Spilyay tymoo. (Warm Springs, Or.) 1976-current, December 02, 2020, Page 8, Image 8

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    Page 8
Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon
‘Large enough to
serve you... Small
enough to care’
866-299-0644
December 2, 2020
Social Security notice
Letters regarding the
Cost of Living Adjust-
ments—the COLA— and
the new Medicare Part B
amounts will be mailed
out any day from Social
Security.
The statements are re-
quired when applying for
Senior programs as proof of
income. Most of us who re-
ceive these statements lose
them within a couple days or
so.
To ensure that you always
have a copy you can bring
the statement by my of-
fice at the Resource Cen-
ter to be photo copied
and stored for future use.
Please consider this op-
tion. Thank you,
Rosemary ‘Mushy’
Alarcon, 541-553-4955.
Latest Indian Country covid data from IHS
2019
Buick
Envision -
14,798
miles -
2017
Buick
LaCrosse
- 50,236
miles -
$32,995
$23,995
#37596A
#79235A
2017
Ford F-
150 -
56,243
miles -
2016
Chevrolet
Cruz -
71,766
miles -
$33,995
$11,995
#30961A
#34309A
2016
Chevrolet
Silverado
- 53,748
miles -
2016
Chevrolet
Tahoe -
85,482
miles -
$32,995
$32,995
#17049A
#187576A
2015
Hyundai
Sonata -
108,373
miles -
2015
Chevrolet
Equinox -
133,374
miles -
$14,995
$12,995
#70126A
#46039A
2015
GMC
Acadia -
125,892
miles -
2014
Lincoln
MKX -
65,443
miles -
$16,995
$20,995
#36757A
#17972A
2012
Chevrolet
Equinox -
107,000
miles -
2009
Chevrolet
HHR -
132,734
miles -
$10,995
$7,995
#72150A
#93295C
Indian Health Services
data show 101,717 tests have
returned positive for Covid-
19, across all of Indian Coun-
try.
That represents an increase
of almost 1 percent from the
100,765 cases previously re-
ported by the IHS. The most
recent data was released late
last week.
Altogether, 1,353,684
coronavirus tests have been
administered within the IHS
through.
Since mid-October, the
IHS has been providing ad-
ditional information about the
spread of the coronavirus
within the system.
The cumulative percent
positive column shows the his-
torical Covid-19 infection
rate, meaning the number of
tests that have returned posi-
tive since the onset of the
pandemic.
Based on the cumulative
percent positive, the highest
rates have been seen in the
Navajo Area (14 percent), the
Phoenix Area (12.9 percent),
the Oklahoma City Area (10
percent) the Great Plains
Area (9.8 percent) and the the
Albuquerque Area (9.8 per-
cent).
The first two regions in-
clude the state of Arizona, in-
dicating a disproportionate
toll of Covid-19 in the state.
The 7-day rolling average
positivity column offers a
more contemporary look at
the
impact
of
the
coronavirus. The data shows
where Covid-19 cases have
been increasing recently.
Based on the 7-day rolling
average positivity, five regions
have seen dramatic increases
in Covid-19 cases. They are:
the Billings Area (20.1 per-
cent), the Albuquerque Area
(18.2 percent), the Great
Plains Area (18 percent), the
Oklahoma City Area (17.8
percent) and the Navajo Area
(15 percent).
Overall, 8.1 percent of
IHS tests have been positive
since the onset of the pan-
demic, the data shows. The
7-day average has grown
higher over the last few
weeks and now stands at
12.8 percent.
The data, however, is in-
complete: While 100 percent
of facilities run directly by
the IHS are reporting data,
only 33 percent of tribally
managed facilities and 44
percent of urban Indian or-
ganizations are doing the
same.
The service population
for IHS across Indian Coun-
try is approximately
2,562,290.
Based on that figure, 52.8
percent of American Indi-
ans and Alaska Natives have
been tested for the
coronavirus since the IHS
began reporting data in
March.
The IHS user population,
on the other hand, is a much
smaller number. As of 2019,
1,662,834 American Indians
and Alaska Natives have
lived within a service deliv-
ery area and have received
health care at an IHS or
tribal facility during the pre-
vious three years.
Based on the user popu-
lation, 81.4 percent of Na-
tive Americans have been
tested for the coronavirus
since the IHS began report-
ing data in March.
Dam demolition could save
salmon from extinction
When Karuk tribal mem-
ber and cultural biologist Ron
Reed was just a toddler in the
early 1960s, he liked to
crouch on a rounded rock
poking out of the rushing
water of California’s Kla-
math River, watching his
family fish for the Chinook
salmon that arrived in late
spring. The fish crowded so
thickly in the water that they
looked nearly solid enough to
walk across.
His family had waited
through the long winter for
these fish. They would fill
sacks full of salmon, enough
to feed them several times a
day for months.
Those days of extreme
abundance are decades gone.
For the past few years Reed,
fishing now with his own chil-
dren, has taken only a few
spring-run fish from the
river. Dams, climate change,
and other issues have
wreaked havoc on salmon
along the U.S. West Coast,
and the declines have been
particularly acute for the
spring-run fish, which mi-
grate farther upstream and
so are more likely to have
been cut off from their habi-
tat by the dams.
But in November a long-
delayed project to remove
some of the major dams on
the Klamath cleared a major
hurdle: The governors of
Oregon and California
agreed to take control of the
dams from PacifiCorp, the
utility that operates them.
The states and the utility have
also agreed on financing for
the $450 million plan.
Federal regulatory ap-
proval is still required, and
nothing is certain—but for
now the dams are back on
track for removal starting in
2023.