Page 8 Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon September 27, 2017 Colville tour tower for ideas on fish passage On the Upper Columbia River in north-central Washington, the federal government built the Grand Coulee and Chief Joseph dams with- out any kind of fish passage. This completely devastated salmon and steelhead—fish the Colville tribes relied on from time immemorial. The Columbia Basin Fish Ac- cords of 2008 are a partnership agreement among tribes—Warm Springs, Colville, Umatilla and Yakama—and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Bureau of Reclama- tion, and the BPA. The Accords have provided nearly $1 billion in funding for fish restoration projects in the Colum- bia Basin. The kinds of projects specified include habitat restoration, hatchery production and lamprey projects. The Chief Joseph Fish Hatch- ery, at the Chief Joseph Dam, is an example of an Accords hatchery project. The Colville built the hatch- ery from 2010 to 2013, and cel- ebrated a First Return last year. In the Accords, fish passage above dams is also a priority. The Colville—a band of 12 tribes from that region of the Columbia—have Diversity group offers awareness training in Nov. The Let’s Talk Diversity Coalition is one of six re- gional Health Equity Coali- tions in Oregon. Their mission is to cre- ate inclusive conversations and empower communities. The coalition offers a four-part Cultural Aware- ness Training. The next training is Ex- periencing Poverty and Its Effect on Health on Thurs- day, November 2 from 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m. More than 500 people have partici- pated so far in training. To learn more about reg- istering, you can visit: letstalkdiversity.net Courtesy Lisa Dubisar/PGE PGE fisheries biologist Rebekah Burchell (far left) talks Rodney Cawston, Mike Marchand, Ron Suppah, Carissa Eichman, Chief Joe Moses, Alfredine Smith and others during the tour of the fish tower. been studying the idea of fish pas- sage above the Chief Joseph and Grand Coulee dams. Warm Springs Tribal Council- man Ron Suppah—who was Chairman during the Accords ne- gotiations—invited a Colville team—Colville Natural Resources director Rodney Cawston, Coun- cil Chairman Mike Marchand, and tribal attorney Carissa Eichman—to tour projects on the Warm Springs Reservation. The tour included the fish hatchery, and especially the selec- tive water intake tower at the Round Butte dam. The tribal- PGE fish tower—and the effort to get adult fish back above the dam—have seen success in bring- ing fish back up above the dam. Hands Across the Deschutes River Bridge Chiefs for Recovery and Madras Best Care invite the community to come cel- ebrate Recovery Month— Hands Across the Deschutes River Bridge this Saturday, September 30, starting at 10 a.m. There will be a meet and greet with testimony at the Rainbow Boat Launch. Prayer services will be held at the Old Shell Station for those lost in addiction. A light meal will be provided. This will be the Second Annual Recovery Month— Hands Across the Deschutes River Bridge. For more information con- tact Aldo Garcia at 541-771- 8596; or Michelle Wells-Elliot at Best Care, 541-475-4822. Fire Management will be con- ducting fall burning in Oct.- Nov. Call Brad Donahue, 541- 553-8301 with questions. Grant supports Museum at Warm Springs partnership T he Museum at Warm Springs and the High Desert Museum just received a grant for $110,662. The funds come from the Insti- tute of Museum and Library Ser- vices, through a Museums for American grant. The Museum at Warm Springs can use some of the funds to im- prove and update parts of the museum permanent exhibit. Meanwhile, the High Desert Museum is planning to improve its Native American exhibit, By Hand Through Memor y—Indian Nations of the Columbia River Plateau. The grant will help both muse- ums with training programs and workshops, opportunities to learn the latest in museum presentation. The partnership arrange- Dave McMechan/Spilyay Display at the Museum at Warm Springs. ment—a Native American mu- seum and a large region mu- seum—is unique and exciting, said Carol Leone, Museum at Warm Springs executive director. Museum standards and technol- ogy change all the time, and the grant helps in keeping up with these latest developments, Ms. Leone said. In awarding the grant, the In- stitute of Museum and Library Services is supporting the project, Weaving Stories: Creating Stronger In- stitutional Partnerships to Enhance Cul- turally Relevant Visitor Experiences. This grant “empowers the mu- seum professionals at both institu- tions to expand their capacity to develop place-based exhibits, pro- grams and practices that honor In- digenous perspectives, both past and present,” said Dana Whitelaw, High Desert Museum executive director. “This is a tremendous oppor- tunity to support and further de- velop our partnership with the Museum at Warm Springs, to work together and leverage expertise at both museums,” Ms. Whitelaw said. “We are ver y honored to be awarded this funding, and to part- ner with the Museum at Warm Springs.” Weaving Stories includes multi-day workshops, and intensive learning experiences to foster relationships across organizations and advance staff expertise. Weaving stories is based on the successful National Science Foun- dation funded Cosmic Serpent and Native Universe models. These NSF- funded models explore the com- monalities between western science and Native knowledge. Weaving Stories is a three-year project, divided into three phases built around intensive learning ex- periences. The cultural engagement phase—this December through December 2018—will center on a foundational four-day workshop advancing understandings of land, place and culture among stakehold- ers. During the exploration phase— January 2019 to November 2019—core project staff will travel to museums in Washington, D.C. and the Northwest to learn about innovations in exhibit design and challenges in interpretation of com- plex stories. The development phase—De- cember 2019 to April 2020—will include a four-day workshop that will enable staff to work collaboratively on exhibit concepts and program design. CRITFC position The Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Com- mission is advertising for an administrative assistant. Department: Fish Management. Full- time regular, non-ex- empt (GS 7/8). Salary: $40,673 - $52,870; $45,044 – $58,561. Location: Portland. Closing date: October 13. Primary responsi- bilities: Provide admin- istrative support to the Fisheries Management Department and coordi- nate with other depart- ments as needed. Fa- cilitate communication within the Fish Manage- ment Department, the Commission staff, the Commissioners, tribal technical staffs, tribal at- torneys, tribal fishers, and state and federal agencies. Also, provide backup and support for Fish Sci- ence and Policy and Liti- gation Support as neces- sary. Here is the link to the job applicant pro- cess: critfc.org/blog/jobs/ad- ministrative-assistant-2/