Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon March 28, 2018 Summer youth workshops this week Youth work will be available for tribal youth this summer. Application workshops are being held this week, during spring break. Application work- shops are being held at the Education Building, 1110 Wasco Street from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. This Wednesday and Thurs- day, March 28-29. All 14-year old stu- dents, please bring your parent or guardian. Important informa- tion: · Bring a current pic- ture identification card: Samples of identification can be a school identifi- cation, tribal ID, Oregon state ID card. Your iden- tification cannot be more than three years old. · Bring your Social Security card · Any Native Ameri- can youth/college stu- Youth job fair Friday The 2018 Summer Youth Job Fair and Op- portunities is coming up this Friday, March 30 at the Community Center Social Hall. The youth job fair will be from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. On hand will be hir- ing representatives from many employers: Indian Head Casino, Heart of Oregon Corps and Youth Build, Central Electric training and IBEW 80, Northwest Youth Corps, Higher Education, Summer Youth Program— dent may apply. · Youth must be en- rolled and attending high school, alternative school, GED, or college. · Students who have Branch of Natural Re- sources, Native Aspira- tions, Kah-Nee-Ta Re- sort, UA 290, AmericCorps VISTAS and others. The job fair is open to youth ages 14-24, and college students of any age. This is an opportu- nity for networking, ca- reer fulfillment, new skills, retraining and other benefits. For more information contact Melinda Poitra at 541-553-3324; or Thayliah Henry-Suppah at 541-553-3328. worked in previous years in a summer work program are required to submit a resume with their applica- tion. · Young men ages 18 and over are required to be registered with Selec- tive Service. · Must be age 14 at date of application. · All 14-year old stu- dents and any first-time workers are required to complete pre-employ- ment workshops to be eligible to work. · Social Security cards will be used for hiring purposes, and a current picture identification card are needed for drug tests in the hiring process. Per Human Resources Department require- ments, no copies of iden- tification documents will be accepted by the Hu- man Resources Depart- ment, and identification cards may not be older than three years. More information will be provided after com- pleting workshop. Powwow MC going to USS Arizona ceremony Carlos Calica will take part in an Eagle Feather cer- emony at the USS Arizona Memorial in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. Carlos is planning to at- tend with sons Quindon, 20, and Trenton, 17, and aunt Linda Meanus. The Eagle Feather cer- emony at the Arizona Me- morial will honor Native vet- erans, all other veterans and their families. The Arizona was bombed and irreparably damaged during the Decem- ber 7, 1941 bombing at Pearl Harbor. The ship still lies at the bottom of the bay. The Eagle Feather cer- emony will be the first time in 76 years since the bomb- ing that any Native cer- emony has been held to honor fallen veterans. Mr. Calica, who works at tribal Credit, is known in Western states for his skills as a pow- wow master of ceremonies. Locally, he MC’s at Pi- Ume-Sha, Lincoln’s Pow- Carlos Calica during a previous year’s Pi-Ume-Sha. wow, and the Warm Springs Veterans Powwow. He also MC’s at powwows through the West, including at powwows at eight of the Pac-12 colleges. 2 positions with WSCAT The Warm Springs Community Action Team has two new po- sitions opening this month. They are Small Busi- ness Incubator Man- ager, and Small Business Bookkeeper. For details and to apply, contact Chris Watson at the Commu- nity Action Team. The Eagle Feather cer- emony will be in September. The Native American Cul- tural Association of Oregon will have many of the tribes from Oregon represented at the ceremony. While visiting Hawaii, the participants will also attend the Polynesian Cul- tural Center. Then the group will at- tend the Rose Peters Me- morial Powwow. This will be a chance for the Na- tive community to honor Ms. Peters, the influential Native woman of Or- egon who passed away last year. After the ceremony, the U.S. Parks Service will be gifted an eagle feather with a display plaque con- taining challenge coins from all branches of mili- tary service. Joining the ceremony will top ranking officers of the Pacific Theatre, honoring current enlisted military and their families. The Parks Service will permanently display the plaque and in the Mu- seum for Pearl Harbor, honoring Native and non- Native veterans. For Miss Warm Springs expenses A Miss Warm Springs Coronation and fundraising banquet is coming up on May 12, at 6 p.m. at the Mu- seum at Warm Springs. Money raised will help with Miss Warm Springs Thyrecia Simtustus’ travel expenses throughout the year. There will be a dinner, and live and silent auctions. It will be $20 per person, $10 for senior citizens and children under 10. You are asked to RSVP by May 1. Contact Thyrecia or Joie Simtustus. Page 3 MD team report at Tribal Council The Confederated Tribes in May of 2006 entered an agreement with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Oregon, the Fed- eral Bureau of Investiga- tion, Indian Health Service, and the Bureau of Indian Affairs. The agreement estab- lished the Multi-Disciplinary Child Abuse Team, or MDCAT. Tribal officials on the team are from the Warm Springs Police Department, tribal Prosecution, Victims of Crime Ser vices, Children’s Protective Ser- vices, and the Community Health Program. The parties to the agree- ment established the proto- cols to investigate and pros- ecute cases of child physi- cal and sexual abuse that occur on the reservation. The multi-disciplinary team members meet one time a month, reviewing cases that are referred to them. Members then report on steps that have been taken to address the case, and the outcome. The team also rec- ommends how best to handle specific cases, and makes recommendations to tribal and federal prosecu- tors. The most serious cases are handled by the FBI and the U.S. Attorney’s Office, under the Major Crimes Act. The monthly MDCAT meetings are not open to the public, because the team dis- cusses specific details of pending cases. Anyone wishing to have an item added to the MDCAT agenda may make a recommendation to Cecelia Collins, CPS direc- tor and MDCAT chair- woman; or to Corey Clements, deputy tribal pros- ecutor and MDCAT vice chair. As required by the inter- disciplinary agreement, the team reports once a year to the Tribal Council. They met with Council last week, reviewing the past year’s ac- tivities—the number of cases referred to the team, cases prosecuted and the outcomes, the number of children whose cases went before Tribal Court with cus- tody going to the parent and/or guardian. They discussed the rate at which child abuse cases on the reservation are taken up by the U.S. Attorney’s Office, or tribal prosecu- tion. Cases that can result in a sentence of up to a year can go to tribal pros- ecution. Major crimes are taken up by the federal prosecutors. A case can be prosecuted first in tribal court, and then in federal court, as this does not violate a defendant’s right against double jeopardy. Councilwoman Val Switzler commented that there should be a compre- hensive guide to the re- sources and department ser- vices that are available to families. Ms. Collins said that she is in the process of hiring an intern who will develop a catalogue of all the services available to members— health services, food, fuel and electricity vouchers, shel- ter, fire wood, phone service help, etc. The information would then be available in one publication. Meth/opioid epidemic In another recent devel- opment, the multi-disciplin- ary team established a sub- committee focusing specifi- cally on the methamphet- amine/opioid epidemic. The team agreed that the subcommittee is needed to look into the number of women who report to the clinic and are testing pre- sumptive positive for meth- amphetamine or opioids, and who are lacking prenatal care. There are instances of ba- bies being born with long term affects of in-utero ex- posure to these drugs, and who grow up with learning disabilities and behavioral is- sues. The report to Council says: “The Drug Endangered Child Multi-Disciplinary Team Subcommittee was created as a smaller branch of the MDCAT, and is in the early stages of development. Partners include Dr. Locker, Ashley Blodgett, Erin Ludwig, Cecelia Collins, Tony Cordizar and Rosetta Herkshan (school resource officers), Misti Kopplin of ECE, and other invited guests.” Over the past 12 years, the MDCAT has developed into a cohesive and productive group, committed to the goals as stated in the founding agreement. The members bring dif- ferent perspectives and in- sight into addressing the safety and health of children on the reservation, the team reported at Council.