September 2014 - Cherokee Phoenix
Transcription
September 2014 - Cherokee Phoenix
Joint Venture Rare Talent Fighting Cancer LaNice Belcher started with the clarinet The Cherokee Nation is requesting Former Miss Cherokee Julie Thornton is but switched to the bassoon at her band IHS help to build a new hospital in battleing soft tissue sarcoma which attacks instructor’s request. CULTURE, 19 Tahlequah, Okla. COUNCIL, 7 muscles and bones. HEALTH, 12 September 2014 • cherokeephoenix.org 186 Years of Cherokee Journalism PHOENIX CHEROKEE Redbird Smith’s remodeled main facility opens The revamp includes 12 dental chairs, which is five more than the center offered before. BY JAMI MURPHY Reporter SALLISAW, Okla. – Cherokee Nation officials celebrated the opening of Redbird Smith Health Center’s main building on Aug. 13 after it underwent a remodel the past two years because of mold found inside. Clinical Director Jerry Caughman said the remodel means a lot to him because he grew up in Sallisaw and is a CN citizen. “I’m not only an employee here, I’m from Sallisaw. Both sides of my family, they’re from Sallisaw and we have been 100-plus years,” he said. “So these people that come to this clinic, they’re not only patients of mine, but they’re my friends and family. And so this means more than anyone can ever know.” The building was closed in 2012, and its patient services were moved to different parts of the health center after the mold was discovered. The building was gutted, said CN Communications officials, with the use of Indian Health Services funds. Redbird Smith Health Center Clinical Director Jerry Caughman, far left, and Dr. Stephen Jones, Cherokee Nation’s director of dental services, far right, stand with dental staff and showcase the new dental wing inside the main building of Redbird Smith Health Center in Sallisaw, Okla. COURTESY The building cost $4.4 million to remodel and will house dental, administration, a fitness area and public health nursing. Connie Davis, CN Health Services executive director, said the tribe’s administration, Tribal Council and Health Services have made the expansion of health services a priority. but also offer programs such as mammography and physical therapy that patients normally would have to be referred to Tahlequah or other health centers to get,” she said. “I’m very proud of this expansion, and it’s just the first of many more to come for our overall health centers.” “The Redbird Smith renovation and expansion will not only serve more patients, Tribal Councilor Janelle Fulbright said the new services the facility will offer is something 1839 Cherokee Constitution born from act she and patients have waited a long time for. “I’ve been on the council seven years and one of things I really, really wanted when I got on the council was a dialysis center. It took four years, but we accomplished that and helped so many people,” she said. “We’ve got top notch care for our people. When they come here they can rest assured they’re getting some of the finest.” Principal Chief Bill John Baker said “citizens deserve world-class care” and the expansions and remodels represent that. “This will ensure we offer treatment as effectively and efficiently as possible when patients come for health care services. This is the most important long-term investment we can make as a tribal government,” he said. “More importantly, this expansion allows our health center to accommodate more people day in and day out.” A new annex is also being constructed behind the main building. When finished, the center will go from 33,000 square feet to more than 60,000 square feet. Its cost totals about $11 million, making the entire construction at Redbird Smith more than $15 million. The health center opened in 1992, according to CN Communications. In 2013, it served more than 100,000 patients. After renovations, that number is expected to rise. PASSING ON THE KNOWLEDGE The constitution is one of four governing documents the Cherokee Nation has used since 1827. BY WILL CHAVEZ Senior Reporter TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – The 175th anniversary of the Cherokee Nation’s 1839 Constitution will be commemorated during this year’s Cherokee National Holiday. It was signed Sept. 6, 1839, after contentious meetings between two Cherokee factions – Eastern Cherokees or the Ross Party led by Principal Chief John Ross, and the Old Settlers who settled Arkansas and what is now eastern Oklahoma in the early 1800s. A third faction, the so-called Treaty Party, that in 1835 signed away what remained of Cherokee land in the Southeast for $5 million, sided with the Old Settlers. Those led by Ross had just arrived in Indian Territory in the spring of 1839 after being removed from their homes in the Southeast. Sequoyah, who had moved to Indian Territory in 1829 from Arkansas, attempted to unite the Old Settlers, who had their own government, with the Ross Party. On July 12, 1839, a convention was held, and after deliberation a formal Act of Union was adopted, whereby the two branches declared to be “one body politic, under the style and title of the Cherokee Nation, succeeding both of the tribal organizations. Ross; George Lowrey, president of the National Committee; Goingsnake, speaker of the council; and 13 others signed the act on behalf of the Ross Party. Acting Principal Chief John Looney, Council President George Guess and 15 other Old Settlers leaders, including Sequoyah, signed for that faction. Another convention met at Tahlequah in September 1839, composed mostly of Eastern Cherokees, to frame a new constitution. The document established rules for election of legislators and chiefs and common holding of the lands of the Nation. Another feature was suffrage for boys over 18 years of age. For purposes of civil administration and the apportionment of legislators, the CN was divided into nine districts similar in size and organization to counties. They were called Canadian, Illinois, Sequoyah, Flint, Delaware, Goingsnake, Tahlequah, Saline and Cooweescoowee, the last one being named in honor John Ross’ Cherokee name. The 1839 Constitution was preceded by the 1827 Constitution, which was drafted on July 26, 1827, at New Echota, Ga. The document outlined a structure of government, which included an elected principal chief, a senate and a house of representatives. In 1898, the CN’s 1839 Constitution ceased to govern the tribe It is teaching Cherokee women how to make river cane baskets, including gathering materials in the woods. See 1839, 3 See BASKETS, 2 Expert basket maker Charlotte Coates, left, helps apprentice Candessa Tehee finish a river cane basket on Aug. 14 at the Cherokee Heritage Center in Park Hill, Okla. Tehee, who is the CHC executive director, is taking part in a basket-making program with three other Cherokee women. PHOTOS BY WILL CHAVEZ/CHEROKEE PHOENIX Mentoring program teaches basketry BY WILL CHAVEZ Senior Reporter PARK HILL, Okla. – Four Cherokee women are working with expert basket makers to learn how different baskets are woven with various materials as part of a Cherokee Heritage Center mentoring program. This summer Feather Smith-Trevino, Emma Washee, Candice Byrd and Candessa Tehee learned from basket makers Charlotte Coates and Cherokee National Treasures Betty Frogg and Shawna Cain. The apprentices learned how to make double-walled reed baskets before learning how to make double-wall river cane baskets from start to finish. The process included gathering cane and stripping it to create basket-making materials. Coates, who specializes in double-wall baskets, said she volunteered to partake in the program because she believes her knowledge needs to be shared so it is not lost. The Cherokee Heritage Center is conducing an mentoring program to teach basket weaving. Four Cherokee women are apprenticing with expert basket makers to learn how different types of baskets are woven. Those in the program are, from left to right, Feather Smith-Trevino, Candessa Tehee, Emma Washee (sitting), Cherokee Nation Treasure Shawna Cain (standing), Charlotte Coates, Candice Byrd (sitting) and Cherokee National Treasure Betty Frogg. Nation’s FY 15 budget up by $73.1M Higher Education scholarships get an $11.37M bump; Gaming Commission loses $951K. BY WILL CHAVEZ Senior Reporter Principal Chief Bill John Baker delivers his State of the Nation speech during the 2013 Cherokee National Holiday at the Courthouse Square in Tahlequah, Okla. This year tribal leaders will commemorate the 175th anniversary of the 1839 Constitution. WILL CHAVEZ/CHEROKEE PHOENIX TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – On Aug. 18, the Tribal Council’s Executive and Finance Committee passed the Cherokee Nation’s fiscal year 2015 budget that saw a $73.1 million increase when compared to the start of the FY14 budget. The budget now heads to full council on Sept. 15 for approval. Secretary Treasure Lacey Horn said the FY15 budget, as of Aug. 21, was $731.3 million, up by approximately $73.1 million when compared to the beginning of the FY14 budget of $658.2 million. The fiscal year begins Oct. 1. The Executive and Finance Committee held budget hearings on Aug. 18, meeting with tribal department heads to discuss funding needs and allocations that are included in the FY15 budget. Horn said the increase was because of new grant awards, increases in motor vehicle tax revenues related to the car tag expansion, changes in the rebate structure of the tobacco tax compact, proceeds from contract support cost settlement as well as increased Indian Health Service funding for the Vinita Health Center and contract health care. Horn said programs and services that received the largest increases this fiscal year are Higher Education scholarships at $11.37 million and Charitable Contributions with an $890,000 budget increase. Charitable contributions are made to communities and organizations to improve communities and help organizations perform. Horn said the Day Training and See BUDGET, 4 2 CHEROKEE PHOENIX • September 2014 News • dgZEksf BASKETS from front page “There’s not that many people in Oklahoma that could do this type of weaving, so when I was asked to teach the double-wall, I absolutely jumped at the opportunity because it’s important,” she said. Tehee, the CHC’s executive director, said she was excited when Cain and her husband Roger Cain approached her to form a partnership to teach apprentices how to make single- and double-wall baskets from river cane while collecting materials in a sustainable fashion. “River cane basketry is a huge part of Cherokee tradition and Cherokee culture. It has a long history. It goes back prior to contact (with white settlers), and so the partnership between the Cherokee National Treasure Association and the Cherokee Heritage Center was something I was very excited about. It’s a natural partnership for the Heritage Center and the CNTA,” Tehee said. Tehee has learned how to finger-weave yarn and weave with a tabletop loom, but she also wanted to learn basket making. “I wanted to add basketry to the skills that I have because a traditional Cherokee woman prior to contact would have done all of these things. I think it’s important for Cherokee women to carry on this tradition and know what our traditional arts are and to be able to teach them to others,” she said. Cherokees have had a close relationship with river cane for thousands of years. Records show that river cane once covered the lands of the Southeast and that Cherokees used it for basketry, music, housing, weapons, food and other items that have been lost over time. “By teaching these young ladies about not only basketry, but also the plant itself, they Apprentice Candice Byrd, left, listens to expert basket maker Charlotte Coates about a river cane basket at the Cherokee Heritage Center in Park Hill, Okla. The apprenticeship/mentor program is meant to teach Cherokee women how to make river cane baskets from start to finish, which includes gathering materials in the woods. WILL CHAVEZ/CHEROKEE PHOENIX are learning holistically a more traditional process based upon the values of our ancestors of respecting the plant and what it gives us in return,” Roger Cain, who is also a Cherokee National Treasure, said. “Now that these apprentices have learned to weave double-wall baskets throughout the summer, we plan to now begin the process of gathering, processing and especially cultivating river cane so that these traditions and art forms that have almost been lost will continue to flourish for future generations,” he added. Washee and Smith-Trevino said they already had some experience making baskets, but through the apprenticeship they will not only learn how to make baskets, they will understand where the materials grow, when to gather them and how to prepare them. Smith-Trevino said she’s learned basket making from various teachers, including Frogg while working in the CHC’s Ancient Village. She’s been weaving flat-reed and round-reed baskets for about 10 years and wanted to learn double-wall baskets and more techniques for Ewf #>hAmh • jlsd 2014 river cane baskets. “I have worked splitting cane and working with natural dyes, but I hope to really improve those techniques and to learn more about how to gather, where to gather, at what times of the year to gather,” she said. “At the end of this program, we should be able to go out and gather all of our own materials, prepare our own materials and be able to completely prepare the baskets and weave it from start to finish.” Byrd is new to basket making. While working in the CHC’s Diligwa village she learned how to make single-wall, flat-reed baskets from Frogg and double-wall, flat-reed baskets from Coates and Shawna Cain. “It was something that I never pictured myself doing. It just thought it was something that really took some craftsmanship, and I didn’t think I was capable of doing it. It takes some thinking, some concentration,” she said. “We are learning the techniques of weaving, but what we’re also learning how to respect our natural resources. So, it’s more than just learning a new craft, it’s learning a new world view and a new appreciation for the work that goes into weaving the basket.” Tehee said the art of river cane basketry is not as vital as it once was for the Cherokee people. “Currently, there are really only a handful of people who can make a basket from start to finish using river cane. We are very, very lucky to partner with some individuals who have that knowledge, so we can create new artists who can carry on this tradition and pass it down to future generations,” she said. Tehee said the plan is to continue the program as long as there is interest. “I don’t think we can teach too many people these skills because prior to contact this is something every Cherokee woman knew. It’s something every Cherokee man knew in terms of gathering river cane in a sustainable way.” Cherokee Nation leaders take tour of Craig County BY WILL CHAVEZ Senior Reporter VINITA, Okla. – Cherokee Nation officials toured Craig County on Aug. 7 to visit community leaders and discuss community needs. Secretary of State Chuck Hoskin Jr., Deputy Chief S. Joe Crittenden, Chief of Staff Chuck Hoskin Sr., and Tribal Councilor Victoria Mitchell Vazquez visited with town officials in Welch, Bluejacket and Vinita. In Welch, the CN’s partnership to improve water quality was discussed. A $10,000 grant from the Indian Health Service was secured by the CN to assist with a $40,000 water study. A grant will cover the remaining costs. “It is my understanding that the funds will be used toward a study of the current Welch water system to determine radium levels and how to make the water better,” Vazquez said. A Colorado-based company will use equipment to filter out radium from the town’s water source. The Oklahoma Department of Environmental Quality will monitor the threemonth study. The tribe also donated $2,000 for park and recreation projects in Welch. “Regarding the use of the Welch Parks and Recreation money, Mayor Winston McKeon and I plan to get together soon to discuss,” Vazquez said. CN leaders also visited with business owners in the Bluejacket area, including the owner of a new independent grocery store. The tour ended at the Vinita Health Center where CN Registration staff members issued nearly 400 photo identification cards that contains CN citizenship and Certificate Degree of Indian Blood card information. Members of the Vinita Indian Territory Coalition met with CN leaders to discuss the tribe’s recent donation of $1,000 to the organization and plan upcoming events. “The Vinita Indian Territory Coalition is a nonprofit formed a few years ago by Cherokee citizen Lisa Trice Turtle. It was formed to bring Cherokee language, culture and activities ‘up north’ since we are so far from Tahlequah,” Vazquez said. “The $1,000 check we gave them will be used to hold events such as basket making, cornhusk doll making, arts and storytelling and other similar projects.” Vazquez said she would be working with the VITC in November to host a second Cherokee Heritage Day at the Vinita Health Center. She helped host the inaugural event in November. Cherokee National Treasures Jane Osti and Roger and Shawna Cain and others attended to demonstrate and share art with the community. “This year we hope to make it bigger and better, have Native foods and more demonstrations,” Vazquez said. Correction In the story “Swearengin signs wrestling scholarship with Bacone College” in the August 2014 issue, we misidentified Levi Swearengin as an Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians citizen. He is a Cherokee Nation citizen. We apologize. 2014 Ewf #>hAmh • jlsd News • dgZEksf Hard Rock Cherokee Tower under revamp The 10-year-old Cherokee Tower is getting needed updates on the inside as crews renovate all 148 guest rooms. BY WILL CHAVEZ Senior Reporter CATOOSA, Okla. – Nearly hidden by the quick growth of the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino during the past 10 years is the original hotel tower that opened at the casino in 2004. However, the Cherokee Tower is getting needed updates on the inside as crews renovate all 148 of its guest rooms. In 10 years, the Cherokee Tower has held up well through high occupancy and lots of use, said Jon Davidson, Cherokee Nation Entertainment hospitality operations senior director, but its guest rooms needed updating. “We are renovating them all. They opened late in 2004, so they are almost 10 years old. We started a plan to renovate about a year ago, and we physically started on the first two floors about a month ago, on Floors 2 and 3. Our hopes are to have it completed by the first of October,” Davidson said. He said the guest rooms are being stripped down “to the concrete and sheetrock.” “Fortunately, we’re able to repurpose everything inside of the room to go to other needing agencies within the (Cherokee) Nation – furniture, artwork, lighting. You name it. We try to save everything that we can that someone may have a use for. So fortunately that’s been packaged up and transported down to Tahlequah,” Davidson said. Some repurposed furniture was sent to Sequoyah High School for its dorm rooms. Davidson said more modern case good furniture have added to the remodeled rooms, as well as soft goods such as carpet and wallpaper. Also, accent lighting has been added behind the bed headboards and to the desk walls. Bathroom shower enclosures and builtin hutches are new in the bathrooms. Also, new artworks created by Cherokee artists are on display in the renovated rooms. A new 19-story hotel tower rose above original seven-story Cherokee Tower in 2008. The smaller tower has since been in the taller one’s shadow. Also in 2008, The Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Tulsa’s seven-story Cherokee Tower, built in 2004, is getting needed updates on the inside as work crews renovate each of the tower’s 148 guest rooms. WILL CHAVEZ/CHEROKEE PHOENIX the casino’s name changed its name to the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Tulsa. The Cherokee Tower opened with 150 guest rooms but lost two rooms when it was connected to the 19-story Hard Rock Tower. The original tower is similar in size and style to the 10-story Suite Tower that was built in 2012 after Casino 3 at the property collapsed under the weight of snow in 2011. Davidson said there are 454 guest rooms and suites at the Hard Rock. “We have 208 keys in the Hard Rock Tower, 98 keys in the Suite Tower and 148 in the Cherokee Tower,” he said. Davidson said the three Hard Rock towers enjoy high occupancy rates, especially Thursday through Saturday. “Our midweek busy is very strong from a group standpoint, and that’s what we focus on to fill those days. Obviously as we get into Thursday our gaming market swells and we do most of our business on weekends,” he said. CNE officials said the renovation’s cost is estimated at $4 million and that the Cherokee Nation Businesses board of directors appropriated the funding. Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Tulsa is located off I-44 at Exit 240. Visit www. hardrockcasinotulsa.com or call 1-800760-6700. September 2014 • CHEROKEE PHOENIX 1839 from front page as the Curtis Act instituted by the federal government dissolved tribal governments in Indian Territory to assimilate tribes and prepare for Oklahoma statehood, which came in 1907. Until 1971, the federal government played a paternalistic role for the Cherokee people, choosing their chiefs and dictating tribal matters. In 1971, after his selection as the tribe’s first elected chief since 1903, William Wayne Keeler presided over the drafting of a new Cherokee constitution. The 1975 Cherokee Constitution, signed by Principal Chief Ross Swimmer in October 1975, superseded the 1839 Constitution. The new constitution contained a Bill of Rights, specifications for tribal citizenship or citizenship, three branches of government (executive, legislative and judicial), tribal elections, qualifications for elected office and rules for council meetings. A constitutional convention was held in Tahlequah in 1999 to revise and update the tribe’s constitution. Delegates from throughout the CN discussed, debated and modified the 1975 document. The new constitution included a clause that removed the need to ask the Bureau of Indian Affairs’ permission to amend the constitution. Cherokee voters approved the amendment in May 2003 that removed federal requirements for amendments to the 1975 Constitution. Two months later, voters adopted the 1999 Constitution as the tribe’s supreme law. The tribe and BIA negotiated changes to the new constitution and it was ratified in 2003. However, the secretary of the Interior would not approve it. Proponents of the new constitution filed a lawsuit with the tribe’s Judicial 3 Appeals Tribunal (now Supreme Court) in 2005, asking it to rule whether the 1999 law was valid. On June 7, 2006, the JAT ruled the law became the tribe’s “organic document” when the Cherokee people approved it. The CN officially began using the 1999 Constitution in July 2006. However, as late as November 2011, the BIA stated it has not approved the tribe’s 1999 Constitution or an amendment that led to its implementation. CN Attorney General Todd Hembree, who in November 2011 was the Tribal Council’s attorney, wrote a letter that stated CN has a strong argument that the U.S. government has recognized the 1999 Constitution because the government has approved numerous government-togovernment actions between itself and the CN in the past five years. In July, Hembree took part in a ceremony at the Capitol Square in Tahlequah that celebrated the 1839 Act of Union, which had allowed for the creation of the 1839 Constitution. “This Act of Union was not born out of a desire for good government. It was born out of necessity,” Hembree said. “Because if we didn’t come together at that point in time, under those circumstances, all that we fought to preserve could have been lost. It was not just advantageous to unite; it was essential. And that is what happened here, 175 years ago.” Sources: “Sequoyah (ca. 1778-1843),” Oklahoma Historical Society; “A History of the Cherokee Indians,” Vol. 8, No. 4, December 1930, Chronicles of Oklahoma, Hugh T. Cunningham; “Curtis Act,” Oklahoma Historical Society, M. Kaye Tatro; “Cherokee,” Oklahoma Historical Society, Rennard Strickland; “Echo Hawk opinion may have ‘drastic consequences,’” Cherokee Phoenix, Nov. 22, 2011. 4 CHEROKEE PHOENIX • September 2014 News • dgZEksf Ewf #>hAmh • jlsd 2014 Cherokee students learn journalism at Native conference BY WILL CHAVEZ Senior Reporter Cherokee Phoenix Executive Editor Bryan Pollard shakes hands with Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism Professor of Media Ethics Loren Ghiglione after Pollard received his Native American Journalists Association Medill Milestone Achievement Award at the Native Media Awards on July 12 in Santa Clara, Calif. Pollard is the first of 10 journalists to receive the award. WILL CHAVEZ/CHEROKEE PHOENIX Cherokee Phoenix wins awards at NAJA conference The Cherokee Phoenix takes home seven awards on July 12 in Santa Clara, Calif. BY STACIE GUTHRIE Reporter SANTA CLARA, Calif. – The Cherokee Phoenix and its staff members won seven awards, including first place for General Excellence in its division, on July 12 at the Native American Journalists Association’s Native Media Awards event. Phoenix Executive Editor Bryan Pollard said he’s proud of the awards but hopes to see the Phoenix place in more categories next year. “The awards are nice to receive and in some ways they’re a little bit of a measuring stick on how you’re doing in comparison with other Native media,” he said. “I would like to see us continue to improve and to possibly win awards in some other categories that I think that we should be able to compete in.” Pollard said the “crown jewel” was winning the General Excellence-Print category. “That’s always a mark that you’re doing something right if independent judges look at your newspaper and say that you’re the best overall among your competition,” he said. CHEROKEE PHOENIX 2014 NAJA AWARDS First Place: General Excellence-Print, Division III First Place: Best Layout-Print in the Monthly/ Semimonthly-Division III First Place: Best News Photo-Print to Senior Reporter Will Chavez NAJA Medill Milestone Achievement Award to Executive Editor Bryan Pollard BUDGET from front page Summer Youth Employment Program fund received a $275,000 increase, while the Vocational Assistance Program that helps CN citizens train for and gain employment received a $150,000 budget increase. These three programs are also fully funded for the entire year, she said. The Citizens Access to Transparency fund The Phoenix also won first place for Best Layout, which distinguishes the newspaper’s look. “I think the other award that I’m particularly proud of, and a lot of credit goes to our Multimedia Editor Mark Dreadfulwater and Assistant Editor Travis Snell, was winning first place for Best Layout,” he said. “I know they put a lot of attention into making sure that the paper is laid out very well.” Along with organizational awards, individuals on the staff won awards. “(Senior Reporter) Will Chavez got first place for Best News Photo. Then we had three award winners for our videos, which is a category that is fairly new for the Native Media Awards,” Pollard said. “The fact that we had a first place winner and two, second place winners in the best feature and best news category was pretty impressive, too.” Pollard also left with the NAJA Medill Milestone Achievement Award, which recognizes people who have made important achievements to the journalism world in the past, as well as working to encourage the next generation of Native journalists to strive for excellence. NAJA partnered with Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism in Chicago to offer the award. “To be honored by a separate group of people that are watching what your doing is, it’s a tremendous honor, but I was a little surprised by it because I don’t do what I do to get any kind of national attention. I do it because I want the Cherokee people to have a good newspaper,” Pollard said. First Place: Best News Story-TV in the Daily/ Weekly/Monthly/Semimonthly-Division III to Reporter Stacie Guthrie Second Place: Best Feature Story-TV in the Monthly/Semimonthly-Division III to Multimedia Producer Roger Graham Second Place: Best News Story-TV in the Daily/ Weekly/Monthly/Semimonthly-Division III to Multimedia Editor Mark Dreadfulwater was increased by $650,000 for a total budget of $800,000. This program assists citizens who are seeking information about their tribal government, including how money is spent. The additional funding will provide free oneyear subscriptions for the Cherokee Phoenix to Cherokee households with good addresses, both in the 14-county jurisdiction and outside the jurisdiction. Two major programs receiving cuts this year were the Cherokee Nation Gaming Commission and the political contributions fund. Horn said while her office proposed SANTA CLARA, Calif. – Two Cherokee students from Oklahoma traveled to the National Native Media Conference in July to learn the skills of good journalism. Cherokee Nation citizen Cheyanne Hodge, 16, of Tulsa was part of “Project Phoenix,” which exposes high school students to journalism and how it impacts Indian Country. It honors the first Native American newspaper – the Cherokee Phoenix. United Keetoowah Band citizen Brittney Bennett, 21, of Kansas took part in the “Native Voice” project, which helps college students gain hands-on experience in print, digital and broadcast media under the guidance of Native professionals. Hodge will be a junior this fall at Will Rogers College High, a college prep school. Along with learning more about journalism, she wants to become a veterinary technician. She said she spent her week shooting videos, gathering stories and interviewing people, and “more and more” she’s also looking at journalism as a career. She said what interested her about journalism is that “you have a voice and that people can hear you.” “There are so many things offered to you because you get to go and see things that other people don’t,” Hodge said. She said the most important thing she learned was to learn how to write news and shoot video. “That’s a lot for me because I didn’t have any experience,” she said. “I’ve definitely learned to be patient. We’ve been in this (news) room from the time we wake up to the time we go to sleep. You just have to put your all into it.” Mentor Benny Polacca, a reporter with the Osage News in Pawhuska, Okla., said the students are exposed to all disciplines used by today’s reporters. They wrote news stories for the newspaper published during the conference, wrote stories for the “Native Voices” website and created audio and video assignments using Apple technology. “In the end we are giving the children an opportunity to learn the tools of the trade, especially during this time when we’re seeing a shift in ways of communication, a shift toward online and computer gadgets, including smart phones,” Polacca said. Bennett attends the University of Oklahoma where she’s studying public relations. “I’m here to get a better feel for journalism and kind of learn the ins and outs that I haven’t gotten to (learn) because I am a PR major. It’s similar in a lot of ways, but different...especially this year since they are going more digital,” she said. “I haven’t really worked with a lot of the equipment. Being PR you don’t take that many broadcast classes or any editing classes, so that is definitely new to me.” Bennett was selected as a 2011 Gates Millennium Scholar and has been named to the President’s and Dean’s Honor Roll at OU multiple semesters. She said the first few days of the “Native Voice” project was spent learning the “nuts and bolts” of journalism. From there the students produced short stories about local events, and then produced short videos on local attractions. She graduated to helping work on a web story about the Muwekma Ohlone Tribe of the San Francisco Bay area, which is not recognized by California or the federal government. She said it required her to make “a lot of calls” and do research. She also worked on a print and video story about the Native American Journalists Association raising more than $10,000 for a fellowship. NAJA oversees “Project Phoenix and the “Native Voice” project. She said during the week she got rid of the misconception that a journalist has to have the “nicest equipment” and work “in the nicest studio” to be successful. She learned there are phone applications and computer programs she can use to report news. Bennett is focusing on a career in the film industry and doing public relations work for Native American actors and films. She landed an internship at the Oklahoma Film and Music Office’s PR department for the fall semester. She plans on graduating next May. Polacca said students participating in the student projects have the opportunity to network, meet other Native American journalists and possibly find a place to work in the future. “Who knows, maybe in the future the students will work for someone in the field whether it’s a journalist working with the student project program or whether they are here as a conference participant,” he said. increasing the CNGC’s budget, the Tribal Council decreased it by $951,000. Councilors also decreased political contributions by $100,000. New programs added to the budget include the Adult Language Program, which will help adults gain proficiency in the Cherokee language. Another new program is the Human Services Emergency Assistance, which will assists citizens with unique or emergency needs. The Adult Language Program received $200,000, while Human Services Emergency Assistance received $150,000. During the budget hearings, it was reported there are 440 unfilled job openings within the CN’s budget. Horn said funding for unfilled positions remains in the budget and, depending on the funding source, can be reallocated for services or other needs and/or roll into future carryover funds. As of Aug. 21, Horn said the tribe’s FY14 capital budget was $119.68 million while the operating budget was $611.66 million. The Tribal Council routinely modifies these budgets during its regular monthly meetings. OPINION • Zlsz 2014 Ewf #>hAmh • jlsd September 2014 • CHEROKEE PHOENIX 5 Talking Circles Thanks to TahlEqaulity September 2014 Volume 38, No. 9 The Cherokee Phoenix is published monthly by the Cherokee Nation, PO Box 948, Tahlequah, OK 74465. Application to mail at Periodicals postage rates is pending at Tahlequah, OK 74464. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Cherokee Phoenix, PO Box 948, Tahlequah, OK 74465 Bryan Pollard Executive Editor bryan-pollard@cherokee.org 918-453-5269 Travis Snell Assistant Editor travis-snell@cherokee.org 918-453-5358 Mark Dreadfulwater Multimedia Editor mark-dreadfulwater@cherokee.org 918-453-5087 Dena Tucker Administrative Officer dena-tucker@cherokee.org 918-453-5324 Will Chavez Senior Reporter will-chavez@cherokee.org 918-207-3961 Jami Murphy Reporter jami-murphy@cherokee.org 918-453-5560 I wanted to voice my appreciation to the young men and women at TahlEquality for arranging the demonstration on June 1 in support of our LGBTQ brothers and sisters, and to thank the Cherokee Phoenix for featuring an article on their demonstration. The LGBTQ community has long suffered injustice and discrimination at the hands of the majority in the United States, particularly in the Midwest. This has often been justified under the guise of religious morality and “...protecting our children from ‘those people’ and their lifestyles...” We must not forget that the Cherokee Nation’s history of injustice at the hands of American majority has likewise been justified by a religious ‘mandate of heaven’ and desire to “protect their children” from a culture they did not wish to understand. Let us not, as we seek the respect that all men and women are due, forget to treat others with dignity and compassion. Our future generations look to us as examples. Let us teach them that our people deserve respect because we are capable of demonstrating it to others. Justïne Underwood-Jones Tahlequah, Okla. Talking Circles submissions can be mailed to Cherokee Phoenix, PO Box 948, Tahlequah, OK 74465 or emailed to travis-snell@cherokee.org. CHIEF’S PERSPECTIVE Enjoy Cherokee Nation’s culture, hospitality during Cherokee National Holiday By Bill john baker Principal Chief Once again, we will welcome another record crowd to Tahlequah, Okla., this Labor Day weekend, as we celebrate our 62nd annual Cherokee National Holiday. More than 100,000 visitors typically descend on the area this weekend, and I’m sure the 2014 celebration will be bigger and better than ever. I look forward to joining you, your family and friends in fellowship and fun as we celebrate the history, heritage and hospitality of the Cherokee Nation. The first Cherokee National Holiday was held in 1953 to commemorate the anniversary of the signing of the 1839 CN Constitution, and it has been celebrated with flair and fanfare ever since. We gather this year and every year to celebrate the accomplishments of our tribal government and our bright future. We will honor the progress we have made over the past year and look forward to building upon those accomplishments in the coming year. We’ll celebrate the strides we’ve made in building new homes for Cherokees, the continued improvements to our health system, and the hope we strive to instill in Cherokee people every day. Simply put, I call this Homes, Health and Hope. In addition to the celebration of our tribe’s accomplishments, Cherokee National Holiday offers an array of entertainment, cultural and athletic events to participate in. There is something for everyone, from traditional foods and music to competitive marbles, a car show, softball and stickball tournaments, and the highly celebrated intertribal powwow. I also encourage history enthusiasts to explore our local museums during the Holiday weekend. They all highlight different aspects of Cherokee events and people from our history. Our five museums in or near Tahlequah tell the stories ranging from our removal to Indian Territory 175 years ago to our traditions and culture today. This 62nd National Holiday is especially poignant as we commemorate the 175th anniversary of the end of the Trail of Tears. Although we were forcibly marched from our homelands in the Southeast to Indian Territory, our ancestors never relinquished the fortitude to continue walking another day in hopes of a better life. While nearly a quarter of the 16,000 Cherokees who started the Trail of Tears perished, our Cherokee people collectively persevered. Keeping with that spirit of Cherokee perseverance, a resurgence occurred at the end of that marched journey. We rebuilt our communities, court system and government. We not only survived, but we thrived and prospered. Today, the Cherokee Nation is stronger than at any time in our history, and Cherokee National Holiday is an opportunity to show that national pride. Our history will forever influence us, and we draw upon that strength daily. That legacy is something I hope each of you comes to celebrate with us this Cherokee National Holiday, Aug. 29-31 in Tahlequah. I believe you’ll find a wealth of kind hearts, determined minds and resilient spirits, while making memories you and your family will cherish for a lifetime. God bless each and every one of you, and God bless the CN. bill-baker@cherokee.org 918-453-5618 Tesina Jackson Reporter tesina-jackson@cherokee.org 918-453-5000 ext. 6139 Stacie Guthrie Reporter stacie-guthrie@cherokee.org 918-453-5000 ext. 5903 Roger Graham Media Specialist roger-graham@cherokee.org 918-207-3969 Joy Rollice Secretary joy-rollice@cherokee.org 918-453-5269 Kendra Sweet Advertising Representative kendra-sweet@cherokee.org 918-207-3825 Justin Smith Distribution Specialist justin-smith@cherokee.org 918-207-4975 Anna Sixkiller Linguist anna-sixkiller@cherokee.org 918-453-5145 Editorial Board John Shurr Jason Terrell Robert Thompson III Clarice Doyle Keith Austin Cherokee Phoenix P.O. Box 948 Tahlequah, OK 74465 (918) 453-5269 FAX: (918) 207-0049 1-800-256-0671 www.cherokeephoenix.org ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTIONS Within the United States: $10 for one year $18 for two years $26 for three years International: $24 for one year Please contact us at the number above to subscribe. Mail subscriptions and changes of address to the Cherokee Phoenix, P.O. Box 948, Tahlequah, OK 74465, phone 918-207-4975. Please include the words “Change of Address” or “Subscription” on the envelope. Back Issues may be purchased for $2.50 postage and handling. Please inquire to make sure the issues are in stock by writing to Back Issues, Cherokee Phoenix, P.O. Box 948, Tahlequah, OK 74465; or calling 918-2074975. Member Copyright 2014: The entire contents of the Cherokee Phoenix are fully protected by copyright unless otherwise noted and may be reproduced if the copyright is noted and credit is given to the Cherokee Phoenix, the writer and the photographer. Requests to reprint should be directed to the editor at the above address. Material provided through membership with Associated Press NewsFinder, identified by (AP), may not be reproduced without permission of the Associated Press. Oklahoma Press Association Native American Journalists Association GUEST’S PERSPECTIVE Sovereignty vs. Stereotype BY JACQUELINE KEELER Navajo/Yankton Dakota Sioux Sometimes people claim there are “more important things” in Indian Country than the mascotting of Native people. These folks can run the gamut from hardcore Redsk*n supporters from team owner Dan Snyder who famously told USA Today in 2013, “We’ll never change the name. It’s that simple. NEVER. You can use caps,” to Native people for whom this racism is manageable. This despite the fact every other ethnic group in the United States has already rid themselves of the scourge of mascotry 40 years ago during the Civil Rights movement. For me, this argument really promotes an acceptable level of racism for Native people that is greater than that any other ethnic group must endure. This higher bar of racism is matched only by the higher rates of suicide, murder and rape of Native people – higher than the any other ethnic group in the United States. Wilma Mankiller, former principal chief of the Cherokee Nation – and an inspiration to me as a leader and as a woman – said it best when she told an audience at a CSU Sonoma lecture in 2008, “The lack of accurate information about Native people leaves a void, which is often filled with stereotypes that sometimes romanticize Native people and sometimes vilify Native people, and I think a few misinformed people apparently believe tribal people still live and dress as they did 300 years ago.” The reason these stereotypes matter on the “more important issues” is because they feed into misconceptions about Native people that can lead to wrong conclusions about what is best for us on the policy level. These wrong-headed ideas are held by politicians and encouraged by the American electorate and creates U.S. policy that threatens our sovereignty, reduces funding for needed programs, schools, housing and health care. And when held by Supreme Court Chief Justice Roberts can lead to the theft of our children as witnessed in 2013 in the case of Adoptive Couple v. Baby Girl, when he repeatedly questioned the blood quantum of the child in question as negligible despite repeated reminders by Justice Sotomayor that the Cherokee Nation does not use blood quantum to determine citizenship. These questions revealed his state of mind regarding who he thought was “Indian” and who was not based on stereotypes, not law. This ignorance on who we are even feeds anti-sovereignty groups. When I reported on the Baby Veronica case I found that many of the anti-Indian Child Welfare Act groups also had a long-standing ties with this political movement and with former Sen. Slade Gorton (R-WA), who was a leading voice in the 1990s for the termination of tribal sovereignty “for their own good.” Our status as citizens of sovereign nations that pre-existed the United States and continue to exist is completely obscured by the mascotry and this leaves Americans unable to comprehend what tribes are doing as nations. Mankiller touched on this a bit in her lecture, “The dozens of anti-sovereignty groups who argue that tribal people should not have ‘special rights’ fail to understand tribal people sacrificed billions of acres of land and millions of lives to retain our right to self-governance.” And Native youth? With three times the rate of suicide of all other youth in this country? Studies show that after being exposed to Native mascots their selfesteem plummets even if they say they are OK with Native mascots. Meanwhile, studies also find that exposure to Native mascots actually increases non-Natives’ self-esteem. This shows that this form of “entertainment” is shown to be not harmless at all, but constitutes a real taking from the most vulnerable population in the country. As real as the theft of land, culture, language and of our children. And that it is done for profit, Snyder’s Washington, D.C., NFL franchise is valued at $1.8 billion dollars, and in our children’s schools is completely unconscionable. “The idea of ‘context is everything’,” Mankiller said, “basically grew out my belief that even after hundreds of years of living in our former towns and villages too few Americans know much about our history, culture or our contemporary lives and issues. And it’s my belief that it is almost impossible to understand the challenges tribal people face in the 21st century without placing those issues within a cultural and historical context.” The “more important issues” argument is a trap that misses this larger context Mankiller eluded to. This blindness endangers us as a people and cannot be passed on to the next generation, some as young as 6 years old who could live well into the next century. We need to fully comprehend the damage these stereotypes do and the ways in which they make Native people unreal and invisible today. Jacqueline Keeler is a writer living in Portland, Ore., and is a founder of EONM.org (Eradicating Offensive Native Mascotry). She has been published in Salon.com, Indian Country Today and the Nation. She is finishing her first novel “Leaving the Glittering World” set in the shadow of the Hanford Nuclear Reservation in Washington State during the discovery of Kennewick Man. Advertise with the Cherokee Phoenix Print, Web, Radio, & Weekly Digital Newsletter Contact: Kendra Sweet 918-207-3825 phoenix-advertising@cherokee.org CHEROKEEPHOENIX.ORG 6 CHEROKEE PHOENIX • September 2014 News • dgZEksf Ewf #>hAmh • jlsd 2014 CNMS joins human trafficking task force BY STACIE GUTHRIE Reporter TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – Because human trafficking is growing in Oklahoma, the Cherokee Nation Marshal Service recently joined the Oklahoma Human Trafficking Intelligence Working Group to help establish cooperation between tribes and the state to stop the crime. CNMS Director Shannon Buhl said working with the task force should be beneficial to CN communities. “We thought it was fantastic for us to partner with the state to make sure that human trafficking doesn’t come into Indian Country. If it does then we can chase it down and prosecute this as rapidly as possible,” he said. Buhl said after opening his eyes to the crime, he believes the OHTIWG is a worthwhile effort. “In the past six months my eyes have gotten opened up to human trafficking. Once my eyes are opened up to something I don’t close them,” he said. “I believe that this is going to be a very important part of law enforcement of the Cherokee Nation.” Part of the joint effort includes CNMS investigators undergoing training. Buhl said a lot of what they look for with narcotic investigations they will look for when investigating human trafficking. “It’s going to become a easy fit for our investigators. They already do the narcotics part of it. It will be a easy step for them to do the human trafficking side as well,” he said. Once investigators learn the training, officers will then learn how to recognize, investigate and prosecute human trafficking. Cherokee Nation Marshal Service members simulate entering a building in this 2010 photo. The CNMS recently joined a task force to reduce human trafficking. JAMI MURPHY/CHEROKEE PHOENIX “It’s the patrolling (officers) that are out on the street everyday and every night that might come in to this, that might be able to stop it before it gets to be a epidemic problem in Indian Country,” Buhl said. Once marshals are trained to handle human trafficking, they will give informative talks to CN communities, as they do with Rape Aggression Defense, Buhl said. “I foresee this as being another one of those areas or topics that we bring up to the community,” he said. “A community that Employees from the Cherokee Nation’s Natural Resources Department bale hay in a field located along Highway 62 in Tahlequah, Okla. They hay is available for purchase from the tribe for $25 by application only. JAMI MURPHY/CHEROKEE PHOENIX Tribe selling 2014 season hay to Cherokee citizens BY JAMI MURPHY Reporter TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – The Cherokee Nation’s Natural Resources Department is selling hay to CN citizens this summer. Prime hay baling season runs from the summer to October, and Natural Resources has cut and baled its first hayfields this year. Bales were originally set for purchase at $25. CN citizens interested in purchasing round hay bales must first fill out an application and will be given first priority. According to the application, the price of hay will be set at a “fair market value and sold by application only to assure quality and compliance is met.” Natural Resources Director G.V. Gulager said baling is seasonal and relies heavily on the weather. “Right now we’re on our way. We’re baling hay this week and next week until we get it done around the complex here,” he said. “We have three pastures right now that we’re currently baling. This hay season, I bale hay personally for myself, it’s an outstanding (season). Everybody is getting good hay.” He said once they are finished baling the three locations in Cherokee County they’re going to bale tribal properties in Adair County. All together the properties total near 800 acres. Last season, the tribe baled 1,988 round hay bales across the its jurisdictional area making $30,935 for the season. When that season began the hay sold at $25 each and later was lowered to $20 and finally lowered to $15 per bale to ensure all inventory would be sold. The money made is used for upkeep on machines, fuel and other costs associated with the program. “We run two hay cutters, two rakes and two balers,” Gulager said. “It’s a joint effort. We keep track of our salaries and hours that we use to do the hay with, you know, our personnel. Then we put it back into the accounts that the salary comes out of or the fuel comes out of.” Gulager said the program is designed to help the average farmer. “My goal is to hold back 500 bales for the little Native American person who’s only got five or six cows that wants 20 bales or 10. So that’s what I want to do, and that’s what the whole intent of the program was to take care of the Native American people who can’t go out here and buy from a farmer because he’s not buying 200 bales. A lot of the people won’t sell you two or three bales. They program is set up to help the Native American farmer and rancher, the small, so they can get hay at a good price. If they just want 10 bales they got 10 bales and if they want 20 we’ll sell them 20. If they want one, we’ll sell them one.” The program is first-come, first-served. Those interested in purchasing must be able to haul the bales, but Natural Resources will meet the buyer to help load the hay using their equipment. “No refunds or exchanges for hay,” the application states and “all sales are final.” For more information, visit the tribe’s Realty Department Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. or call 918-453-5350. Cleveland Indians urged to change name Democrat asks Cleveland Indians to rename team and choose another mascot. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) – It’s time for the Cleveland Indians to drop their name and Chief Wahoo mascot, an Ohio state senator says. Eric Kearney, a Democrat from Cincinnati, introduced a resolution on Aug. 13 that would encourage the baseball team to adopt a new name and mascot, citing racial insensitivity. He also sent a letter to Indians owner Lawrence Dolan urging a change. With the Indians in the midst of a fourgame series with Cincinnati, Kearney said it’s the right time to introduce the resolution. The Legislature is on summer break. American Indians and others have protested the use of the logo for years at the team’s annual home opener, complaining that the mascot mocks them and their heritage. It’s part of a national debate over the use of Indian nicknames in sports that has regained momentum in recent months, particularly the campaign to get the NFL’s Washington Redskins to change their name. In June, a federal trademark board ruled the Redskins’ trademarks protections should be canceled because the team name is disparaging to Native Americans. At an unrelated Aug. 14 news conference, Indians President Mark Shapiro said the Chief Wahoo mascot “represents the heritage of the team and the ballpark” and will remain in place. He added that the team will continue to build and promote the use of the block “C.” Kearney, who said he’s a big baseball fan, didn’t expect major change right away but said he’s “asking for a discussion to occur.” Retiring the Indians’ name and mascot would show that much has changed in the 100 years since the name was adopted, he said. Kearney is the former running mate of Ohio Democratic gubernatorial candidate Ed FitzGerald. He withdrew from the ticket in December amid questions about tax liens. works with the police and police that works with a community makes the community safer.” For now, Buhl said he’s not seen signs of human trafficking in the tribe’s jurisdiction, but plans to work with CN locations that receive tourists. “We have some of the largest casinos in the state of Oklahoma. Some have hotels. A lot of the population that come through are tourist,” he said. “I think it’s an opportunity to get those coalitions working together and identify any trends that we might see in the future of human trafficking.” Buhl said this is the first time he’s seen Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt involve tribes with a state task force. Along with the CN, the Muscogee (Creek) and Chickasaw nations as well as smaller tribes are involved. “I think it’s paramount the level of cooperation between the state and the tribal communities on this issue,” he said. “I think this will be a first in a very positive trend on the cooperative relationship between the state of Oklahoma and tribal nations.” Buhl said anyone could be a victim to this crime, not just young children. He said those who are targeted surprised him when learning about the crime. “It’s everything form migrant farm workers to custodial staff to the fabrication industry. It spans a gamut from young boys, young girls to teenagers, to adults to older adults,” he said. “It’s scary what is going on in the Untied States as far as human trafficking, and I think that’s why the state has started this task force. They see the victimization and how hard it is to prosecute those things in the state. It’s a trend that we have got to change as a community.” Council • d/wWf 2014 Ewf #>hAmh • jlsd September 2014 • CHEROKEE PHOENIX 7 Tribe requests IHS help to build Tahlequah hospital BY WILL CHAVEZ Senior Reporter TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – At its Aug. 11 meeting, the Tribal Council approved a request to participate in the Indian Health Service’s 2014 Joint Venture Construction Program so that it can build a hospital in Tahlequah. If the tribe’s request is approved, the IHS would agree to provide staffing and operations funding. Under the agreement, the Cherokee Nation would purchase the necessary equipment and construct the facility. The CN has a construction budget of $54.1 million, and the construction is managed by Cherokee Nation Construction Resources LLC. CN Health Services Executive Director Connie Davis said the CN would not break ground for the hospital until it receives word about whether the tribe can participate in the program. To do so would disqualify the CN from being considered by the IHS. The IHS is authorized to establish Joint Venture Construction Program projects with tribes for the construction of health care facilities as long as tribes are able to spend tribal funds or other non-IHS funds, including loan guarantees, for the construction of a tribally owned health care facility. In exchange, for a minimum of 20 years, the IHS agrees to lease the health care facility and the land under a no-cost lease and agrees to provide equipment, supplies and staffing for the operation and maintenance of the facility, according to IHS information. The CN is receiving funding for the hospital from its business arm, Cherokee Nation Businesses. The CNB board has also allocated additional funding to improve upon the hospital’s plans. In April, the board approved $7.5 million to the hospital’s construction budget to “strengthen” the hospital’s construction in the event of a tornado. In February, it added $650,000 for a 1,500-squarefoot area that will house a C-section unit and storage for the intensive care unit. In other business, the council unanimously approved a resolution to receive 35 to 50 head of bison through the Intertribal Buffalo Council in Rapid City, S.D. The ITBC is a cooperative of 57 Native American nations with more than 15,000 head of bison. The resolution states “the Cherokee Nation as a working member in the Intertribal Buffalo Council is taking necessary steps for the development and required expertise needed for American Bison husbandry.” The buffalo are coming from the Badlands of South Dakota and will be fenced in on CN land near Kenwood in Delaware County. “We’re getting 35 to 50 or whatever we can haul. We’ve already got our fences built on the Cherokee Nation ranch, and we’re ready to receive them,” Tribal Councilor Curtis Snell said. The council also approved a resolution to accept 1,000 pounds of bison meat from the ITBC. The meat will be distributed during the Cherokee National Holiday, Snell said. The council also added $3,334 to the tribe’s comprehensive capital budget for fiscal year 2014 for a total budget authority of $103.4 million. Also, $4.6 million was added to the tribe’s comprehensive operating budget for a total budget authority of $618.4 million. Also, during his State of the Nation address, Principal Chief Bill John Baker said the tribe’s school clothing voucher program has “been a true success,” having provided $100 vouchers to more than 7,000 students. Tribal Councilors honor 3 veterans BY WILL CHAVEZ Senior Reporter Cherokee Nation Tribal Councilors Lee Keener, left, Janees Taylor, Don Garvin, Dick Lay, right, and Cara Cowan Watts, sitting with face unseen, discuss legislation during a brief recess at the Tri-Council meeting on Aug. 15 in Tahlequah, Okla. The meeting involved the CN’s Tribal Council as well as the legislative branches of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians and United Keetoowah Band. JAMI MURPHY/CHEROKEE PHOENIX 3 Cherokee councils oppose BIA recognition attempt BY JAMI MURPHY Reporter TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – The Tribal Councils of the Cherokee Nation, United Keetoowah Band and Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians passed three pieces of legislation, including affirming equality among the three tribes, at the annual Tri-Council meeting on Aug. 15 at Northeastern State University. Although the resolutions passed unanimously, the resolution affirming equality among the three tribes caused about an hour’s worth of debate after CN Tribal Councilor Lee Keener offered an amendment to change the name Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma to Cherokee Nation. “Our constitution has us as Cherokee Nation only, and also updating or amending this would make it the same as the second and third propositions that are before us,” Keener said. “It would be consistent with all three.” However, UKB Chief Wickliffe, who chaired the meeting, took issue with the amendment. “We are representing the Cherokee Nation, the original, all three of us sitting here,” Wickliffe said. “We’re federally recognized. You people are too, and the Eastern Band. I don’t think there needs to be superiority anywhere. If we’re going to work together, let’s do it right.” Keener said he did not mean to have one tribe over another, but if Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma was to be in the first legislation then it would need to be in the other two as well. “I’m not understanding. That’s just our name. We’re not better than anyone else that’s just our name,” Keener added. “I don’t understand the opposition.” After discussion among the three tribes and a recess, a compromise was suggested. Rather than naming all three tribes, the councils decided to accept EBCI Chief Michell Hicks’ suggestion of changing the names to “the three federally recognized Cherokee tribes.” “Instead of postponing this issue… what if we said the ‘three federally recognized Cherokee tribes.’ And we don’t get into these technicalities because we’re fussing over technicalities here. Make it something more generic. But I think when it comes to the federal government, obviously they’ll recognize the stamps of the three federally recognized Cherokee tribes.” Wickliffe and Keener, as well as all councilors, accepted the compromise. The councils also passed a resolution to combat the regulations the federal government is attempting to pass with regards to federal recognition. Tribal officials said the standards for becoming federally recognized are potentially going to be reduced allowing for smaller state recognized tribes to seek federal recognition. Currently, to be acknowledged, a tribe must have history dating back nearly 200 years. But with the possible changes it would only mean the group seeking the recognition could have history dating back to the early 1900s. The resolution states the three tribes being against the more lenient guidelines. CN Tribal Councilor Joe Byrd said legislation was to keep other Cherokee groups throughout the United States from seeking federal recognition. “We only have three federal recognized tribes in the United States, only three, and we don’t need any more the federal government is attempting to recognize,” he said. “They’re trying to water down policies from the Bureau of Indian Affairs’ state recognized tribes. We do not condone that. So we want to keep three federal Cherokee tribes in the United States and that’s it. That’s all we’re trying to do here.” The Tri-Council also passed a resolution supporting the establishment of a steering committee for the cultural preservation of historically significant Cherokee sites and heritage events. The UKB hosted the nearly weeklong Tri-Council gathering, which included pre-meetings and cultural activities. The EBCI will host the next meeting in 2015. According to EBCI officials, they are looking to have the meeting in Red Clay, Tenn. TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – Elmer C. Tadpole Jr., his brother Thomas Tadpole and Richard Acorn were the three Cherokee veterans honored with Cherokee Warrior awards during the Aug. 11 Tribal Council meeting. Elmer was born in June 1940 to Elmer Tadpole Sr. and Lillian Napier Tadpole in Muskogee. When Elmer was 4, his family moved to Tulsa where he grew up and went to school. On his 17th birthday, in 1957, he joined the U.S. Navy Reserves. After graduating from high school he went active duty serving on the USS Woodson DE and USS Hornet CV-12. The USS Woodson DE was home ported at New Orleans where the boat patrolled from St. Louis down the Mississippi River into the Gulf of Mexico to Miami. He then transferred to the USS Hornet CV-12. The USS Hornet CV-12 was home ported at Long Beach, Calif., and was part of the Pacific Sixth Fleet patrolling Japan, China, South Korea, Vietnam, Philippines, Hawaii and the West Coast of the United States. After this stint he was transferred to a naval supply and training base in Subic Bay, Philippines. There, Elmer performed duties such as security and training. He was honorably discharged in June 1963. Thomas Tadpole was born in Tulsa on July 21, 1948, to Elmer Sr. and Lillian Tadpole. Thomas lived in Tulsa and graduated from Tulsa Central High School in 1966. In 1968, Thomas volunteered for the U.S. Air Force and completed basic training at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio after which he attended Security Police Training at Lackland AFB. In 1970, Thomas volunteered for duty in Vietnam and served there from September 1970 to September 1971 at Tan Son Nhut Air Base. He was assigned to Military Assistance Command Vietnam/7th Air Force, 12th Recon Intelligence Technical Squadron. Staff Sgt. Thomas Tadpole was honorably discharged in May 1972 and was awarded medals and ribbons including USAF Commendation Medal (1971-Vietnam), Vietnam Service Medal with three Campaign Stars, Vietnam Campaign Medal w/device, Vietnam Cross of Gallantry and a Presidential Unit Citation (Vietnam). Thomas returned to Tulsa where he was employed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. He spent 34 years with the Corps of Engineers as a construction representative and project engineer working on military and civil works projects in several states and retired in 2004. He and his wife Floy live in Claremore. Acorn was born July 20, 1934, in Stilwell to Lillie Mae Acorn and Fred Aguirre in the family home place where he still lives. Shortly after his birth, his father and mother divorced. He was raised and adopted by his grandfather and grandmother Rev. John B. Acorn and Adeline Smith Acorn. After graduating from Sequoyah Indian School in Tahlequah in 1952, Acorn moved to Wichita, Kan., and worked in a sheet metal shop until 1955 when he moved back to Oklahoma to do plumbing with his uncle Bill Acorn. At this time he also met and married Shirley Dreadfulwater. Acorn was drafted into the Army in 1957. He was sent to Fort Chaffee, Ark., for basic training. After training he was assigned to overseas duty with 7th Army Headquarters, 78th Ordinance Company Field Supply, Mannheim, Germany, and drivers training for military vehicles in Mannheim. After his tour in Germany, Acorn returned back to the United States to join his family and they moved back to Wichita in 1959 where he worked at Cessna Air Craft Company and joined the U.S. Army Reserve Unit 5048th. He spent four years in the reserves and was honorably discharged in 1963. In 1965, with the death of his wife, he was left with three girls ages 5, 3 and 18 months. In 1967, he met Judith Ann, who had two girls and two boys, and they married and had a son together. In 1983, he began working at Cherokee Nation in Community Development and security. He serves as a security guard. 8 CHEROKEE PHOENIX • September 2014 Community • nv 0nck Announcements Deborah Reed has been appointed as a Business Law Ambassador for the Business Law Section of the American Bar Association. The Ambassadors program is part of the Leadership Diversity Outreach Committee and encourages the participation of lawyers of color in the Business Law Section. The program is one of four programs administered by the Leadership Diversity Outreach Committee. All programs provide participants with subsidized Section Meeting attendance, mentorships and special leadership opportunities. Deborah is also an officer of the Indian Law and the Government and Administrative Law Sections of the Oklahoma Bar Association, and a member of the Cherokee Nation Bar Association. She is Of Counsel to the Greuel Law Firm in Tulsa, practicing mainly in the areas of real property, corporate law and Indian law. Dwight Mission School Reunion October 4, 2014 at 10 a.m. Registration: 8:30-10:00 a.m. Coffee, juice, and donuts served along with free lunch served at noon. Contact Levada Smith 918773-3096. Community Meetings Sept. 1 Belfonte 6:30 p.m., Call Glen Qualls at 918-4271700 or 427-0227 Eucha Indian Fellowship, 8 p.m. Marble City Community Organization, 7 p.m. Lost City Community Organization, 6 p.m. Sept. 4 Washington County Cherokee Association Potluck dinner 6 p.m., 7 p.m. Call Ann Sheldon at 918-333-5632 Muldrow Cherokee Community Organization 7 p.m., Call Tim Laney at 918-427-4006 Rocky Ford Community Organization, 6:30 p.m. Brushy Community Action Association 6:30 p.m. Sept. 8 Marble City Pantry, 7 p.m. Call Clifton Pettit at 918-775-5975 Sept. 9 CC Camp Community, 7 p.m. No-We-Ta Cherokee Community, 6:30 p.m. Call Carolyn Foster at 918-331-8631 Victory Cherokee Organization, 7 p.m. Call 918-798-2402, victorycherokee@ att.net Sept. 11 Lyons Switch, 7 p.m. Call Karen Fourkiller at 918-696-2354 Greasy, 7 p.m. Native American Fellowship Inc. South Coffeyville, 6:00 p.m. Call Bill Davis at 913-563-9329 Sept. 14 Rogers County Cherokee Association, 2 p.m. Email Beverly Cowan at beverlycowan@ sbcglobal.net Sept. 16 Tulsa Cherokee Community Organization 6 p.m., Call Donna Darling at 918-8084142 tulsacherokees@gmail.com Central Oklahoma Cherokee Alliance Oklahoma City, BancFirst Community Room 4500 W. Memorial Road, 6 p.m. Call Franklin Muskrat Jr. at 405-8426417 Oak Hill/Piney, 7 p.m. Call Dude Feather at 918-235-2811 Rocky Mountain Cherokee Community Organization, 7 p.m. Call Vicki McLemore at 918-696-4965 Sept. 22 Christie, 7 p.m. Call Shelia Rector at 918-778-3423 Sept. 23 Fairfield, 7 p.m. Call Jeff Simpson at 918-696-7959 Dry Creek, 7 p.m. Call Shawna Ballou at 918-457-5023 Ewf #>hAmh • jlsd 2014 In Memoriam Funeral services for Marvin Wayne Buzzard, 67, Lecompton will be held at 10:00 a.m. Saturday, August 16, 2014 at Wa r r e n - M c E l wa i n Mortuary in Lawrence. Inurnment will be held at Oak Hill Cemetery at a later date. Marvin was born March 16, 1947 in Madera, CA the son of Franklin Fallin and Mary Rachel Grandstaff Buzzard. His journey home was August 12, 2014. He married JoMarie Enderlin on June 14, 1974 in Vermillion, SD. She preceded him in death December 29, 2006. Their daughter Rachael Marie came to them in September, 1976. He was an enrolled member of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma and an affiliate member of the Haskell Veterans Club. Marvin’s school career began in Seaside and Monterey, CA, he finished his last two years of high school in Jay, OK. He received his Bachelor of Science degree from Northern State University in Tahlequah, OK and continued his education at the University of South Dakota at Vermillion, SD receiving his Master’s Degree in Education with an emphasis in School Administration. Marv had a variety of jobs during his high school and college days. After college graduation, he worked for the Department of Labor in Park Rapids, MN. He began working as a school administrator at Pinepoint on the Red Lake Indian Reservation in Northern Minnesota. He later moved to Nebraska and was Commissioner of Indian Affairs, for several years. He re-entered school administration and became superintendent at schools in Santee and also Winnebago, NE. In 1987 the family moved to Lawrence and finished his career in school administration at Haskell Indian Nations University. For 35 years his goal was to help with education in Indian Country. Marv enjoyed being with his granddaughters, Mia, Hannah, and Summer Sky. He enjoyed NASCAR racing, NFL especially KC Chiefs, college football and basketball and has a wide collection of sports memorabilia. He enjoyed being outside and keeping his yard in tip-top condition. Marv is survived by his daughter, Rachael, son-inlaw, Tony and three granddaughters, Mia Hannah, and Summer Sky; Jay and Stephanie Crawford, Lawrence, Rose Lee, White Swan, WA (three children were his nieces and nephew; however they were closely mentored by Marv), his sister, Inez of Lawrence, his brother, David of Claremore, OK, two sisters-in-law, Mona of Eucha, OK and AnnaMae of Stilwell, OK, a very special sister, Barbara Cunningham of Anadarko, OK, a host of nephews and nieces, cousins, and a host of friends. Marv was preceded in death by his wife, JoMarie, his parents, Frank and Mary, two brothers, Leon and Daniel, one brother-in-law, Edward, and two sistersin-law, Betty and Jeanette. Memorial contributions may be made in his name to the Haskell Foundation, 155 Indian Avenue, Box #5030, Lawrence, KS 66046 or may be sent in care of the mortuary. Online condolences may be sent to www. warrenmcelwain.com. Community Calendar Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays Marble City Nutrition Center 711 N. Main Marble City, Okla. 918-775-2158 The Marble City Nutrition Center serves hot meals at the Marble City Community Center at 11:30 a.m. Third Tuesday of even numbered months Mayflower UCC Church Oklahoma City 405-408-0763 The Central Oklahoma Cherokee Alliance meets at 6 p.m. on the third Tuesday of every even numbered month at the Mayflower Church. First Friday of every month Concho Community Building Concho, Okla. 405-422-7622 Year Round Will Rogers Memorial Museum Claremore, Okla. 918-341-0719 Fourth Thursday of each month American Indian Chamber of Commerce of Oklahoma – Eastern Chapter monthly luncheon at Bacone College Muskogee, Okla. 918-230-3759 The lunch begins at 11:30 a.m. at Benjamin Wacoche Hall. Please RSVP one week ahead of time. Second Saturday of each month Cherokee Basket Weavers Association at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation Tahlequah, Okla. 918-456-7787 Monthly meetings are at 6 p.m. Second Tuesday of each month Cherokee Artists Association at 202 E. 5th Street, Tahlequah, Okla. 918-458-0008 www.cherokeeartistsassociation.org The CAA meets at 6 p.m. the second Tuesday of each month. Every Friday of each month Dance at Tahlequah Senior Citizens Center 230 E. 1st St. in Tahlequah, Okla. For seniors 50 and over, 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. Admission is $2.50, includes pot luck dinner Every Tuesday of each month Dance at Hat Box Dance Hall 540 S. 4th St. in Muskogee, Okla. For seniors 50 and over, 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. Admission is $2.50, includes pot luck dinner 2014 Ewf #>hAmh • jlsd Community • nv 0nck September 2014 • CHEROKEE PHOENIX 9 Bell holds its 29th annual powwow BY JAMI MURPHY Reporter BELL, Okla. – Hundreds gathered on Aug. 1-2 in Adair County, just south of Stilwell for the 29th annual Bell Powwow. Several contests were held for junior and adult dancers, including the boys and mens straight, traditional, grass and fancy dances and the girls and women cloth, buckskin, jingle and shawl dances. Cherokee Nation citizen Solen Deerinwater dances the southern straight and has since about age 3. He said powwow is a “natural part of life” for him. “I dance because once I step out into the arena I feel the most freedom,” he said. “Freedom to dance anyway I choose.” On Aug. 2, a rainstorm hit the powwow grounds during the event, but that didn’t stop Deerinwater and other attendees and dancers from enjoying the event. “Once I seen the rain fall at Bell Powwow, I felt a connection with nature,” he added, “which I also love, Mother Nature.” Also at the event, Lilli Jordan-Lemasters was crowned 2014-15 Junior Bell Powwow Princess. Jordan-Lemasters, of Lyons Switch, said it’s an honor to represent the Bell Powwow, as well as the love and traditions shared by the drummers, singers and dancers. “I’m very excited,” she said. “I’m grateful to my family and friends for their support and help. I hope that being at events and powwows over the next year will bring more people out to next year’s Bell Powwow.” Head man and head lady were Larry and Pauline Tsosie respectively. Head singer was Patrick Oyebi of the Cherokee Gourd Society. Master of ceremonies was Archie Mason and Sam Howell served as arena director. Powwow dancers dance on Aug. 2 during the 29th annual Bell Powwow in Bell, Okla. PHOTOS BY JAMI MURPHY/CHEROKEE PHOENIX Drummers sing a song during a contest at the 29th annual Bell Powwow. CN spurs growth in Ochelata In the past year, the Cherokee Nation has invested nearly $9.5 million to improve life in the Washington County town. BY STAFF REPORTS OCHELATA, Okla. – The Cherokee Nation is helping breathe new life into this small Washington County town, where main street is now repaved, city water is clearer and a $9 million health center is bringing jobs. In the past year, the CN has invested nearly $9.5 million to improve life in the town of about 500 people just south of Bartlesville. “Ochelata is a great success story. It’s a small community on the rise, and it’s wonderful to see it doing so well,” Principal Chief Bill John Baker said. “With the leadership of a visionary mayor, who is a Cherokee citizen, along with the tribe’s partnerships on important infrastructure and health care investments, the town of Ochelata is poised to thrive for a long time. That kind of growth can only happen when everyone in the community is working together toward a common goal.” CN-funded projects include the $9 million Cooweescoowee Health Center and an $84,500 road project on Main Street. The CN, Delaware Tribe of Indians and Town of Ochelata also signed an agreement earlier this summer to develop a new $1.67 million wastewater treatment plant that will serve 66 tribal homes and 141 non-tribal homes. With the help of the Delaware Tribe, the CN also secured $395,000 from Indian Health Service to build a wastewater treatment plant. Another $7,000 in tribal funds will be used for the plant and Ochelata will cover the remaining project costs. The 28,000-square-foot Cooweescoowee Health Center, which is projected to open in early 2015, will replace the 5,000-squarefoot CN Bartlesville Health Center. Ochelata Mayor Sydney Barnes, a CN citizen, said he expects the new health center to further grow the town’s economy. “The Cherokee Nation health center is a huge deal for the Town of Ochelata because it will not only provide quality health care, but bring major traffic and economic growth to our small town,” he said. “Partnering with the tribe on the wastewater plant, road project and health center gives an economic boost to a small community that lacks the resources of larger communities. Our partnership with the Cherokee Nation has opened up numerous doors for continued economic growth here in Ochelata.” A portion of the town’s Main Street that leads to the newly restored Caney Valley Elementary School has also been widened and repaved. The highly traveled road had been in disrepair, but through tribal funding, quality road conditions now exist for Ochelata citizens and Caney Valley Public School buses. The Caney Valley schoolhouse was built as a Work Progress Administration project in the 1930s. Citizens of the Caney Valley School District passed a $5.4 million bond issue that restored the historic building. “The relationships of the Cherokee Nation with our citizens and our communities in the Cherokee Nation jurisdiction are strong. The roads we fund and the community water and wastewater improvement projects we fund are greatly needed and appreciated by tribal citizens and by the communities we serve,” Tribal Councilor Dick Lay, who lives in Ochelata, said. “The work we are doing in the Ochelata community has been warmly received by the community, and the city council has done everything they can to welcome the Cooweescoowee Health Center into the community and to fast track our efforts.” Principal Chief Bill John Bakers watches as construction continues on the $9 million Cooweescoowee Health Center in Ochelata, Okla. The tribe has helped bring new life to the small Washington County town. COURTESY A woman dances during a fancy shawl competition at the 29th annual Bell Powwow. 10 CHEROKEE PHOENIX • September 2014 Money • a[w Ewf #>hAmh • jlsd 2014 S. Coffeyville casino work underway BY WILL CHAVEZ Senior Reporter Cherokee Nation citizen Lori Ensign-Scroggins talks to a rescued tiger at Safari’s Sanctuary, a nonprofit, volunteer wildlife sanctuary in Broken Arrow, Okla. PHOTOS BY TESINA JACKSON/CHEROKEE PHOENIX CN citizen saves exotic animals with sanctuary BY TESINA JACKSON Reporter BROKEN ARROW, Okla. – Since 1995, Cherokee Nation citizen Lori Ensign-Scroggins has been rescuing exotic animals with Safari’s Sanctuary, a nonprofit volunteer wildlife sanctuary. “Safari’s is a very important operation,” Ensign-Scroggins said. “Every animal here would’ve been euthanized, and they’ve all had a full life and a happy life due to us rescuing them. I don’t feel that because the human made the mistake of getting the animal that the animal should suffer. So we take them in and take on the expenses and we try to really teach people about these animals.” Founded and created by EnsignScroggins, Safari’s Sanctuary is home to more than 200 animals that were given up by owners or facing euthanasia. “Sometimes people go to an auction and end up with a baby tiger,” Ensign-Scroggins said. “A month later, they are eating a chicken a day and they don’t know what to do with it. They get anywhere from 500 to 700 pounds and you can’t just throw that in your backyard. People get caught up in the moment and they get stuck and that’s where we come in.” Ensign-Scroggins’ love for animals came from growing up with a bobcat for a pet. “I had him illegally. There was an ad in the Tulsa World newspaper for bobcats, so I thought ‘if they’re running ads for them then it must be legal,’” she said. “Eventually I moved out, got my own place and a neighbor turned me in, but by that point I already knew the error of my ways and was starting the rescue.” The sanctuary has black bears, a lion and lioness, bobcats, black leopards, turtles, tortoises, lemurs, alligators, snakes, a skunk, an emu, parrots, monkeys, cougars, an African porcupine, peacocks, donkeys, horses, chickens, roosters, pigs, raccoons, rabbits, wolves, turkeys, geese, ducks, goats, a kangaroo and tigers. The sanctuary, which is regulated Safari’s Sanctuary in Broken Arrow, Okla., is home to eight wolves. by the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation, is home to Shammi, a female golden tiger formerly owned by boxing legend Mike Tyson. The sanctuary operates on 12.5 acres, owned by EnsignScroggins, and is solely run on donations. “At Safari’s, we have over 200 animals and it gets quite expensive,” she said. “We go through about 5,000 pounds of raw meat a month. Our expenses here – and we don’t pay anybody it’s all volunteer – is over $6,000 a month just to keep everybody fed. We have to buy the grain. We have to buy the gas to go get all of the produce. We do get produce donated by Target, Walmart and Reasor’s.” Ensign-Scroggins said the sanctuary hasn’t received any grants because most grants go towards animals in the wild, not animals that have been rescued. She said she would like to get her sanctuary more involved with the Cherokee Nation and its citizens. “I’ve always wanted to help and get involved with the Cherokee people,” she said. “I’ve never tied in our zoo with the Cherokee people, but I would love to and I would love to get more people involved.” Although the sanctuary is not open to the public because of a lack of volunteers, the sanctuary offers a Zoo To You program where, for a fee, animals are brought to your event. Handlers provide information and facts on each animal making it an educational experience. Kenny Bootus, 16, who has been volunteering since he was 8, said working with the animals is the best time he’s ever had and knows the importance of the sanctuary. “If it (the sanctuary) wasn’t here then where would these animals be? They wouldn’t be here today. They would be gone,” he said. “If it wasn’t for this place and Lori, they’d be dead. I’m glad she’s here.” To donate or to volunteer, call 918-357-5683 or visit http://www. safarizoo.com. CATOOSA, Okla. – During a July 30 meeting, Cherokee Nation Entertainment Chief Operating Officer Mark Fulton told the Cherokee Nation Businesses board of directors that work on a new casino in South Coffeyville is underway. “You can see a whole lot of physical movement there. They have sent out bid packages. Next week they will have prebid meetings and award contracts, and we’ll start seeing some actual construction activities there in August,” Fulton said. “We’re conservatively scheduled to open in mid-February, but we’re looking for ways to accelerate that. Every day that we’re not open it’s very obvious that we’re not generating revenues.” He said a groundbreaking ceremony would be scheduled for the casino in August. CNE officials have said the casino would be similar to the original modular casino built in Ramona and would hold 200 to 300 gaming machines until it proves the market could sustain a gaming facility like CNB studies have shown. Officials said the ultimate plan is to build a facility like the current Tahlequah, Ramona or Fort Gibson casinos. Principal Chief Bill John Baker at the July 14 Tribal Council meeting said the new facility should generate around 100 jobs. Fulton also reported that construction of a new casino and hotel in Roland is “going well.” The target date to open that casino is May 25 with the hotel opening in July. Fulton said 10,000 square feet of space on the first floor of the new hotel, where meeting rooms will be located, is being looked at to serve as a storm shelter. He said he is looking to add storm shelters in all new construction. Fulton also said the original seven-story, 148-room hotel tower at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Tulsa is being renovated. Two floors at a time are being renovated to keep part of the hotel open for business, and about three weeks construction time is being allocated for every two floors. Floors 2 and 3 have been completed. The first floor of the hotel does not have guest rooms. The entire renovation should be completed in mid-September, Fulton said. CNB Chief Financial Officer Doug Evans reported that in June CNB had $66 million in revenue, $2 million less than the company’s $68 million target. However, Evans said CNB, which has nine business components, ended with a net income of $9 million in June and is doing 6 percent better than it did in 2013 at the time. He said for the first nine months of the fiscal year, the company generated $616 million in revenue against a $622 million target and that he expects the company to reach its target by Sept. 30. CNB had $112 million in cash flow from its business operations and has expended $72 million for capital projects and dividends to the Cherokee Nation, which leaves $40 million in cash., Evans said. 2014 Ewf #>hAmh • jlsd Education • #n[]Qsd September 2014 • CHEROKEE PHOENIX Bacone restructures Center for American Indians BY TESINA JACKSON Reporter MUSKOGEE, Okla. – Established about five years ago, the Center for American Indians recently underwent restructuring to expand programs while uniting students at Bacone College. “What we are trying to do basically is combine all of Indian students on campus together so that we’re all more united and we can expand our programs,” Dr. Patti Jo King, CAI director, said. King, who came from the University of North Dakota in 2013, became CAI director in January and is the interim chair of the college’s American Indian Studies program. Under new leadership, the CAI has grown to encompass all aspects of Native American students and programs, including coordinating American Indian scholarships, recruiting, overseeing cultural programs and supporting American Indian academic programs and degrees. “We are on a multipronged program right now to reinvigorate our relationship with the Native American community, which has included discussions with a number of tribes about a more developed relationship we might have with them in terms of providing for their higher education and needs,” Bacone College President Franklin Willis said. “We would like to really get back to our original mission, which is to provide for Native American higher education and have Native American tribes think of Bacone as their private school of higher education.” Almon C. Bacone, a missionary teacher, founded Bacone College in Muskogee in 1880. He started the school with three students in the Cherokee Baptist Mission at Tahlequah, Indian Territory. Seeing the need to expand after an increase in the student population, an appeal was made to the Muscogee Creek Tribal Council for 160 acres in Muskogee. The land was granted and in 1885 Indian University was moved to its present site. In 1910, it was renamed Bacone Indian University after its founder and was later changed to Bacone College. Today, it is a four-year school and has a student body including African Americans, Native Americans, Hispanics, Caribbeans, Caucasians and Asians. In 1953, Bacone had 170 students with 152 of those students being Native American. In 2013, there were 965 students with 247 being Native American. 11 CN Tribal Youth Council applications available BY STAFF REPORTS Mark Ries of Bacone College facilities constructs a new fire pit that will be used for activities and a storytelling club at the school’s Center for American Indians. JAMI MURPHY/CHEROKEE PHOENIX Because of those numbers, King said there are people who ask if Bacone College is still a Native school. “It’s the same as it always has been, we’ve just increased the other people around us,” she said. “It’s a fine place for students because of the teacher-to-student ratio and there’s a lot of one-on-one. We get to know them very well, we’re more like a family.” At the CAI, which is across from the Native American student dormitory, students can study, play games, watch TV or participate in tribal cultural activities such as arts and crafts, basketry and stickball. “We have a lot of students from just all over the place and they feel homesick and they need a place to touch base and we try to bring the kids together,” King said. “It helps because they are having an intercultural experience by meeting these other kids and that opens a new world to them, and also we can be there for them and we can help them whenever they need help.” King said there are also culture clubs students can join while receiving academic credit such as tribal arts and crafts, the drum group and storytelling. A new fire pit was even built behind the center for the storytelling club. To expand CAI programs, King created a partnership with other departments, including the business, agricultural science and criminal justice departments, so students majoring in those fields could find a way to relate to and include their culture. “They have a business management degree program and so what we’ve done now is we have a partnership with them so we have a business management degree with an emphasis in American Indian business leadership,” King said. The CAI has created a Three Sisters Garden Project within the agricultural science department, which will help students create a community garden where they will learn to work together to harvest what they grow. The students will also learn entrepreneurship skills by taking the harvest to farmers markets and grocers. Stemmed from the Three Sisters Garden Project is a healthy living campaign that focuses on health and community awareness, addressing alcoholism while promoting alcohol awareness. The campaign will also promote tobacco and diabetes awareness. In the criminal justice department, a program was created to help Native students learn how to deal with tribal border and homeland security issues. The CAI also created a scholarship, the Alexander Posey Scholarship, which was named after Creek scholar Alexander Posey. The scholarship will benefit up to 100 Native American students. Students who live in dormitories on-campus will be eligible for the full $10,000 scholarship while those who live off campus will be eligible to receive $5,600. For more information about the CAI, call 918-687-3299. TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – The Cherokee Nation is accepting applications for all 15 Tribal Youth Council seats for 2014-15. The Tribal Youth Council advises the CN Tribal Council on issues that affect youth. Selected students will attend CN Tribal Council meetings and help with community service projects. The new members will be comprised of eight students from the southern half of the Nation’s 14-county jurisdiction, which includes Cherokee, Adair, Sequoyah and portions of Muskogee, Wagoner and McIntosh counties. Seven members will be accepted from the northern districts of the jurisdiction, including in Delaware, Mayes, Craig, Nowata, Washington, Ottawa, Rogers and Tulsa counties. Applications must be mailed only and postmarked by Sept. 26. Applications can be downloaded at www. cherokee.org/youthcouncil. Students will serve a oneyear term. Interested students must submit a profile, write an essay on the importance of tribal sovereignty, submit three letters of recommendation and other criteria. A committee will make the selections. “This is the 25th anniversary of the Tribal Youth Council’s creation and a great time to see young Cherokee leaders more active in the tribe and their tribal communities,” Tribal Youth Council sponsor Lisa Trice-Turtle said. “Students who are selected will learn more about Cherokee culture, history, language and how to be a voice for all Cherokee youth.” Trice-Turtle, a founding member of the Tribal Youth Council in 1989, said this upcoming year’s youth council will determine how the group will operate in the future. The 15-member body will review bylaws and determine projects. “This is a program that’s near and dear to my heart, and I want to see it be successful,” she said. “It’s a vehicle to teach leadership and provide students with enough opportunities to enhance their leadership skills.” To apply for the Tribal Youth Council, students must be 15 to 22 years old on Oct. 13, 2014; be a CN citizen; have a permanent address inside the Nation’s 14-county jurisdiction; and have a 2.5 grade point average on a 4.0 scale. “The future of the Cherokee Nation begins today, and it begins with young people like those who serve on the Cherokee Nation Tribal Youth Council,” Principal Chief Bill John Baker. “It’s important to cultivate leadership from a young age, and I look forward to the seating of this next council.” For more information, call Trice-Turtle at 918-4535000, ext. 4991. 12 CHEROKEE PHOENIX • September 2014 Health • aBk 0sr Ewf #>hAmh • jlsd 2014 Miss Cherokee winning fight against cancer BY JAMI MURPHY Reporter TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – Former Miss Cherokee Julie Thornton will passed her crown to the new Miss Cherokee on Aug. 23. Thornton has served as Miss Cherokee for nearly a year, visiting different areas of the United States. However, in April, she was diagnosed with soft tissue sarcoma, a type of cancer that attacks muscle and bones. “It’s a type of cancer that causes tumors that are connected to your lymph nodes and your bones,” Thornton said. “It looks like a knot on your skin and usually they turn black and they raise up.” But having cancer hasn’t slowed her. She said despite the diagnosis she’s remained busy with classes at Northeastern State University and is maintaining her grades, earning all A’s. Thornton said both sides of her family has endured cancer, so she has always been careful and watchful about her body. “My grandfather just recently passed away of stomach cancer, and a few years ago my other grandpa died of lung cancer,” she said. “So my family has always taught me to watch my body, and if something is wrong, you know, go to the doctor and make sure it’s all checked out.” She said this spring she noticed a small knot on her thigh and visited the doctor to determine what it was. “They said that ‘it’s just the keloids, just watch it.’ If it got bigger or anything and if it did then to come back,” Thornton said. Keloids are a formation of a type of scar. The Julie Thornton, Miss Cherokee 2013-14, places a copper gorget on newly crowned Cherokee Ambassador J.J. Dodge’s neck during the 2014-15 Little Miss and Mr. Cherokee Ambassador competition on Aug. 9 in Tahlequah, Okla. Thornton is battling soft tissue sarcoma, a cancer that attacks muscle and bones. JAMI MURPHY/CHEROKEE PHOENIX scar overgrows tissue at the site of a healed skin injury. It tends to affect more people of a darker pigmentation. She said she’s had keloids since a young age and that she watched the area closely. After the knot changed she returned to the doctor. Save money and calories with a packed lunch BY JAMI MURPHY Reporter TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – Lunch doesn’t need to be expensive. With kids going back to school and parents straining to make ends meet, one healthy and money-saving tip is packing a daily lunch. Terri Hayes, homebuyer trainer for Cherokee Nation, said taking lunch to school and work can save a family money. “Instead if buying the lunch at school, kids could take leftovers or pack a cheap healthy lunch. Families could make a menu plan for the week and cook extra for the kid’s lunch as well,” Hayes said. She added that families should first seek out whether they qualify for free or reduced lunches at school for their students. “Of course checking on reduced lunches could be a better route for children, but taking lunch from home can save a family money,” she said. “The reduced lunches is a huge benefit if a family is eligible. If not, buying what is needed for lunch in bulk at wholesale stores and/or watching sale ads can help save money as well.” Clinical Dietitian Dietician Tonya Swim said there are health benefits when choosing what to eat for lunch each day, but there will always be temptations even with healthy options during lunch. “Packing a lunch is one way to control your choices, get variety and eat healthy,” she added. “Food gives our bodies energy and getting the right balance is very important. Having fruit, vegetables, lean protein and whole grains will help make a balanced meal and provide the energy your body needs.” Swim said over the years school lunches have improved greatly, and schools and kitchen staff strive to cook and serve healthy options to students. “Sometimes we get bored with the same old, same old, and taking a packed lunch from home can help with that,” she said. “Packing a lunch from home can offer a little more control over the choices and how food is prepared.” Although one is packing a lunch from home, it’s also important to remember food safety Swim added. “Make sure to keep hot foods hot and cold foods cold. Warm entrées need to be kept in a thermos container. You can ask ahead of time, if there is a microwave that could be used to re-heat those warm entrees,” she said. “Cold packs can be placed inside the lunch box to help keep yogurts and other cold items cold.” She said a good example of a healthy lunch could be one whole grain tortilla, three ounces of lean meat like turkey or chicken, one slice of low-fat cheese, with vegetables of one’s choice. “Add grape tomatoes, carrot slices and an apple on the side with animal or Graham crackers for a treat,” she added. “And don’t forget the water bottle.” Some quick lunch ideas for back-to-school kids include peanut butter and jelly roll-ups using wheat or flour tortillas or tuna or chicken salad sandwiches on wheat bread. It’s important to include a snack option too with kids’ lunches like grapes, carrot sticks, dried apples or bananas, yogurt or muffins. “Well it got bigger and it got to the size of a half dollar size and it turned black and it raised up,” she added. “So I went to the doctor and they performed a biopsy and they removed the tumor and (I’ve) been going through treatment ever since.” Her treatment has consisted of chemotherapy injections as well as radiation in the form of pills. Depending on the month, she said she takes one chemo injection every two weeks. “So like, sometimes I’ll go like once a month in a big dose or I’ll do once every two weeks in small doses. Now I’m doing just once a week (on the radiation pill),” she added. “Yeah, the medicine is working.” The biggest issue she’s had while going through treatment is exhaustion. “Everyday I would get tired. I can never get enough sleep it feels like. I guess like depending on the day that I get treatment, I get really moody,” she said. She hopes her treatments will stop this fall. As for now, her goals are to continue with her classes, graduate in 2017 with a major in criminal justice and double minor in police force and homeland security. Her goal is to become a Cherokee Nation marshal when she turns 21. Her suggestion for kids and adults is to keep a close watch on one’s body. “But also just knowing your body, and what’s non-normal. Because like, when I got diagnosed with sarcoma, part of the whole treatment process is that you have to get pat downs every month to make sure that you don’t have any new spots as well,” she said. “Know their body. Know what’s not normal. Know if something’s out of place. Notice new spots on you or new bumps. If you don’t think something is supposed to be there, it’s probably not and you need to go to the doctor and get that checked out.” DIETITIAN’S CORNER Stress management and how it affects your health BY FELIPE GUZMAN-ZAMARRON Occupational Therapist Stress. We have all experienced it during our lives. Even positive events can be stressful. Stress is a state of mental or emotional strain or tension resulting from adverse or demanding circumstances. Stress is a fact of life. When people reach for help, they are often dealing with circumstances, situations and stressors in their lives that leave them feeling emotionally and physically overwhelmed. Modern life makes stress management a necessary skill for everyone. Many people juggle multiple responsibilities, work, home life, caregiving and relationships. Learning to identify problems and implement solutions is the key to successful stress reduction. Stress management will enable everyone to master their stressors for their physical and psychological well-being. People who do not learn and use appropriate stressmanagement techniques can experience negative effects, including physical illness, psychological illness, damaged personal relationships and poor productivity. Studies on health and stress have shown that stress can be a causal or contributing factor to heart disease, increased risk for stroke, diabetes, headaches, gastrointestinal problems, depression and anxiety. Although we all talk about stress, it is often not clear to many people what stress is. Some people consider stress to be something that happens to them, an event such as an accident or losing a job. Others think that stress is what happens to our body, mind and behaviors in response to an event such as heart pounding, feeling anxious or nail biting. While stress does involve events and our response to them, these are not the most important factors. Our perception and thoughts about the situations in which we find ourselves are the critical factor. Stress can come from any situation or thought that makes you feel frustrated, angry or anxious. Everyone sees situations differently and has different coping skills. For this reason, no two people will respond exactly the same way to a given situation. Additionally, not all situations that are labeled stressful are negative. The birth of a child, being promoted at work or moving to a new home may not be perceived as threatening. However, we may feel that situations are stressful because we don’t feel fully prepared to deal with them. Stress is normal part. In small quantities, stress is good. It can motivate you and help you become more productive. However, too much stress, or a strong response to stress can be harmful. How we perceive a stress-provoking event and how we react to it determines its impact on our health. We may be motivated and invigorated by the events in our lives, or we may see some as stressful and respond in a manner that may have a negative effect on our physical, mental and social well-being. If we always respond in a negative way, our health and happiness may suffer. By understanding ourselves and our reaction to stress-provoking situations, we can learn to handles stress effectively. In the most accurate meaning, stress management is not about learning how to avoid or escape the pressures and turbulence of modern living. It is about learning to appreciate how the body reacts to these pressures and about learning how to develop skills that enhance the body’s adjustment. To learn stress management is to learn about the mind-body connection and to the degree to which we can control our health in a positive sense. The “fight-or-flight” response of the body during times of stress is well-documented. This instinctive response floods your body with adrenaline and cortisol, which increases heart rate, redirects blood flow to the muscular system, releases fats into the bloodstream for use as energy, increases breathing rate, tenses muscles and increases your blood’s clotting ability – all of which are intended to help you fight off (or run from) an opponent. Over time, constant stress wreaks havoc on your health physically, mentally and emotionally. Chronic stress can wear down the body’s natural defenses, leading to physical symptoms such as dizziness or a general feeling of “being out of it,” general aches and pains; grinding teeth; clenched jaw; headaches; indigestion or acid reflux symptoms; increase in or loss of appetite; muscle tension in neck, face or shoulders; problems sleeping; racing heart; cold and sweaty palms; tiredness or exhaustion; trembling/shaking; and weight gain or loss. Reversing your stress response quickly is a simple and effective first line of defense. It can help prevent the negative effects of chronic stress, especially if used as part of an overall stress management plan. Stress management isn’t something that’s done in a day. It requires adjustments in your lifestyle and how you handle what comes your way. You can reduce the level of stress you feel by practicing relaxation techniques, having a good support system, sleeping six to eight hours, eating a healthy diet, practicing tai chi, yoga or mindfulness as well as exercising three to five times per week. Studies show that regular exercise can reduce stress in the short and long term. More highenergy exercises such as weight training or martial arts can provide a good physical outlet where you can release pent-up tension, while walking or yoga can have a more soothing effect. Relaxation is invaluable for maintaining your health and well-being and repairing the toll that stress takes on your mind and body while getting enough sleep can aid in reducing your stress, as well as helping your body recover from daily events. Since living without stress is impossible, try to deal with it more effectively. Utilizing appropriate individual stress reduction techniques will improve a person’s quality of life and in many cases contribute in the reduction of disease symptoms. Learning to deal with life stressors in a healthy manner could lead to a happier and healthier life. Health • aBk 0sr 2014 Ewf #>hAmh • jlsd September 2014 • CHEROKEE PHOENIX 13 CN Behavioral Health performs alcohol compliance checks BY JAMI MURPHY Reporter TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – On June 30, Cherokee Nation Behavioral Health employees, two undercover buyers and law enforcement officers visited restaurants, stores and gas stations to ensure alcohol was being sold and served to properly aged buyers. Sam Bradshaw, director of the Region 5 Prevention Center that serves Cherokee, Adair, Sequoyah and Wagoner counties for the CN, said an Oklahoma Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services grant funded the alcohol compliance checks. “It’s called the substance abuse prevention block grant, and it goes to every state to develop regional prevention centers. Each one of those centers is responsible for so many counties and providing prevention services to those four counties,” said Bradshaw. “We have one element of it that is called the core services, and in the core services we do alcohol compliance checks, tobacco checks, and then we do special risk assessments to make sure that people aren’t selling alcohol to minors.” Coleman Lee Cox, a Behavioral Health prevention specialist, said 27 retailers were checked in Tahlequah with on-site (alcohol consumed there) and off-site (consumed elsewhere) visits. “These compliance checks were completed with the help of two minor decoys under the age of 21, Tahlequah Police Department, NSU (Northeastern State University) Police and the Cherokee Nation Marshal Service. This operation resulted in compliance rate of 78 percent,” Cox said. “Of the 27 retailers checked, there were six sales to a minor decoy, resulting in four citations. Two merchants were given warnings by local law enforcement. Twentyfive of the 27 retailers asked to see an acceptable form of identification. All the retailers who sold Tahlequah (Okla.) Police Officer David Craig, middle, talks with fellow officer Thomas Donnell, left, and Cherokee Nation Behavioral Health prevention specialist Coleman Cox about a ticket to be given after an employee served alcohol to a minor on June 30 during alcohol compliance checks. JAMI MURPHY/CHEROKEE PHOENIX were unaware to ‘Check the Red Box,’ which shows the date when the customer will turn 21.” Cox said alcohol compliance checks are evidence-based practices authorized by the Oklahoma Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services to reduce retail access of alcohol by minors. “They ensure stores are following the law when they sale or serve alcohol or beer. An undercover officer enters retail environment for a safety scan, then minor decoys enter, retrieve product and attempt an alcohol purchase,” he CN, TU to conduct asthma prevention study BY STAFF REPORTS TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – The Cherokee Nation and the University of Tulsa are conducting a three-year study to determine whether minor changes at home and school can reduce asthma among Cherokee children. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency awarded TU a $920,000 research grant in June. Researchers at TU’s Indoor Air Program approached the tribe to collaborate on the study. The CN will use $318,000 for supplies and research expenses. The From Home to School: Tribal Indoor Air Quality Intervention Study will test whether using certain products in the home reduce allergens such as dust mites and pet dander, which trigger asthma. “We’ve identified that childhood asthma is a significant health problem in the Cherokee population, and by looking at research data from a combined environmental and health perspective with TU’s help, we will be able to find innovative solutions to reduce asthma in our communities,” CN Health Research Director Sohail Khan said. Some households will receive a specialized vacuum and dust mite mattress protectors to use at home. The study will compare asthma outbreaks among children using those tools with those who make no changes. The study will also ask some local elementary schools to implement specific cleaning tasks and whether those changes make a difference in the participating students’ health and attendance. In 2013, CN health centers and W.W. Hastings Hospital cared for 820 children with asthma attacks. “The Cherokee Nation has a strong presence among tribes across the country, and we’re excited to work together for this asthma intervention study,” Richard Shaughnessy, TU’s Indoor Air Program director, said. “In addition, the convergence of the study on three tribes within three different regions and climates of the United States makes for a very unique opportunity for success to explore the spectrum of exposures that children with asthma encounter on a daily basis.” A handful of Cherokee students interested in research will be selected to help collect data. Study results should be available in 2017. For more information, call Ryan Callison at 918-453-5000, ext. 5093; Shaun West at ext. 5363 or Sohail Khan at ext. 5602. said. “When asked, decoys provide clerks with their actual ID, showing them to be under the legal drinking age. All decoys undergo an age verification process where 10 random people tell staff how old they believe the decoy looks. Decoys must look under 21 to qualify.” The program also offers Responsible Beverage Service and Sale Training, which instructs retailers how to check IDs, identify fake IDs and refuse service to intoxicated patrons. “Every merchant that serves alcohol is encouraged to send their employees to RBSS, a free class offered by the RPC (Regional Prevention coordinator). Cherokee County alcohol retailers can sign up for this training by contacting RPC staff at 1296 Skill Center Circle (in) Tahlequah or (call) 918-207-4977,” Cox said. The retailers who denied sale to a minor on June 30 were Mazzio’s Italian Eatery, Reasor’s Grocery, Super Mart, The Branch, The Grill, Wal-Mart, Walgreens, Las Maracas Mexican Restaurant, Dollar General on Downing Street, Dollar General located next to Reasor’s, EZMart No. 554, 66 Quick Stop, Big-B Food and Deli, Chilango’s Mexican Restaurant, Dano’s, Dewain’s Place, El Molcajete Mexican Restaurant, El Zarape Mexican Restaurant, EZ Mart at 1600 E. Downing and Fuel Mart No. 1, according to a report. Bradshaw requested the Cherokee Phoenix not publish the merchants who sold to a minor decoy because he said the program’s purpose is not to condemn merchants who sell but to offer them the opportunity to learn methods of refusing service to minors as well as the ways to determine if a buyer is of age. “So we’re trying to make sure that people are in compliance. But we also provide responsible beverage sales and service training. So if they do fail, if they do end up selling, if they do get a ticket, but also we provide them training to educate them on how to properly ID someone, how to turn someone away and how to develop the skills not to sell,” he said. “So our goal is to reduce retail alcohol and tobacco sales to minors.” Tickets are given by the municipality, usually the city or the county depending on where the group is performing compliance checks, Bradshaw said. Ticket costs of this kind can vary from $200 to $300, according to the Cherokee County Clerk’s Office. Cherokee professor gets $2.9M grant to study substance abuse BY STAFF REPORTS TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – Cherokee Nation citizen Dr. John Lowe recently received a $2.9 million grant from the National Institutes of Health to conduct and evaluate an after-school substance abuse prevention and intervention program for American Indian youth. Intertribal Talking Circle for the Prevention of Substance Abuse in Native Youth is a five-year research project targeting sixth grade Native American youth in three tribal communities – the Ojibwe/Chippewa in Minnesota, Choctaw in Oklahoma and Lumbee in North Carolina. The goal is to evaluate the use of the Talking Circle to increase Native American youth cultural identity while decreasing their substance use. The study also will train tribal personnel throughout the three regions on how to implement the Talking Circle intervention as a more permanent program in their communities. “The Talking Circle is both a cognitive and behavioral intervention, reviewing stress levels, substance abuse and other risk factors associated with the Native American Indian populations,” Lowe said. This research project builds on several years of previous studies conducted by Lowe that have evaluated the use of the Talking Circle as an effective intervention for the prevention of substance use and abuse among Native American youth. Models have emerged from Lowe’s previously funded research, promoting the health and wellbeing of Native Americans across the country and are being recognized internationally by those advocating for the health of other Indigenous populations. Lowe’s contributions to his profession are heavily based in his research program, which evolved from his doctoral dissertation, “Cherokee Self-Reliance,” which investigated cultural values that contribute to the Cherokee Nation’s health and well-being, particularly in regards to the substance use and abuse. Lowe is a professor at Florida Atlantic University’s Christine E. Lynn College of Nursing and one of approximately 20 doctoral-prepared Native American nurses in the United States. He has been a longtime advocate for culturally competent healthcare for Native Americans and Indigenous people globally. He has represented Native American and Indigenous nurses in many national and international forums and with national leaders. Globally, Lowe has provided health care services and research consultation to underserved/disadvantaged groups in countries such as Australia, New Zealand, Tanzania, Costa Rica, Jamaica and China. 14 CHEROKEE PHOENIX • September 2014 Services • nnrpH Ewf #>hAmh • jlsd 2014 CN, Sequoyah County fix road BY WILL CHAVEZ Senior Reporter While looking at their photos, Cherokee Nation Indian Child Welfare child welfare specialist Carolyn Swepston discusses some of the children the program has helped in recent years. WILL CHAVEZ/CHEROKEE PHOENIX ICW always in need of Cherokee foster homes BY WILL CHAVEZ Senior Reporter TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – The Cherokee Nation’s Indian Child Welfare always needs foster homes in which to place Cherokee children who, for various reasons, cannot remain in their homes. Sally Wilson, ICW foster and adoptive home recruiter, said negative publicity surrounding foster parents such as stories about the mistreatment of foster children is a detriment to recruiting foster parents. “It stymies what you are trying to do because people get scared to dive into that realm,” Wilson said. To qualify as ICW foster parents, one parent must be 21 years old, Native American, financially able to take care of their needs and the foster child’s needs, have a willingness to be patient and loving and provide a stable home. The parents also must submit to a background check and provide their child welfare history. ICW child welfare specialist Carolyn Swepston said the training required to be a foster parent also deters some potential foster parents. The training is available through ICW, but it takes time to complete. Pre-service training is 12 hours split up into two days. Once a parent is in the program fostering a child or children, they must take 12 more hours of training during the year with four hours related to Cherokee culture. Foster parents may take a class at the Cherokee Heritage Center in Park Hill or attend an ICW-hosted Cherokee culture camp. Swepston said ICW has more difficulty finding homes for Cherokee children who are out of state or who are in Oklahoma custody. “The few homes that we do have go to our kids. Meanwhile, we have tons of Cherokee kids (in state custody) out there who are placed in non-Indian homes because we don’t have homes for them,” Swepston said. “The state can provide a place for those kids even it’s not a Cherokee home. There’s somewhere for them to go. Our kids, we’re fully responsible for them, so we have to get the homes that we do have.” Swepston said the biggest need for ICW is foster parents who are willing to take larger groups of children and older children. “We have sibling groups, and you might have a sibling group of three and they will be in three different homes because the homes that we do have only want one kid or two kids and you’ve got (a) sibling group of five or six,” Swepston said. “They’re not only separated from their parents, but they’re separated from their siblings, also, and from their communities.” Wilson said most of the time the sibling bond is stronger than the bond with the parents, so it’s vital to try to keep sibling groups together. Indian children under the Oklahoma Department of Human Services’ care and other state agencies are assigned an ICW specialist to ensure the state is following the federal Indian Child Welfare Act and are attempting to place them in Indian homes. “Historically, we’ve been, not just us but other tribes and the state, low on foster homes. It’s always been a battle for us,” Wilson said. ICW has created a Diligent Search Unit to find relative for kids needing a foster home. “We don’t have a lot of relatives that step forward when we remove kids. I think it’s a family issue a lot of times,” Swepston said. “So, our good non-relative foster homes end up adopting kids that don’t get to go home...so we end up closing homes just as quick as we can open them because they end up adopting kids.” Some families take in foster children with the hope of adopting the children, Swepston added. Wilson said the slogan used by ICW for recruiting foster parents is: “Their tribe, their home, our future.” Children are removed from homes for physical abuse, sexual abuse and neglect. Some of the neglect is because the parents are using drugs and neglecting their children. ICW works under the umbrella of CN Human Services, and some Cherokee families who have to give up their children can seek help through Humans Services to find a job or get food through a donated foods program. “It helps reunify that family to get that support in place when you’re trying to reunify them because a lot of times they are involved in illegal activity when their child is removed, so they’ve lost their housing or they’ve lost their job. So, you kind of have to start from square one,” Wilson said. Behavioral Health and child care services are utilized to help parents who are trying to have their children returned to their custody. Housing services, the Marshal Service, Attorney General’s Office and Registration assist ICW with foster children and their families. “It’s not just an ICW issue; it’s a tribal issue,” Wilson said. “Whenever I talk to people when I go out for recruitment events...I push the fact that we belong to each other, and that’s core of who we are. We have always believed we’re responsible for the next person and we hold them sacred. As tribal people we need to continue to embrace that.” CN Child Services hosts family event The “Hula on in for some family fun” event features the Pumpkin Hollow Boys band, games and food. BY TESINA JACKSON Reporter TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – In support of Child Awareness Month, Cherokee Nation Child Services hosted its first family fun event on Aug. 7 at Norris Park. The “Hula on in for some family fun” event featured the Pumpkin Hollow Boys band, activities, games and food. Several other CN departments also attended with display booths offering information on the respective services. Since starting in 2007, Child Support Services has offered free services such as genetic testing, affidavits, locating a parent and trying to establish assisted payments of child support for Cherokee children to custodial families so that the children gets their needs met. “We also service Cherokee citizens that live outside of the boundaries if they’re willing to submit to the jurisdiction of Cherokee Nation,” Kara Whitworth, Child Support Services director, said. Whitworth said when the department started, officials wanted to be supportive of the entire family because “we know at Child support Services that it takes more than just money to raise a child.” “We feel that at our office that it’s more important to help the entire family than just collect money and so that’s what our philosophy has been for the last seven years,” Whitworth said. “We’re a relatively new agency and if you compare us to the state agencies, which have been in operation for approximately 30 years, since opening our doors we have collected approximately a little over $25 million. That goes directly to our custodial parent, who are the ones taking care of the children.” Whitworth said the department still has approximately $2.7 million that still needs to be collected. Child Support Services is free to CN citizens living within the tribe’s 14-county jurisdiction. A non-custodial parent may fill out an application as long as the child is a CN citizen. During the Aug. 7 event, Principal Chief Bill John Baker also signed a proclamation reaffirming August as Child Awareness Month. “That proclamation just reaffirms Cherokee Nation’s commitment to supporting all of our children and our families,” Whitworth said. “It is a way of memorializing the fact that Cherokee Nation holds their children and their families sacred and they want to make sure they’re taken care of.” For more information, call 918-453-5444 or email childsupport1@cherokee.org. VIAN, Okla. – Tribal Councilor David Thornton joined Dist. 2 Sequoyah County Commissioner Steve Carter to observe the completion of a road project near Vian. Cherokee Nation funds were used to purchase asphalt for 1.75 miles of road about two miles northwest of Vian. Carter said the asphalt his crew put down cost $142,000, and the cost of prepping the road for the asphalt was another $40,000. Carter said road work began on Aug. 4 after being delayed two days by rain, and his crew planned to finish the road on Aug. 5. “(Tribal Councilor) David Thornton stepped up and offered money to overlay this road, so we’re doing it for the people up live up here,” Carter said. Carter said asphalting the road not only benefits the people who live on the road, it also benefits him because it’s one less dirt road his work crew have to grade, maintain and put money into. “I can eliminate that and I can move on to other things,” he said. “For this community up here, naturally it cuts down on the dust...and when we do something like this it increases their property values because it provides better access to their property. Basically, that’s what it’s all about. It’s a better quality of life for people who live in this neighborhood.” About nine years ago, Carter said he worked with Thornton to complete a 2.5mile road east of the 1.75-mile road. The two roads connect. “I’m a (CN) tribal member, so naturally I’m going to have a relationship with David Thornton because he’s my Tribal Council member from my end of Sequoyah County. We’ve known each other forever, and we just have a good relationship,” he said. Thornton, who helps represent Sequoyah County and part of Muskogee County, said the 1.75-mile road is getting done through a partnership between the county commissioner and the CN Roads Department. He said Tribal Councilors are given money through the Roads Department to fund road projects in their respective districts. He said Tribal Councilors provide county commissioners road funding to buy asphalt while the commissioners provide the machinery and labor to build the road. To try to make funding go further, previously some dirt roads received the “chip and seal” treatment where a thin base of oil-based bitumen is evenly distributing onto an existing pavement before laying down finely graded aggregate, which is composed of sand, small gravel or crushed stone. “The chip and seal and oil has went up so much that we can get more for our buck if we go ahead and do overlays (of asphalt),” Thornton said. Carter said he has worked with Thornton on other paving and road projects for Vian and Gore schools, the Cedar Creek Cemetery and others. He said he has served as a county commissioner for 10 years and has worked on a road project with Thornton each of those years. Deputy Chief S. Joe Crittenden visited the construction site with Thornton and said road projects for rural roads are good for the entire community. He said better roads prevents wear-andtear on vehicles and makes it easier to for people to travel to work and school. “I’m thrilled every time I get a chance to go out to a project like this because I know that it’s going to be good and people are going to appreciate it. And without our funds and the help and cooperation of the county commissioners, a lot of this wouldn’t be getting done,” Crittenden said. Deputy Chief S. Joe Crittenden, left, and Tribal Councilor David Thornton, center, stand on the back of a road paver on Aug. 4 with Dist. 2 Sequoyah County Commissioner Steve Carter as workers put down asphalt to complete a road project near Vian, Okla. WILL CHAVEZ/CHEROKEE PHOENIX Services • nnrpH 2014 Ewf #>hAmh • jlsd September 2014 • CHEROKEE PHOENIX 15 Nation gives $50K for Nowata waterline BY STAFF REPORTS NOWATA, Okla. – On May 30, the Cherokee Nation completed a mile stretch of waterline that is expected to be more reliable and provide better quality of water to Cherokee families and other non-Cherokee residents living along 415 County Road. “The collaboration between the Cherokee Nation and Nowata will strengthen the community’s infrastructure, and that increased capacity in the water system will improve the lives of its citizens, both Cherokee and non-Cherokee,” Principal Chief Bill John Baker said. “Through our business success, we are able to make these kinds of investments and partnerships. The Cherokee Nation plays a key role in ensuring northeast Oklahoma remains a great place to live and raise a family. We have a vested interest in doing all we can to make sure our communities flourish and continue to grow.” The CN donated $50,000 and manpower to replace the deteriorating steel water pipes with 4-inch thick polyethylene pipes. The former waterline, installed in the 1950s, frequently caused low water pressure or water outages from water leaks, frustrating and potentially harming local residents. “The old waterline was dilapidated and caused numerous problems for our citizens,” Tribal Councilor Dick Lay said. “Completing this project eases the concerns of citizens who deserve not to worry day to day if they will have access to clean and reliable water.” The Nation began planning in 2013 and started the work in May. The City of Nowata now assumes operation and maintenance costs of the new waterline. CN citizen John Phillips, who lives on 10-acres of his family’s original Cherokee allotment, said he tried getting new water pipes along the road years earlier and is thankful the CN stepped in to help. “Getting a new waterline has been a long, long time coming,” Phillips said. “The line we had was real old, and the steel pipe rusted. It would have bad leaks, and we property owners had to patch it and patch it again. Cherokee Nation replacing this is such a blessing, and I am so thankful.” The Nation’s Community Services completed 10 water and sewer projects, totaling more than $250,000, in fiscal year 2013. For more information on its Engineering and Sanitation Program, call 918-453-5111 or toll free at 1-800256-3387. Or visit www.cherokee.org/Services/Community/ EngineeringandSanitation.aspx USDA reaching Indian Country through Food Distribution BY STAFF REPORTS Rusty Gillispie, Ramsey Ward Electric Inc. job superintendent, measures the location where a backup generator will be placed at a water district location in Gore, Okla. The water project is expected to be finished next June. STACIE GUTHRIE/CHEROKEE PHOENIX Water projects underway in communities The Cherokee Nation helps towns provide better water for their citizens. BY STACIE GUTHRIE Reporter OCHELATA, Okla. – More water projects are underway or near completion within the tribe’s jurisdiction thanks to the Cherokee Nation’s help. The towns of Ochelata, Gore and Kenwood are either adding to or updating their respective water situations with the hopes of giving CN citizens better water quality. Ochelata Mayor Sydney Barnes said Ochelata has been under a consent order from the Oklahoma Department of Environmental Quality since 2005 for not meeting required wastewater discharge limits. “Being a small town, it’s presented a challenge to us to find something affordable to solve the problem,” he said. Barnes started working for the town in 2008. He said that’s when he started looking for financial options to update the water system but not cost the town more than it could afford. “We’ve come up with this small water treatment system that is economical for a small community,” he said. “We’re still talking $2.5 million total project costs for a town of 500. But it’s still much cheaper than the traditional brick and mortar, concrete-type water treatment facilities.” Ochelata’s project consists of a new wastewater treatment system with the tribe donating $7,000. “The plant is designed with water quality in mind and we have designed it for a growth of 40 percent,” he said. “It will bring us state-of-the-art water treatment, which will put us in line with most any major city in the state, as far as water quality. We will meet the water quality guidelines set by the state of its 400,000 gallons,” he said. “That is Oklahoma for the next 40 years.” something that we can utilize because Barnes said the previous infrastructure we currently only have a 150,000 gallon has outlived its life expectancy and it’s storage (tank). That’s just not quite time to upgrade. enough, we can last maybe part of a day “Being a small town, our at peak season. Normally you want at infrastructure was put in in the 1960s, least two days of storage.” and it’s an ongoing battle to upgrade With the new tank the town would water facilities,” he said. “Now we’re just have a total of 550,000 gallons of water trying to rebuild.” storage. Barnes said project is in its beginning “Let’s say that you wanted to take a stages. tower down for maintenance,” he said. “We have a contractor selected,” “Well, communities with one tower, he said. “We’re looking at starting that’s a problem. We could just isolate (working) in October and it’s a one-year one tower, or take it off the system and it construction period.” wouldn’t effect us at all.” Rather than reacting to a problem, Lindley said the improvements to Gore Administrator Horace E. Lindley the town would give the town the said his town’s water opportunity to project is completely welcome more proactive. businesses and Being a small town, “What happens in homes. a lot of towns is they The project it’s presented a regulate the systems, began in June and challenge to us to find is expected to be and a lot of times towns are deficient in June. It something affordable complete and they are under is expected to cost consent orders and approximately $1.71 to solve the problem. are forced to do with CN – Sydney Barnes, million things. This is just donating $65,000. Ochelata mayor the opposite. This is In Delaware a proactive move by County, Kenwood the town of Gore,” he said. Water District Project Manager Greg Lindley said the town plans to expand Butcher said so far Kenwood has added its water treatment facility, increasing two wells, a pump house and a water production capacity by 30 percent. tower to its water systems. He said “We’re adding a new building and new the final project is the new filtration filter. We currently have two filters. We’re plant, which is a water treatment plant. placing in a third one and a spot for a The plant would bring the town up fourth one,” he said. “At the same time, to Environmental Protection Agency in the production plant, we’re re-doing standards. all the controls and reconditioning all “Also, it will safeguard all of the the existing filters. That means new citizens’ water for years to come,” he said. electronics, new computer controls. The project began in February, but the Also, we’re putting in a self-contained planning started approximately six years full backup generator for the system in ago, Butcher said. As of July, he said the case we lose power.” plant should be completed within weeks. Town officials also plan to increase the The Kenwood project cost amount of water the town can store. approximately $ 1.1 million with CN “We’re putting in another water tower, donating $237,000. WASHINGTON – Finding groceries can be difficult in many inner city neighborhoods, and in many rural areas the challenge can be even more daunting. Americans living in remote areas might easily spend half a day just making a grocery run. And for many Native Americans living on Indian reservations, simply getting to a place to purchase nutritious foods becomes a constant struggle. One program expanding access to nutritious foods is the Food Distribution Program on Indian Reservations. The FDPIR was first authorized under the Food Stamp Act of 1977 to provide access to nutritious foods to low-income Native American households. It is administered locally by either Indian tribal organizations or an agency of a state government. Currently, there are about 276 tribes, including the Cherokee Nation, receiving benefits under FDPIR, with an average of 82,600 participants each month. “Expanding access to nutritious food will not only empower American families to serve healthy meals to their children, but it will also help expand the demand for agricultural products,” U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said. Because the FDPIR is administered directly on Indian reservations, it can eliminate the need for recipients to travel great distances simply to acquire nutritious foods. Eligible participants are able to choose from over 70 food options that can be used to create meals that align with the Dietary Guidelines for Americans and MyPlate. In fiscal year 2009, the Healthy Eating Index, which rates diets based on overall nutrition, rated the FDPIR food option package at 85.3 (an HEI score above an 80 is considered a healthy diet). To assist in the preparation of healthy meals using FDPIR foods, FNS recently worked with tribal citizens to create a recipe book. “A Harvest of Recipes with USDA Foods: The Food Distribution Program on Indian Reservations” provides creative, regional recipes using FDPIR food options. Each recipe features sensible levels of fat, sodium and sugar without sacrificing taste. The recipes also list nutrition facts. The FDPIR has made great strides in providing access to nutritious foods and reducing food insecurity on Indian reservations. For more information on FDPIR, visit http://www. fns.usda.gov/programs-and-services. CN launches ‘Start by Believing’ campaign BY STAFF REPORTS TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – The Cherokee Nation and ONE FIRE Victim Services have launched a campaign throughout the tribe’s 14-county jurisdiction that focuses on improving the tribe’s public response to sexual assault. It’s called “Start by Believing.” “Victims of sexual crimes often choose to simply live with what happened rather than tell someone or ask for help...we are committed to doing our part and encouraging the Cherokee Nation to make it easier for victims to come forward,” Tonya Hunter, ONE FIRE Victim services advocate, said. The campaign launched with Principal Chief Bill John Baker officially signing the proclamation declaring the day “Start by Believing” Day. Employees were also sent emails including certificates of participation for them to sign, which stated, “My name is…and when someone tells me they were raped or sexually assaulted, I…Start by Believing.” For more information, visit www.startbybelieving.org. The ONE FIRE hotline is 1-866-458-5399 and is available for those who have been sexually assaulted and need help and resources. Murrow Indian Children’s Home in need of supplies BY STAFF REPORTS MUSKOGEE, Okla. – For more than 100 years, the Murrow Indian Children’s Home has provided a safe, home environment for Native American children from Oklahoma tribes. Through contracts with tribal and state governments Native children are placed there who either orphaned or are deprived of normal family care for various reasons. Currently the home is need of supplies including laundry detergent, 13-gallon garbage bags, sandwich bags, one-gallon and quart freezer bags, serving tongs, snacks, toothpaste, band aides, dishwashing soap, and napkins. The home also needs Comet cleaner, Pine Sol, Lysol, bleach, furniture polish and storage bags. Following the end of the Civil War in 1865, Rev. J.S. Murrow began taking orphaned and homeless Indian children into his home. In 1902, Murrow opened an orphan’s home in Atoka. In 1919, Rev. Murrow realized that considerably more support would be needed if the home were to meet the educational, spiritual and personal needs of the Indian children. He arranged for the American Baptist Mission Home Societies to take full responsibility for the home and it was moved to the campus of Bacone College in Muskogee. The MICH depends on monetary and inkind donations from various sources and also depends on volunteers and mentors for the children. The Cherokee Nation annually donates $5,000 and monetary donations are received from the Muscogee Creek and Sac & Fox Nations. The main fundraising event held for the home is an annual powwow held on the campus of the nearby Bacone College. This year’s powwow was held June 28. There are five cottages on the campus of Murrow Indian Children’s Home. Three of the cottages are devoted to the children and have the capacity to house 10 children each. One of the additional cottages is used for staff offices and one is used to house volunteers. Volunteers and mentors are always needed for the home as well as monetary and in-kind donations. For more information about the home or powwow, call 918-682-2586 or e-mail murrowhomedirector@gmail.com. Those interested in assisting the home may also visit www.murrowchildrenshome.org. 16 CHEROKEE PHOENIX • September 2014 People • xW Ewf #>hAmh • jlsd 2014 Blalock earns OBU track scholarship BY WILL CHAVEZ Senior Reporter Cherokee Nation citizen Ashley Snow prepares to set a volleyball while warming up during an Aug. 20 practice in Muskogee, Okla. Snow recently received an athletic scholarship to Bacone College. TESINA JACKSON/CHEROKEE PHOENIX Siblings receive athletic scholarships BY TESINA JACKSON Reporter MUSKOGEE, Okla. – After playing sports for a majority of their lives, Cherokee Nation citizens Ashley, Christian and Ajay Snow received athletic scholarships, something they feel has helped their family. “Well at one time he had four kids in college and by us getting athletic scholarships that makes it less money our dad has to pay,” Ashley, 22, said of her father Connie. “So we try to do what we can to help him out.” Ashley, who has played volleyball for 10 years, including two years at a college in Alabama, recently received a scholarship to play at Bacone College in Muskogee. Ashley, who will be a junior this fall, was notified about the scholarship in May. “The scholarship is important because it will help take some financial burdens off of my dad so he doesn’t have to pay my tuition and that stuff, and then being around my family here, too, is another important reason to me,” she said. Ashley said she’s excited for the atmosphere and smaller classes that Bacone has to offer. During the 2013-14 year, there were 965 students who attended Bacone. The 5-foot-11-inch outside hitter, from McIntosh, Ala., played two years at Faulkner State Community College in Bay Minette, Ala., after playing for several years for school and during camps. “Coming from a small town, there’s not really much to do but to play sports,” she said. “It was something to do after school but then it just grew on me. I started going to camp during the summer, I started getting a little better.” Ashley said her favorite part about playing volleyball is the aspect of being part of a team. “I like playing with others, being able to know that someone has my back,” she said. “It’s a team sport, somebody has to bump it, the perfect set and hitting.” Although Ashley doesn’t think she will play volleyball professionally because she is majoring in physical education, she sees herself coaching it and helping others play the sport that she has enjoyed over the years. However, her brother, Christian, 19, hopes to continue his baseball career after college. Christian will be a sophomore at Faulkner State this fall. “I decided to play baseball because it’s something I like to do and it helps my dad out so he doesn’t have to pay all of my tuition,” he said. “I received a full athletic scholarship that covers tuition and books. It’s important to me because by playing it’s helping me further my education, and hopefully in the future you will see me in the MLB.” TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – Cherokee Nation citizen Jordan Blalock has parlayed one season of track at Tahlequah High School into a college scholarship to Oklahoma Baptist University. He will be attending OBU in Shawnee on a track scholarship where he said he wants to continue to sprint and get faster. Blalock said for his senior year at THS he looked for a sport to replace baseball. He chose track though he had not participated in track since the sixth grade. He ran the 100 meters, 4 x 100 meters, 4 x 200 meters, and 4 x 400 meters. “I think I was better at it than baseball,” he said. At THS, he earned the “Sprint Athlete of the Year” award. He said he works out at the gym, runs and does sprints as he continues his quest of getting faster. “I sprint a lot and occasionally do some hills and stairs and a lot of block work,” he said. Block work is when he takes off sprinting from a starting block to simulate a race. This summer he competed for a chance to run in USA Track & Field events and qualified for the 2014 USATF National Junior Olympic Track & Field Championships in Humble, Texas, which were held July 21-27. He ran the 100-meter dash and finished in 33rd place out of 44 entries with a time of 11.26 seconds in the preliminary race. The winning time was 10.53 seconds. He said he is not proud of his finish but saw it as a learning experience. His track accomplishments this past year were good enough to earn him a partial scholarship to OBU. He said it is a “small scholarship” but is glad to get it and to have the opportunity to continue to run track in college. He is unsure what distances he will run for the Bison. “I’m sure I’ll stick with just sprints,” he said. He said his main goal for running track in college is to “get faster.” Christian, along with his brother Ajay, played on traveling baseball teams during their teenage years. Ajay, 21, attends the University of West Georgia in Carrolton, Ga., and like his brother, hopes to continue his baseball career in Major League Baseball. “I decided to play baseball because at an early age I noticed it is something I love to do,” he said. “I received a scholarship to play. It’s important to me right now because it’s helping pay my tuition and taking that stress off of my dad. Hopefully the hard work pays off in the future by me getting my degree and getting drafted.” Tahlequah High School sprinter Jordan Blalock did well enough in track this past school year to earn a college scholarship to Oklahoma Baptist University. COURTESY 2 Cherokee citizens win UNITY 25 Under 25 awards BY STAFF REPORTS MESA, Ariz. – Cherokee Nation citizens Nathalie Tomasik and Chelsea Wilson recently received inaugural United National Indian Tribal Youth Inc. 25 Under 25 Native Youth Leadership Awards, which are designed to celebrate the achievements of Native Americans and Alaskan Native youth. Tomasik, a Gates Millennium Scholar, attends Oklahoma City University where she majors in acting. As a Sequoyah High School graduate and member of its drama club, Tomasik, 19, acted in school productions. She also performed in several independent films. She is working as the lead in the upcoming independent film “The Heart Stays.” Tomasik has also participated in the tribe’s Remember the Removal bike ride, Cherokee National Youth Choir and Cherokee Tribal Youth Council. “I am thrilled and honored to receive this award as one of the 25 Under 25 honorees. This award is only given to Native youth who have proven themselves to be outstanding individuals and leaders,” Tomasik said. “Each honoree has their own set of skills, talents and ideas to help them impact their own communities. I would like to thank UNITY for this amazing opportunity to help me with my dreams, and my family and friends for always supporting and believing in me.” Wilson graduated from the University of Denver in 2012 with a degree in political science. She worked in the tribe’s Government Relation’s Office on top federal policy priorities. Wilson, 24, wrote congressional testimony, created a voter engagement project and developed a legislative portfolio highlighting economic development, health care and education. Wilson works in Washington, D.C., as a legislative assistant for the Native American Chelsea Wilson Contractors Association. “It meant the world to be nominated for UNITY’s 25 Under 25,” Wilson said. “I’ve been incredibly fortunate to have an amazing mentor, talented colleagues and a supportive family. So much of the work I did at the Cherokee Nation shaped who I am today and why I’m working on Native issues at the national level. I’m deeply honored to be recognized as one of UNITY’s 25 Under 25 and am looking forward to becoming a better leader through the program.” Wilson said that after a few years in D.C. she will be able to take the knowledge that she’s learned back to the CN and be better equipped to take on some of the issues the tribe faces. “I’m really humbled and excited to meet and see the other 24 amazing young people that have also won the award,” she said. “I think it’s going to be an amazing program and to be a part of the inaugural class, knowing that this is a new initiative of theirs, that makes it even more special.” Honorees were slated for recognition at a ceremony during the UNITY National Conference in Portland, Ore., with each receiving handmade beaded 25 Under 25 medallions. In addition to being recognized, each Nathalie awardee were to receive special training Tomasik by UNITY over a year that is designed to build on their individual achievements. The class will be recognized as UNITY ambassadors, serving as examples of Native youth leadership in Indian Country. “We are thrilled to announce and congratulate our first class of the UNITY 25 Under 25 awards program,” Mary Kim Titla, UNITY executive director, said. “Our regional voting panelists had a major task, vetting each candidate and narrowing the field to those who stood-out and exemplified what the UNITY organization has stood for, for the past 38 years. We look forward to seeing the honorees in Portland, and I encourage everyone to congratulate these outstanding individuals for putting their best foot forward in representing our tribal communities and Native youth leadership.” 2014 Ewf #>hAmh • jlsd People • xW September 2014 • CHEROKEE PHOENIX 17 WNBA players Goodrich, Schimmel honored by tribes BY STAFF REPORTS TULSA, Okla. – Oklahoma’s Native American community presented a special tribute at the BOK Center to honor Tulsa Shock guard and Cherokee Nation citizen Angel Goodrich and the Atlanta Dream’s rookie Native sensation and All-Star MVP Shoni Schimmel. Schimmel is a citizen of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Reservation in Washington. Principal Chief Bill John Baker joined Muscogee (Creek) Principal Chief George Tiger and Osage Nation Principal Chief Geoffrey Standing Bear for pregame activities. “Angel and Shoni both had outstanding college careers and now have taken that next step as a pro. They are immensely talented and successful and true role models for young Native people,” Baker said. “Without really asking for it, they have become ambassadors for tribal citizens nationwide and that carries some extra pressure. I respect them for their class and maturity as much as I do for their creative brand of basketball. All of Indian Country want to see them thrive because there is so much Native pride in seeing them win and receive the highest accolades.” The MCN Office of Public Relations, in coordination with the Tulsa Shock, presented a pregame event that featured more than 50 dancers representing most of the state’s 38 federally recognized tribes. Native Americans dressed in their respective traditional attire covered the arena floor in an intertribal dance accompanied by the drumbeats and songs of a local singing group the “Redland Singers.” “Through the athletic talents and accomplishments of Native American athletes such as Angel and Shoni, they’ve united and inspired youth and tribal members, not only in Oklahoma, but across the United States,” Tiger said. “Native Americans are showing their pride and appreciation wherever they appear, pride in their accomplishments and pride in their traditions and cultures. It is a unifying phenomenon that we want to perpetuate.” This was the first meeting between the Shock’s second year guard and the Dream’s rookie sensation. Both were highly recruited following successful collegiate careers at Kansas University and the University of Louisville, respectively. The Shock lost to the Dream 85-75. The two teams were to play each other again on Aug. 15 in Atlanta with the Shock losing 76-92. The Dream made the playoffs while Tulsa didn’t. Tulsa Shock guard and Cherokee Nation citizen Angel Goodrich, right, and the Atlanta Dream’s rookie Native sensation and WNBA All-Star MVP Shoni Schimmel, a citizen of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Reservation in Washington, run down the court during a July 31 game in Tulsa, Okla. This was the first meeting between the two players. CHELSIE RICH/MVSKOKE MEDIA Landrum taught reservations about narcotics BY STACIE GUTHRIE Reporter Faye Morrison, right, and her sister Kaye Callaway received their commemorative 50- and 45-year service pins respectively this year for service to the Veteran’s of Foreign War Auxiliary in Tahlequah, Okla. JAMI MURPHY/CHEROKEE PHOENIX Sisters unite for 95 years of VFWA service BY JAMI MURPHY Reporter TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – Cherokee Nation citizens and sisters Faye Morrison and Kaye Callaway have been members of the Tahlequah Veteran’s of Foreign War Auxiliary since age 16. They said it’s one of the ways they give back to their country and community. Morrison recently received her 50-year membership pin from the organization to which she said she was proud to have. She got involved with the VFWA because her parents were and it was just what you did back then, she said. “We just were always a patriotic family,” Morrison said. And patriotism is what has kept her a member for 50 years, she said. “We just always had that in the back of our minds,” she said. “It was what our parents did, and we just felt like it was the thing to do. What little we could do to give back to serve our country in what way we could.” Callaway, a retired teacher who recently received her 45-year pin, said during the years she hasn’t been as active as her sister because of different things that keep her busy, but she’s always tried to help. “You know through the year I had the school, OEA – Oklahoma Education Association. Then during the summer, I worked with the Tahlequah Girls Softball League, so you know my year was full. But when it came to convention time, we’d usually all go to the state convention,” Callaway said. “And it was just kind of like that’s how we were raised to give back to the community. It’s not ‘give me something.’ It’s ‘what can I do for you.’” Morrison said she and her sister remember their mother being involved in the VFWA. Before they were old enough to go into the Veterans Affairs hospital in Muskogee, she said, her mother organized bingo games there for veterans. “I guess when it was not school time, of course, she couldn’t get a baby sitter and back then it was OK just to let your kids run around out in the parking lot. Of course, Honor Heights Park was right there. She did that for I don’t know how many years,” Morrison said, “probably at least 50 years. Once I got old enough I started going with her and helping her. For the last 30 years, I’ve been what they call the representative and it’s my job to go over and put the party on. Used to be hers, now it’s mine.” Callaway said she enjoyed helping at the hospital as a young woman. “It was really neat back then because we were young and we got to help all of these old men, you know. And at that time they had those cards where you slide the little red over when you get a number, and we would help them do that and ‘oh you missed one’ and, you know, their prizes were socks and bar soap, a tooth brush, a comb…and they thought they were getting a pot of gold,” Callaway said. Morrison said sometimes she dreads driving to Muskogee, but that feeling leaves her when she gets there. “Sometimes I think ‘Ugh, the second Tuesday of the month and I’ve got to go to Muskogee, drive over there, hot cold, rain, shine,’” Morrison said. “But you make somebody happy, even if it’s just one person.” The VFWA has received more than 300 combined years of volunteer service from all the female members in sisters’ family, all of which are or were Cherokee, dating back to the 1950s. Not only have the women been involved, but they have also had men serve as well, including their father Luther Hammons and brother Jerry E. Hammons. To be a member, a woman 16 years or older must have a family member that has served in a foreign war. TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – Cherokee Nation citizen and retired Drug Enforcement Administration special agent Tim Landrum spent much of his DEA career educating and preventing drug use within Native American tribes in the Southwest. Landrum worked as the special agent in charge or SAC in Arizona, where there was a need for drug intervention. He saw a need for more education, resources and training on Arizona reservations. “We saw a strong influx of methamphetamines, marijuana, alcohol use on the reservations,” he said. “Obviously, with my back ground in the Cherokee Nation...we really partnered up with our community leaders, our FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation), ATF (Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives), our other agencies and went to some of the different reservations and the chiefs. We put together a meeting and round table discussions and tried to see how could we come in, not just from an enforcement perspective” One reservation considered a successful drug prevention programs was the Arizona Salt River Community. Landrum said it served as a successful example when reaching out to tribes. “It was really a successful program, and I just saw a huge void within the tribal entities, and I just felt that it was something that needed to be done,” he said. “It had not been done on the southwest border, so it was kind of a new approach they way we did this collectively, together. We were very successful and it set a model and was utilized throughout other places in the United States. We were really proud of it. Our approach continued to show good results.” Landrum said it was important to speak with tribal officials before bringing in the operation. “Normally, we would target those that we had intelligence or information on within the different tribes,” he said. “We always asked. We wanted to partner up with them so we could do it together and then at the end show our success, rather than us just go in covertly and just do it and not have the partnership.” Tribal citizens from the Bureau of Indian Affairs were asked to join the operation because of their knowledge and experience. Landrum said while working with the reservations there was a large amount of narcotics coming from the U.S./Mexico border. “It is a serious issue, especially Arizona being on the southwest border.” Landrum served 26 years with the DEA and recently retired. 18 CHEROKEE PHOENIX • September 2014 Culture • i=nrplcsd Cherokee artist Jeffrey L. Watt carves an eagle out of deer antler on Aug. 4 at his Tahlequah, Okla., home. Watt has been carving since 2012 and creates pieces ranging from necklaces to knife handles. PHOTOS BY STACIE GUTHRIE/CHEROKEE PHOENIX Watt strives to enlighten others with his artwork Jeffrey L. Watt is a deaf Cherokee artist who creates art in different media. BY STACIE GUTHRIE Reporter TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – Cherokee Nation citizen Jeffrey L. Watt is a multitalented artist who excels at different artistic crafts despite being deaf. His wife, Cheryl Watt, signed to Jeffrey during the Cherokee Phoenix’s interview, and in turn, relayed his answers. Jeffrey took an interest to art when he was 7 years old. He said that’s when his teacher opened his mind about the art world and what it had to offer. “I started doing my art and I grew up and I saw other people’s art and I really liked it. I just started learning it all,” he said. “The teacher taught me how and he showed me and he opened up my mind to make me understand. I know I’m really happy doing my art and it’s hard.” It wasn’t until 2012 that Jeffrey learned to carve. That’s when Cherokee artist Levi Springwater gave Jeffrey a Dremel tool and showed him how to carve. “It looked hard, but whenever I started doing it, it was easy and I’m really fast at it,” he said. “In my mind, I know things. I know how to make things. I use my imagination when I carve and it’s really cool.” He said his first carved piece was a feather from abalone shell. From there, he said he carved animals, knife handles, necklaces and other items from deer or elk antlers. “He’s perfect with eagles,” Cheryl said. “His clan is the Bird Clan. So I thought that was pretty cool that, that’s his favorite.” Jeffrey said the carvings that receive the most attention are his rose necklaces carved from deer antlers. Aside from his carvings, Jeffrey creates necklaces, wood burnings, paintings, gourd art, emu egg shell art, murals and even paintings on Cherokee artist Jeffrey L. Watt also creates necklaces. Some seen here are rose, spider and feather necklaces. old windows that can be hung inside the house. Cheryl said people appreciate Jeffrey’s art because many times it holds sentimental value for the buyer. “Some people cherish it because when he does the wood burnt portraits, a lot of times their parents or their child has passed away and they want to remember that person,” she said. Cheryl said Jeffrey is a visual artist – if he sees it he can replicate it. Jeffrey said he believes that he has a special talent and is thankful for it. “When I was little growing up and doing my art and learning it, and in my mind, I knew that God wanted to give this gift to me to open up my mind and my heart to do all kinds of different artwork so that I can help other people and show other people and support other people and to teach people and to help kids,” he said. As his fan base grows, he said he feels more humble by the people who take interest in his art. “Thank you so much for supporting me,” he said. “I appreciate you so much and thank you so much for supporting me.” Cheryl said she is proud of her husband and how he has progressed his life. “When I first met him, he showed me his art, but nobody else had seen his art,” she said. “I want the world to see how amazing this man is with his art, and he’s so sweet and sincere. Not only has he grown as a person, but he’s grown as an artist. He’s just a better person.” In the future, Jeffrey said he would like to produce kids books that teach how to create different types of art and illustrate an art book that would tell different Native American stories. Jeffrey’s art can be found at the Cherokee Heritage Center in Park Hill and at the Cherokee Gift Shop, Light Eyes Beads and One Feather Books in Tahlequah. His art can also be found online at eBay and Pinterest by searching Jeffrey L. Watt. For more information, visit his Facebook page www.facebook.com/jeffreylwatt or www. jeffreylwatt.com. Cherokee artist Jeffrey L. Watt shows some of his wood burning art. Watt wood burns portraits, landscapes and animals. Cherokee artist Jeffrey L. Watt sits with his wife Cheryl Watt and daughter Violet Watt at their Tahlequah, Okla., home. Ewf #>hAmh • jlsd 2014 2014 Ewf #>hAmh • jlsd Culture • i=nrplcsd September 2014 • CHEROKEE PHOENIX 19 Belcher excels in field of music LaNice Belcher started with the clarinet but now plays the bassoon. they were. That was an adventure.” Each day, for three days, Belcher said she and the group practiced for more than 25 hours. “We rehearsed just a huge amount. We got through all the music. I have no idea how,” she said. “I know it was bad because I woke up in the morning and my lips were already bleeding on my pillow.” Although Belcher had to continuously practice, she said it was all worth it. “I learned more than just the music. I learned how to mentor, how to teach better,” she said. “That’s really what I was trying to accomplish is learning how to teach because that’s what I want to do for the rest of my life. I want to teach music.” For the foreseeable future, Belcher is looking to marching band season, All-District tryouts and Tulsa Youth Symphony chair tryouts. She said when preparing for auditions she starts two months in advance and practices three to four times a week for two hours. She said when it gets to the two-week mark she’s constantly practicing and thinking about her music. BY STACIE GUTHRIE Reporter TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – Since an early age, Cherokee Nation citizen LaNice Belcher has proved that she can excel in the musical field, reaching new heights each time she plays. The 16-year-old sophomore at Tahlequah High School is the only bassoonist in the school band. However, playing the bassoon was not her first instrument choice. “Actually, I really never had an interest for it (the bassoon),” she said. “My first instrument I wanted to play was tuba or saxophone, and that’s the only reason I got in band. I started out on clarinet because I can’t play either of those other instruments. I couldn’t play any instrument besides the clarinet.” She said her-then band director Harvey Price inspired her to strive for the best when it came to music. “I was the one who stayed in there until he (Price) left, practicing,” she said. “Within three months, I was first chair out of 26 clarinets. I was just doing really good.” After Belcher’s success on the clarinet, she said Price approached her and asked her to play the bassoon. She said she had no idea what the bassoon really was until she switched to it when she was 12 years old. “Once I started actually playing it and getting the notes down and not being frustrated, it really got enjoyable,” she said. Belcher said since her time on the bassoon she has competed in competitions, including All-District and All-State. “Last year, I was trying out for All-State and Cherokee Nation citizen LaNice Belcher practices her bassoon on Aug. 15 at her home in Tahlequah, Okla. Belcher has been playing the bassoon for four years. STACIE GUTHRIE/CHEROKEE PHOENIX that’s everyone across Oklahoma,” she said. “On the list there was 50 bassoons, I was one of 50 bassoons trying out. It got pretty competitive.” Orchestra pits are also something she strives for, participating in orchestra pits for Northeastern State University and various operas. In June, Belcher took part in the 2014 OK Mozart Festival in Bartlesville. “That was a really good experience because the Amici Orchestra from New York City was there and we kind of had a mentorship program going on,” she said. “It was great. I got a lot of one-on-one time.” Belcher said she learned the orchestra that would be preforming during the festival needed a bassoonist to fill a position. Within four days of receiving the initial phone call, she received the music she needed to learn. “I looked at it about an hour and a half before I got to the rehearsal,” she said. “It was about 11 pages. It was extremely difficult. I had to learn new notes because of how ridiculously high “Any chance I get I’m practicing,” she said. “It means a lot to me.” Belcher said being in band and striving for the best in her musical career was not always the easiest of tasks and advises others wanting to learn to play an instrument to not give up. “Honestly, it’s going to be hard. It is extremely difficult. You’re going to get so frustrated whether is with your instrument or with your director. You will want to quit. You will want to give up, but the thing is if you do you won’t have anything after that,” she said. “We’re a family and you’re not going to have that. Whenever you quit you won’t have that support anymore, but if you just keep going you’re going to reap so many benefits. It helps you academically. It helps you emotionally, especially.” CNHS honored for preservation work BY STAFF REPORTS Feather Smith Trevino explains the game of Cherokee stickball during a tour of the Diligwa Village in Park Hill, Okla. In the background villagers demonstrate how the game is played. WILL CHAVEZ/CHEROKEE PHOENIX CHC offers free admission during Labor Day weekend BY STAFF REPORTS PARK HILL, Okla. – The Cherokee Heritage Center will offer free admission during Labor Day weekend, Aug. 30-31, as the center takes part in the annual Cherokee National Holiday. During the weekend there will be more than 60 Native arts and crafts booths, fair-style vendors, Cherokee games and an opportunity to see the permanent Trail of Tears exhibit in the CHC’s museum. Also, the annual Cherokee Homecoming Art Show will be on display in the museum. The show features authentic Cherokee art and is considered one of Oklahoma’s most prominent art shows. Cherokee artwork is judged in traditional and contemporary divisions. The traditional division is defined as arts originating before European contact and consists of four categories including basketry, jewelry and beading, pottery and traditional arts. The contemporary division is defined as arts arising among the Cherokee after European contact, and consists of five categories including paintings, sculpture, pottery, basketry and textiles. Tours of Diligwa, a Cherokee village set in 1710, will be offered for $2 every half hour. Diligwa features 19 wattle and daub structures, 14 interpretive stations. Visitors can witness daily Cherokee life in 1710 as they are guided through the interpretive stations where crafts are demonstrated, stories are told and Cherokee life ways are explained. Diligwa is a name derivative of Tellico, a village in the east that was once the principal Cherokee town and is now underwater. Tellico was the Cherokee Nation capital and center of commerce before the emergence of Echota in Monroe County, Tenn. The CHC has been committed to telling the story of the Cherokee since 1967. The center was built on the original site of the Cherokee National Female Seminary, the first institution of higher learning for women west of the Mississippi River. Offering exhibits, cultural workshops, living history and events throughout the year, the CHC also includes the Adams Corner Rural Village, Nofire Farms, Cherokee Family Research Center and the Cherokee National Archives. The CHC is located at 21192 S. Keeler Dr. For information, call 1-888-999-6007, email info@cherokeeheritage.org or visit http:// www.CherokeeHeritage.org. OKLAHOMA CITY – The Cherokee National Historical Society was recently recognized for its work to preserve and protect a rare tintype photograph of Ned Christie with his half-brother Jim Christie, one of only a few images of the legendary Cherokee senator, recently at the Oklahoma State Capitol. Also, the CNHS was accepted into the “Top 10 Artifacts: Saving Oklahoma’s Heritage” Program. In addition to being accepted into the program, the CNHS was presented with a Cultural Heritage Stewardship Award signed by Gov. Mary Fallin, State Sen. Wayne Shaw and Rep. Mike Brown. The award recognizes the society’s commitment to the preservation of Oklahoma’s rich culture and heritage. “Each year thousands of visitors have the opportunity to experience and enjoy irreplaceable treasures in institutions across the state,” Susan Feller, co-project director of the Oklahoma Cultural Heritage Trust, said. “This program allows us to assist with ongoing efforts to provide for the proper care of these items and ensure their preservation to allow future generations to continue to enjoy these cherished treasures.” The rare tintype photograph is one of 10 artifacts from institutions across Oklahoma accepted into a program sponsored by the trust. The program increases awareness and support for items that illuminate, celebrate and preserve the story of Oklahoma. Organizations from across the state nominated items for consideration. In selecting the top 10, a committee considered the uniqueness of the item and its importance to Oklahoma. Additional consideration was given to the level of commitment the nominating organization has exhibited to being good stewards of historical collections. The other nine items accepted included the Frank Griggs Cellulose Nitrate and Acetate Negatives, circa 1938-1950 from the Bartlesville Area History Museum; the Dr. Orange Starr Collection, circa 1915 from the Drumright Historical Society Museum; Woodring Wall of Honor, circa 2000 from the Woodring Wall of Honor; and the Oklahoma Colored Agricultural & Normal University teaching certificates book, circa early-1900s from the Melvin B. Tolson Black Heritage Center. Jack Baker and Mary Ellen Meredith, delegates from the Cherokee National Historical Society, accept the Cultural Heritage Stewardship Award alongside State Sen. Wayne Shaw, right, recently at the Oklahoma State Capitol in Oklahoma City. COURTESY 20 CHEROKEE PHOENIX • September 2014 Ewf #>hAmh • jlsd 2014