Page 6 Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon Opposition to Goldendale project The proposed Goldendale En- ergy Storage Project has been well received in some quarters, but it is sharply opposed by several Na- tive American tribes, primarily the Yakama Nation and also the Warm Springs, Umatilla and Nez Perce tribes. Why are the tribal nations op- posed to the project? The answer requires an understanding of trea- ties and the relationships between the U.S. Government and the tribes. In 1855 when the Yakama Nation signed a treaty with the U.S. government, it ceded lands outside the reservation to the gov- ernment. However, the treaty al- lowed them to retain some rights to the ceded lands, among them to hunt, fish, and gather in the area in perpetuity. To further understand the tribes’ opposition requires a dive into the Final Environmental Im- pact Statement documents pub- lished in December of 2022 by the Washington Department of Ecology. Appendix H is a ‘Tribal Resources Analysis Report’ and provides the most comprehensive look at tribal nations’ opposition to the project. The following ex- cerpt is taken verbatim from the report; while being edited for clar- ity and brevity. Tribal traditions are interwoven into the ecosystems in which tribal members live, from hunting and gathering to sacred sites—places and activities that have spiritual and cultural meaning. The Godendale developer has pro- posed mitigation for impacts to some of the natural resources, but Courtesy DOE Site of the Goldendale energy storage project. the tribes have indicated that this is not sufficient. The proposed project would have unique impacts on tribal communities and tribal members. This report seeks to explain those impacts within the cultural context of the tribes. Therefore, it is im- portant to listen to the feedback provided by the tribes on whether there is mitigation that would help to reduce project impacts. To date, there is no information available about mitigation proposed by or supported by the tribes that would reduce impacts on tribal cultural and other resources to a level that is less than significant. Washington Ecology continues to engage with tribes to better under- stand project impacts. Current un- derstanding of the construction and operation of the proposed project indicates significant and unavoid- able adverse impacts on tribal and cultural resources. These impacts in- clude hunting and traditional gath- ering of wildlife and vegetation, as well as archaeological sites and tra- Railway and an avid outdoorsman, Rhodes took pho- tos of railroad work sites along with his many travels through- out the Pacific Northwest. The photos shed a little more light on a present-day investiga- tion into Fort Simcoe and the gov- ernment-run Indian boarding school that operated there for nearly 60 years. In the Tribal Court of the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs CTWS, Petitioner, vs ROBIN WARNER, RESPONDENT; Case No. JV17-18. TO: ROBIN WARNER, TYRONE LAWRENCE, MALLORY & TOMMY GILBERT: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an ASSISTED GUARD- IANSHIP REVIEW has been filed with the Warm Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are summoned to appear in this matter at a hearing sched- uled for the 15 TH day of MARCH, 2023 @ 9:00 AM CTWS, Petitioner, vs ANTONIA WAHSISE, RESPON- DENT; Case No. JV58-09. TO: ANOTNIA WAHSISE, CASEY GRAHAM, STEPHANIE & JACOB MAY: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an ASSISTED GUARD- IANSHIP REVIEW has been filed with the Warm Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are summoned to appear in this matter at a hearing sched- uled for the 27 th day of MARCH, 2023 @ 9:00 AM CTWS, Petitioner, vs ROBIN WARNER, Respondent; Case No. JV17-18. TO: ROBIN WARNER, TYRONE LAWRENCE, MALLORY&TOMMY GILBERT: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an ASSISTED GUARD- IANSHIP REVIEW has been sched- uled with the Warm Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are sum- moned to appear in this matter at a hearing scheduled for the 15 TH day of MARCH, 2023 @ 9:00 AM JANICE SUPPAH, Petitioner, vs GARRETT SUPPAH SR, Re- spondent; Case No. DO18- 23. TO: JANICE SUPPAH, DEECE SUPPAH, GARRETT SUPPAH JR: Skatepark: Grand Opening day this month ditional cultural properties, used for camping and traditional tribal rituals, such as ceremonies and vi- sion quests. Without effective mitigation that would reduce significant im- pacts to tribal and cultural re- sources, those impacts would be considered unavoidable. There- fore, there would be significant and unavoidable adverse impacts to cultural and tribal resources. The study area is within lands ceded by the Yakama Treaty of 1855. Additionally, the area is, and has historically been, used by the Yakama Nation, Warm Springs, Umatilla and Nez Perce Tribe for hunting, traditional gathering, camping, and traditional tribal ritu- als, such as ceremonies. In their scoping comment letter, the Yakama Nation states that the project area is one of “exceptional cultural importance” to them and that to this day, tribal members ex- ercise ancestral harvest and ceremo- nial practices. Historic photos shed new light on boarding school Sometime in the last two weeks of April 1909, a man pho- tographed two women and two men on the porch of the commander’s house at For t Simcoe in the Yakama Valley, Washington. A young Native girl stands near them, but apart. The amateur photographer was John Clark Rhodes. A sur- veyor for the Great Northern March 8, 2023 YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that a CONSERVATOR/ GUARDIAN HEARING has been scheduled with the Warm Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are summoned to appear in this matter at a hearing scheduled for the 23 RD day of MARCH, 2023 @ 2:30 PM ASHLYN JOHNSON, Peti- tioner, vs TYRONE MEDRANO, Respondent; Case No. RO15-20. TO: ASHLYN JOHNSON, TYRONE MEDRANO: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an RESTRAINING OR- DER EXTENSION has been sched- uled with the Warm Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are sum- moned to appear in this matter at a hearing scheduled for the 22 ND day of MARCH, 2023 @ 11:00 AM CTWS, Petitioner, vs WILMA BAZA, Respondent; Case No. JV12-18. TO: WILMA BAZA, GINA & MICHAEL GISH: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an ASSISTED GUARD- IANSHIP REVIEW has been sched- uled with the Warm Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are sum- moned to appear in this matter at a hearing scheduled for the 3 RD day of APRIL, 2023 @ 2:30 PM CTWS, Petitioner, vs LEONA TENORIO, Respondent; Case No. JV81-15. TO: LEONA TENORIO, MARTIN MEDINA, CPS, JV PROS: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an CUSTODY REVIEW has been scheduled with the Warm Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are summoned to appear in this matter at a hearing scheduled for the 4 TH day of APRIL, 2023 @ 10:00 AM Notices continue on 7 Until recently, the 19 Fort Simcoe photos Rhodes took re- mained with his family. Recently, his great-niece, Jeanne Webb, presented the photos to the Yakima Herald- Republic so they could be shared with the public for the first time, and given to organizations that will keep them for the future. (from page 1) Once the fundraising started for the Warm Springs park, with great success, the scope of the project grew to include the new ramps of concrete, instead of wood, and other improve- ments at Elmer Quinn Park. The labor for the most part was volunteer by the Tactics team. Collective Concrete pro- vided their services for the major pouring work. The Warm Springs Skatepark is an example of how dedica- tion and a good idea can bring about great accomplishments. Cooperation and sharing were the keys to bringing this project to fruition. The Confederated Tribes by Council resolution dedicated $10,000 to the project, matched by Jefferson County. Pacific Source of Central Or- egon has been a major donor. Supporters of the Warm Springs Skatepark would like to thank the sponsors, who are noted on the Grand Opening announcement flyer (on page 1). Last condor sighting in Washington occurred in 1897. Can they come back? Language offers one place to begin, because if something as dis- tinct as a condor inhabits a defined area over the course of genera- tions, then a word for the bird will surely follow. That’s the way it works moving upstream through the Columbia Gorge, searching the eras before, during and after Euro- American contact. When Samuel Black, the Hudson’s Bay Company agent in charge of Fort Walla Walla in the late 1820s, compiled a basic vo- cabulary for the three main tribal tongues he heard spoken at the post, he included condor words in Walla Walla, Nez Perce and Cay- use languages. Eugene Hunn, an anthropologist working with Yakama people in the 1970s, re- corded different words for con- dor in two other distinct Sahaptin dialects spoken upstream around the Big Bend. Then there are the body parts. Before the closing of the Colum- bia River’s John Day Dam in 1957, an archaeological excavation at the Five Mile Rapids section of The Dalles uncovered thousands of bird bones in a layer that dated back thousands of years. Among them were no less than 63 indi- California condor vidual California condors, the fourth-most common bird in the complex. A recent re-examination of the avian remains from Five Mile Rap- ids revealed several hundred marks consistent with the action of meat butchering in other birds. The people had applied their knives very differently to the condors, however, cutting distinct swipes across the wing bones that appear to have targeted primary and sec- ondary flight feathers. Such cut marks might lead di- rectly to an Edward Curtis photo taken in the early 1900s of an el- der at Wishram Village. The village site is still located on the Columbia’s north bank, hard by the former great fishery at Celilo Falls and only a few riffles upstream from Five Mile Rapids. The elder from Wishram Village holds a gigantic black feather in one hand that could only have come from a con- dor wing.