Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon January 25, 2023 On the Council agenda in February The following are some of the items coming up on the Februar y agenda of Tribal Council (subject to change at Council discretion): February 6 Invocation 9 a.m.: Bureau of Indian Affairs update with Brenda Bremner, BIA Agency superintendent. 10: Bureau of Trust Funds Ad- ministration update with Kevin Moore. 11: Realty items with Greta White Elk, BIA Realty. 1 p.m.: Covid update with the Response Team. 2: Legislative update conference call, federal and state. 3: Tribal attorneys update. Tuesday, February 7 – Enter- prise updates 9 a.m.: Warm Springs Telecom with Tim York. 10: Credit enterprise with Lori Fuentes. 11: Warm Springs Ventures with Jim Souers. 1 p.m.: Warm Springs Housing update with Daniel Wood. 2: Warm Springs Timber LLC with Brian Prater. Wednesday, February 8 9 a.m.: Appellate Court rules update with Robert Brunoe, Sec- retary-Treasurer. 10: Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission Enforcement at Columbia, discussion with Aja DeCoteau, Mitch Hicks and Brent Hall. 1 p.m.: Indian Health Service update with Hyllis Dauphinais, clinic chief executive officer. 2: Health and Human Services update with Caroline Cruz. 3: Managed Care update with Mike Collins. Monday, February 13, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.: Joint Committee meet- ing at the Fire Management con- ference room. Tuesday, February 21 9 a.m.: Secretary-Treasurer up- date with Robert Brunoe. 10: March agenda and review minutes. 11: Draft resolutions. 1 p.m.: Enrollments with Lucille Suppach-Samson, Vital Statistics. 2: Office of Information Sys- tems update on directorship dis- cussion. Tribal Ski and Snowboard Day February 3 The Tribal Ski and Snowboard Day at Mt. Hood Meadows is com- ing up on Friday, February 3. This is an opportunity for War m Springs youth, families and indi- viduals to enjoy time in the snow on Mt. Hood. Beginners and experienced ski- ers and snowboarders are welcome to participate. Transportation is available, and everything you need is provided. To sign up, send an email to Sue Matters of KWSO: sue.matters@wstribes.org In the mail, include your name and contact information. All par- ticipants must also complete a group consent form. Any unac- companied minors need a ‘Con- sent to treat medical release form’ including insurance information and parent or guardian signature. Please provide names and ages of each individual in your group, whether the participants will ski or snowboard; and whether you, and others with you will ride the bus, or drive yourself up to Mt. Hood Meadows. On the Ski Day, if you are transporting yourself, meet at Ver- tical at Mt. Hood Meadows at 9 a.m. For those using the Mt. Hood Meadows transport: The bus will arrive at the Warm Springs Com- munity Center at 7:15 a.m. for the 7:30 departure. Please be on time (call 541-460-2255 by 7:15 a.m. if you are running late). Check in with the day’s coordi- nators—Sue or Heidi—for the fol- lowing: Lift tickets and equipment rental instructions; beginner in- structions and schedule instruc- tions. Lunch will be at noon. Some background The Mt. Hood area is part of the Ceded Lands of the Confed- erated Tribes of Warm Springs— the area is part of the 10 million acres of traditional homeland of Highway 26 corridor, Greeley Heights, West Hills, Tenino Apart- ments, Elliot Heights, Trailer Courts, Miller Heights, Upper Dry Creek, Sunnyside, Wolfe Point and Kah- Nee-Ta. When there is a boil water no- tice, you need to bring tap water to a rolling boil, boil for one minute, the tribes that were subject to the Treaty of 1855. Under the treaty, the Warm Springs and Wasco tribes relin- quished the approximately 10 mil- lion acres of land, but reserved the Warm Springs Reservation for use. The tribes also kept their rights to harvest fish, game and other foods off the reservation in their usual and accustomed places. Recognizing that the Mt. Hood area, including Meadows, is part of the Ceded Lands, Meadows each year hosts events for tribal mem- bers. There are berry-picking out- ings, and coming up in February the Tribal Ski and Snowboard Day. and cool before using. Or use bottled water for drink- ing, making ice, washing dishes, brushing teeth, and preparing food. Emergency Management’s water distribution hours are 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. week days, and they are open during the noon hour. California’s salmon population plummets amid new threat They’ve been pushed to the brink of extinction by dams, drought, extreme heat and even the flare of wildfires, but now California’s endangered winter-run Chinook salmon appear to be fac- ing an entirely new threat - their own ravenous hunger for ancho- vies. After the worst spawning sea- son ever in 2022, scientists now suspect the species’ precipitous decline is being driven by its ocean diet. Researchers hypothesize that the salmon are feasting too heavily on anchovies, a fish that is now swarming the California coast in record numbers. Unfortunately for the salmon, anchovies carry an en- zyme called thiaminase, which breaks down thiamine — a vita- min that is essential to cell func- tion in all living things. In humans, a critical deficiency of thiamine, or vitamin B1, can lead to heart failure and nerve dam- age. In female salmon that are re- turning to rivers and streams to spawn, thiamine deficiency can be passed on to their many hatchlings, which suffer problems swimming and experience high rates of death, researchers say. Now, with government agencies and Native American tribes fear- ing the collapse of the winter-run Chinook, scientists are embarking on a campaign to determine why For W.S. Little League The following are some impor- tant dates coming up for the Warm Springs Nation Little League sea- son: January 31: Early registration deadline. February 1: Late regis- tration. Febr uar y 28: Coaches meet and coach registration deadline. March 12: Player registra- tion deadline. March 13: Man- datory coaches meeting; fol- lowed by tryouts. $20.5 million award to CRITFC and tribes In a first-of-its-kind deploy- ment under Bipartisan Infra- structure Law funds, NOAA this month awarded approximately $20.5 million for the coordinated management of fisheries, ocean and coastal resources. The recommended federal funds will significantly enhance existing collaboration among tribal government, states and the federal government, and provide needed capacity to advance their work. Through this recommended funding, the awards will support projects to advance regional ocean partnerships and data sharing among ocean users, and include the engagement of federally recog- nized tribes with existing regional ocean partnerships. Regional ocean partnerships are regional organizations con- vened by governors to work collaboratively across multiple states, in coordination with fed- eral and tribal governments, on common priorities and chal- lenges. A total of 13 awards were dis- tributed to tribes and partners: $1.1 million will go to four fed- erally recognized tribes or tribal organizations—including Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commis- sion—to support tribal actions re- lated to regional ocean and coastal priorities. Ski area at Meadows. Issue at treatment plant brought water notice The tribes and Public Utilities had to issue a boil water notice for last Thursday, January 19. This was in regard to the Agency water system, and was a precautionary notice while testing of the water was under way. The Agency water system serves the Campus area and the Page 3 the anchovy population has ex- ploded off the California coast, and why winter-run Chinook are seem- ingly ignoring all other prey. Warm Springs Recreation invites departments to participate in a Valentine’s Day office decorat- ing contest. The theme is ‘Show the Love NDN Style.’ Offices must be decorated by Februar y 14 at 5 p.m. If your workplace wants to get in on the competition, call Recreation 541-553-3243 to register by Monday, February 6.