Spilyay Tymoo Coyote News, est. 1976 January 30, 2019 - Vol. 43, No. 3 Wiyak’ik’ila – Winter - Anm The tribal story as taught in schools For years the tribal story as taught in schools has been mis- represented. The curriculum, de- veloped from the non-Indian per- spective, has been incomplete and incorrect. This is changing as the nine tribes of Oregon are developing Native American curricula that will be taught in public schools. Warm Springs Culture and Heritage, a department of the new Education Branch, is devel- oping the curriculum of the Con- federated Tribes. Working with tribal elders, Deanie Smith at Culture and Heritage is coordinating the Warm Springs project. The group meets at the Education building, and has developed a draft curriculum that will be refined over the coming months. The team also hosts commu- nity meetings, seeking input. The most recent, for instance, focused on the three Native languages of the Confederated Tribes. Five specific topics are covered in the overall curriculum: Tribal History, Sovereignty, Culture, Lan- guages, and Tribal Government. Three levels of study—for el- ementary school students, middle and high school—are included. The final curriculum will be complete and submitted to the Oregon Department of Educa- tion by August. This will then be incorporated into the lessons of the public school system, replac- ing the versions that are incom- plete or inaccurate in regard to the Native people. Culture and Heritage for years now has been teaching tribal languages, history and cul- ture in schools. The new curricu- lum will broaden this approach, giving students a better under- standing of the tribal experience. See SB 13 on page 2 Construction work on Veterans Memorial PO Box 489 Warm Springs, OR 97761 ECR WSS Postal Patron U.S. Postage PRSRT STD Warm Springs, OR 97761 Lincoln’s turning 42 The Simnasho community will host the Forty-Second Annual Lincoln’s Powwow, February 8-10. Memorial releases and opening of the longhouse floor is this Saturday, February 2. Dance competition categories are Tiny Tots, Junior Boys and Junior Girls, Teen Boys and Teen Girls, Adult Men and Adult Women, and Golden Age Men and Golden Age Women. Specials include the Mother and Daughter Special; Outgoing Junior Queen Special; Outgoing Senior Queen Special; and more specials to be announced. The Johnson family will sponsor host a Men’s Traditional Special, Honoring Fathers, in memory of David Johnson. Traditional danc- ers 18 and up are invited to partici- pate on Saturday night of the pow- wow. The Lincoln’s Powwow Raffle grand prize is a 32-inch television. Royalty candidate is Feliciana Conner, who is selling raffle tickets. You can purchase tickets from Feliciana in person or through Paypal (paypal.me/felicianaconner). You can also purchase tickets from Alyssa Macy at the tribal adminis- tration building. There will be a stone-setting for Emery Ross Yallup at 9 a.m. on Saturday, Febr uar y 2 at the Simnasho Cemetery, followed by a Memorial at the Longhouse. Dave McMechan/Spilyay W arm Springs Construction this week began preparing the ground for the Warm Springs Veterans Memorial Park. The memorial will be at the far end of the north field by the museum. The Confederated Tribes and the Spirit Mountain Foundation have provided initial funding for this project. Additional funding will be needed to complete the project as planned, but resources are in place to begin the long-planned memorial. The park will be in honor of all veterans from the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, representing all military branches and all major conflicts, from the early tribal Scouts to the present day. The memorial will display the official seals of all the branches of service, along with seven flags. According to the design, there will be 10 pillars on a raised mound with the names of the veterans inscribed on the pillars. And there will be walkways of bricks inscribed with the names of donors. Tribal Council approved the project last year, as presented by the Veterans Memorial Park Committee. Tribal Council meeting with state officials Courtesy Veterans Memorial Park Committee Architects conceptual drawing of the Veterans Memorial Park. Council to consider cannabis funding proposal The Tribal Council agenda for the end of January includes con- sideration of a resolution to fund the hemp project. Council was scheduled to meet this Wednesday, January 30, on a funding resolu- tion. CP Enterprise, a project of Warm Springs Ventures, is propos- ing the hemp, or non-recreational cannabis operation on the tribes’ Schoenhagen farm property. The CP Enterprise team would like to have the funding—made possible by the carbon sequestra- tion revenue—soon, in order to start growing. The hemp operation would be overseen by the tribes’ Cannabis Commission, responsible for en- suring compliance with all regula- tions. Tribal Council late last year approved the CP Enterprise-Ven- tures hemp plan. The supplemen- tal budget process is also complete, with the final piece in the funding process being the resolution to transfer the funding. Ventures and CP Enterprise last year changed from the initial rec- reational cannabis proposal to hemp, which is less strictly regu- lated and less crowded. Hemp produces non-THC, CBD-based products that have many applications, especially through medicinal and health products. T he 304-acre Schoenhagaen property is trust land, located across the river off Highway 26. The grow opera- tion, storage and processing fa- cilities, and an office space would be located on site. ATNI winter meeting Tribal Council members this week also joined other tribal lead- ers from around the region for the Affiliated Tribes of Northwest Indians Winter Conference. A focus on the agenda this winter was the tribal response to climate change. Addressing the conference, the president of the Quinault Nation told the delegates that Northwest tribal governments have the sovereign authority to regulate and tax big oil as a re- sponse to climate change. Quinault president Fawn Sharp said tribes are taking the lead on this because other gov- ernments are not willing to take the steps necessary. Dave McMechan Tribal Council this week is plan- ning an important government- to-government meeting in Warm Springs with state of Oregon offi- cials. As part of the meeting, Coun- cil was expecting to welcome Or- egon Governor Kate Brown. The meeting was scheduled for Thursday of this week, Janu- ary 31. Gov. Brown, the thirty-eighth governor of Oregon, is serving in her second term, having won re-election in 2018. She has also served in the Oregon House and Senate, and as Secretary of State. Other items on the Tribal Coun- cil agenda this week include draft resolutions and enrollments, dis- cussion of the Burlington North- ern Santa Fe vs. Clark County law- suit, and the February agenda. Some items for future consid- eration, as stated in the January Council agenda: A government-to-government meeting with the Yakama Nation. The Tribal Fishing Code, and financials from the end of 2018.