Spilyay tymoo. (Warm Springs, Or.) 1976-current, July 19, 2017, Page 5, Image 5

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    Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon
July 19, 2017
Page 5
More eclipse plans for August 21
Tribal youth, community mem-
bers and guests are invited to join
the Northwestern Earth and Sci-
ences Pipeline for solar eclipse view-
ing on Monday, August 21.
The event will be from 9 to
11:30 a.m. at the Warm Springs
Academy football field. There will
be:
Free solar eclipse glasses; and
solar eclipse viewing telescopes.
Take your own photo of the sun;
and ask an expert. Potential live
streaming from balloon flights.
The schedule that follows is
from Chief Operations Officer
Alyssa Macy’s most recent eclipse
events update.
On the Monday of the eclipse,
tribal teams will be launching high
altitude balloons. The planned
timeline looks like this:
8–9 a.m.: Teams prepare the
high altitude balloons launch.
8:50–9:10: Launch first set of
balloons
9:10–9:20: Launch second set
of balloons.
Till 10: Views from tbe balloons
cameras.
Northwestern Earth and Space
Sciences Pipeline, the Confeder-
ated Tribes and Warm Springs
Academy are partnering on this
project.
The weekend events at the
AARP drivers course in Warm Springs
An AARP Smart Driver
Course will be in Warm Springs
on Thursday, July 27. The class
will be from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at
the Family Resource Center.
There will be a one-hour break
for lunch.
This is for drivers 50 and
older. Registration cost is pro-
vided for Warm Springs resi-
Jayson Smith/Spilyay
The Simnasho community hosted the Summer Nights
Powwow in July. This year the powwow celebrated its
Fifteenth Anniversary.
CP Enterprise: funding
(Continued from page 1)
Voting in favor, Councilwoman
Carina Miller said, “The people
have voted on this, and they want
to get it moving.” Warm Springs
Chief Delvis Heath also voted in
favor.
Other Council discussion was in
regard to details of Financial Strat-
egies LLC. The limited liability as-
pect of the entity protects the tribes
from any potential liability, as the
LLC itself would be the only re-
course, said tribal attorney Ellen
plan
Grover.
Financial Strategies would be
managed by a management com-
mittee comprised of the Secretary-
Treasurer, the director of tribal Fi-
nance, and an individual tribal mem-
ber appointed by Council.
The management committee will
be in charge of direct approval of
any loans that comply with the pur-
pose of the LLC. The committee
will provide an annual budget re-
port to the tribes.
Horses: limited sales market
(Continued from page 1)
Fish habitat and native plants
also benefit from reduced horse
numbers, as the animals forage
through riparian areas, said Brad
Houslet, tribal fisheries biologist.
Other benefits of the program
have been employment and income
opportunities for mermbres, job
skills building, and recognition by
youth of the tribal horse culture,
Jayson Smith said.
The horse removal program is
funded through the settlement
money the tribes received in a natu-
ral resources lawsuit against the fed-
eral government. The money was
ear-marked for horse population
control.
In 2006 the federal government
stopped funding for horsemeat in-
spection. The effect was the clo-
sure of the few processing facili-
ties in the U.S., leaving Canada and
Mexico as the available markets.
At the Council update last week,
Wasco Chief J.R. Smith Sr. asked
what would happen if these mar-
kets were blocked.
The result could be devastation
to the range habitat, as there would
be no option for controlling the
horse population, Bobby Brunoe
said. “We do think about that, and
it would be devastating,” he said.
Meanwhile, there may be a
chance at the federal level to re-
open a domestic market, Mr. Smith.
He is a member of the National
Tribal Horse Coalition, and follows
developments in the industry.
15% OFF product
purchases
To redeem mention this ad,
or show your tribal ID.
Academy will also inlcude a plan-
etarium and student robotics com-
petition.
Another item to note: Elmer
Quinn will be available for camp-
ing, with RV parking at the Warm
Springs Community. Expected at-
tendance about 250. For informa-
tion contact the chief operations at
541-553-3212.
341 SW Sixth St.
Redmond
Tuesday - Saturday
10 a.m. - 6 p.m.
ph. 541-923-8071
dents and tribal members by the
Health and Human Services
Branch.
Class size is limited to 15. Call
the library to register, 541-553-
1078. Upon completion of the
course you may be eligible to re-
ceive a multi-year auto insurance
discount. There are no tests, you
just show up and learn.