Thursday, April 30, 2009

What Would Grand Ronde Do?

In reading the story on the following link, I couldn't help but wonder how we in Grand Ronde would handle such a situation. I remember reading about the near-violent ousting of a Tribal leader in Oklahoma over ten years ago, and that got me thinking about how our laws and Constitution are crafted to handle government meltdowns. I am not sure if they do. That is one of the flaws of the level of sovereignty tribes have been given--what higher authority do they appeal to when laws are being broken and or circumvented by the very people charged with enforcing them?

http://www.reznetnews.org/article/little-shell-elections-set-may-9-30870

To view the story on the Oklahoma Tribal leader, check out this one:

http://www.nytimes.com/1997/07/06/us/cherokee-nation-facing-a-crisis-involving-its-tribal-constitution.html

Sunday, April 26, 2009

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Chugging Along

Had I been thinking, the smart thing to do would have been to take note of the odometer on my 2006 Tacoma pick-up. Last week I am pretty sure it read nearly 1200 miles less. But throw in a round trip to Yakima, then Hood River four days later, and then Vancouver, Washington, and those miles will quickly add up. Next week features a short drive or two. Oh well. While the road can wear a person down, so too can the office.
Friday in Vancouver we met with a number of Clark County officials, from county commissioners to city councilors to staff for one of their state senators. I must admit that overall it feels kind of odd to be in another state explaining how Grand Ronde has some historical connection. It seems odd until I think of other tribes who were coerced onto reservations several states away, like the Cherokee of Oklahoma. Then, this history of displacement doesn't seem so strange.
What does seem strange is to think that the United States has always had Indians, some of them nomadic living off of different sized game from buffalo to grouse, while others had mastered agriculture and in the Pacific Northwest especially, fishing. And where these Indians happened to base themselves, or maybe camp for a season, over a century later forms the historic and legal argument for why the descendants of those people should be allowed to build an ultra-modern casino/resort. Did those brave people back then have any notion of that where they were setting out salmon to dry or maybe built a campfire would be the historical seed that would blossom into a sports bar or steakhouse? Yes, Indian gaming has had an interesting narrative.
Several years ago, if I am not mistaken May 2005, we passed a resolution to move some major money as part of an overall strategy to thwart the casino at Cascade Locks. That resolution was just the start, and boy did I hear from constituents and supporters about that one. What I remember that day was the Warm Springs gaming compact ended up being disapproved, meaning the money we were pouring into a media campaign was suddenly moot, at least to me it was. Since then I have been very skeptical of our off-reservation gaming strategy.
Back in March, the U.S. Supreme Court made a ruling on Carcieri, which I will not go into because providing an explanation right now is slightly less important than that what I can say the decision does do is provide a monstrous stumbling block to the Cowlitz Tribe. Their grand casino in La Center now is less likely to happen, and in the event there is still life in the project, another few years have been added to the timeline. Everybody we spoke to yesterday was well aware of it too.
Cowlitz of course is the second prong in Grand Ronde's off-reservation offensive, a strategy that has probably cost us at the very least $6 million. Yet like Cascade Locks, the decision isn't really in our hands, and ultimately we have no way of knowing how effective our moves have been. Some might way we've made the difference, and there are certainly co-workers of mine who believe so. But what the Carcieri decision proves is that there are events beyond our control which will produce the exact almost the same result we've been paying for.
That is what I thought anyway, yesterday at the lunch table. Nonetheless, I still do my part.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

March v. April

Since I am on a multimedia kick of late, it was hard to resist this opportunity to explore Blogger's video capabilities. I hadn't really planned on doing this, but as luck would have it happened to be carrying my new camera both days. I couldn't resist showing people the contrasts of Spring in Oregon. Keep in mind that these two videos are less than a month apart. The first is March 9, the second April 6. Both of these are from the exact same spot just outside the front doors of the Tribal Governance Center.





Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Springtime






I love Oregon. That is no secret, for sure. For the last few years, since buying a decent digital camera, I've promised myself to take advantage of the brief period of blossoms and blooms that hits Oregon this time of year. It's nothing that'll win me any awards, and in many ways has little if anything to do with the Tribe. But it is what keeps me sane, and one of those hobbies I've always intended, but rarely did...

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Disenrollment in Michigan

This story came to me via American Indian Report blog email alerts. I chuckled a little at the vagueness of the motion, and the Council's unwillingness to be upfront about their reasoning. It is stuff like this that makes me wonder why tribes all seem to be going through the same things. Maybe it is just endemic to young democracies with underdeveloped laws, ordinances and constitutions. I've always believed that there are certain patterns of human behavior that tend to play out the same across cultures, and when stories like this surface...well, ultimately it's affirmation.

http://www.themorningsun.com/articles/2009/03/26/news/srv0000004985476.txt