Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon January 4, 2017 Page 3 Agreement: tribes, state agree on cannabis project Jayson Smith/Spilyay The drum at the Miss Warm Springs Pageant. Timber Co.: Council okays through 2017 (Continued from page 1) Instead, the legal recourse is limited to the LLC itself. The Timber Company appears to be the first LLC of the Confederated Tribes, Hamstreet said. The Tribal Council agreed to form the company last year, after Warm Springs Forest Products Industries became insolvent. At the time, around late spring of last year, the WSFPI insol- vency meant that some of the timber resources—tim- ber on the ground in the for- est, for example—were in jeopardy of going to waste. It was also important to go ahead with already- planned timber sales, be- cause the 2016 tribal budget anticipated some of this rev- enue. The LLC was the choice to move forward, and the company was successful in making sales; although wait- ing for an approval from the BIA, some of the logs on the ground were lost to bug infestation. Still, the company as a start-up had a successful year. At first there was a matter of re-establishing the credibility of the tribal tim- ber sales, as fallout from the WSFPI insolvency created doubt among major players in the regional market, Hamstreet said. The good reputation has since been restored, he said. The Timber LLC will be the sole purchaser of tribal timber in 2017, with the ex- ception of one sale of about 6 million board feet. This sale will go directly to a com- pany that will harvest and haul the logs. This will be used as a test, to compare benefits to the tribes of the two approaches. Meanwhile, the reserva- tion timber allowable cut is set at 25 million board feet. In addition, there are about 11 million board feet from 2016 that were not har- vested, and this timber will be added to the 2017 inven- tory. Earlier in December, when the Tribal Council con- sidered continuing the Tim- ber Co. in 2017, the vote on the resolution was 3-0-6: There were three in favor, no one against, three abstains plus three out of the room. The result of this was un- clear. Rather than debate the question, Council decided to read the resolution again and have a re-vote. This time it passed 6-2-0. Councilman Ron Suppah supported the resolution, but nevertheless said he was con- cerned that the BIA agency superintendent had not been present at these meetings re- garding timber sales. The BIA has a trust and fiduciary duty regarding the resource, and proceeding with no BIA representative is concerning, Councilman Suppah said. At the time of these meet- ings, the BIA Warm Springs Agency had no permanent superintendent. (Continued from page 1) The state has no regulatory jurisdiction on the reserva- tion, and therefore cannot impose regulation on tribal cannabis production on-res- ervation. At the same time, the state through the OLCC deter- mines the products that are allowed to be sold at cannabis stores in Oregon. So in order to have a vi- able enterprise on the reser- vation, the tribes and state need an agreement allowing the tribes access to the Or- egon market. At the same time, the sovereignty of the tribes is to be respected. To accomplish this, the tribes’ Cannabis Commission will be the regulatory body for production on the reser- vation. The commission will en- sure that the product meets the state standards, including aspects such as allowable fer- tilizer and solvents, for ex- ample. When the tribal product meets the state standards, the tribes can then export the particular shipment from the reservation to the state mar- ket. There is no plan for sales on the reservation. The inter-government agreement includes provisions regarding a scenario in which the tribal product does not meet the state standards. In this case the state would be able to prohibit, or embargo the product from the state market. If this happens, the Can- nabis Commission would work with the OLCC on re- solving the matter. An em- bargo scenario would most likely be mutually agreed upon between the tribal and state regulatory bodies, Ellen Grover said. The inter-government agreement envisions a coop- erative approach, which the tribes have taken with both the state and federal govern- ment on this issue. There is a dispute resolu- tion process set out in the in- ter-government agreement, in case the Cannabis Commis- sion and OLCC do not come to a mutual agreement. In an unlikely and worst case scenario, an irreconcil- able disagreement would end up in state court in Marion County. This was a point of concern for Tribal Council- man Jody Calica: The state at times has been at odds with the tribes, he said, in matters such as fisheries and hunting, and even the null and void “treaty of 1865.” The tribes’ legal counsel said she would bring up the matter with the state counsel, in order to clarify this point as to tribal sovereignty. The inter-governmental agreement is for a term of ten years, with an automatic renewal possible for another ten years. The tribal membership in late 2015 passed the cannabis referendum with more than 86 percent of the voters say- ing yes. The referendum also saw the largest turnout of voters, for a referendum, in tribal history. Meanwhile, Ventures is in the process of hiring an ex- ecutive director of the can- nabis enterprise. Court issues big decision in Indian Child Welfare Act case The Indian Child Welfare Acts was passed by Congress in 1978. The Act is a federal law that seeks to keep Ameri- can Indian children with Native families. Congress passed ICWA in 1978 in response to the alarmingly high number of Indian children being re- moved from their homes by both public and private agencies. The intent of Congress under ICWA was to “pro- tect the best interests of Indian children and to pro- mote the stability and secu- rity of Indian tribes and families.” ICWA sets federal re- quirements that apply to state child custody proceed- ings involving an Indian child who is a member of or eli- gible for membership in a federally recognized tribe. Over the years the act has been misinterpreted or ig- nored by local courts while dealing with Indian parents and their children. After several years of fighting with the Rapid City, South Dakota, court system to enforce the ICWA, attor- ney Dana Hanna received judgement from Chief Fed- eral Judge Jeffery L. Viken in the U. S. District Court. The case that finally reached the conclusion was known as “Oglala Sioux Tribe, and Rosebud Sioux Tribe to protect the rights of Madonna Pappan, and Lisa Young, individually and on behalf of all other persons similarly situated.” Plaintiffs Madonna Pappan and Lisa Young live in Pennington County and are member of the Oglala Sioux Tribe and the Stand- ing Rock Sioux Tribe. The court classified them as class representatives for all similarly situated Indian parents. In a March 2015 court order the judge found the defendants had violated the plaintiff ’s due process rights under the 14th Amendment during the course of the 48- hour hearings. Among the findings: The defendants failed to appoint counsel in advance of the 48-hour hearing. They failed to provide no- tice of the claims against In- dian parents, the issues to be resolved and the state’s bur- den of proof, and denied the plaintiff ’s the right to cross- examine adverse witnesses. They denied Indian parents or custodians the right to present evidence in their own defense, and removed Indian children on grounds not based on evidence pre- sented in the hearing. The December, 2016 or- der applied a permanent in- junction on the defendants, stating that in their official capacities they are “hereby immediately and perma- nently restrained and en- joined from engaging in the following activities: Violating the constitutional rights of plaintiffs guaranteed by the Due Process Clause of the 14th Amendment; Violating the statutory rights of the plaintiffs guar- anteed by the ICWA and par- ticularly those rights guaran- teed by 25 U. S. C. s 1922 et seq, and Violating the constitutional and statutory rights of the plaintiffs as set out in the Declaratory Judgement en- tered on Dec. 15.