Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon December 6, 2017 Page 7 A Year in Review ~ 2017 (The following is a look back at some of the memorable news events of the past year around the reservation.) January The year started with Katrina Blackwolf winning the 2017 Miss Warm Springs crown. “I’ve always wanted to be Miss Warm Springs,” Katrina said after the pageant. “Especially since I was Little Miss Warm Springs in 2000, I’ve looked up to the older girls who were Miss Warm Springs.” Over the years she has also been the Miss Columbia River Powwow Queen, and Junior Miss Yakama Nation. She learned tradition and culture from her grandparents, es- pecially grandmothers Galen Jack- son and Katie Blackwolf-Bevis. Here grandfathers are Amos Nelson and John Bevis. Katrina’s parents are Zelma Walsey and Levi Blackwolf. In other January news: Tribal Council voted to continue the Warm Springs Timber Co. through 2017. By continuing the company through this year, the tribes could realize more than $2 million in timber stumpage pay- ments. The timber stumpage pay- ments are the source of the Se- nior Pension and per capita pay- ments. Elsewhere this month: Tribal Council approved an agreement with the state of Oregon that clears the way for the can- nabis project. The agreement was 11 months in the making, including extensive negotiation with state officials in- cluding the Governor’s office and legal counsel, and the Oregon Li- quor Control Commission, which regulates the industry in the state. This is a unique agreement in Oregon, and only the fourth such document in the U.S. The other three are with tribes in the state of Washington. The inter-government agree- ment is the document that will al- low the tribes to export its cannabis products into the state market. After gold was discovered in the Middle Fork John Day River in the 1860s, the waterway and the ecosystem it supports endured over a century of damage, degradation, and destruction. The greatest dam- age came from the dredge mining of a two-mile stretch of the river from 1939 to 1943. In total, around two hundred acres of floodplain were impacted, with soil and vegetation loss, straightened stream channels, and tailing piles that affected water qual- ity. Bucket dredging was an early steam-powered method that was used on the Middle Fork John Day River. A bucket dredger uses a ro- tating belt or wheel equipped with buckets to scoop up material from the riverbed for processing. The scouring of the riverbed at this scale destroys aquatic ecosys- tems that take thousands of years to develop naturally. The Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs Branch of Natural Resources recognized that the river needed help. The thinking was that by speed- ing up the river’s recovery, the sum- mer steelhead, spring chinook salmon, Pacific lamprey, and bull trout that depended on the river would reap the benefits. The tribes coordinated a large- scale restoration project, taking a number years, with a successful fin- ish and dedication in 2017. In other news: The morning of August 21 of this year, a Monday, will bring a solar eclipse across parts of Or- egon. The reservation is in direct line to see the total eclipse. A January report at Tribal Coun- cil: Expect many visitors, as more populous areas—Portland and Eu- gene, for instance—are not in di- rect line to see the total eclipse. This is an economic opportunity for the tribes, and plans are coming together for a variety of events on the day of the eclipse, and during the weekend leading up to it. Indian Head Casino is planning to feature Native entertainers on the days leading up to the eclipse. Working with the casino, the Mu- seum at Warm Springs has plans for a gathering on the museum grounds featuring tribal vendors and dance demonstrations. The snowpack this winter in the region is about 122 percent of average. This will help the roots and fish in the spring. The snowpack this year is healthy, especially in comparison with some other recent years. In 2015, for instance, the level was 41 percent of average; and in 2014, thirty-seven percent of average. In late January news: Almost no jurisdiction in the U.S. still requires a blood test before two people can obtain a marriage li- cense. Of the states, only Mon- tana and Mississippi, plus the Dis- trict of Columbia, have the require- ment. The Tribal Council decided to eliminate the blood test and health certificate requirement for people wanting to obtain a tribal marriage license. The action came on recommen- dation of the tribal Justice Team. The Justice Team recommended the elimination of the requirement as outdated, and because Oregon no longer has the requirement. People wanting to avoid the tribal test could simply go off reserva- tion to get married; so having a tribal blood-test requirement was obso- lete. February Tribal member employment is a top priority of the Twenty-Sev- enth Tribal Council. In February they took significant action toward this goal. The Council approved a memorandum of understanding between the Confederated Tribes of War m Springs TERO and the Oregon Depart- ment of Transportation. TERO is the Tribal Employ- ment Rights Office, housed in the Warm Springs Ventures building at the industrial park. With the ODOT agreement in place, the Warm Springs TERO has jurisdiction over federally- funded transportation projects in a large area of the region. This will provide construction and other employment opportu- nities for tribal members. TERO also coordinates training programs for members. The office serves the Warm Springs tribal members, and any other member of a federally rec- ognized tribe. The process of reaching the MOU took a couple of years, as the parties worked out the details. It was a case of being at the right place at the right time. Like a hole in one. Or better yet, a double eagle. An avid golfer, Brent Moschetti was a long-time mem- ber of t h e K a h - N e e - Ta Courtesy Brigette McConville and family Andrew Zimmern of the Travel Channel’s Bizarre Foods meets with Tribal Councilwoman Brigette McConville at the Columbia River. The show, featuring Councilwoman McConville and family, premiered in February 2017. cour se. Mr. Moschetti retired from his medical supplies business at the end of last year, with the idea of playing more golf. A short time later he received word that the Kah-Nee-Ta Golf Course was closing, due to finances at the resort. He knew that closing the course for a year or two—letting the fair- ways and greens go fallow—would mean the course would probably never open again, at least not with- out substantial and costly renova- tion. “And I would hate to see it close,” Moschetti was saying in Feb- ruary. So he contacted the Kah-Nee- Ta board and management. His pro- posal was that he would operate and maintain the course and clubhouse. This was a decision based on love of the game, and a desire to help the resort, rather than for profit. So far this year he has already made improvements at the course, trimming trees, getting the rough un- der control, re-sanding the traps, landscaping around the clubhouse. March Marie Kay Williams was named the interim general manager for Kah-Nee-Ta Resort and Spa. Former resort general manager Jim Bankson retired based on a doctor’s recommendation. The resort board of directors and interim manager Williams met with Tribal Council this week for an update on the developments. Ms. Williams is a long-time resort employee, having started there 18 years ago while in high school. In other March news: The Confederated Tribes have been trying to negotiate a new long-ter m education agreement with the Jefferson County School District 509-J. This has been an on-going process yet to be resolved. Meanwhile the district is following an agreement that is past due for renewal. The tribes may request the matter be put to mediation. This would be through the Oregon Department of Education. In other school news: The district 509-J board of di- rectors hired Warm Springs Acad- emy Principal Ken Parshall as the new district superintendent. Mr. Parshall has been the Warm Springs Academy principal since the beginning of the 2015 school year. For at least the first two years of his tenure as district superin- tendent, Parshall will continue to serve as the Warm Springs Acad- emy. Elsewhere: Columbia River tribes support a proposed law to protect salmon and steelhead runs in the Colum- bia River by allowing for more ef- ficient removal of predatory sea lions. Studies by the National Marine Fisheries Service and others show that predatory sea lions are hav- ing an ongoing significant and det- rimental impact on the fish runs. NOAA Fisheries Service estimates that up to 45 percent of a recent spring chinook run was potentially lost to sea lions. And this: The federal lawsuit U.S . v. Oregon is the ongoing court case that implements the Treaty of 1855 fishing rights of the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, and three other Columbia River treaty tribes. The management agreement pursuant to U.S. v. Oregon is the fundamental guiding document for tribal fisheries at the Columbia. So having a long-term agreement with provisions that ensure tribal fishing rights is critical. The management agreement also covers vital matters such as fisheries restoration at the Columbia, providing a framework for all parties in salmon and steelhead management. Mr. Ogan gave an update in March at Tribal Council on the U.S. v. Oregon management agree- ment. There was good news, he said, in that it appears all parties are willing to extend the current agreement for another ten-year term. The existing agreement is set to expire at the end of this year.