April 2015 KOGI 97.7 – The Biggest Radio

Transcription

April 2015 KOGI 97.7 – The Biggest Radio
April 2015
Tribal Department
Contact Information
Tribal Administration
P.O. Box 700
825 S. Main St.
Big Pine, Ca 93513
Office No. 760-938-2003
Fax No. 760-938-2942
Tribal Historic Preservation
Office No. 760-938-2003
Fax No. 760-938-2942
Utility Department
Office No. 760-938-2003
Fax No. 760-938-2942
Tribal Court Clerk/ ICWA
Specialist
Office No. 760-938-2003
Fax No. 760-938-2942
Environmental Department
Office No. 760-938-2003
Fax No. 760-938-2942
CDD Housing Department
Office No. 760-938-2003
Fax No. 760-938-2942
Education Center
Office No. 760-938-2530
Fax No. 760-938-3125
BP Paiute Development
Corporation
Office No. 760-938-2800
Fax No. 760-938-2942
KOGI 97.7 – The Biggest Radio Station on the Rez
After about 10 years in development, the tribe has its own radio station. Media justice advocates and
community groups were able to push forward the Local Community Radio Act after a decade of
struggle in 2011 to open up the airwaves to issue permits for brand new noncommercial FM radio
licenses. In 2013, the FCC allowed new radio station applications for a period of one month and the
tribe was able to put in its paperwork with the help of Prometheus Radio Project. It was consequently issued a radio station construction permit. The Tribe received a grant from Metabolic Studio in
2014 to purchase radio equipment to set up a studio and transmission site. Last month, Allan Gomez
and Will Floyd from Prometheus Radio Project came to the Reservation from Philadelphia and
helped put together the radio station. On the evening of March 24 th, the tribe tested out the equipment and found that the station was clear at every location on the Reservation. In fact, the tribe’s
station could be heard all the way in Bishop.
The tribe’s station, KOGI 97.7, will be up and running soon. KOGI will provide a diverse line-up of
music, news, community events, cultural information, entertainment, etc…so get your radios out of
storage, dust them off and tune them to 97.7.
KOGI would like to thank everyone who helped out to make this possible. It was hard work getting
to this point, but the end result will be a better connected community leading to an improved quality
of life.
Congratulations Big Pine Paiute Tribe of the Owens Valley for pushing forward to become the 4th
tribe in California to operate a tribal radio station!
Opens June 19th
Nawanaki – Ti Market 2015
Fridays 5:30pm - Dusk
Produce * Prepared Foods * Crafts
Mark your calendars, the Nawanaki-Ti Market season opens on June 19th 2015! The 2014 season was an astounding second year success. The consistent number of weekly vendors doubled that of the 2013 inaugural season and the amount
of revenue earned per vendor was estimated to be tripled. Building on the foundation of the first two years this upcoming third
year has the potential to be another landmark year! A true feeling of establishment is in the air as spring rolls in and we prepare
to anchor ourselves in and spread our roots further. Hopefully our little market venue can be viewed as a little less avant-garde
and a little more as annual tradition.
2015 market vendor applications are available now in the Tribal office and at the Environmental Department office.
Having these applications filled out and turned in early at the Tribal office or the Environmental Department office would be
extremely helpful to the Nawanaki-Ti Market management. We look forward to seeing you there!
Joseph Miller – Market Manager
Household Hazardous Waste Collection Event
Big Pine Transfer Station
Saturday May 2, 2015, 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon
Also at Bishop Sunland Landfill Sat. April 11
Items Accepted
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Paints/Stains
Oil/Oil Filters
Herbicides
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Solvents
Anti-Freeze
Old Diesel/Gas
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Pesticides
Insecticides
Bleach/Cleaners
Transmission Fluid
Disposal sites can accept no more than 20-gallons per visit in no larger than 5-gallon containers. Clear out old
stuff for safety and peace of mind! Contact the Tribal Environmental Department for more information or assistance.
MANAGING WASTE ON THE RESERVATION
YOUR OPINIONS = OUR DATA
Please fill out the survey form included in this newsletter.
Return it to the Environmental Department
for a chance to win $100
(in gift cards to local businesses).
Survey is for Tribal community members ages 18 and up.
Enter soon. Drawing is May 1.
KOGI 97.7 on your FM dial – What’s in a
Name? By Sally Manning, Environmental Director
Why KOGI? As I write this, the Big
Pine Tribe’s new low power FM
radio station is about to burst into
bloom! Did you know that kogi is
an Owens Valley Paiute word for
the mariposa lily plant? Mariposa
lily flowers bloom from spring into
summer, depending on elevation.
Mariposa means butterfly in Spanish,
and the flowers not only attract
butterflies, they also are as large as
some butterflies. Another name for them is
“sego lily,” with sego being a Great Basin area Native American word
referring to their edible and nutritious bulb.
As a botanist, I know the kogi as belonging to the genus Calochortus (which comes from Greek,
meaning “beautiful grass”). Mariposa lily species occur only in Western North America and down into
Central America. There are at least four species in our area.
There are many things the four species share in
common. Most notably: They are so beautiful!
They should take your breath away when you see
them growing up through rocks and scruffy bushes,
from the valley floor to high into the pinyon pines
and junipers. The tulip-like flowers have 3 petals; in
fact, the plant parts are in 3’s or multiples of 3’s.
Typically the petals appear white, but they may be
pale greenish, pinkish, or bluish, especially on the
back side of the petal. The exception is the desert
mariposa lily, C. kennedyi, which is typically
intensely bright orange. We also have a variation
in color in this species: rather than orange, some flowers in the Inyo Mountains (on the east slope) are
bright yellow. One of the white-flowered species, C. excavatus, grows only in meadows of the Owens
watershed, and it is considered an endangered species due to groundwater pumping by Los Angeles
Department of Water and Power.
The mariposa lily flower is relatively large, maybe 1
to 2 ½ inches in diameter, which is in contrast to its
slender stem and sparse, grass-like leaves. It is a
perennial herb, meaning it persists most of the year
as a bulb a few inches under the ground. In late
winter, a leaf emerges at ground level. Later in
spring or in summer, particularly in wet years, it
sends up a stem, and may produce 1-5 short-lived
flowers. That’s it. After pollination, the petals fall
off and a fruit with 3 seed chambers grows from the
center. It is not clearly known if the seeds are
edible.
However, the underground bulbs are edible. Often
when you see one mariposa lily, if you look around
you may notice you are in a patch of them. Sites
like this were probably harvested by the ancestors,
and tradition tells us they did not take everything –
always leaving some bulbs behind to become food
in future years.
Due to their beauty, mariposa lilies attract gardeners, but they have not adapted well to a garden
setting, seeming to prefer the wild! It’s great to think of this stunning, native, nutritious,
enduring plant that inhabits the wide open spaces as the symbol for the Big Pine Tribe’s
presence on the air waves of your home.
Earth Day is April 22
By Sally Manning, Environmental Director
Isn’t EVERY day Earth Day? One may try to live that way, but it’s not
always easy. Also, we look around and see so many things people do,
intentionally and unintentionally, that harm the earth. Earth is resilient, to
a point, and in the end, they say, Earth Bats Last!
How will you celebrate Earth Day? This year it falls on a Wednesday during
a busy week for many. If you can’t make time Wednesday, still consider
doing something as an individual or family. Perhaps this is a good time to:
 Assess what’s in your household trash, and vow to find alternatives
that result in less waste.
 Take in things to recycle and other things to the area Thrift Stores.
 Create something useful out of seeming waste.
 Get out and clean litter around your neighborhood.
 Turn off and unplug anything you’re not using.
 Go on a hike, bike ride, or picnic.
 Go fishing.
 Explore for flowers, rocks, bugs, birds, or signs of the past.
 Photograph or draw a natural subject.
 Write a poem or song or dedicate a prayer of appreciation.
 Go a day or more without using your car (find earth-friendly alternatives)
 Prepare and share a healthy meal.
If you’d like to join with other people, consider participating in one of the following:
 On Saturday April 18, 10 a.m. to 1:00 p.m., the Tribal Environmental
Department will join with the Housing/CDD for workshops on green Creative Ideas
for Around the Home. Environmental will have:
o information on how to Recycle,
o a chance to take the Waste Survey (and enter the drawing)
o ideas for fire safe landscaping, and
o how to get started with composting.
 On Saturday April 18, the Lone Pine Paiute Shoshone Reservation is
hosting a “One Earth, One Chance” Earth Day Celebration. It begins at 9 a.m. at
the Tribal Gymnasium, 975 Teya Road with a roadside clean up. At 10 a.m. there
will be a community fair, which will end about noon.
 Also on Saturday April 18, Earth Day will be celebrated in Bishop City Park,
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Here you may: take a ride on a human-powered ferris wheel, visit with the folks who
study the Sierra Nevada Bighorn Sheep, learn how Eastern Sierra Wildlife Care rescues and rehabilitates
injured wild animals, or join the fun playing a recycling game. You may also bring used batteries for disposal,
shop for interesting crafts, sample the food booths, and listen to live entertainment.
 The 46th annual Manzanar Pilgrimage takes place Saturday April 25 at Manzanar National Historic Site. This
year’s theme is: “Continuing our Civil Rights Legacy.” In fact, pilgrimage-related events happen all weekend,
but the keynote speakers and taiko drumming begin about noon on Saturday. Everyone is welcome.
 Also on Saturday April 25, Los Angeles Department of Water and Power and Friends of the Inyo are teaming
with others to sponsor a bird weekend at Owens Lake. This also coincides with Opening Day of Fishing Season
in the high country.
In sum, there are many ways to be part of Earth Day 2015!
ORGANIC LUXURY?
By Joseph Miller
Community Garden Specialist
In a society where health has become an ever increasing issue, many Americans are turning attention
to their dinner plates for the first step toward a healthy lifestyle. In the present age, the conscious market
consumer is more aware than ever of genetic modification and pesticides in the food that we are putting in
our bodies and the negative effect they can have on our personal health. Many retailers have caught on to
this new health awareness in American society and have filled the gap in the demand for these goods. In
doing so, they have created a market niche on a product with a moderately limited supply that has enabled
them to gain a notable profit from the sale of these goods.
With the average markup on natural or organic
foods being anywhere from 30 to 100 percent, this can
make quite an impact on the amount of money spent
monthly by individuals and families on food expenses. On
average, a local family of 2 adults and 2 children spend
$110 dollars per week on groceries, with limited
consideration to organic or natural foods. If individuals and
families were to concentrate on purchasing organic or
natural products, weekly expenses would likely increase in
range from $143 to $220 dollars. These figures beg me to
ask this question, “Is eating good, natural food now
considered a luxury?” I find it disheartening that lower
income populations are being forced by price to purchase
food which has been genetically modified and treated with
poisonous chemicals while the rich are consuming good,
natural food. These feelings urge me to pose another
question, “Is there something that we as a community or
society as a whole can do about this? “
Today the same consciousness that spawned organic food awareness has given birth to ideas that
focus on solving the organic luxury dilemma. Good food advocate groups believe that individuals should
have a right to know what is in the food we put in our bodies and that all people should have food choices
regardless of income. We are now seeing these groups creating outlets such as co-op’s, food banks, CSA’s and
farmers markets. The state of California has even jumped on the bandwagon with such supplemental
programs as WIC farmers market vouchers and the EBT farm fresh program. Both of those programs offer
additional funds to supplemental benefits already received by recipients of WIC and EBT for purchasing fresh
fruits and vegetables from participating farmers markets.
Currently, the county’s WIC program is offering farmers market vouchers that can be used at farmers
markets in the county with WIC certified vendors. The EBT Farm Fresh program is being considered by the
Nawanaki-ti Market to enable residents to have the means to purchase healthy fruits and vegetables
throughout its upcoming season. If this program could be implemented here on our reservation this would
create a fantastic opportunity for families with supplemental state benefits to have the choice to purchase
fresh locally grown fruits and veggies from any produce vendor selling at the Nawanaki-ti market. My hope
is that residents take advantage of the state run programs because they provide healthy food alternatives
for our community and help reduce the inequality created from the current organic food luxury dilemma.
Are lower income
populations being
forced by price to
purchase food which
has been genetically
modified and treated
with poisonous
chemicals?
SEED KEEPER TRAINING
RE-SCHEDULED
When: Saturday May 2 & Sunday May 3, 9am-5pm
Where: The Bishop Paiute-Shoshone Cultural Center
Due to an illness, we have had to re-schedule our Seed Keepers Workshop.
We wish a speedy recovery to the instructor, Rowen White, and look forward to still offering this training this Spring.
The Good news is, we
still have spots available!
Please join us for this 2-day in-depth and hands on training on the
re-integration of seed stewardship back into our farms and gardens. Seed
Keepers focuses on empowering and equipping indigenous leaders with the
knowledge and tools of seed saving practices to
create sustainability and food sovereignty in their communities.
The workshop will be facilitated by Rowan White, a Seed Keeper from the
Mohawk community of Akwesasne and a passionate activist for seed sovereignty. Currently, Rowen is the director and founder of the Sierra Seeds, an
innovative organic seed cooperative focusing on local seed production and
education, based in Nevada City CA. She teaches creative seed training immersions around the country within tribal and small farming communities.
Find her website at www.sierraseeds.org
To register, please contact Alan Bacock at 760-938-2003.
Please bring a potluck item for lunches. Light refreshments will also be provided.
Sponsored by:
The Indigenous Farming Project
The Bishop Paiute Tribe & The Big Pine Tribe
News from the Tribal Historic Preservation Office
by Bill Helmer, Tribal Historic Preservation Officer
Inyo County Board of Supervisors Will Vote on the Renewable Energy General Plan Amendment
(REGPA) on Tuesday, March 24, 2015.
Despite not completing consultation with the Big Pine Paiute Tribe on the proposed REGPA per state law
SB 18, the Inyo County Board of Supervisors plan to vote on this General Plan Amendment on March 24.
Nellis Air Force Base Reaches Out to Native American Tribes, Visits Big Pine Paiute Tribe.
On March 4, 2015, Kish LaPierre and Richard Arnold of Nellis Air Force Base came to the Big Pine Paiute
Reservation to talk about their cultural programs and projects occurring on the base. This is the first time
that any representative from Nellis Air Force Base has come to the Big Pine Reservation. Kish LaPierre,
base archaeologist, and Richard Arnold, Pahrump Paiute Chairperson and Nellis Native American Liaisonspoke about the many cultural sites on the base and what is being done to protect them.
Left to right: Darrell Moose, Kish LaPierre, Ross Stone, Richard Arnold, Charlotte Bacoch, Danelle Gutierrez and,
Don Bacoch.
Cultural Committee Visits Deep Springs College
Members of the Cultural Committee visited Deep Springs College on March 18, 2015. Terrigen Vixie, student archivist, took us to the college archives and two rock shelters near the college. The teachers and students were very
friendly and welcoming. There are twenty seven students. We looked at old photographs and college ledgers which
contained the names of workers in the 1920s. Photographs of Mary Harry, who once lived at Deep Springs, were donated to the Big Pine Paiute Tribe from Deep Springs College.
Deep Springs Lake.
Left to right: Evelyn Miller, Terrigen Vixie, Ross Stone, Marian Zucco, Charlotte Bacoch at the
Deep Springs archives.
Deep Springs College ledger from the 1920s.
C.D.D. Housing Department
APRIL 2015
NEWSLETTER
NEED HOMEOWNER OR RENTERS INSURANCE?
AMERIND Risk Management Corporation recognized a significant
need in the Tribal marketplace. The commercial insurance world was
not interested in responding to the unique needs of Native American
property. In response to that, AMERIND Risk Management Corporation developed the Native American Homeowners and Renters insurance products. These insurance products were created to offer
affordable coverage for Native American homeowners and renters to
protect their home and personal contents.
AMERIND takes a very flexible approach
to coverage design. Homeowners and
renters select the coverage based on
their needs. The premium is based on
the limits of the property and coverage
options selected.
OPTIONS:
Dwelling – the value of your
dwelling is based on the cost to
replace like and kind.
For your
convenience, the
application is set up
as an electronic
form.
Personal Belongings/Contents – This is value of your persona
contents. This includes anything that is not physically attached
to your dwelling.
Other Structures – This could include property such as garages,
tool sheds, barns, carports, etc.
Personal Liability – Third party liability for bodily injury and
property damage.
Valuable Belongings/Contents – Collectible items that have
intrinsic value (jewelry, artwork, pottery, ceremonial regalia,
etc.).
Emergency Living Expense – The additional cost of living expense
due to a covered property loss.
Builder’s Risk – Coverage while your home is under construction
or renovation.
TYPES OF HOMES ELIGIBLE FOR COVERAGE:
Traditional homes
Stick Built homes
Adobe home
Modular home
Custom Built home
Mobile home
New Construction
Under renovation
Rental Property
To be eligible, the homeowner or renter must be enrolled in a Federally-recognized Tribe. The home must also be located on any of these
types of land:
Indian Reservation
Restricted Land
Trust Land
Indian Allotment
For your convenience, the application is set up as an electronic form.
You may fill out the form electronically, if you choose. To complete the
application, you must ensure that all fields are filled out, then print
and sign the document. Once signed, AMERIND asks that you send the
application to them via email ([email protected]), mail
or fax. You will need to send these documents along with the application:
*Copy of Tribal ID/Enrollment Card
*Color Photos (REQUIRED) - please send via email or mail
only.
*Renovation List (if applicable)
*Contractors Spec Sheet (if applicable)
*Scheduled Personal Property Inventory (if applicable).
Once AMERIND receives the completed application, their underwriters
will review it. If the application is approved, you will then receive a
quote within 24 hours. If you have any questions about the application
process, please contact AMERIND’s Underwriting Team at (800) 3523496.
For more detailed information on
how the Native American Homeowners and Renters Program will
benefit you, contact AMERIND at
(800) 352-3496.
Or you may contact the Big Pine
Paiute Tribe Community Development Department at (760) 938-2003
ext. 230 if you have any questions
or to request an application for the Native American Homeowners and
Renters Insurance Program.
AMERIND Risk is the only 100% tribally owned and operated insurance carrier in Indian
Country. Over 400 Tribes united and pooled their resources to create AMERIND Risk to
keep money within Indian Country. AMERIND Risk provides property, liability and workers’
compensation insurance for tribes, tribal governments, businesses and individual coverage.
CDD Housing & EPA Department
GREEN PROJECTS AROUND THE HOME WORKSHOP
Date: Saturday, April 18, 2015
Time: 10am-1pm
Place: Tribal Office/EPA Grounds
Come on out to participate in our workshops and we will also be discussing
fire prevention and other safety issues. Learn how to make your own
yardwork displays!! -Limited supplies availableLUNCH WILL BE SERVED
For further information contact the Housing Department
760.938.2003
BIG PINE PAIUTE
DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
April 2015
Big Pine Paiute Development
Corporation
Board of Directors
Shannon Romero
Rhonda Brooks
Paul Huette
Violet Pierce
Yolanda Cortez
Genevieve Jones
Friendly new employees at Wellness Center
Chairperson
Vice Chair
Treasurer
Secretary
Member
Council Rep
P. O. Box 566
Big Pine, CA 93513
(760) 938-2800
Manahu Big Pine Paiute Tribe! My
name is Rosie Moose and I have lived
her in Big Pine all my life. I chose to
raise my children Tanya and Thomas
here. I hope to do bigger and better
things for the Tribe while we reside
here. My family enjoys being outdoors, Spring and Summer are our
favorite seasons. We enjoy fishing,
camping and being outside. I am
pleased and proud to work her at The
Wellness Center, I take pride in my
own personal well-being as well as my
community's. Don’t Hesitate to come
and see me, I am here to help you!.
Hello, my name is Auwwahu Tsuua
Pierce, my name means “Morning Girl”
in our Paiute language. I was named
by the late Clara Rambeau. I am a Big
Pine Paiute Tribal member and I am 19
years old. I have lived here on the Big
Pine Reservation all 19 years. My parents are Violet Pierce and Darrell
Moose, members of the Big Pine Paiute Tribe.
I attended Big Pine School K-12 and I
want to further my education later in
my life when I am ready to take that
step. I am not quite sure what I want
to do yet. I
have four brothers and four sisters
that are always there for me when I
need them . I am also an auntie to 3
nieces and four nephews. I have a
baby cousin, Damon L. Pierce and he
is so cute and precious to me.
I started working for The Wellness
Center as a WEX worker through the
Community Program with Sage
Romero. I thank him for giving me the
opportunity to learn and be a part of his
training program that helped me to be
where I am today. I currently work for
the Wellness Center as a permanent
part-time employee as a Wellness
Center Monitor. I was hired in January
2015 and I enjoy my job and all the
great people that I work with.
“Hey, Hey”, my name is Alina Dondero, I am a Big Pine Paiute tribal
member and I also live here on the
Reservation. I have a 7-year old
daughter and an 8-month old baby
boy. They are my whole world,
along with my fitness and health. I
haven't always had a healthy lifestyle, but watching my family and
friends lose their life or become
very sick due to an unhealthy lifestyle, brought me to where I am
today. I made a promise to myself
that I was going to be a better person and help my community and
anybody else who wants to live
healthy and feel better. I will be
supportive and give the extra positive push that we all are looking
for. I am ecstatic to be a part of
The Wellness Center team here in
Big Pine, it’s right in my backyard,
but most of all, I get to work with
my community and be a positive
role model for my friends, family
and most importantly, my children.
Hope to see most of you very
soon!! Working out is worth every
second and each ache and pain.
Shineline Janitorial
SHINELINE SPRING CARPET SPECIAL: 2 ROOMS FOR $89.00* Call for an estimate (760) 938-2800
*Based on square footage. Heavy soiled carpets, additional rooms and moving of heavy furniture extra.
Back by popular demand, in April 2015
The Wellness Center is open MondayFriday from 8:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. and on
Saturday and Sunday from 8:30 am. to
2:00 p.m. There is no charge for Big
Pine Tribal Members for any of the classes or to use the facility, including their
legal spouses who are also free. There
is no charge to Native Americans who
attend the Toiyabe sponsored classes:
Circuit Training, Granite 360, and Yoga
class on Monday evenings. There is a
fee for non-tribal members for the Yoga
classes on Saturday and the soon to
start Zumba classes to help cover instructor costs.
For more information on rates, classes
or any other questions, please do no
hesitate to contact The Wellness Center
at (760) 938-2800.
Starting
soon:
Committee Members Needed
The BPPT is in need of Tribal members who are interested and willing to be a part of the following Committees:
■ Land Assignment Committee: 2 members needed
■ (PAC) Parent Advisory Committee: 2 members needed
■ Big Pine Indian Education Center Scholarship Committee: 1 member needed
■ Community Emergency Response Commission: 5 commissioners
needed
If you are interested, stop by the tribal office and pickup a Declaration of Intent to run for office form. Speak
up and give your thoughtful opinions about matters being discussed .
INDIAN GAMING REVENUE SHARING TRUST FUND (IGRSTF) DISTRIBUTION DEADLINES
(For College, Trade School, Technical School & Certificate Programs)
To be eligible for the IGRSTF, all students must be enrolled in at least six (6) credits/units or enrolled in an
accredited college, trade/technical school or certificate program. The following documents will be accepted as
proof of enrollment: Most recent quarter/semester grades, Program progress reports, and/or official written
verification of current enrollment. Submitted documents must show the student’s name, & name of college,
trade/technical school or certificate program. Documents must be submitted to the Big Pine Tribal Office, located
at 825 South Main Street, Big Pine CA by mail, fax, email or in person.
QUARTERS
DEADLINE TO SUBMIT
VERIFICATION DOCUMENTS
1st Quarter
(January, February, March)
January 31
2nd Quarter
April 30
(April, May, June)
3rd Quarter
July 31
(July, August, September)
4th Quarter
October 31
(October, November, December)
Verification of enrollment in a College, Trade/Technical School and/or Certificate Program must be submitted to
the Big Pine Tribal Office by the following deadlines.
**Additionally please be advised that all Residency Verification forms must be submitted thirty (30) days prior**
to the approval of the gaming revenue list.
April 2015
Sun
Mon
Tue
Wed
1
Thu
Fri
Sat
2
3
4
8
9
10
11
14
Cultural
Committee
Meeting 12 noon
Enrollment
Committee
Meeting
6:00 p.m.
Recycle
15
Housing Meeting
6:00 p.m.
16
Tribal Council
Meeting
6:00 p.m.
17
18
Green projects
for around the
home workshop
10 a.m. - 1 p.m.
21
22
23
24
25
Tribal Council
Meeting
6:00 p.m.
5
EASTER DAY
6
TERO Meeting
6:00 p.m.
7
Land Assign.
Meeting
6:00 p.m.
Env. Advisory
Board Meeting
6:00 p.m.
Recycle
12
19
13
20
EDC Meeting
6:00 p.m.
Earth Day
Recycle
26
27
28
Utility Meeting
6:00 p.m.
29
30
Commodity Food Blood Pressure
Dist. 8-11am
Clinic 3-5pm
Recycle
CERT Meeting
6:00 p.m.
Big Pine Paiute Tribe of the Owens Valley
P.O. Box 700 ● 825 South Main Street
Big Pine, Ca 93513
Phone No. 760-938-2003 ● Fax No. 760-938-2942