4 JUNE 1, 2003 Smoke Signals Spirit Mountain Community Fund Reaches The $20 Million Mark Community Fund contin ued from front page Fund successful. "It's been wonderful," said Monica Ileeran, Director of the Volunteers Medical Clinic in Eu gene. 'The grant money we re ceived was used for the diabe tes program and there are over one hundred patients enrolled in the program. The fund helps us to provide services to people who would otherwise not be able to afford it." The fund has given away more than any other Tribal grant pro gram in the state and more than all the others combined. The event emphasized diver sity, a guiding principle of the Community Fund from the start, and guests saw that diver sity in the entertainment that included Japanese Taiko Drums and the Hispanic Milagro The ater. Checks for $5,000 each were presented to a broad spectrum of community outreach pro grams. The recipients included Volunteers in Medicine Clinic in Eugene, the Community Action Agency of Yamhill County and the Sable House, a domestic vio lence shelter and hotline in Dal las. These awards brought the fund to the $20 million mark. "The fund is mostly education-related," said Adam Henny, Director of Marketing for the Spirit Mountain Casino. The fund has supported edu cational, family, and commu nity organizations since its in V'- I . i r) ) -cn, "' m j ' .- ,.;," "m",,Y i Mm ft i Performance Art The Oregon Coast Children's Theatre, above, was just one of the hundreds of Spirit Moun tain Community Fund grant recipients at the Portland Art Museum to help celebrate the fund reaching the $20 million mark in charitable donations. Since it's inception in 1997, the fund has helped over 250 different organizations with grants and donations. Community Fund board member Adam Henny (left) was there to welcome everyone, as well as Oregon State Senate Democratic leader Kate Brown (right). -A I Farmworker Education Center Getting Finishing Touches Community Fund's grant encouraged others to give. By Ron Karten The Cipriano Ferrel Education Center is not scheduled to open un til July, but when completed, it will be a much needed multi-purpose fa cility, said Roberto Franco, Execu tive Director of the Farmworker Housing Development Corporation (FHDC) in Woodburn. "The core or heart of the program will be an early childhood development program." This education center is the third phase of a 105-unit housing devel opment for farmworkers, but even more than the first two phases, "The Education Center has been a mag net that created other collaboration between our organization and the community," said Franco. "We have a computer lab for com puter literacy and for providing technical support for students, for those interested in the internet and email, and to help students with their homework." It also will be used to take advantage of "a lot of programs that are internet-based." Among on-going programs that will soon have a home because of the Education Center are English classes for adults, a home-buyer program, an after school program, a 4-H youth club, and "since 1997, we've been working with a group of 20 women to be day care provid ers." Last year, as part of a financial literacy program, the FHDC made a commitment to match savings on a 4-1 basis for any of 20 farmworkers in the program who save a minimum of $20 monthly. The Community Fund contributed $100,000 to the $1.5 million facil ity, but it was a particularly impor tant $100,000, according to Larry Kleinman, Secretary-Treasurer of PCUN, because it was the first ma jor contribution the facility received, and it opened the doors to other funders, including Paul Allen, the Meyer Memorial and the Ford Fam ily foundations. PCUN (Pineros y Campesinos Unidos del NoroesteNorthwest Treeplanters and Farmworkers United), the state's farmworker union, has championed Oregon farmworkers since 1985, and is a founding member of the non-profit FHDC. B u -I u 1 "P-l A Place To Learn The Cipriano Ferrel Education Center is being constructed with help from organizations like the Tribe's Spirit Mountain Community Fund. The edu cation center is the third phase of a 105-unit housing devel opment for Woodburn farm workers. Oregon's Hungry Benefit From Tribe's Community Fund By Ron Karten The Oregon Food Bank is the number one against hunger in Or egon. With Oregon surfacing in recent years as one of the hungriest if not the hungriest state in the union, the Food Bank's mission - "to eliminate hunger and its root causes" is that much more vital. The food bank works through 18 regional food banks, with one in Grand Ronde, to serve more than half a million hungry Oregonians each year. Forty-one percent are children. For every dollar contributed, the Oregon Food Bank moves six pounds of food to hunger-relief agencies. But the food bank has other needs as well. In 2000, the Spirit Mountain Community Fund provided $250,000 to the group for a new $9.75 million facility, fl