Page 6 Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon January basketball at high school January 2, 2019 Elks hosting Hoop Shoot Young people are invited to the annual Elks Hoop Shoot on Saturday, January 12 at the Jefferson County Middle School. Registration will be at noon and the contest will start at one. The Hoop Shoot is open to boys and girls ages 8-13 based on age on April 1. Winners will advance to the District Hoop Shoot in Prineville later in Janu- ary. Warm Springs has seen suc- cess in this youth free-throw competition: Last year Jaihline ‘Cha Cha’ Ramirez took the School and District competi- tions, and advanced to the Regionals. She won there in her age group, qualifying and ad- vancing to the State Hoop Shoot. If you would like more in- formation on the 2019 Elks Hoop Shoot, contact coordina- tor Tammie Schongall. Her email is: tammark1985@gmail.com Basketball action on KWSO Listen to KWSO 91.9 this Fri- day, January 4 when the boys var- sity basketball teams plays Moun- tain View. Tip-off is at 7. You can also listen online at kwso.org, using the Tune In Radio app. KWSO will also cover the boys game on January 11 when the boys host Valley Catholic. Jayson Smith/Spilyay The Madras frosh girls had a big win in December over Summit, 57-15. The Madras High School girls varsity basketball team has two away games, this Friday, January 4 at Mountain View; and then on January 11 at Valley Catho- lic. The girls return home on January 16 to host Corbett. The boys varsity team has home games starting this Friday, January 4 against Mountain View; and then the boys host Valley Catholic on January 11. The teams had tournaments dur- ing December, the boys traveling Movin’ Mountains 2019 begins in Jan. to Seaside and then Summit; and the girls at Summit. The high school regular basket- ball seasons then end in mid Feb- ruary, followed by the tournament play-in games, and the State Tour- nament into early March. Sports schedule at the Academy Winter sports action coming up n at the Warm Springs Academy: Academy Girls Basketball January 17: Academy girls bas- ketball is at Sisters. Game time at 3:30 p.m. January 23: The girls play at home, hosting Elton Gregory Middle School. Game at 3:30. January 29: The team plays at home against Obsidian Middle School. January 30: The team is at the Jefferson County Middle School at 3:30. Januar y 31: Home game against Crook County Middle School. February 6: At home vs. Sis- ters. February 7: Elton Gregory Middle School in Redmond. Febr uar y 13: At Obsidian Middle School in Redmond. February 14: Girls basketball at home against the Jefferson County Middle School. Febr uar y 20: At Crook County Middle School, Prineville. January 23: Academy wrestlers will compete at a meet at Jefferson County Middle School at 3:30. January 29: The team has a meet at Pilot Butte Middle School. February 5: At Crook County Middle School. February 8: Wrestling will com- pete at the Central Oregon Middle School Classic, this Friday and Sat- urday. February 12: At Elton Gregory Middle School, 3:30 p.m. Febr uar y 20: At Obsidian Middle School The 2019 Movin’ Mountain Slimdown Challenge runs from January 17 through mid May. Cash awards will be given out in two-person team division, and individual divisions. The Slimdown is open to any- one 18 years or older who lives or works on the Warm Springs Reser vation or elsewhere in Jefferson County. Registration and assessments will be at the Warm Springs clinic on Thursday, January 17 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. There will be additional registra- tion and assessments in Madras on Friday, January 18 from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., and Saturday, January 19 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Jefferson County Public Health Department. If you are unable to make those dates, contact Carolyn Harvey at 541-475-4456. The last day to pay is January 19. Adult basketball leagues starting For a few more days, the Ma- dras Aquatic Center Recreation District is taking registrations for its adult basketball leagues. The leagues will run January to March. The registration deadline is Saturday, January 5. For more information and reg- istration, go to macrecdistrict.com Scholarship applications are avail- able online at: macrecdistrict.com/adult-basket- ball/ Academy Wrestling Zone 6 scaffold, hook and line fishery A commercial sturgeon setline fishery has been set, and platform and hook and line fishers may also participate in sales. The season began on Tuesday, and runs through 12 p.m. on Thursday, January 31. The open area is all of Zone 6, the Bonneville, The Dalles and John Day pools. Allowed sales are sturgeon be- tween 38 and 54 inches fork length in the Bonneville Pool, and from 43 to 54 inches fork length in The Dalles and John Day pools. These fish may be sold or kept for subsistence use. Fish may be sold after the period ends if caught during the open period. Closed ar- eas applicable to scaffolds and hook and line are in effect. Bill targeting sea lions intended to help salmon The U.S. House and Senate have passed a measure that will make it easier to kill sea lions that feast on protected salmon and steelhead in the Columbia River basin. The bill will help protect the bil- lions of government dollars already invested in salmon preservation, without causing long-term harm to sea-lion populations. Other actions will certainly be needed. But this bill offers an im- mediate life preserver to some of the region’s chinook salmon, a cru- cial food source for the critically endangered southern resident orcas. Federal researchers estimated that a quarter of last year’s spring chinook inexplicably disappeared last year on their way from the mouth of the Columbia River to Bonneville Dam, with sea-lion pre- dation most likely to blame. State officials say they would need to kill only a few hundred sea lions to make a difference. That would have little effect on the booming population of California sea lions, which has rebounded from about 30,000 animals in the 1960s to nearly 300,000 today. New pact on Columbia River spill to help salmon An agreement filed in U.S. Dis- trict Court in Portland in late De- cember establishes a new regime for spring spill of water over Co- lumbia and Snake River dams to benefit young salmon in their mi- gration to the sea, while enabling the Bonneville Power Administra- tion to take better advantage of power markets. The three-year agreement, reached after months of negotia- tions, enables increased spill for fish to swoosh over dams—in- stead of going through power- houses—during hours when power prices are low. Then, the spill can be reduced, and more water run through gen- erators, when prices are higher in daily markets. The intent is to increase the sur- vival rates of salmon and limit the cost for the program to no more than was spent in 2018—and pos- sibly less. The pact, signed by BPA, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Bureau of Reclamation, the states of Or- egon and Washington, and the Nez Perce Tribe, is intended to last through 2021, when a court-man- dated environmental review of river operations is expected to be completed. The agreement calls for a pause in new litigation while it remains in effect. Shannon F. Wheeler, chairman of the Nez Perce Tribal Execu- tive Committee, said in a statement that in setting aside litigation, the tribe will focus on ensuring a full analysis of lower Snake River dam breaching during the agreement’s term: “The tribe has long sup- ported breaching the four Lower Snake River dams.” The Seven Directions is a family-owned business in Maupin. There are five Warm Springs tribal members with the house- hold, participating in the business. Warm Springs tribal members receive a 15-percent dis- count on Pendleton Woolen Mill products, including in-store items and catalog orders. Thank you, Al and Sandi Thomas, Amelio Yahtin, Rochelle tom, Latrell Charley, Michael and Alma Cuevas, and Oscar Thomas.