Spilyay Tymoo Coyote News, est. 1976 March 14, 2018 - Vol. 43, No. 6 March – Wiyalppt – Winter - Anm Plan for renovating the ballfields The Warm Springs baseball fields are in need of extensive renovation. And once this work is done, the new fields will need ongoing maintenance. Young play- ers, and adult softball teams, re- quire this amenity here in Warm Springs. Tribal executive management and community development have developed a detailed plan that would accomplish the goal, bring- ing the fields up to a highest qual- ity standard. As the health of tribal youth is a community priority, the Tribal Council by resolution this month endorsed the plan. The endorsement allows man- agement and community develop- ment—with Warm Springs Recre- ation as project sponsor—to pur- sue the necessary funding for the work, which will extensive. One immediate source of fund- ing—one prompting the recent Council resolution—could be the Oregon Parks and Recreation. The Parks and Recreation grant would be in addition to the tribal match, and other potential sources. The Council resolution states the need for action to restore the fields, noting: “The existing 41- year-old ball fields complex is due for extensive renovation and re- development… “ The resolution continues with some details of the project: A new orientation and reloca- tion of all four current ball fields—three Little League base- ball, and one adult softball field— shall be repurposed to create a total of four new Little League baseball fields in a typical four-plex ball fields layout. An additional two adult softball size ball fields would be con- structed adjacent to the four- plex ball fields. Other amenities: New chain- link fencing, synthetic turf for infields and outfields, spectator seating, dugouts with players benches, combination restroom, food concession and picnic shel- ter, landscaping, pedestrian walkways, handicapped accessi- bility, parking areas, under- ground utilities, scorekeepers booths, other related ancillary items. (See the conceptual drawing of the project on page 8.) Getting ready at the Plateau Travel Plaza These are busy days at the Plateau Travel Plaza—busy and exciting as the 70 employ- ees are getting ready for the opening. The goal is to have all of the staff on opening day work- ing as smoothly as though they have been there for years, said Eric Angel, Travel Plaza gen- eral manager. The employees are running through all facets of the op- eration—from the kitchen and dining area, to the convenience store, fuel stations, gaming area, security, maintenance and more. The Travel Plaza will open to the public on Saturday, March 24, with the grand opening planned for Friday, April 6. The enterprise has already created many new jobs for tribal members: close to 75 per- cent of the workers there are members. “I’m really happy about that,” said Jeffrey Carstensen, Indian Head Ca- sino Chief Executive Officer. The Plateau is a new busi- ness, though it is a project of Indian Head Casino. And the two will complement one another. The Travel Plaza—off High- way 26 at Cherry Lane in the Ma- dras Industrial Park—will be the first new business enterprise of the Confederated Tribes in several years, and one that has taken dili- gence and time to realize. “We started in October of 2013, so it’s been more than four years,” Mr. Carstensen said. The Travel Plaza will be a 24- hour operation, working in three shifts. There will be many cus- tomers from the industrial park, which employs more than 1,000 people. Just off the highway, and near the intersection with Highway 97, the vehicle traffic will also bring in many customers. Clearly, this month will mark a milestone in the economic future of the Confederated Tribes. Dave McMechan photos/Spilyay Photos show 1950s era harvests Mt. Hood Meadows hosted the annual Warm Springs Tribal Ski Day last week. On hand from Warm Springs were 65 skiers, snowboarders—like Kaliyah Iverson (above)—and other guests. (See page 8 for more on Ski Day.) Courtesy Sue Matters/KWSO ECR WSS Postal Patron U.S. Postage PRSRT STD Warm Springs, OR 97761 Powwow, new exhibit for Museum anniversary Twenty-five years ago this week the tribes celebrated the opening of the Museum at Warm Springs. That week saw the realization of a vision—a museum preserv- ing and honoring the tribal history, culture and traditions—first con- ceived in the 1960s. Some ensuing milestones were Tribal Council approval of the charter, and membership approval of the referendum. The ground-breaking happened in 1991, and the doors opened to the public this week in March 1993. To celebrate these first 25 years—the Silver Anniversary— the Museum at Warm Springs will host a powwow, and the opening of a new exhibit. This Saturday, March 17 the museum will host a traditional pow- wow and opening of the new ex- hibit, Twanat—Celebrate Our Legacy. Events begin at 2 p.m. There will be commemorative gifts, door prizes and refreshments. Miss Warm Springs will be on hand. The new exhibit is a celebration of the tribal culture and the mu- seum. Items on display will be rarely seen items from the Mu- seum at Warm Springs Permanent Collection. Prevention task force reports at Tribal Council Kathy Danzuka and Rena Suppah (above) take inventory in the grocery area of the Travel Plaza; while Cecil Brunoe (left), from the Indian Head Casino- Travel Plaza maintenance crew, works by the new fuel pumps. Courtesy Yvonne Iverson PO Box 489 Warm Springs, OR 97761 The Culture and Heritage Com- mittee shared a recently compiled book of photographs of tribal members in the 1950s harvesting huckleberries and edible lichen, and digging roots. The publication also has pictures of the 1953 Huckle- berry Feast at the HeHe Longhouse. Michelle Steen-Adams from the University of Washington shared the publication with the tribal Natural Resources Branch, who shared with the Culture and Heritage Commit- tee. The photograph images in the publication are from glass slides, originally in the collection of David and Katherine French, now at the University of Washington. The glass slides allow for reproduction of the highest quality: Many of the photo- graphs are sharp and brightly col- ored. Some are in black and white. The publication is the result of U.S. Forest Service project to study the effect of fire on the health of the forest, specifi- cally how the Native people used fire to maintain healthy habitat for traditional foods. Culture and Heritage Com- mittee chairwoman Myra Johnson-Orange shared the pub- lication with Tribal Council, dur- ing her committee update. Another topic was the Agency and other longhouses. Committee member Carlos Calica said the tribes should con- sider having an official longhouse and meeting policy to deal with people who are disrup- tive or under the influence. The team working to help address the drug and alcohol epidemic on the reservation shared their latest report this week with Tribal Coun- cil. The epidemic—of methamphet- amine, opiates and alcohol—is hurt- ing everyone on the reservation, the parties agreed. To some degree the epidemic harms all families. “One addicted family member can turn the whole household upside down,” Councilwoman Val Switzler said. The problem has existed for years, but recently has reached an critical level, directly harming the tribal organization and its ability best to serve the membership. Even the clinic experienced a meth incident. The drug and alcohol epidemic is not isolated to Warm Springs: Reservations across Indian Coun- try, like many other communities in the nation, are seeing the same prob- lem, said Councilman Lee Tom. There are many recent drug- and alcohol-related incidents that have harmed and cost the Confederated Tribes organization, affecting all members. Some examples: Meth and Opiate Work Group member and Housing Authority di- rector Danielle Wood reported that one or more people broke into the Housing warehouse. (See WORK GROUP on 7)