PRESORTED STANDARD MAIL U.S. POSTAGE PAID SALEM, OR PERMIT NO. 178 General Council meeting — pg. 5 september 15, 2014 Leno wins seventh term Voters re-elect Chris Mercier, select Tonya Gleason-Shepek By Dean Rhodes Smoke Signals editor T ribal voters re-elected Tribal Council Chairman Reyn Leno to his seventh con- secutive three-year term after election results were released on Saturday, Sept. 6. Leno, who was fi rst elected to Tribal Council in 1996, was the top recipient of votes, garnering 558, or 15.47 percent of the total. Grand Ronde voters also re-elected Chris Mercier, who took a year off from Tribal Council after serving three consecutive terms from 2004 to 2013. Mercier, who is attending law school at Michi- gan State University, received the second most votes with 543, or 15.06 percent. He said before Election Day that he will take a leave of absence from law school if elected. First-time Tribal Council candidate Tonya Gleason-Shepek received the third most votes with 539, or 14.95 percent. She ran on a slate with Leno and incumbent June Sherer. Sherer and fellow incumbent Kathleen Tom fi nished fourth and fi fth with 521 votes and 424 votes, respectively. Sherer will end her fourth non-consecutive term on Tribal Council while See ELECTIONS continued on page 8 Photo by Michelle Alaimo Reyn Leno, left, and Tonya Gleason-Shepek give each other a congratulatory hug before the start of the General Council meeting held at the Tribal Community Center on Sunday, Sept. 7. Leno was re-elected for a seventh consecutive three-year term and Gleason-Shepek was elected to Tribal Council for the fi rst time during the Saturday, Sept. 6, election. State grants Grand Ronde greater control over its natural resources By Dean Rhodes Smoke Signals editor Photo courtesy of Gabe Clift This year, the Grand Ronde Tribe’s wildland fi refi ghting crew was sent to fi ght fi res in Oregon, Washington and California, including the Pine Creek Fire in central Oregon. Tribal fi refi ghters battled 23 fi res across the Northwest Program anticipates $1 million in reimbursements this year By Ron Karten Smoke Signals staff writer T he Grand Ronde Reservation and most of western Oregon has so far this season been spared wildland fi res, but across the Northwest many other areas have not been as lucky. This summer, 54 Tribal fire- fi ghters have been busy in three northwestern states – Oregon, Washington and California, spe- cifi cally in the north – battling 23 wildland fires, according to Jeff Nepstad, Silviculture and Fire Pro- See FIREFIGHTERS continued on page 12 J OSEPH – The Oregon Department of Fish & W ildlif e Commis s ion unanimously approved the Grand Ronde Tribe’s Fish and Wildlife Management Plan and a new administrative rule that gives the Tribe control over the take of fi sh and wild- life on Reservation and trust lands during its Friday, Sept. 5, meeting held in the Joseph Community Center. By adopting the Tribe’s Fish & Wildlife Management Plan, the state commission delegated its authority to the Tribe to be exercised on Reservation and trust lands in accordance with the provisions outlined in the management plan. The new permanent plan replaces an interim plan that the Tribe has been managing its lands under. “It was a very historic mo- ment for the Tribe,” said Tribal Council Chairman Reyn Leno during the Sept. 7 General Council meeting. “We will now manage our own Reservation. It’s something that hasn’t been done before. .. It says a lot for our Tribe. It says a lot for our leadership because it is also the recovery of some of our sov- ereignty that was taken away from us 60 years ago. This is something that very few Tribes ever get to do. It was a huge day for Grand Ronde … a monu- mental time for our Tribe.” Fish and Wildlife Commis- See CONTROL continued on page 11