PRESORTED STANDARD MAIL U.S. POSTAGE PAID PORTLAND, OR PERMIT NO. 700 Wildland fire exercise photos — pg. 7 august 1, 2023 Contest Powwow slated for Aug. 18-20 By Dean Rhodes Publications coordinator A fter a two-year hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Tribe’s biggest powwow at- tracted 290 registered dancers and eight drum groups in 2022. Now the 38-year-old August Contest Powwow is pretty much back to normal as the memories and protocols of the COVID-19 pandemic era are fading into bad memories. Smoke Signals file photo Tribal member Auburn Logan participates in a grand entry at the 2022 Grand Ronde Contest Powwow at Uyxat Powwow Grounds last August. Powwow weekend will kick off with the Grand Ronde Royalty Pageant at 11 a.m. Friday, Aug. 18, at the Tribal Governance Center. The 2023- 24 Royalty Court officially will be crowned later in the day at 5 p.m. at Uyxat Powwow Grounds. More than $22,000 in prize money will be danced for and prizes range from $100 for a consolation prize to $1,000 for first place. Specials will include the Saturday Night Best Dressed Drum Group with a top prize of $800, a Prairie Chicken/Round Bustle committee special See POWWOW continued on page 11 Tribe holds hybrid Candidates Forum By Dean Rhodes Publications coordinator F or the fourth consecutive year, the Tribe held the annu- al Tribal Council Candidates Forum using the Zoom teleconfer- encing program with candidates attending in the Governance Cen- ter and most other Tribal members participating remotely. Starting at 6 p.m. Wednesday, July 26, challengers Veronica Mon- tano, Chris Bailey and Matthew Haller joined Tribal Council incum- bents Lisa Leno, Michael Langley and Chris Mercier in Tribal Council Chambers for a 92-minute forum that attracted approximately 36 online viewers and 20 in-person attendees. Acting General Manager Chris Leno handled moderator duties and watched the clock to ensure candi- dates did not go over their allotted time. Tribal Council Chief of Staff Stacia Hernandez monitored online attendees for any questions. After three-minute opening state- ments, each candidate had two minutes to answer submitted ques- tions from the membership. In a slight departure from previous forums, only three candidates an- swered a question before moving on to the next question that three other candidates answered. Questions covered a wide range of topics, including increasing rental assistance for Tribal members in college, protecting the minor’s trust accounts, how to make the Tribe more welcoming to visitors and employees, defining self-sufficiency and discussing views on transpar- ency in Tribal government. Following the questions, each candidate was allotted 90 seconds See FORUM continued on page 9 Photo by Michelle Alaimo Tribal Council Administrative Assistant Shannon Ham-Texeira plugs her Hyundai IONIQ 5 electric vehicle into a ChargePoint charging station on Thursday, July 20. The solar-powered charging station was recently installed in the Tribal Governance Center parking lot for Tribal employee use. Tribal campus is charging up By Danielle Harrison Smoke Signals editor T he Tribe recently began offering another perk to employees with its first solar-powered electric vehicle charging station, located at the southern end of the Tribal Governance Center parking lot. “This is a benefit the Tribe is providing to em- ployees and to help reduce air pollution,” Tribal En- gineering and Planning Manager Ryan Webb said. “This charging station is completely self-contained, doesn’t require any utility hookups and creates re- newable energy.” See CHARGING continued on page 7