Spilyay Tymoo Coyote News, est. 1976 January 2, 2019 - Vol. 43, No. 1 Wiyak’ik’ila – Winter - Anm Membership to elect new Tribal Council Absentee ballots are expected to be in the mail within the next few weeks for the election of the Twenty-Eighth Tribal Council of the Confederated Tribes. The election will be on April 4. For a number of reasons, there will not be a primary election for the Agency District (see the letter of explanation from Wasco Chief JR Smith on page 4). To the candi- dates: Spilyay Tymoo and KWSO will be providing information about the candidates to the membership, with a special edition of the newspaper and candidate interviews on KWSO. You can submit a written state- ment and a photo to the Spilyay. If you don’t have a photo to sub- mit, we can take the picture. You can also email the statement and photo to: david.mcmechan@wstribes.org Or stop by the Media Center at 4174 Highway 3 in War m Springs. Statements should be limited to 250 words or fewer; as there are a total of 36 candidates. Candidates can also schedule an interview with KWSO in Janu- ary or February. Please call 541- 553-1968 to schedule a time. The interview will take 15-20 minutes. The Agency District nomi- nees are (listed alphabetically): Mike Clements. Austin Greene Jr. Leona Ike. Anita Jackson. Jeremiah Johnson. Cassie Katchia. Dan Martinez. Carina Miller. Jeff Sanders Jr. Wilfred Sando. Dustin Seyler. Glendon Smith. Randy Smith. Lola Sohappy. Valerie Switzler. See TRIBAL COUNCIL on 2 Show through January PO Box 489 Warm Springs, OR 97761 ECR WSS Postal Patron U.S. Postage PRSRT STD Warm Springs, OR 97761 Shutdown closed BIA The Bureau of Indian Affairs of- fice was closed as a result of the partial federal government shut- down. This includes the Office of the Special Trustee. Many federal workers had not been working since the part shut- down began in mid December. The clinic was on regular business hours. The shutdown affected some federal grant processes of the tribes, such as Housing and Urban Devel- opment. The process went into a kind of holding pattern during the shutdown, said Chief Operations Office Alyssa Macy. Ball field funding explanation Emily Courtney created the Painted Ladies series (below) for the Twenty-Fifth Annual Tribal Member Art Exhibit at the Museum at Warm Springs; while Travis Bobb created the green M&M in traditional regalia. At top is a detail from a beaded vest by Marge Kalama. The exhibit is on display through January. New board will work on tribal housing at river There are more than 30 desig- nated tribal fishing sites along the mid Columbia River. The sites are a legacy of the federal government’s construction of the dams on the Columbia. The dams flooded the traditional fishing sites, and also destroyed homes and entire tribal villages. The federal government for de- cades now has been obligated to provide housing for tribal members who were displaced from their homes by the dams and reservoirs. After the construction of the dams, the federal government re- built homes for non-Indians who were displaced, but nothing was done for the Native people. Some of these tribal members have been living at the designated fishing sites, in conditions that are unsafe and unsanitary. Then a few years ago, correct- ing this long-standing omission be- came a priority of lawmakers from the Northwest. As a result of this effort, the U.S. Army Corps of En- gineers is now working on a tribal housing project at the Columbia. The Corps last year received $1.8 million to develop a plan for the housing project. Details—the loca- tion and types of housing—will be worked out with the tribes: The Warm Springs, Yakama, Umatilla and Nez Perce. For its part, the Tribal Council has created a new Co- lumbia River intertribal hous- ing entity, with a possible name of N’Chi Wana Housing. The board will work with other tribes and the Corps of Engineers on developing and implementing the tribal hous- ing project at the Columbia. See HOUSING on page 2 The following explains the Warm Springs ball fields funding request the tribes made to the Oregon Parks and Recreation Grants Division funding program. The program is called the Land and Water Conservation Fund, or LWCF. This is a federal funding pro- gram providing about $75 million in annual funding to all 50 states for outdoor parks and recreation projects. Warm Springs competed for LWCF funding, and was awarded $360,500. There is a requirement that the tribes match that amount at 50 percent, either in cash or in- kind services such as construction of areas and facilities that value up to the required match amount. So, the total amount of project funding is valued at $721,000. In November the LWCF pro- gram managers at Oregon State Parks contacted the tribes, saying there was a surplus in LWCF funds. They asked if the tribes might be in interested in adjusting their original budget request, and add more funds on a 50-percent-to-50- percent matching basis. The offer to add more funding to the original grant application without having to write an entire grant proposal again was a rare and unusual opportunity. So here is the ballfield funding summary, as of late December: · The most recent request for an adjustment in grant application funding is for an additional $202,000 on top of the original award of $721,000 for a new to- tal of $923,000, has not been ap- proved and authorized as of De- cember 28, 2018. · Additional funding would go to construct for an eight fixtures restrooms with four flush valve type toilets and four laboratories (sinks), all accessible and unisex type near the future multi-purpose fields overlying the two 300 foot softball fields. See BALL FIELDS on page 2