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tribal courtSharon Edenfield Slated to Replace Lisa BrownLooks like it's going to be Sharon Edenfield and she'll be appointed at a Special Tribal Council Meeting tomorrow morning, June19. The meeting isn't shown on the official tribal website. Sharon appears to be intelligent and knowledgeable about tribal affairs. It's not likely, however, that she'll be an independent voice on the tribal council. In all probability, this appointment will increase Chairman Pigsley's power base on the Tribal Council to a lopsided 7-2 majority. Recall that Sharon Edenfield served as interim director of Siletz Tribal Business Corp (STBC) in 2007 after Henry Cagey was fired. She served until Dave Tovey came aboard to assume the helm of the sinking STBC ship last year. She is the mother of Election Board member, Felicia Carmona, and is now holding the job of Admin Manager, one of the top paying positions of employment in the tribe. It will be interesting to see if she retains her high-paying position while holding office, as so many Tribal Council members have. Sharon Edenfield can be reached at (541) 444-2532 x1202 or sharone@ctsi.nsn.us According to well-connected sources, Phil Rilatos had been asked if he was interested in taking Lisa's Browns position before the expulsion proceedings began. Many will find it surprising that Dee Pigsley didn't pick Rilatos, whom she endorsed in the elections and who won the second highest number of votes this year of available alternates. It would have, at least, been a nod to the voters in a year when few gestures of respect for the voters have been forthcoming from the Tribal Chairman. One wonders what role Chairman Pigsley sees the voters as having in choosing Tribal Council members, but this appointment presents an even deeper problem. The Tribal Council knows very well that Lisa Brown's case is still underway. Tribal attorney, LeeAnn Easton informed the Tribal Council last Friday that Brown still has time to file for an appeal. I'm not saying that Brown is likely to win an appeal, but what kind of situation would filling the vacancy she left put the tribe into if she did win her appeal? And how could any action prejudice Lisa's case more than seating someone in her place while her case is still in progress?
An Open Letter to the Siletz Tribal Membership
My name is Delores Riding In, and I have been a Siletz Tribal member since 1978. My father was four years old when he was kidnapped from his parents (for bounty money) and incarcerated in Chilocco Indian boarding school in Oklahoma. He enlisted in the Army straight out of boarding school, and served in Korea as a medic. After the Army my father, a full-blood Pawnee Indian man, earned his bachelor's degree and enrolled in medical school. I believe his studies in medical school triggered PTSD for him, because he dropped out of medical school and enrolled instead in law school. In 1959, he graduated from Northwestern College of Law with a J.D., while working full-time as a radiologist. My father was among the first six or seven full-blood Indians in the history of the U.S. to earn a law degree. He never passed the Oregon State Bar because he had never been taught to write in longhand in boarding school, and he couldn't meet the time requirement. I often think of my father, being forced by the white people to stand on his own as a four-year-old. His life is the standard I use when it becomes necessary to judge an Indian man. I was raised during a time and in a place where Indian men lived honorable lives, and held positions of status and respect because they did whatever had to be done to feed, care for, and protect tribal women and children. I was in Tribal Court today, and I heard Tribal Judge Calvin Gantenbein, who is white, make a racist comment. His exact words were, "Tribal Council didn't make me the Chief of anything around here!" As you know, "Chief" is a derogatory word that white men use to describe all Indian males. In spite of his many accomplishments, my father was called "Chief" his entire life. He hated it, and so did my mom. The word is meant to demean Indian men, and disregard them as individuals with names and titles of their own. This comment from Judge Gantenbein was made while he sat, often smirking, directly beneath a staff of eagle feathers that hangs on the wall! I was raised in the Indian way, and that means men and women each have their own roles. The traditional job of the Indian man is to fight our enemies. The Siletz Tribe can and will go bankrupt, exactly like the AIG, and the Wall Street banks. Secret deals worth millions of tribal dollars have gone out to non-tribal people, and are covered up to this day. Millions of tribal dollars are still “missing.” I am asking for the help of tribal members, and Siletz tribal men in particular, to step up to the plate and take a stand. Women like Lisa Brown and myself are growing tired of fighting on our own. If we are going to be an Indian tribe, then we must act according to Indian ways. A long time ago, when we still lived as native people, if a man attacked a woman he was immediately exiled by the other men. It was too disruptive to the people, disrespectful, and caused too many bad feelings. I recall reading about native women going into battle and cutting the enemy’s bow strings, because the men wouldn’t touch them. A true Native man would never attack a woman, the way Robert Kentta has been allowed to attack Lisa. THIS WAS NOT OUR WAY. I encourage the men of the Siletz Tribe to fulfill their traditional role, and fight together to save this tribe, before there is nothing left to save. Delores Riding In can be reached at siletzwoman@nativeweb.net
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