Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon July 18, 2018 Businesses: project manager on board Courtesy WSCAT A conceptual drawing, by Hacker Architects, of the Small Business Incubator building. (Continued from page 1) In the basement will be space for artisans to produce their work. Outside would be a variety of food carts in the food court pavilion; and the nearby service building. This will all be done in phases, with the main Commissary work the initial phase. The Community Action Team began the project a few years ago, with an open house and information and opinion gath- ering session with the community. People mentioned more retail space and business offices, and small business support, as among the biggest needs in Warm Springs. The Old Commissary—once relo- cated to a new site—was identified as the best option for an incubator project. The team studied two different sites, and with more community input they identified the highway- Paiute Avenue site as the best. A benefit is its close proximity to the highway, and there is infrastruc- ture already in place. Tribal Council gave their sup- port, and provided the Commu- nity Action Team with a 10-year lease of the Old Commissary. The Community Action Team has hired Marissa Ahern as the Small Business Incubator project manager. Ms. Ahern is a graduate of the University of Colorado, where she studied Environmental Design in the Architecture program, and is completing her Master’s Degree in Community and Economic Devel- opment. Dave McMechan Examples of small business incubators What is a small business incuba- tor? One definition reads: Business incubators are organi- zations that offer startups shared operation space. In doing so, entrepreneurs en- joy a collaborative work environ- ment with invaluable mentoring and networking opportunities, funding support and shared equipment. In short, they offer fledgling young companies a warm, safe place to grow and prosper. There are many examples in Oregon, each one a little different. The Warm Springs Community Action Team has looked at several, such as the Gaucho Collective of Klamath Falls. The Gaucho Collective features working space, laptop stations, a Purpose statement of incubator project The Warm Springs Com- munity Action Team states the purpose of the Small Busi- ness Incubator with these observations: Currently, small businesses on the Warm Springs Indian Reservation provide fewer than 200 jobs for War m Springs tribal members, far below the estimated 1,000 needed to stabilize the job market and create a healthy economy on the reservation. To address this problem, the Warm Springs Community Action Team seeks to develop a small business incubator that will serve as an anchor for small business in the War m Springs downtown area. The Small Business Incu- bator project will be the first effort in decades designed to improve the small business environment for community members in Warm Springs. This project will address a community need for places and spaces where community members can meet, and where social and economic relations may be intertwined. kitchenette, printer-copier-scan- ner, a meeting room, lockers for rent, and Wifi. For the Warm Springs small business incubator, there are so far two businesses identified so far: a café and the Tananáwit shop. The operator of the café is still not de- termined. The rest of the space at the Warm Springs incubator would be available to other small business owners. Further business space—for food carts, for instance—would be available outside the main build- ing. The Hacienda Community De- velopment Corp. is an example of how the food court area may de- velop, said Christ Watson, Com- munity Action Team director. The Hacienda CDC, in Port- land, has a food court area and a service teaching those interested in the food service industry. Page 5 Tananáwit artists group to have shop at small business center Tananáwit is an artists’ project, working in partnership with the Warm Springs Com- munity Action Team. Tananáwit artists will have a first-floor store at the Small Business Incubator building, with artist work space on the basement floor. The group this spring re- ceived its non-profit 501(c)3 status. The board members are chairman Gerald Danzuka, Tamera Calhoun, Marge Kalama, Shayleen Macy EagleSpeaker, Tamera Moody and Aurolyn Stwyer. Emily Courtney will be working with the Community Action Team to establish the Tananáwit shop at the new business center. Leah Guliasi is the Community Action Team liaison to the Tananáwit board and membership. If you would like informa- tion on joining Tananáwit— meaning ‘Our People’ in Ichishkeen—stop by the Com- munity Action Team office, 1136 Paiute Avenue, or call 541-553-3148.