Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon January 31, 2018 Page 3 Cannabis summit at Portland Campus ‘old clubhouse’ comes down U.S. Attorney Bill Will- iams, District of Oregon, will host an interagency can- nabis summit this Friday, February 2. The tribes were specifically invited to the meeting, and a representa- tive from Council will at- tend. Gov. Kate Brown will also be on hand. U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions in early Janu- ary rescinded earlier memo- randa, from the previous ad- ministration, that had been guidance for U.S. Attorneys in states that have legalized marijuana. The earlier memo- randa had given assurance that federal law enforcement in states with legalized mari- juana would focus only on specific areas: organized crime, distribution to a minor, unlawful sale, crossing state lines, for instance. The recision of these guidelines create some con- fusion for states such as Oregon. The meeting this Friday will be a chance for U.S. At- torney Williams to share his enforcement strategy with interested parties, in light of the new federal policy. Important message from Sanitation, Landfill Dave McMechan/Spilyay The campus building removal project is approaching the final phase. The 3 Kings Co. demolished the largest single building among the eight sites—’the old clubhouse’—in late January. Early to mid February is the timeline for completion. CRITFC celebrates permit denial Washington Gov. Jay Inslee this week rejected a permit for a massive oil-by- rail terminal proposed along the Columbia River in southwest Washington state. Gov. Inslee said he agrees with the recommendation of a state energy panel, which in December voted to deny the application of the Vancouver Energy project. The joint venture of Tesoro Corp. and Savage Companies proposed to re- ceive about 360,000 barrels of North American crude oil a day by trains at the port of Vancouver. The oil would be loaded onto tankers and ships for transport to oil refineries up and down the West Coast. “The Governor’s deci- sion shows that the health of the Columbia River and the safety of its citizens matters most,” said Jaime Pinkham, executive director of teh Columbia River In- ter-Tribal Fish Commission. “The denial of Vancouver Energy’s permit to build the largest oil-by-rail terminal in the nation is a decision that we all cel- ebrate.” Throughout the applica- tion process, CRITFC and its member tribes, including Warm Springs, vigorously as- serted the interests of the Columbia River and those who depend on it. Upcoming tribal committee meetings This is the schedule for tribal committee meetings over the next several weeks: Water Control Board: 1 to 3 p.m., Thursday, Febru- ary 1 at the Branch of Natu- ral Resources Cougar Den. Fish and Wildlife Com- mittee: 3 to 5 p.m., Thurs- day, February at the Tribal Administration Building, con- ference room 3. Land Use Committee: 9 a.m. to 12 p.m., Wednes- day, February 7 at Adminis- tration conference room 3. Education Committee: 10 a.m. to noon, Saturday, February 10 in the trailer behind the old simnasho school. Water Control Board: 1 to 3 p.m., Thursday, Febru- ary 15 at the Branch of Natural Resources Cougar Den. Education Committee: 10 a.m. to noon, Friday, Feb- ruary 16 at Administration conference room 3. Land Use Planning Committee: 9 a.m. to noon, Wednesday, February 21 at Administration room 3. Water Control Board: 1 to 3 p.m., Thursday, March 1 at the Branch of Natural Resources Cougar Den. Fish and Wildlife Committee: 3 to 5 p.m., Thursday, March 1 at the Administration conference room 3. Education Committee: 4:30 to 6:30 p.m., Monday, March 5 at the Seekseequa Fire Hall. Land Use Planning Committee: 9 a.m. to noon, Wednesday, March 7 at the Administration con- ference room 3. Water Control Board: 1 to 3 p.m., Thursday, March 15 at the Branch of Natu- ral Resources Cougar Den. Land Use Planning Committee: 9 a.m. to noon, Wednesday, March 21 at the Administration con- ference room 3. Education Committee: 1 to 4 p.m., Saturday, March 31 at the Greeley Heights community building. For information contact the Tribal Council office, 541-553-3257. Warm Springs Recreation Presents Sweetheart Sale Shop local to get a unique gift for your sweetheart ~ Stop by for lunch or scrumptuous treats Friday, February 2, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Community Center Social Hall Taking sign-ups ~ Call Carol, 541-553-3243. Warm Springs Sanita- tion and Landfill will con- tinue to provide trash pickup for all residents; however, we must limit the 96-gallon totes to one per household. We are running low on totes and must make changes in order to serve more customers. If you need to main- tain a second tote, please call Russell 541-553- 4943. We will need to start charging for the second tote. Because of expensive equipment costs, we will no longer be giving out totes for replacement or for new residents. The cost of the totes has in- creased substantially. We also have vari- ances and special allow- ances on a case-by-case basis. Again, call Russell at 541-553-4943 for more information. Tires and hazard- ous materials Recently, many of our tribal landfill transfer sta- Courtesy Sanitation/Landfill Oil and hazardous materials at the landfill. tions have been receiving increased quantities of tires and hazardous materials such as motor oil and hy- draulic fluid. The landfill transfer sta- tions and the main landfill cannot accept this volume of hazardous waste. Tires cannot be left at the transfer stations, and must be taken to the com- mercial entrance to be dis- posed. There is a cost for the weight of tires to be dis- posed. The Confeder- ated Tribes must pay an outside disposal com- pany to handle tires, and the price to dispose of tires has increased. We also suspect some people from the outside are using our landfill transfer stations. If you see something, please call Russell at 541-553-4943, or call the Warm Springs Police Department. On the February Tribal Council agenda The following are some of the items on the Februar y Tribal Council agenda (sub- ject to change at Council dis- cretion): Monday, February 5 9 a.m.: Bureau of Indian Affairs update with Floy Anderson, superintendent. 9:30: Office of Special Trustee update and Realty items with Charles Jackson and Urbana Ross. Land Buy-Back War m Springs appraisals update with the Office of Special Trustee and the Buy-Back program. 1:30 p.m.: Legislative up- date conference call, federal and state. 2:30: Tribal attorney up- date. Tuesday, February 6: Off-shore drilling tribal con- sultation. Tuesday-Wednesday, Februar y 6-7: War m Springs National Fish Hatch- ery-USFWS co-managers meeting at Kah-Nee-Ta. Monday, February 12 9 a.m.: Children’s Protec- tive Services update with Cecelia Collins. 10: Veterans Memorial Park update with the Veter- ans Memorial Park Commit- tee. 11: Collaboration grant with the Jefferson County School District, with April Campbell, Oregon Depart- ment of Education. 1:30: Water treatment up- date with Travis Wells and Roy Spino. 2:30: Columbia River In- ter-Tribal Fish Commission meeting with Jaime Pinkham. 3:30: Draft resolutions with Secretary-Treasurer Michele Stacona. Febr uar y 12-15: Na- tional Congress of the American Indian executive council winter session. Tuesday, February 20 9 a.m.: Secretary-Trea- surer and Chief Operations Officer updates with Michele and Alyssa. 10: March agenda and minutes with the S-T. 11: Draft resolutions with the S-T 1:30 p.m.: Legislative up- date calls, federal and state. 2:30: Fee to Trust tribal consultation. 3:30: Enrollments with Lucille Suppach-Samson of Vital Stats.