or the last name, we are still War m Springs. Let’s band together and become the power that we once were. Let’s forgive and forget, and remember that together we can all work side by side towards success. Then to the grind, jobs, jobs, jobs It seems that “jobs” is what we’ve been hearing about for years now. How do we best create and maintain jobs? By actively creating our economy. If we promote eco- nomic opportunities, support business developments, pro- vide education opportunities and incentives, develop rec- reational opportunities (just to name a few), we will be well on our way. We need 100-plus small businesses that make a buck, or even break even, that will employ a tribal member or two. Looking for one silver bullet that will solve all our financial problems is maybe unrealistic. Maybe a franchise or two, a warehouse, a mall All the business ven- tures have sovereignty is- sues that need close at- tention. We have circum- vented our self determi- nation rights through NOAA, Marine Fisher- ies, federal Fish and Wildlife, gaming com- pacts, OLCC rules and regulations. The various tribal committees need to have a greater voice in the ac- tivities of the tribes. The committees ensure tribal member participation in the tribal government. They give continuity of tribal affairs, including our unwritten laws (Taman wit). IRMP and funding agency regula- tions have made tribal wants and views irrel- evant. Put knowledge- able, credible tribal people on the commit- tees and enterprise boards. Diversity of opinion has long been a corner- stone of our strength. Like spokes on a wagon wheel, there are many paths to the center of truth or accomplishment. The world of com- merce is flowing, moving, changing. If we are to thrive, we need to be in stop with the times. Our challenge is to remain true to our core beliefs, and change the tribes into a sustainable organiza- tion. Having dealt with nu- merous changes, we will have to deal with the normal negative passive- aggressive resistance to change. In closing, I would urge you to get out and vote in the Tribal Council election. If you read this, I thank you for your time. John Katchia Sr. with food courts: these can help build our local economy that we need here in Warm Springs. We are a resource rich tribe that can explore many possibilities to utilize our land. Sovereignty is a powerful word, we need to exercise it. We have existing tribal jobs and departments that can think “outside the box.” We need internships with colleges and trade schools. We can even create our own local in- terns with our own criteria. Many of our people have special needs or handicaps that need careers and em- ployment as well. This is just a start to some ideas, concepts and possibili- ties. We can work as a team so that we as a tribe can implement and start achieve- ment into some great possi- bilities. Thank you I want to take the time to thank the membership for giving me the opportunity to run for Tribal Council and serve our people. It’s a very prestigious honor to be a nominee and given a chance to be a the table with our well respected elders, Chiefs and leaders. God Bless, Jason W. Smith