Page 6 Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon In the Tribal Court of the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs Note: All proceedings are held at the Tribal Court of the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs. moned to appear in this mat- ter at a hearing scheduled for the 14 th day of OCTOBER, 2020 @ 3:00 PM CTWS, Petitioner, vs KATIE SMITH, RE- SPONDENT; case no. DO98-09. TO: KATIE SMITH: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that a AS- SISTED GUARDIAN- SHIP REVIEW has been filed with the Warm Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are summoned to ap- pear in this matter at a hear- ing scheduled for the 12 th day of OCTOBER, 2020 @ 11:00 AM DESIREE R. ALLEN, Petitioner, vs CARI ANN STORMBRINGER, RE- SPONDENT; Case No. DO163-19. TO: DESIREE ALLEN, CARI ANN STORMBRINGER, S H A R D STORMBRINGER: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that an ADOP- TION has been filed with the Warm Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are summoned to appear in this matter at a hearing sched- uled for the 28 th day of OCTOBER, 2020 @ 10:00 AM IN THE MATTER OF: AARON JOSEPH STRONG , DOB: 11/09/ 2010. Case No. DO48-20. VANESSA F. KNIGHT- CRANE, Petitioner: The above individual has filed a Petition with this Court to change said name from AARON JOSEPH STRONG to AARON JO- SEPH KNIGHT. A hearing on this matter has been set for 10:00 AM on the 5 th day of NOVEMBER, 2020, at the Warm Springs Tribal Court. Any person who may show cause why this Petition should not be granted must file such objection in writing on or before 22nd day of OCTOBER, 2020. IN THE MATTER OF: ROMA VENUS STRONG DOB: 09/10/ 2013; Case No. DO47-20. VANESSA F. KNIGHT- CRANE, Petitioner. The above individual has filed a Petition with this Court to change said name from ROMA VENUS STRONG to ROMA VE- NUS KNIGHT. A hearing on this matter has been set for 10:00 AM on the 5 th day of NOVEMBER, 2020, at the Warm Springs Tribal Court. Any person who may show cause why this Petition should not be granted must file such objection in writing on or before 22nd day of OCTOBER, 2020. G O N Z A L O ARTHUR, Petitioner, vs JESSIE KALAMA, ROSS KALAMA SR., RESPON- DENT; Case No. JV113- 14. TO: GONZALO ARTHUR, MONICA FRANK, JESSIE KALAMA, ROSS KALAMA SR.: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that a CON- SERVATOR GUARDIAN- SHIP has been filed with the Warm Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are sum- moned to appear in this mat- ter at a hearing scheduled for the 20 TH day of OCTO- BER, 2020 @ 3:00 PM CTWS, Petitioner, vs G E R A L D I N E SWITZLER, RESPON- DENT; Case No. JV15-11. TO: LAURA S W I T Z L E R , G E R A L D I N E SWITZLER: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that a AS- SISTED GUARDIAN- SHIP REVIEW has been filed with the Warm Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are summoned to ap- pear in this matter at a hear- ing scheduled for the 26 TH day of OCTOBER, 2020 @ 2:00 PM CTWS, Petitioner, vs TERRINE RABBIE, RE- SPONDENT; Case No. JV2-11. TO: TERRINE RABBIE, JAYDEAN GILBERT, RON & EUGENIA HAGER: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that a AS- SISTED GUARDIAN- SHIP REVIEW has been filed with the Warm Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are summoned to ap- pear in this matter at a hear- ing scheduled for the 22 ND day of OCTOBER, 2020 @ 9:00 AM EDNA GONZALES, Petitioner, vs CHANDA ROBINSON, Respon- dent; Case No. DO57,58- 17. TO: CHANDA ROBINSON, CODY MILLER, EDNA GONZALES: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that a CON- SERVATOR GUARDIAN- SHIP has been scheduled with the War m Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are summoned to ap- pear in this matter at a hear- ing scheduled for the 15 th day of October 2020 @ 4:00 PM CTWS, Petitioner, vs JENNY BIRD, RE- SPONDENT; Case No. JV148-08. TO: JENNY BIRD, AARON KEELE: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that a AS- SISTED GUARDIAN- SHIP has been filed with the Warm Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are sum- CTWS, Petitioner, vs L O R E E N STORMBRINGER, Re- spondent; Case No. JV55- 18. TO: LOREEN STORMBRINGER, CPS, JV PROS: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that an AS- SISTED GUARDIAN- SHIP has been scheduled with the Warm Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are summoned to appear in this matter at a hearing scheduled for the 12th day of NO- VEMBER, 2020 @ 3:30 PM CTWS, PETITIONER, vs VIRGINIA MCKINLEY, RESPON- DENT; CASE NO. JV72- 17, JV73-17. TO: VIRGINA MCKINLEY, ANDREW SMITH SR: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that a SUPER- VISED PROBATION RE- VIEW/ ASSISTED GUARDIANSHIP has been scheduled with the Warm Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are summoned to appear in this matter at a hearing scheduled for the 21 ST day of October, 2020 @ 2:00 PM TIFFANY HUNT, Pe- titioner, vs TANAYA HUNT , Respondent; Case No DO91-20. TO: TIFFANY HUNT, TANAYA HUNT, BLAKE WEASELHEAD, SYLVANIA RUSSELL- BRISBOIS: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that A CON- SERVATOR GUARDIAN- SHIP has been scheduled with the War m Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are summoned to appear in this matter at a hearing scheduled for the 29 TH day of OCTO- BER, 2020 @ 3:00 PM Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, Petitioner, vs Jimmy Koppenhafer, Re- spondent; Case No. CV3-07. TO: Jimmy Koppenhafer: YOU ARE HEREBY NO- TIFIED that a Show Cause Hearing has been scheduled with the Warm Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are summoned to appear in this matter at a hearing scheduled for SEPTEMBER 29, 2020 at 1:00 pm PROBATE In the matter of the state of Norman Nathan, W.S., U/A, deceased. Estate no. 2012-PR12. To Susan Nathan Smolinski and Renee Krstovich: You are hereby notified that an informal pro- bate hearing is scheduled for October 16, 2020 at 1:30 p.m. In the matter of the es- tate of Hazel L. Seyler, W.S., U/A, deceased. Es- tate no. 937-14-99. To Charles Nathan and Sara Evans: You are hereby noti- fied that an informal probate hearing is scheduled for Oc- tober 16, 2020 at 1:30 p.m. September 23, 2020 Opinion Mischaracterization of history of Falls This opinion article was submitted to The Portland Tribute by Raymond Tsumpti, chair of the Con- federated Tribes of Warm Springs; Delores Pigsley, chair of the Confederated Tribes of Siletz; N. Kathryn Brigham, chair of the Confederated Tribes of Umatilla; and Delano Saluskin, chair of the Con- federated Tribes and Bands of Yakama Nation: In a recent article— ‘Willamette Falls Trust apologizes for harming tribes’—there was a mischaracterization of the tribal history and re- lationships to the Falls of the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, Siletz Indians, the Umatilla and Yakama Nation. The article inadvert- ently advanced a false narrative that the Grand Ronde Tribe is the only tribe with historic, cultural and legal interests in Willamette Falls, and that other tribes only visited with their permission and sufferance. This could not be fur- ther from the truth. Many different Indian bands and tribes stewarded and made use of the Falls for thousands of years, in- cluding the ancestors of our four tribal nations. Willamette Falls was an Indian gathering place, similar to Celilo Falls. Our tribes met there to harvest, trade, visit and even intermarry. The Indians who were signatories to the ratified 1855 Treaty of Kalapuya were removed to the Siletz Reservation and the Grand Ronde reservations. Indians at the Falls who came from the east were removed to several reser vations, but preserved in three other rati- fied 1855 treaties their rights to continue to fish at all usual and accustomed fish- ing places, however distant from those reservations. Al- though our ancestors came from many places, we are now identified by the reser- vations they were moved to: War m Springs, Siletz, Umatilla, Yakama and Grand Ronde. The Treaty Tribes work together on issues of mu- tual interest on the Willamette River and at Willamette Falls specifically. Recent examples include the cleanup of the Portland Harbor Superfund site, Portland General Electric FERC licensing processes and the Willamette Falls Locks Commission. Even more recently, Con- gress recognized the inter- ests of these tribes, not just Grande Ronde, in protect- ing salmon and restoring eco- logical balance to the Willamette River in and around Willamette Falls. The Grand Ronde Tribe’s strategy of exclusion of our Tribes insults the history of our Tribes, especially after our Tribes banded together, at their request, to support the Grand Ronde Tribe’s re- establishment in 1986 through Congress. We stood with the Grand Ronde Tribe in its time of critical need. Sadley, not long after correcting a historic injustice to the Grand Ronde people, they chose to disprespect our effort through a sig- nificantly funded media campaign designed to remove our histories at the Falls. Your editors should have done additional in- vestigation when the Grand Ronde Tribe de- clared its intent to ex- clude other tribes, claim- ing that “other tribal” representation on the Willamette Falls Trust Board would somehow ‘under mine’ Grand Ronde. This claim stands far from the truth. Our collective efforts have always made us stronger in the protection of natural resources. Conversely, the Willamette Falls Trust Board strives to under- stand the complex nature of Willamette Falls and are interested in inclusion and collaboration to share the full story. Our past, as well as our future, are united by Willamette Falls. The Willamette Falls should be protected for the natural and cultural resources it possesses, our shared history it rep- resents, and should be restored and enjoyed by all rather than subject to commercial develop- ment for any one entity’s gain. Awareness Month sheds light on survirors by Liz Hill, Red Lake Ojibwe StrongHearts Native Helpline Every October during Domestic Violence Aware- ness Month, advocates and communities across Indian Country rally together to honor survivors of domes- tic violence and support abuse prevention. In 2020, StrongHearts Native Helpline once again calls on advocates, tribal leaders, reservation and ur- ban Indian community mem- bers, service providers and Native organizations to sup- port the movement to pre- vent and end domestic vio- lence, which disproportion- ately affects millions of Natives every year. Violence against Indig- enous peoples began with European contact and has continued to this day, add- ing up to more than 500 years of abuse. Domestic violence, which continues as a tool of colonization, rep- resents a lack of respect for Native peoples. Native women and men in the United States experi- ence domestic violence at alarming rates, with more than four in five Natives having experienced some form of violence in their lifetime and more than half experiencing physical vio- lence by an intimate partner in the past year. For one-on-one advo- cacy, see: strongheartshelpline.org Or call 1-844-7NATIVE (762-8483). Domestic violence has many faces: physical, sexual, emotional, cultural, financial and digital. It doesn’t discrimi- nate and includes violence against children, elders, LGBTQ2S individuals. There is also a strong con- nection between domestic violence and thousands of Missing and Murdered In- digenous women. Native nations in the Lower 48 and Alaska Na- tive Villages continually go underfunded for life saving domestic violence services. Now in its fourth year of operation, StrongHearts has received more than 9,103 phone calls and online chats.