Page 8 Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon December 29, 2021 New Parks director faces a ‘huge task’ ‘Large enough to serve you... Small enough to care’ 866-299-0644 2021 Chevrolet Traverse - 100,214 miles - $18,995 #12385A 2020 Buick Enclave - 13,500 miles - $44,995 #54413A 2020 Buick Encore - 3,216 miles - 2019 Chevrolet Silverado - 42,236 miles - $35,995 $54,995 #102095 #2548A 2018 Chevrolet Equinox - 93,700 miles - 2018 Chevrolet Cruz - 61,645 miles - $26,995 $21,995 #04661A #P20989 2017 Dodge Journey - 98,214 miles - 2016 Buick Encore - 27,351 miles - $16,995 $22,995 #48707A #79134B 2015 Dodge Journey - 104,740 miles - 2014 Nissan Altima - 42,411 miles - $15,995 $19,995 #07407A #24986A 2012 Ford Explorer - 105,418 miles - 2003 Cadillac - 110,000 miles - $18,995 #P2091 $7,995 #45070A Record annual atten- dance numbers. Low morale among employees. Billions of dollars in maintenance needs. Those are just some of the challenges Charles ‘Chuck’ Sams III will have to tackle as director of the National Park Service after officially taking leadership in a swearing-in ceremony in December. Sams becomes the first Native American to hold the position. His boss is Deb Haaland, Laguna Pueblo, the Interior secretary and first Indig- enous person to hold a cabi- Charles Sams net-level position. Sams’ background and citizenship with the Confed- erated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reser vation also means some are optimistic he’ll work to improve how the agency and its hundreds of national parks, historic sites, monuments and recre- ation areas work with tribal nations and incorporate their history and culture. “Everyone should have access to the outdoors no matter where they live, how much money they have, or what their background is,” Secretary Haaland said. “Chuck Sams understands the importance of connect- ing people to nature, and I am thrilled to work with him as the Interior Department works to make our national park system accessible to all Americans.” CRITFC welcomes new director Aja DeCoteau grew up on the Yakama Indian Reserva- tion in Washington, and she fondly remembers fishing in the Columbia River Basin and hunting with her family as she learned about the importance of Indigenous First Foods. Still, she thought she’d end up working as a medical doc- tor someday. But after high school she got a job with her tribe’s forestry department, and then during breaks and summers in college, she kept finding herself working in natural resources. “I have great memories of going hunting with my brother and sister and trout fishing with my dad. I feel like I've always had an interest in my environ- ment,” Ms. DeCoteau said. “And, of course, knowing the importance of what we call First Foods to our cul- ture and our religion is some- thing that has always been a part of who I am.” Those summers working in forestry for her tribe led her to a career in natural re- sources instead of medicine. Eventually, that led her to the Portland-headquartered Co- lumbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, CRITFC, which represents the interests of the four Columbia River treaty tribes in policy, advo- cacy and management of the basin. The Confederated Tribes are among the charter members of the organization. Now, 12 years after join- ing CRITFC, Aja was named its executive director, mark- ing the first time a woman has Aja DeCoteau ever held the position. The organization an- nounced DeCoteau as the new executive director in November, after she had served in the role on an in- terim basis since April, after the previous executive direc- tor, Jaime Pinkham, was ap- pointed to a high-ranking job with the federal government. It’s a position that DeCoteau—who is a citizen of the Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakama Nation and descendent of the Cayuse, Nez Perce and Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians—has al- ways wanted to hold since coming to CRITFC. “I am honored and ex- cited to lead CRITFC and work together with our member tribes to bridge tra- ditional knowledge, scientific expertise and cultural con- nection to ensure that we have salmon and other natu- ral resources for generations to come,” DeCoteau said. While she’s excited for the opportunity—and honored to be the first woman leader of CRITFC in its nearly 50- year history—she takes over at a pivotal time for the or- ganization amid a series of challenges, including climate change, dwindling salmon populations and questions over the future of dams and hydropower.