Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon June 21, 2017 Page 3 TERO planning for 2017-18 construction The Warm Springs Tribal Employment Rights Office is coordinating work on- and off-reservation for later this year and in 2018. The Warm Springs TERO finalized its memorandum of understanding with the Or- egon Department of Trans- portation in February. With the MOU in place, TERO now works with the on- and off-reser vation ODOT contractors and oth- ers on future projects. There are several projects planned in ODOT region 4—north to south Central Oregon—and in neighboring ODOT regions within the Warm Springs TERO juris- diction, said Wendell Jim, of- fice director. The TERO is located at Ventures at the industrial park. Mary Sando-Emhoolah, TERO dispatcher, maintains a data base of almost 150 tribal members who have completed the necessary work skills survey. As projects come open, the office determines the kind of worker that may needed. Ms. Sando-Emhoolah then works to fit the position with a member in the data base. This can be a challenge, as projects often are away from the reservation, such as at Mosier to use a recent ex- ample. Prineville, Hood River, The Dalles are other examples. Some workers use Summer meals for youth Warm Springs youth 18 and younger are wel- come to free nutritious meals through the Sum- mer Food Service Meal Program. Breakfast is served at the Warm Springs Youth Center (in the former el- ementary school gym) from 8:30-9, and lunch is from noon to 12:30. At Bridges Career School, located in the Westside School in Ma- dras, they will serve lunch at noon, and an afternoon meal at 3. fifth-wheel other rigs, or stay at campgrounds to make it to off-reservation jobs. Different kinds of posi- tions come open on the con- struction projects: laborers, flaggers, licensed commercial drivers, heavy equipment op- erators, carpenters, to name a few. For prospective employ- ees, keeping the TERO of- fice aware of a current phone number, job status, residence, etc., is important. To be added to the TERO data base, the skills survey is avail- able online at: wstero.com TERO also has partner- ships that can offer training and certifications. The TERO office has ju- risdiction on ODOT construc- tion projects on the reserva- tion, and within a 60-mile ra- dius of the reservation. Summer powwow at Simnasho Simnasho’s Fifteenth An- nual Hot Summer Nights Powwow and Encampment is coming up on July 11-12 at the Simnasho Powwow Ar- bor. Specials include Tiny Tots, Sweep Your Teepee World Championships, Family Team Dance, Round Bustle, Puth- la-pa, Drummers Relay and the Simnasho Derby, plus the Hot Summer Fun Run and Walk. Diabetes Prevention Moc Walk The Warm Springs Out- door Market is every Friday from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. in front of the Re-Use It Store next to Warm Springs Market. The market features lo- cally crafted items and fresh produce. For more information, contact the Warm Springs Community Action Team office, 541-553-3148. Jayson Smith/Spilyay Miss Warm Springs Katrina Blackwolf leads the Warm Springs Academy Eighth Grade Promotion, held at the Academy during the Graduation Banquet. Scholarship applications due The deadline is coming up to submit an applica- tion to the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs scholarship program. The last day to submit an application is Friday, July 1. For more infor- mation contact Higher Education in the Educa- tion building, room 306. The phone number is 541-553-3311. Or email: carroll.dick@wstribes.org Tribal enterprise boards of director Wasco weaver a feature at British Museum exhibit The Confederated Tribes have openings on the follow- ing enterprise boards of di- rector (Note: letters of in- terest and resume due this Friday, June 23): War m Springs Ven- tures: One tribal member, class II, term expires De- cember 31, 2017. Interest in economic and social devel- opment of the tribe and its membership. Warm Springs Com- posite Products Board of Directors: two non-member positions. Class II ending December 31, 2018; and Class III ending December 31, 2019. Pat Courtney Gold, mem- ber of the Confederated Tribes, helped revive the unique weaving technique of Wasco baskets. She also en- joys experimenting with vari- ous materials and weaving techniques. Ms. Coutney Gold has two weavings in the British Museum in London. In 2015, the museum asked Pat if they could in- clude one of her weavings in the International Travel- ing Exhibit, Treasures of the World. They chose a contempo- rary weaving titled Anti-So- cial Wild West Weaving. Pat wove this weaving using antique barb wire. She had to wear thick leather gloves, and care was taken to avoid the barbs as the stiff wire tended to swing in all directions. Pat’s weaving represents the coming of the Euro- Americans who took Native lands, then fenced the prop- erty, using barbed wire. This fencing shut out the Native people from their traditional lands. Native ancestors lived on this land for thousands of years. The land contains the spirit of the ancestors, and Warm Springs Power and Water Enterprise Board of Directors: one non-member position, Class II term expiring January 1, 2018. Warm Springs Tribal Employment Rights Of- fice Commission: two posi- tions, terms expiring January 11, 2018. Warm Springs Tribal Credit Board of Directors: one non-member position Class II, term expires Janu- ary 1, 2020. The other Class II board member is a tribal member. For each of these board positions, please submit a let- ter of interest and/or re- sume no later than June 23. Please submit to: Emily Yazzie, PO Box 1299, Warm Springs OR 97761. Or fax to 541-553-2241. Or email: Emily.yazzie@wstribes.org All applicants will be re- quired to do a criminal back- ground check and credit check. These will be con- ducted by the Warm Springs Police Department, and the Good Hire Credit Agency, respectively. The report will be submitted confidentially to the Secretary-Treasurer. For information call 541- 553-3257, or -3258. Andy Stokes at Kah-Nee-Ta in July Long time Northwest musician Andy Stokes—Oregon’s King of Soul— brings his music to Kah-Nee-Ta Resort on Saturday, July 15. The Andy Stokes Band plays Soul, R&B and Blues music. All Ages are wel- come at the July 15 Kah-Nee-Ta show. Doors open at 7 p.m. and the main show starts at 9. Tickets are $10 in ad- vance and $15 at the door. Food and beverage specials. You can buy tickets online at: brow n p a p e r t i cke t s. c o m / e ve n t / 2981952 Or contact DJ Medina at 541-325- 1772; or Kah-Nee-Ta at 541-553-1112. in itself is Native heritage. “A piece of torn calico on the barbed wire repre- sents our continued use of the land, as we crawl through the barb wire fence,” Ms. Gold explains. The antique barb wire was a generous gift from a friend, Becky Roberts of Campbell Ranch in Madras. Pat has earned many awards, including the Na- tional Endowment of Arts Heritage Fellowship. She was featured weaver in the PBS Craft in America, and has her baskets in these national museums: The Peabody Museum at Harvard University, Cam- bridge, Mass; the Smithsonian National Mu- seum of American Indians in Washington, D.C.; and the Museum at Warm Springs. She is a recipient of the 2016 prestigious Potlatch Fund award for her work on cultural preservation.