Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon January 18, 2017 New superintendent on board at BIA F loy Lori Anderson is the new BIA superintendent for the Warm Springs Agency. Floy brings several of ex- perience to the position, hav- ing worked at the Warm Springs Agency for a num- ber years. She first worked here starting in 1984, and for three years was the secretary to the superintendent. She then worked for the BIA in the Portland offices, return- ing to War m Springs in 1995. Most recently she was the administrative officer, be- fore being named this month as superintendent. Lori is a member of the Seneca Cayuga Nation of Oklahoma. The War m Springs Dave McMechan/Spilyay W.S. BIA Agency Superintendent Floy Lori Anderson. Agency superintendent over- sees BIA activities for the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, the Klamath and Burns Paiute tribes. On the Warm Springs Reservation there are 18 BIA employees: five in BIA Roads, four in Social Ser- vices, three each in Realty and Administration, and two with Facilities. Cowlitz looks to hire 1,000 for new casino January 27—only seven days after Trump is sworn into office as the 45th presi- dent of the United States— his incoming team won’t have much time to make a mark. But the expected re- sponse would be to defend the BIA’s acquisition of the 152-acre site. Non-Indian groups aren’t the only ones inter- ested in the case either. Four tribes from California sub- mitted a friend-of-the-court brief that goes against the BIA and the Cowlitz. “The Cowlitz Tribe will be permitted to build and operate a casino outside of its historic reservation and aboriginal territory,” the November 28 brief states. “Other Indian tribes that played by the rules estab- lished by Congress are ad- versely affected by this type of federal action, especially when land is taken into trust outside the homelands of one tribe and within the ab- original territory of another. This creates a double stan- Around Indian Country Tribe makes history with trust land approval The Bureau of Indian Affairs last week approved the very first tribal land- into-trust application in Alaska. The acquisition only covers a 1.08-acre site, but it marks a major milestone in the state and federal his- tory. Up until a few months ago, tribes in Alaska weren’t even able to follow the land-into-trust process. “The journey to this deci- sion has been a long one. Today the federally recog- nized tribes in Alaska have the same opportunity as those in the Lower 48 states to maintain a permanent homeland for them- selves,” Larry Roberts, the de facto leader of the BIA. The Craig Tribal Asso- ciation submitted the ap- plication last October. The 1.08-acre property in- cludes a building in the city of Craig that houses tribal headquarters, a community hall, a Head Start, a business and other programs that provide ser- vices to tribal citizens. A lawsuit finally forced the BIA to remove the so- called “Alaska exception” from its regulations. Union Pacific Railroad sues to exempt itself from Columbia Gorge protections Around Indian Country The Cowlitz Tribe is pre- paring for a big year as it debuts a long-awaited casino in Washington. The ilani Casino Resort is due to open on April 17. The tribe is hiring more than 1,000 people to work there. A legal cloud, though, hangs over the project. Non- Indian interests, and some tribes, are hoping the U.S. Supreme Court will derail the project on the grounds that the Bureau of Indian Affairs should not have ap- proved the land-into-trust application for the casino site. A group called Citizens Against Reservation Shop- ping, non-Indian card rooms and three local property owners filed their petition in October. But the Department of Justice has yet to file a re- sponse, leaving open the possibility for the adminis- tration of Republican presi- dent-elect Donald Trump to weigh in on the case. Since the brief is due by In recent weeks BIA Roads has been especially busy. The department is re- sponsible for maintaining roads on the reservation, and in January the task has been to keep the roads as clear as possible, an accomplishment to be commended. “I really enjoy working with the people here,” Lori says of Warm Springs. One of the positive changes she has seen over the years has been the tribes taking over the 638 pro- grams, “giving the tribes a chance to run their own pro- grams,” she says. And the future will no doubt be interesting, she says, as the new administration takes office in Washington, D.C. Page 7 dard for tribes.” The Mooretown Rancheria of Maidu Indi- ans and the United Auburn Indian Community signed the brief, along with the California Tribal Business Alliance, a small group that represents the Pala Band of Luiseño Indians and the Picayune Rancheria of Chukchansi Indians. All four operate casinos in Califor- nia—three of them in fact were opened on land re- cently acquired in trust. Once the Supreme Court receives the federal government’s brief, the non- Indian interests will be able to file one last reply before the justices take the petition under consideration. After that happens, they will an- nounce whether or not they have agreed to hear the case. Given the rapidly ap- proaching opening date for ilani, it’s possible the Cowlitz Tribe will have already de- buted the casino by that time. Union Pacific, just months after it caused an oil train derailment and fire in the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area in the town of Mosier, filed a lawsuit in federal court seeking to exempt itself from laws that protect this fed- erally designated Na- tional Scenic Area and its communities. The Friends of the Gorge are planning to oppose the action. Last November, Union Pacific’s rail ex- pansion application was de- nied by Wasco County, due to violations of its National Scenic Area ordinance and infringement on Native American tribal treaty rights. The Wasco County deci- sion is currently under ap- peal before the Columbia River Gorge Commission. “This action is predict- able, as they do not wish to respect local, regional and National Scenic Area pro- cess. We urge for justice at this level and protection of our communities,” said Arlene Burns, mayor of Mosier. The Federal Railroad Administration deter- mined that Union Pa- cific caused the oil train derailment and fire in Mosier last June by fail- ing to properly inspect and maintain its tracks in the Columbia River Gorge. The Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, and other Columbia River tribes, have op- posed large-scale oil transportation by rail. Calif. county limits marijuana near tribal land Officials in Yolo County, California, approved an in- terim marijuana ordinance that bars cultivation within 1,000 feet of tribal lands. The Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation asked for the limits, The Davis Enterprise re- ported. The tribe is con- cerned about outdoor mari- juana farms close to its res- ervation. “The tribe requested the proposed buffer to ensure the continued use and en- joyment of tribal lands is not impaired by nearby out- door medical cannabis cul- tivation,” a memo prepared for the board of supervisors reads. “This is a valid basis for county regulation and, as explained further below, the buffer is neither arbitrary nor unreasonable.” The issue was not with- out controversy, though. The board voted 3-2 at a public meeting on Tuesday to include the buffer in the ordinance after some ques- tioned the tribe’s reasoning, The Enterprise reported. Cultivation of medical marijuana is permissible in the county. Free family days at High Desert Museum The Warm Springs com- munity is invited to the open- ing of a new exhibit, A Com- munity Forgotten: Uncovering the Stor y of The Dalles Chinatown, at the Columbia Gorge Discovery Center and Museum. The exhibit opens on Saturday, January 28. For the opening, doors open at 5:30 p.m. Dinner will be served at 6 p.m., followed by the 7 p.m. program. Meet the exhibit curators For tickets or information, call 541-296-8600 x 201 be- tween 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. daily, or visit: www.gorgediscovery.org A Community Forgotten: Uncovering the Story of The Dalles Chinatown tells the tale of the largely forgotten community of overseas Chinese immigrants who once populated First (Main) Street in The Dalles. The exhibit features ar- tifacts from the time, and shines a light on the discrimi- natory laws once used for racial exclusion. The Chinese came to The Dalles, Oregon, begin- ning in the 1850s on the heels of the gold rush, and the overseas Chinese community grew with the 1860s railroad expansion. By the 1880s, The Dalles was a community dominated by Chinese stores that served a multitude of functions be- yond just selling goods: They served as home to both transient and established residents, engaged in labor contracting and laundry work, and provided social diver- sions including gambling, and opium consumption. Free family days at High Desert Museum The High Desert Mu- seum will offer free admis- sion on two upcoming Sat- urdays, January 21 and Feb- ruary 25, thanks to a spon- sorship by Mid Oregon Credit Union. Added attractions, open- ing January 28, at the mu- seum are the B u z z s a w Sharks of Long Ago, and WWII: The High Desert Home Front. The Buzzsaw Sharks of Long Ago exhibition ex- plores the relationship be- tween artist Ray Troll and a 300 million-year -old bizarre “whorl-toothed” creature known as the buzzsaw shark. To commemorate the Seventy-Fifth Anniversary of the United States’ entry into World War II, the exhi- bition W W I I : T h e H i g h Desert Home Front explores contributions from the High Desert to the war effort and the war’s lasting effect on the region. Legendary Landscapes is an exhibition which will open February 18, just in time for the February free day. It features breathtak- ing images of the High Desert landscape taken by the public, and explains the stories behind how these places got their names in this community-curated exhibition. A special schedule of wildlife programs will be held throughout the day. The museum is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., in- cluding the Rimrock Café and Silver Sage Trading.