E Coosh EEWA: The way it is Page 4 Spilyay Tymoo October 9, 2019 Letters to the editor Tribal Council The following are some of the items coming up on the Tribal Council agenda for the rest of October (subject to change at Council discretion): Thursday, October 10 9 a.m.: Tribal Farm update with Robert Brunoe, Natural Resources general manager. 10: Northwest Power Council consultation. 1:30 p.m.: Indian Health Services Joint Venture discus- sion with the Health and Wel- fare Committee. 2:30: Taser discsussion with Carmen Smith, Public Safety general manager. Monday, October 14 9 a.m.: Review minutes and resolutions with Secre- tary-Treasurer Michele Stacona. 10: Business Investment Revolving Fund (BIRF) up- date with Michele. 11: ICF update/Kah-Nee- Ta discussion with Wakinyan. 1:30: Medicare update. Wednesday, October 16 9 a.m.: Civil Rights train- ing with the Oregon Depart- ment of Education. 10: Tribal Council priori- ties. 1:30: Secretary-Treasurer and Chief Operations Officer discussion. Monday, October 21 9 a.m.: Secretary-Trea- surer and Chief Operations Officer updates. 10: November agenda and review minutes. 11: Draft resolutions. 1:30 p.m.: Legislative up- date calls. 2:30: Enrollments. 3:30: September financials with Alfred Estimo and Den- nis Johnson. Monday, October 28: Open for scheduling. Items for further consid- eration: Annual consultation with the U.S. Attorney Office— District of Oregon. Southern Oregon University president meeting at Council. Live- stock code revisions. Warm Springs Community Action Team—Vital Tribal Econo- mies. Bonneville Power Ad- ministration meeting at Coun- cil. Willamette Falls Legacy project. Warm Springs Com- munity Action Team small business program. Justice Team update with Nancy Seyler. Appeals Court judges. Storm event A thunderstorm event on August 10, 2019 caused flash flooding that may have washed out livestock fence. Producers suffering se- vere fence damage due to this storm event may be eli- gible for assistance under the Emergency Conserva- tion Program (ECP). To request assistance please contact the Central Oregon FSA office at 541- 923-4358. The sign-up pe- riod is from the present through October 30. Births Luna Smith Triston Smith and Celeste White of Warm Springs are pleased to an- nounce the birth of their daughter Luna Smith, born on September 26, 2019. Grandparents on the father’s side are Regen Tobi Smith-Morales and Louis Joe Morales. Grandparents on the mother’s side are Edna Campuzano and the late Rolando Campuzano- Lopez Sr. Parker Lynn Thomas Andre Thomas and Tiana Thomas of Warm Springs are pleased to an- nounce the birth of their daughter Parker Lynn Tho- mas, born on September 27, 2019. Parker joins brother Ezra Jerome, age 4. Grandparents on the father’s side are Jerome Lewis and Coreen Thomas of Warm Springs. Grandparents on the mother’s side are Dominic Davis Sr. and Leontyne Tanewasha Davis of Warm Springs. Kemena Elandra-Althea Adams Keevin Adams and Kamianna Lujan of Warm Springs are pleased to an- nounce the birth of their daughter Kemena Elandra- Althea Adams, born on Sep- tember 23, 2019. Kemena joins brothers Karlos, 8, Keevin Jr., 5, and Kaston, 3. Grandparent on the father’s side is Gayleen Adams of Warm Springs. Grandparents on the mother’s side are Wally Lujan Taos of New Mexico, and Althea Henry of Warm Springs. Academy hosting You are invited to an Open House hosted by the Warm Springs Academy. The open house is this Wednesday evening starting with dinner at 5:30 p.m. School hours Regular school hours at Spilyay Tymoo (Coyote News, Est. 1976) Publisher Emeritus in Memorium: Sid Miller Editor: Dave McMechan Spilyay Tymoo is published bi-weekly by the Con- federated Tribes of Warm Springs. Our offices are located at 4174 Highway 3 in Warm Springs. Any written materials submitted to Spilyay Tymoo should be addressed to: Spilyay Tymoo, P.O. Box 489, Warm Springs, OR 97761. Phone: 541-553-2210 or 541-771-7521 E-Mail: david.mcmechan@wstribes.org. Annual Subscription rates: Within U.S.: $20.00 the Academy are Mondays: 8 a.m. drop-off. 9:45— Class starts. 10 a.m.: Break- fast; and class ends at 3:25 p.m. Tuesday through Friday: 7:40 a.m. drop-off. Class starts at 8:15 a.m. Breakfast ends at 9; and school ends at 3:25 p.m. Vote for Blue Flamez’ Stand Up Flea market It is Flea Market time coming up at the fair- grounds in Madras. The market will be on Sunday, November 17. I am reaching out to the Warm Springs community to come and sell crafts and other items. We have several 8-foot by 10-foot booths still avail- able. In addition we’ve low- ered the cost of the booths from $95 to just $75. And I have created a dis- count code just for the Ma- dras show. At check out the buyer would put in the dis- count code, and receive $5 off. The code is ‘madrascofm’. See you at the market! Thank you. Greg Miller Legal service to members The Warm Springs Com- munity Action Team is host- ing the Native American Pro- gram—Legal Aid Services of Oregon. The program is a state- wide, non-profit law firm promoting equal access to justice: They offer free civil legal services for eligible tribal members. These are the upcoming dates when the service will be available at the Community Action Team office, 1136 Paiute Avenue, Warm Springs (all sessions available from 10 a.m. to noon): Thursday, October 17 and Tuesday, October 29. Wednesday, November 13. Tuesday, December 3 and Wednesday, December 18. Walk-ins are welcome during the above times and dates. You may also arrange an appointment by calling 1- 800-546-0534 or 503-223- 9483. If the Native American Program cannot help with your legal need, they may provide you with another legal resource as available and appropriate to your need. Courtesy photos Native Stand youth recording Stand Up; and (right) the Rez Star album cover. T he song and music video are S t a n d U p , from the album R e z Star. The song carries the positive message, ‘Stand Up together against nega- tive decisions...’ In creating the song and video, Scott ‘Blue Flamez’ Kalama worked with the students of the Native Stand youth pro- gram, and featured artist Anita Davis. Filmmakers LaRonn Katchia and Isaac Trimble did the video work for S t a n d U p , filmed at the War m Springs Academy. For Stand Up Blue Flamez is now nominated for two awards—one with Former W.S. resident headlining Acclaimed author, speaker and teacher—who lived and worked for years on the reservation—Jane Kirkpatrick will be one of the authors headlining Sisters Festival of Books. The festival will be Fri- day through Sunday, Octo- ber 18-20. Author of 30 fiction and five non-fiction books, Kirkpatrick’s works have sold over 1 million copies, and have been translated into several foreign languages. She hsa been awarded numerous literary awards and placed on a variety of best- seller lists. Some of her works have featured Native American themes, based on her time in Warm Springs. Kirkpatrick’s first novel, A Sweetness to the Soul, was named to Oregon’s Literary the Native American Music Awards (NAMY), and the second with the Indian Summer Music Awards. You can see the video and hear on the song on youtube.com Search under ‘blue flamez and stand up’ Or you can find the video on Facebook. Blue Flames’ Rez Star it- self is a NAMY-nominated work in the rap-hip hop al- bum category. You can vote for Stand U p for a NAMY at: nativeamericanmusicawards. com You can find the Rez Star album at the Plateau Travel Plaza, Warm Springs Market 100: 1800-2000, as one of the 100 titles published in the last 200 years best rep- resenting Oregon. “I like helping people from the distant past step from their generation into our own to teach us and touch us with their lives,” the author explained. For 27 years, Kirkpatrick and her husband, Jerry, ranched along the lower John Day River in an area known as Starvation Point. Her memoir, Homestead, tells the story of their jour- ney to “rattlesnake and rock ranch” to begin a new life. Kirkpatrick grew up on a dair y far m with her brother and sister in Wis- consin, not far from the Mississippi River. She was surrounded by a large ex- tended family, most of whom lived within 50 miles. In 1974, after receiving her master’s degree in social work from University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, she and Rainbow Market; or download at itunes, Spotify, or google play. Blue Flamez won the first NAMY for Warm Springs in 2016 with his music video Rez Life, featuring the Native flute music of James Edmund Greeley. Blue Flamez’ To the Sky—f ilmed with Katchia and Trimble in Simnasho—won a NAMY last year for Best Music Video Con- cept. moved to Oregon, where she worked in the disabili- ties field, serving as the di- rector of the Deschutes County mental health pro- gram for 10 years. Later, while living on the homestead, Kirkpatrick worked for 17 years as a mental health and early childhood specialist on the Warm Springs Indian Res- ervation. She also began her writ- ing career, while “attempt- ing to grow grapes, alfalfa, and cattle.” Kirkpatrick’s many histori- cal novels, most based on the lives of actual people, speak of timeless themes of hardi- ness, faith, commitment, hope, and love, and many center around a strong fe- male character. Kirkpatrick will discuss One More River to Cross, her latest work, at her Sat- urday, October 19, presen- tation at the Sisters Middle School. New Education program manager with Confluence C aring for Indigenous people is deeply rooted in Heather Gurko’s core. It is a mission-driven pas- sion including a commit- ment to educate the wider community about the Na- tive history, cultures and ecology of this shared land- scape. Heather’s new role is as the Confluence project’s Education program man- ager. Heather’s Tlingit name is Shá xat k’ei. She is an enrolled Citizen of the Cen- tral Council Tlingit & Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska from her mother’s side, and Dutch on her father’s side. Heather Gurko Over the past decade, Heather has been active in the Alaska Native Brother- hood, and has served on the Beaverton School District Native American Parent Advisory Council. Her previous work in the Indigenous community in- cludes positions at CareOregon and the Native American Rehabilitation As- sociation, NARA. Heather is also currently the executive director of the Portland All Nations Canoe Family, where she coordi- nates the group’s cross-gen- erational community build- ing, cultural strengthening, and connection to the envi- ronment. In her new role with Confluence, Heather will work with Columbia River Indigenous educators and artists through Confluence in the Classroom and Confluence Outdoors programs, bringing Native voices into schools. She will also coordinate Confluence’s professional development workshops for teachers. Through indigenous voices, Confluence connects communities and students to the history, living cultures and ecology of the Colum- bia River: “We are a community- supported nonprofit that works through six art land- scapes, educational pro- grams and public gatherings in collaboration with North- west tribes, communities and the celebrated artist Maya Lin.