Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon August 24, 2022 Page 7 Foundation grant helps Boys & Girls Club T he Boys & Girls Club of Warm Springs this month received a $20,000 donation from the Oregon Commu- nity Foundation. The contribution will help expand the club’s Healthy Kids Initiative. “Warm Springs youth are vibrant, strong and deserv- ing of the same opportuni- ties that other communities can access,” said Bill Tsoukalas, executive director of the Boys & Girls Clubs of Snohomish County, the organization that provides funding means for the Warm Springs club. “Support from the Or- egon Community Founda- tion allows us to provide en- hanced services to the youth of the Confederated Tribes Courtesy OCF Youth at the Warm Springs Boys & Girls Club. of War m Springs com- pletely free of charge, while implementing crucial aca- demic success, STEM and healthy lifestyles program- ming.” STEM stands for Science, Technology, Engi- neering and Math. The contribution to the Warm Springs Boys & Girls Club is part of the $8.7 mil- lion in new community grants made this month by the Or- egon Community Foundation. The foundation received 371 requests for funding during the recent grant cycle, a record number of requests made to the foundation. “Due to significant de- mand, it was clear that we would not be able to fund every critical funding request from the Community Grants program alone. Donors from every part of our state stepped forward to help close the gap of ongoing needs of communities” said Kirsten Kilchenstein, chief philan- thropy officer of the Or- egon Community Founda- tion. Documentary A Bridge to the Future (from page 1) In time the building fell into disuse, and stood empty for some time. Then a few years ago Chris Watson and the Community Action Team began developing a plan to move the Commissary, com- pletely renovate and restore the structure, and then de- velop the War m Springs small business incubator. The team obtained funding from a variety of sources, making the steady progress that continues today. The tribes and Action Team contracted for the ac- tual relocation of the build- ing this past April. The Com- missary is now by the high- way on campus. When the project is fin- ished, the business incuba- tor will feature a café, of- fice and retail space. The Tananáwit artists co-operative will have a shop in the building. In time there will be outdoor food spaces, and other amenities. Through the recent grant to the Action Team and film- Filmmaker LaRonn Katchia maker LaRonn Katchia, the development will be fully and beautifully documented. Dave McMechan Courtesy WSCAT Architect’s conceptual image of the Commissary small business center. Shooting incident at Wildhorse Umatilla tribal officials say two people were shot as an armed man and police ex- changed gunfire at the Wildhorse Casino. The Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Res- er vation announced last week that police intercepted a man with a gun near the door of the casino and re- sort, after he tried to rob the establishment. A bystander and the al- leged gunman were struck by gunfire during the shootout. Both were taken to a lo- cal hospital. Officials say the suspect was then taken into custody and the site was se- cured. A social gathering sharing cultural and traditional arts is held the second and fourth Tues- day of the month from 9 a.m. to noon at the Cul- ture and Heritage Department. Warm Springs Vital Stats reminds tribal member graduates that you need to submit your diploma and transcript for the fall Trust Fund payment. You can make con- tact the school dis- trict by calling 541- 475-7265 extension 2316; or 541-475- 4820, ext. Courtesy OCF Courtesy OCF Track event, Warm Springs Boys & Girls Club. Around Indian Country Water shut-off of Klamath Drought conditions are forcing the shut-off of irri- gation water in the Klamath basin for the rest of the sea- son. This was the recent an- nouncement from the fed- eral Bureau of Reclamation. The shut-off impacts three irrigation districts along the Oregon-California bor- der. It marks the end of available water that can be diverted from Upper Kla- math Lake. The far ming community in the region reacted with some frustra- tion. Paul Simmons is the director of the Klamath Water Users Association, a group that lobbies for farm- ers in the area. He says residents are frustrated because of mixed messages about how much water they’d get this year. “There’s been just quite a lot of changing of information and expectations created and changed that have made this extremely troubling and not well received,” Simmons said. This controversy has been long in the making, as the lim- ited water is necessary for fish, wildlife and cultural ways of the Native people of the region. Water levels are main- tained in Upper Klamath Lake to protect several spe- cies of endangered sucker fish. It’s also let out of the lake to flow downriver, to protect habitat for endan- gered salmon.