October 23, 2015 | Cannon Beach Gazette | cannonbeachgazette.com • 5A Tribes make a second appeal for federal recognition Rep. Suzanne Bonamici introduces resolution for congressional consideration Oct. 9. It was assigned to the House Natural Resourc- es Committee and is ex- pected to go to a subcom- mittee. Bonamici introduced a similar resolution last year, but it died in the subcom- mittee on Indian, Insular and Alaska Native Affairs. Diane Collier, chair- woman of the confederated tribes, and Richard Basch, vice chairman, said they are optimistic that the res- olution will go through the process this year. “We were pretty disap- pointed, but we thought we learned a lot,” Basch said of last year’s effort. “We’re more organized now. It just feels right. It just feels like the time is here.” Federal recognition By Nancy McCarthy For the Cannon Beach Gazette A resolution to restore federal recognition of the Clatsop-Nehalem Confed- erated Tribes is making its way through the U.S. Con- gress for a second time. U.S. Rep. Suzanne Bonamici, D-Ore., in- troduced the legislation, known as House Resolution 3736, or the Clatsop-Ne- haem Restoration Act, on of the Clatsop-Nehalem Tribes of Oregon was ter- minated in 1954 when Con- gress passed the Western Oregon Indian Termination Act. More than 100 tribes throughout the U.S. lost federal recognition at the time. Bonamici said in an email that restoring fed- eral recognition for the Clatsop-Nehalem Confed- erated Tribes would “grant this tribe important federal rights and bene¿ts.” She warned, however that the “legislative process takes a long time, and tribal recognition bills can take several sessions to move through the process. I have been communicating about this bill with the natural resources committee, the OBITUARIES Barbara F. Shaw Oct. 25, 1929 — Sept. 23, 2015 Barbara F. Shaw, 85, of Arch Cape, passed unex- pectedly Sept. 23, 2015. She was born to the late Ralph and Lucy Forbes, Oct 25, 1929, in Seattle, Washing- ton. Barbara and family of- ten vacationed to Arch Cape, Oregon, and eventually ac- quired property there as the family getaway. She graduated from Queen Ann High School and went on to received her B.A. in art from Lewis and Clark College in 1951. After grad- uation, she married James R. Shaw June 9, 1951, and raised two sons in California until coming home to Arch Cape, as she put it, in 1978. Barbara was very pas- sionate about helping wom- en get and further education, and joined the NY PEO (Philanthropic Education Organization) 60 years ago in Redding, California. To continue this desire, Barbara helped charter the FB PEO Cannon Beach, Oregon chapter, and is the last of 13 original charter members. Barbara was constant- ly doing for others. Many of us have been exposed to her resilience and strength in this community, always at the right place, right time, to solve the problem or just be a great friend. For 85 years her life’s passions never slowed, from the everyday walks on the beach, to running her bed and breakfast for 35 years in Arch Cape, maintaining her vegetable garden, playing the organ at the First Church of Christian Science in Gear- hart, going to the garden club, to the book club, and babysitting her granddaugh- ter from time to time. This kind of fortitude, and giving, has left all her friends and family knowing how much she loved us all. Barbara is survived by her husband, James R. Shaw of Arch Cape, Oregon; two sons, James R. Shaw III of Pleasant Hill, Califor- nia, and Robert S. Shaw of Manzanita, Oregon; and two grandchildren, Benjamin D. Shaw of Humboldt, Califor- nia, and Emma M. Shaw of Manzanita, Oregon. Memorial contributions can be made to Chapter N E W M ID TO W N O CE AN FR O N T 1 21 6 S P a cif ic, Ca n n on Bea ch W a tch e a g le s & pu ffin s on H a ysta ck R ock! C a su a lly e le g a n t hom e , d u ple x or va ca tion re n ta l. E a ch le ve l is a se lf-con ta in e d 3 b d , 2 b a re sid e n ce rig ht on the b e a ch! CM L S#1 5-646 $1 ,749,000 K a ren M eili 503-440-5806 N E W O ce a n fron t va ca n t lot, le ve l a n d cle a re d w ith a ll u tilitie s a t the stre e t. F O R D E TAIL S C AL L 1 -800-784-9 541 E X T 6 01 CM L S#1 5-1 538 $825,000 Ja ckie W eb er 503-440-2331 FB Cannon Beach PEO, awarded in her name: Women Seeking Advance- ment, c/o Janet Kenny, P.O. Box 2118, Gearhart, OR 97138-2218. A celebration of Barba- ra will be held on Sunday, Oct. 25, between 2 and 5 p.m., at the new Arch Cape Fire Station, 79279 U.S. Highway 101, locat- ed just after the Cannon Beach wayside pullout on the east, coming from the north on Highway 101; from the south, just after the Castle Rock Estates. N E W Richard Basch, vice chairman of the confederated tribes Bureau of Indian Affairs and stakeholders, and I am dedicated to continuing to advocate for this legislation and the Clatsop-Nehalem Confederated Tribes.” The bill has no co-spon- sors. Federal recognition would give the 182 mem- bers of the Clatsop-Ne- halem tribe more opportu- nities for funding through federal grants to improve the members’ health and education, as well as eco- nomic development proj- ects in Clatsop County, Basch said. In addition, the federally recognized tribe would be able to play a big- ger role in protecting the local environment. “Our voice would be much louder about con- cerns we have about de- velopment and protection,” Basch said. Among the projects Basch and Collier hope to pursue once the tribe is of¿- cially recognized is the Ne- Cus’ cultural center at the site of the former Cannon Beach Elementary School. The area, bordering Ecola Creek, once was the loca- tion of a Clatsop-Nehalem village. The tribe worked with the city of Cannon Beach to develop NeCus’ Park where the school’s playground once was, but the property where the school building and the gymnasium stand is owned by the Seaside School District. So far, the city and school district have not agreed on a sales price for the land. Federal recognition also would give the tribes the right to request the return of the remains of more than 200 Clatsop-Nehalem members held by muse- ums, mostly in Washington, D.C., Basch said. The Native American Grave and Repatriation Act, which would allow the tribes to make the request, is “predominantly for fed- erally recognized tribes,” Basch said. “That’s a big- gie.” The act would not re- store hunting, ¿shing or trapping rights, alter any property rights or allow for land to be held in trust for the tribe’s use in Tillamook County. The Clatsop-Ne- halem tribe has already promised it would not build a casino. Opposing the Clat- sop-Nehalem Restoration Act is the Chinook Indian Nation, which, in a state- ment sent to KAST Radio, called the effort “wholly unacceptable.” The statement said the “so-called ‘Clatsop-Ne- halem Confederated Tribes’ are setting themselves up to become a recognized tribe at the expense of the much larger and older Chi- nook Indian Nation where the vast majority of Clat- sop people are enrolled and continue their centuries-old ¿ght. More than 25 percent of the 3,000 members of the Chinook Indian Nation are of Clatsop descent.” The statement claims that the Clatsop-Nehalem Confederated Tribe was organized in 2000 in con- junction with the Lewis and Clark Bicentennial. It notes that the tribe’s members are those who recently returned to the area and others who originally were enrolled as members of the Chinook tribe. Basch, for instance, became a member of the Chinook tribe when his grandmother enrolled him as a child. He later left the Chinook tribe to reclaim membership in the Clat- sop-Nehalem tribe. The Chinook Indian Na- tion consists of the Clat- sop and Kathlamet tribes of Oregon and the Lower Chinook, Wahkiakum and Willapa tribes of modern Washington, according to the Chinook statement. It also represents neighbor- ing tribes including the Ne- halem, Tillamook, Cheha- lis, Satsop and Cowlitz. During the Clinton ad- ministration in 2001, the Chinook Indian Nation achieved federal recogni- tion after seeking it for 19 years. However, the Bush administration reversed the decision 18 months later. When asked about the Chinook Nation’s oppo- sition, Basch pointed to a new section of the pro- posed resolution that says that nothing in the act “es- tablishes a precedent” or will be “construed to affect any decision or other action related to restoration or rec- ognition of any Indian tribe other than the Clatsop-Ne- halem Confederated Tribes of Oregon.” Collier said the Clat- sop-Nehalem Tribe sup- ports the Chinook Nation’s efforts to also be federally recognized. “What was tak- en away should not have been taken away,” she said. But, Basch added, HR 3736 is solely about the Clatsop-Nehalem tribe. “Recognition will give people a place to come to,” Basch said. “We feel strongly that this is about us,” he added. “It’s about justice and about us.” P R IC E U N IQ U E O N E O F A KIN D E S TATE S P E CTACU LAR O CE AN V IE W H O M E 79464 R a y Br ow n R d , Ar chCa pe 8720 Br a er id g e D r, M a n za n ita O ld w orld cha rm oce a n fron t se t in m ystica l w ood e d C ove Be a ch. F O R D E TAIL S C AL L 1 -800-784-9 541 E X T 876 CM L S#1 5-1 278 $1 ,045,000 Ja ckie W eb er 503-440-2331 Tin a Cha pm a n 503-440-9957 LIS T IN G V IE W S U P AN D D O W N TH E CO AS T Lot 2002 P a cific S t, Ca n n on Bea ch P R IC E Barbara Shaw ‘“Recognition will give people a place to come to. … It’s about justice and about us.’ N E W P R IC E In N e a hka hn ie M e a d ow, a re tre a t for those w ho se e k b e a u ty a n d se re n ity in a priva te loca tion . Q u a lity cra ftsm a n ship, va u lte d ce ilin g s, 5 d e cks, ze n g a rd e n , w a lk to M a n za n ita b e a che s. CM L S#1 5-766 $995,000 K a te M errell 503-739-2324 N E W P R IC E LIKE A FR E E BE ACH H O U S E ! CAR E FU LLY CR AFTE D O CE AN V IE W 801 92 P a cif ic R d , Ar ch Ca pe 731 E cola P a r k R d , Ca n n on Bea ch This hom e cou ld b e you r ca sh cow in ve stm e n t w ith sa n d . K ille r vie w s a n d d ire ct pe rson a l b e a ch a cce ss. CM L S#1 5-400 $81 9,000 K a te M errell 503-739-2324 W a lka b le to tow n a n d b e a ch, loca te d in the se clu d e d n orth e n d on n e a rly 1 / 2 a cre . In clu d e s d e ta che d g a ra g e , g u e st hou se . F O R D E TAIL S C AL L 1 -800-784-9 541 E X T 200 CM L S#1 5-424 $640,000 Ja ckie W eb er 503-440-2331 If you call a contractor yourself, that still counts as DIY. Look to a U.S. Bank Home Equity Line of Credit for your next major project. 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