LINKS


Magpie Watch courtesy of
Media Matters.org



CONTENT

Arthur is a contributing editor at
Washblog.com


Veterans Group
Arthur is a social worker, author and freelance writer


Willapa Bay
Washington State
You are not logged in. Log in


Local Media

Aberdeen Daily World
Chinook Observer
Montesano Vidette
Pacific County Press
Willapa Harbor Herald
KXRO 1320 AM



Favorite National News & Blog Sites AMERICAblog

Army Wife 101

Crooks & Liars

Daily Kos

Democracy Now!

FiredogLake

Hoffmania

Huffington Post

Media Matters

Raw Story

Slate Magazine

Talking Points Memo

TPM Muckraker

Truth Digg

ZNet



U.S. Deaths Confirmed By The DoD
Just Foreign Policy Iraqi Death Estimator



Click on image above for our sister site
Custom Search

Bay Center, Washington from U.S. Hwy 101

Monday, 23 April 2007
Tribal Elder says they'll make do with less federal assistance
Now Playing: When I make the money from the federal government a smaller piece of that pie, then we're achieving self-reliance."
Topic: State & Local
 Excerpts from The Peninsula Daily News (Port Angeles)
Click on the Peninsula link to read the entire article
 
Ron Allen, a Native American leader who builds tribe, county -- and respect
 
Click here to zoom...
Ron Allen, chairman of the Jamestown S’Klallam tribe, pauses outside the Jamestown Tribal Center in Blyn. -- Photo by Diane Urbani de la Paz/Peninsula Daily News

 
 


By Diane Urbani de la Paz, Peninsula Daily News


BLYN - This isn't a conversation. It's a headlong leap onto a bullet train.

Ron Allen is the engineer, hurtling back and forth between the Pacific Northwest and Washington, D.C., negotiating on behalf of a small tribe while developing an ever-larger vision for the North Olympic Peninsula.

Allen, in his third decade as chairman of the Jamestown S'Klallam tribe, is also officially an elder - he will soon be 60 - but he's not about to slow down.

No, he has too many passions and too many trips to take.

In recent months, Allen's been to meetings in Washington, Oregon and British Columbia, and to conferences in Las Vegas, Nev., and Colorado Springs, Colo., learning about tribal reservation infrastructure and resort marketing.
He's also been to Washington, D.C., where he helped establish the National Congress of American Indians' National Policy and Research Center.

The center is both a think tank and a clearinghouse for research on Native American issues, from housing to health care to high-school dropout rates to trust lands.
... Last year, the Jamestown tribe purchased a health and medical supply company in Sacramento, Calif.

It bought the Dungeness Golf Course north of Sequim and renamed it the Cedars at Dungeness.

This is all part of Allen's plan to, as he puts it, "take control of our destiny."

"We totally depended on federal funds in the 1980s," after the tribe achieved federal recognition in 1981, he said.

"We started off with $30,000 the first year and went to $180,000 the second.

"Last year, we received about $8 million, which is about 40 percent of our revenue base."

Self-reliance
Allen's goal: Shrink that further, by building up tribal businesses.

"We are doing that as fast as we can," he said.

"You've got to make the pie bigger. When I make the money from the federal government a smaller piece of that pie, then we're achieving self-reliance."


He's also been to Washington, D.C., where he helped establish the National Congress of American Indians' National Policy and Research Center.
from The Peninsula Daily News (Port Angeles)
Click on the Peninsula link to read the entire article.
 

Posted SwanDeer Project at 7:50 AM PDT
Bookmark and Share

View Latest Entries


What does it mean to be Christian in America?
Arthur's blog on religion & Spirituality

I'm glad you asked that question.


Published by SwanDeer Productions
Arthur and Lietta Ruger, Bay Center, Willapa Bay in Pacific County Washington

Willapa Magazine ©2007 is an internet journal based in Bay Center, Washington.
The opinions expressed by Arthur or Lietta Ruger are the writers' own.
Willapa Magazine recognizes Fair Use law and publishes original writings in their entirety based on
'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law.
Permission of Willapa Magazine is required for reprinting original Willapa Magazine writings and the original author(s)
for material posted under fair use law.