Spilyay Tymoo Coyote News, est. 1976 At Council in December The following are some of the items coming up on the Tribal Council agenda for December (sub- ject to change at Council discretion): Thursday, December 2: Cen- tral Oregon Inter-governmental Council meeting, virtual. Monday, December 6 9 a.m.: Bureau of Indian Affairs update with Brenda Bremner, su- perintendent. 9:30: Office of Special Trustee phone update with Kevin Moore, Umatilla Agency BIA. 10: Indian Health Service update with Hyllis Dauphinais, clinic chief executive officer. 10:30: Covid update with the Response Team. 1:30 p.m.: Legislative update calls, federal and state. 2:30: Tribal attorney update. Friday, December 10 9 a.m.: Blue Stone strategy group follow-up session. Monday, December 13 9 a.m.: Secretary-Treasurer up- date with Glendon Smith. 9:30: January 2022 agenda, and review minutes. 10: Draft resolutions. 11: Covid update with the Re- sponse Team. 1:30 p.m.: Legislative update calls, federal and state. 2:30: Enrollments with L u c i l l e Suppach-Samson, Vital Stats. 3: O-Life Network with Matthew Klebes. 4: Willamette Falls Trust update with Gerard Rodriguez. Tuesday, December 14 9 a.m.: Workshop on Columbia River housing. 1:30 p.m.: Akana update. Wednesday, December 15: Government to government meet- ing on Columbia River housing with the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers. Thursday and Friday, De- cember 16-17: Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission meet- ing, virtual. Community update There were 20 people on the reservation with active Covid-19, as of Tuesday of this week, accord- ing to the most recent update from the Warm Springs covid Response Team. The early part of the week saw three new cases from 64 tests ad- ministered by Warm Springs IHS. Community Health and IHS were monitoring 13 close contacts, as of earlier this week. Call 541-553-2131 to schedule a vaccination. · Warm Springs IHS has con- ducted 16,341 covid tests since the pandemic began. There have been 1,258 con- firmed cases among the tribal com- munity since the pandemic began, according to the latest report. December 1, 2021 - Vol. 46, No. 24 December – Nch’i-An - Winter - Yiyam PO Box 489 Warm Springs, OR 97761 ECR WSS Postal Patron U.S. Postage PRSRT STD Warm Springs, OR 97761 New districts and question of political equity The Warm Springs Reserva- tion next year will become part of the large and rural Oregon voting District 57. Meanwhile, the city of Madras—where many tribal members live, shop, work, go to school, etc.—will be part of District 59. This separation dilutes the voting equity of the Confeder- ated Tribes, said Jaylyn Suppah. She spoke earlier this fall at a Oregon redistricting hearing be- fore the Affiliated Tribes of Northwest Indians. With the reservation separated from Madras and moved into the larger District 57, including east- ern Oregon, Indigenous represen- tation is broken up, and thereby weakened. An example is Ms. Suppah her- self. She had considered a candi- dacy for state office in District 59. With the reservation part of Dis- trict 57, she is less likely to run. Like on the reservation, she knows the people and issues of Madras, Jefferson County, and District 59. This is not as true of District 57, making a candidacy less tenable. “I wouldn’t feel comfortable try- ing to represent folks I don’t know,” Ms. Suppah, an education advocate, has said. She is less fa- miliar with communities of the new District 57, and this is the problem. As summarized in a recent In- dian Countr y Today feature: “Tribal advocates who submit- ted maps or worked to increase en- gagement with the process in In- dian Country say the new districts will make it nearly impossible to A s the Warm Springs Prevention team believes: Culture is Prevention. Toward this belief in November the team hosted a drum making class for community members of the all ages. The class was one of their events celebrat- ing Native Heritage Month. In terms of Culture, the Drum is among the most essential, a living tradition as vibrant today as ever. The wood of the drum itself is a living entity. Drums are central to all the of many Native tribes. Ahd while the styles of construction may vary greatly from tribe to tribe, there is a shared foundation among all of them. For information on drum making , or classes that may be upcoming , Warm Springs Preven- tion can be reached at 541-615-0036. elect candidates representative of those communities at a time when voter-engagement efforts were be- ginning to make that a possibility.” The state approved the new Or- egon district maps in September. In comparison, the state of Washing- ton earlier this year drew its new maps, prompting tribal communities to speak in opposition. Washington then redrew its maps to address the concerns. In Oregon the new maps brought a lawsuit by Republicans, though this was dismissed recently by the state Supreme Court. Omicron and vaccine Participants in the drum class at Prevention. The latest covid ‘variant of con- cern’ is the omicron. This variant may be even more contagious than the delta variant. As of earlier this week at least, scientists were not sure whether the omicron is present in the U.S.: If it is already, then it surely will be. And it is still too soon to know whether the current covid vaccines are fully effective against the omi- cron. This should be known in the coming days and weeks. Yet the best advice advice for now, until more is known about omi- cron, is to get vaccinated and get the booster when available, the health experts agree. Reach the Warm Springs IHS clinic vaccine line at 541-553- 2131 for information or an ap- pointment. The omicron was first reported in South Africa and its neighboring countries, though the variant is now found in many other countries, in- cluding Canada. Photos courtesy Scott Kalama/Prevention A Year in Review ~ 2021 ~ The following are some of the memorable news events during 2021 on the reser vation, as re- ported in the Spilyay Tymoo. The January plan called for the return to the classroom by Febru- ary, about one year since schools first closed due to covid. In other January 2021 news: January The year 2021 began with stu- dents of the reservation and school district still taking their classes online from home. In early January 2021, though, the district conducted a survey of families and students, asking whether they would like to return to in-person learning in the classroom. The purpose of the survey: If enough families respond in the affirmative, the in-person learn- ing could resume by late Janu- ary or early February. As the survey was complete, the overwhelming response was A small private business jet crashed in the Mutton Mountains on the reservation. The pilot of the Cessna Citation jet and the one passenger on board were killed. And elsewhere: Spilyay photo Scene in February 2021, the first day students returned to in-person classroom learning. The schools had been closed since March of 2020 because of the covid. in favor of returning to class. So in response, the school dis- trict and individual schools adopted Covid-19 health precautions. In January, for instance, as pri- ority workers, the teachers and school staff received their Covid- 19 vaccines. This was through the Oregon Health Authority and the county health programs. By mid January, the War m Springs Health and Wellness Cen- ter had administered all 400 Covid- 19 vaccines the clinic had received in its December 2020 delivery. As the month continued, Health and Wellness administered several hundred more vaccines. And this: The year 2021 will see some sig- nificant water infrastructure im- provements on the reservation. 2021 REVIEW continues on 4