Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon February 23, 2022 Page 5 School district moves forward with new bond Communtiy photo/Courtesy KWSO The Madras High School varsity girls basketball team is going to the 2022 State tournament early in March. The girls won the Tri-Valley League with the outstanding record of 9-1. The Lady Buffs won the League Championship last week, beating Corbett 58-55. It was senior night, and the seniors were honored with a song from War Face. Seniors on the team this year are Kales Holliday, Shantelle Henry, Lily Libokmeto, and ChaCha Rodriguez. New schedule this semester at high school Madras High School has changed the school schedule for the second semester, which started last week and runs through the end of the school year. The primary goal of this change is to offer students more support or enrichment, whichever is necessary for each student. This time is called, ‘Support Seminar.’ This is when students can get extra time and sup- port from their teachers, like a test review or a writ- ing conference. It can also provide targeted instruction for struggling students and enrichment for students who excel. Students will have access to Support Seminar twice a week, on Mondays and Tues- days. The school will hold two 40-minute sessions on those days and offer a wide arrangement of interven- tion, enrichment, or study time. “It is providing oppor- tunities for students to get help, get better, and get ahead. They either had to do it after school or at an- other time, now this time is built into their school day.” said assistant principal Mark Stewart. “Everyone is excited about this, our staff is ex- cited about it, our students are excited about it.” This extra time is an- other layer to the tiers of support Madras High School offers to students and families. Tier one support is the time students spend inside their classrooms in front of their teachers. Support Semi- nar will be Tier 2 time, which was non-existent in the con- tinuum of support offered by the high school before this change. Tier 3 time is SPED, Alternative Ed, after school support, etc. “Throughout the pan- demic, we’ve seen there is a need to include this extra support time during the school day,” said Madras High School teacher Jodi Galyen. “We took parts of our old system and improved it to make it better for all students. Teachers want to help their students get better every day, and are ready to move for- ward with this schedule change now.” The school will use the sys- tem, FlexiSched, to imple- ment the schedules needed for Support Seminar. Jail: project funding through U.S. Interior (from page 1) Access to infrastructure is a big factor, as is the physical location, not too far from the courthouse yet not in a prominent or very vis- ible place. This is a preliminary rec- ommendation from Utilities and Public Safety, based on their review so far of the options. The suggested site is where the former cannabis project was to be located, off High- way 3 toward the water treat- ment plant. The siting pro- cess requires a preferred site, and two alternatives, based on feasibility and public com- ment. Community input will weigh significantly in the de- cision. Toward this end, James Halliday, Land Ser- vices Officer, has a summary of the site locations on dis- You can review the various potential jail sites, and give your comment, at the Land Services Display Board (left), currently at administration. The board and suggestion box will be around the community, including at Simnasho, this month and early March. play at administration, with a suggestion box. The dis- play and suggestion box will be stationed around the community and at Simnasho in the coming weeks. The tribes have been without a full-time operat- ing jail facility for five years now. Problems with the pre- vious facility included defi- cient ventilation, lack of plumbing and heating, leaky ceilings, unstable walls and floors, etc. As the current jail build- ing is not available for incar- ceration, tribal Public Safety has been contracting with NorCor in The Dalles for de- tention services. A decade ago the Warm Springs Police Department- Corrections and Tribal Coun- cil were initially in contact with the BIA about the need for a proper Corrections facility. Achieving a funding priority was the obstacle. Based on Lt. Greene’s as- sessment, the Department of the Interior last year made a commitment to the tribes that the funding is available. This is a way teachers and students can schedule what they do during the two 40-minute periods a week. Teachers will have the op- portunity to request students prior to the schedule open- ing up to students. If a stu- dent is not requested by a teacher, then they will see all kinds of offerings in FlexiSched to schedule for themselves. This system allows the high school to schedule and monitor students and their progress towards gradua- tion. “The great thing about this is that it is going to put more focus and emphasis on data and student perfor- mance,” Stewart said. The Jefferson County School District is making progress with the new bond program voters approved in November of last year. The bond work includes adding classrooms at the Warm Springs Academy. In January of this year, the district was informed that an additional $2.5 million was garnered from the sale of the bonds. This premium is an extra amount investors paid for the district’s bonds, because they of- fer an interest rate higher than the prevailing rate. While the district will receive $2.5 million more than anticipated, the premium will not increase the tax rate. It will, however, allow the district to support bond projects and prepare for cost escalations and contin- gencies that many construction projects face in the cur- rent economy. In addition to this news, the Jefferson County School District board of directors is pleased to announce that Central Oregon-based Mike Tiller, of Tiller Schoolhouse Consulting, has been selected as the owner’s represen- tative to manage the projects funded by the bond. This comes as a result of a three-month selection process the district implemented from December 2021 through February 2022. Mike Tiller most recently worked for Bend-LaPine School District as executive director of Facilities, and led the completion of the new Caldera High School. Tiller has a proven track record of successful imple- mentation of more than $350 million in K-12 construc- tion projects throughout his career. In 2013, he man- aged a $96 million bond measure with 140 projects rang- ing from new schools, facility upgrades, and asset pres- ervation projects. In 2017, he managed a $268 million bond measure with more than 159 projects. This in- cluded projects ranging from new school construction building, renovating and additions to existing school buildings. The bond also included projects to improve health, safety and security and upgrade and repair fa- cilities. “We are excited to partner with Tiller Schoolhouse Consulting to make our bond projects a reality,” shared Jay Mathisen, Jefferson County School District Super- intendent. “Tiller brings decades of Central Oregon school bond project management experience to the table and is committed to the success of our bond program. We look forward to sharing updates about our bond projects very soon.” Updated tribal covid policies, protocols Tribal Council and man- agement have finalized up- dated policies and protocol for addressing Covid-19 on the r eser vation and among the tribal community. The new policies, based on discussion with health officials and the Covid-19 Response Team, took effect earlier this month and are in place until Council decides otherwise. Some changes are signifi- cant, including the vaccine mandate for employees of the tribes, for instance. Here is the 905-C Man- dator y Covid-19 Vaccination policy statement of the tribes: Policy: Covid-19 is an in- fections illness caused by the corona virus, Covid-19. Due to the high risk to employ- ees, all current employees, regardless of status—limited duration, part-time, or pro- bationary status—and newly hired employees shall be fully vaccinated. Volunteers will have to follow the same policy. 1. Vaccinated employees shall provide a copy of his or her vaccination record to the Human Resources De- partment, who will keep a copy on file. If the employee is not fully vaccinated, the employee needs to provide a copy to the Human Re- sources Department for each stage of the vaccination until the employee is fully vaccinated. 2. If new employees are not fully vaccinated at the time of hire, he or she shall be fully vaccinated within the first six months of employ- ment. The employee needs to provide a copy to the Hu- man Resources Department for each stage of the vacci- nation until the new hire is fully vaccinated. 3. The Human Re- sources Department will grant a medical or religious exemption to this vaccine requirement, so long as the exemption does not pose an undue hardship or direct threat to health or safety. Additional safety precau- tions or job modifications may be required in the event an exemption is granted. The Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs being a sov- ereign nation is not required to follow the ADA and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which includes the medical and religious ex- emption. The tribes find this to be reasonable at this time and reserves the inherent right to change this at any time. a. A medical exemption is to include a letter from your physician to be on file with the Human Resources Department. This is nor- mally defined as being aller- gic to any of the ingredients used to manufacture the vaccine, and/or other un- derlying medical condi- tions. b. A religious exemption must be submitted to the Human Resources Depart- ment to be on file, if get- ting vaccinated goes against your religious beliefs. 4. Exemption unvacci- nated employees must test weekly. Self-administered home testing kits may be used. They may be purchased on your own or may be avail- able at designated locations as long as supplies last. 5. If you are symptom- atic for Covid-19 and test at one of the designated lo- cations—home test, or rapid covid test site—or if directed by a medical pro- vider, or exposure to a per- son known to be positive, please do not report to work until you are tested and re- ceive your results. You must isolate yourself from any contact until you receive a Covid-19 test result. 6. All employees who en- ter a tribal public building must show proof of vacci- nation or have a negative test result within seven days prior to entering the building, and wear a mask. 7. If an employee de- clines to take a Covid-19 test when required, he or she will be sent home for violation of PER 801 Employee Safety. Failure to test after three days will be construed as a refusal to work. Appro- priate action will occur up to an including termination un- der the Personal Policy, PER 801 Personal Appearance and Conduct of Employees. a. An employee will be al- lowed three days to comply with the rquest. b. Those three days will be recorded as Leave Without Pay. PER 905-D—Adminis- trative Covid-19 Leave: Policy: All employees re- garding of status—limited duration, part-time, proba- tionary—may receive Covid- 19 administrative leave for up to 25 days total for the three following scenarios: 1. If you are positive with the covid virus; 2. If you have been ex- posed and place in quaran- tine; or 3. Need to care for mem- bers of your household, or for your immediate family members. All three scenarios shall be backed up with a docu- mented leave notice provided by a medical provider. stat-