PRESORTED STANDARD MAIL U.S. POSTAGE PAID PORTLAND, OR PERMIT NO. 700 HAPPY NEW YEAR january 1, 2024 Tribal Council approves 2024 spending plan By Danielle Harrison Smoke Signals editor ribal Council held its final meeting of 2023 on Wednesday, Dec. 27, by handling items brought to it during its Tuesday, Dec. 19, and Tuesday, Dec. 26, Legislative Action Com- mittee meetings. Council members approved the 2024 final budget, which included a 3.2-percent increase in spending from the 2023 budget. The 2024 draft budget was mailed to Tribal members in early No- vember in the Tilixam Wawa and Tribal Fi- nance Officer Chris Leno briefed the membership on its specifics in ex- ecutive session during Chris Leno the November General Council meeting. Adult Tribal members had until Monday, Dec. 4, to comment on the draft spending plan. In other action, Tribal Council: • Approved an agreement with Upqwena LLC to remove former Tribal Economic Develop- ment Director Bruce Thomas as manager and replace him with Tribal Council Chief of Staff Stacia Hernandez. Thomas recently resigned his position as Economic Development Director after being reapppointed to the position earlier this year; • Approved a secured loan of up to $50,000 to Shasta Administrative Services of Redmond from the Tribe’s TriState Capital Bank line of credit. The decision brings the amount of Trib- al funds loaned to Shasta, which the Grand Ronde Tribe has co-owned since November 2012 with Honolulu-based Hawaii-Western Management Group, to $1.4 million; • Approved reappointing Michael Boyce as the Grand Ronde Gaming Commission’s executive director; • Approved amendments to the Elders Commit- tee bylaws regarding voting/honorary mem- T See MEETING continued on page 4 Photo by Michelle Alaimo Tribal Health Administration Operations Director Tresa Mercier is hugged by Tribal Council member Kathleen George as she is recognized for her 39 years of working for the Tribe during the fourth- quarter Years of Service awards and annual Employee Appreciation Holiday Party held at the Spirit Mountain Casino Event Center on Thursday, Dec. 21. Mercier is the longest serving-Tribal employee. Celebrating service and the holidays Tresa Mercier marks 39 years of working for the Tribe By Sherron Lumley Smoke Signals staff writer ribal employees gathered at the Spirit Mountain Casino Event Center for the The Employee Appreciation Holiday Party combined with the fourth-quarter Years of Service awards on Thursday, Dec. 21. A buffet of salmon, turkey and prime rib was served after a welcome by Tribal Council T Chairwoman Cheryle A. Kennedy and invoca- tion by Tribal Council member Jon A. George. Tribal Interim General Manager Chris Leno announced the service awards. “What we have today is truly amazing and this is one of the best highlights of the year,” See SERVICE continued on page 11 Amendment to fix Thompson strip error signed into law By Danielle Harrison and Dean Rhodes Smoke Signals staff ASHINGTON – An amendment to the Grand Ronde Reservation Act that would fix a mistake incor- porated into the act in 1994 was unanimously approved by the U.S. Senate on Tuesday, Dec. 19. The bill was signed into law by President Biden on Tuesday, Dec. 26, and it will allow the Grand Ronde Tribe to pursue future fixes within the state of Oregon if other W The error was discovered after passage of the Grand Ronde Reservation Act in 1988 that returned 9,811 acres to the Tribe. errors are found. The Bureau of Land Management discovered a survey error on the Grand Ronde Reservation that dat- ed back to 1871. The error was dis- covered after passage of the Grand Ronde Reservation Act in 1988 that returned 9,811 acres to the Tribe. Surveyor David Thompson had incorrectly surveyed the eastern boundary of the Reservation, leav- ing 84 acres unsurveyed. The land also was excluded from a 1904 sale of unallotted lands within the Res- ervation and Grand Ronde was not compensated for it. Until the error was discovered, BLM treated the land as Oregon and California Railroad Grant Lands and permitted private com- panies to harvest timber on the acreage. After being informed of the sur- vey error, the Grand Ronde Tribe determined the parcel, called the Thompson Strip, was unmanage- able because of narrow boundaries and divided ownership interests. See ERROR continued on page 5