Raising a New Chief

Chief Silent Drum Lopez announced this month that he will be retiring after decades of service to his community.

We asked the Chief what he would be looking for in a person to step into his role. It will have to be someone who has many years of life experience he said.

 “It has to be someone who is known to our people and knows about our history. Someone who has experience in our cultural ways and feels comfortable wearing traditional regalia,” he said, “and it would be good if they know about our connection to the land and hunting and fishing. And they have to know how to council people.”

Could the new chief be a woman?

“Of course,” he said, “We have had women leaders in history. It is something to think about.”

As a tribe we do have a lot to think about.

It has been nearly two years since the Clan Mothers began having discussions about raising a new chief of the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe. The major questions being how can it be done in a way that is as inclusive as possible, and who are the ones among us that possess the experience, skill and leadership qualities we expect from our chief?

The Clan Mothers represent the traditional aspects of the community and hope to guide the process with those principals in mind but need more input from tribal members.

With a goal to raise a chief by this coming Fall, these discussions will continue during the weekly Clan Mother gatherings that are held on Sundays at 1 pm at the Mashpee Wampanoag Museum. As the weather improves these meetings will be moved to the sacred circle on our tribal grounds. If you have thoughts or recommendations about the process or who a new chief should be please attend a meeting or relay your ideas through your Clan Mother.

Tribe Meets with Genting: Negotiations Underway

Representatives from Genting arrived in Mashpee on March 6 to greet tribal leadership and tour the Tribe’s reservation. It was the first time Genting met in person with the new Tribal Council Administration and Gaming Authority. Since March 6, the groups have continued to meet in person.

A lot has changed since our Tribe initially broke ground on a resort casino in 2016. The Tribal Council and Gaming Authority are working with Genting to ensure any economic development projects work in the current market and also work for the Tribe.

In addition to meeting with Genting, the Gaming Authority began work to clean up the Taunton site. Work was done last month to remove the trash that had been illegally dumped on the site.

Exercising Aboriginal Rights

In May 2020, Earl Cash, along with his son, Julian, was fishing for herring at the Herring River herring run.

A woman appeared and accused them of poaching.

As she ordered them out of the herring run, Cash refused – claiming his sovereign fishing rights as a Mashpee Wampanoag tribal member. The woman threatened to call police.

New Housing Assistance HUD Programs Coming Soon

The Housing Department will be rolling out new Covid housing assistance programs in April. The new programs will provide rental assistance, homeowners assistance, and a new HUD IHBD Cares program available only to tribal members who live outside of the Housing Department’s Service area (commonly referred to as CHISDA). The IHBD program will be the first time the Housing Department has been able to provide support to tribal members outside of its service area.

Member Portal on Website

The Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe is creating a new portal on the website for tribal members. The portal allows tribal members to login to a protected section of the website to access documents, forms, calendars and additional information that is only for tribal citizens. Tribal members may register today by clicking on the “Member Signup” link in the footer of the website. It will still be several weeks before the site goes live. Tribal members will receive additional notice when the portal is live.

School Choice in Mashpee Closes on April 29

School choice for Mashpee Public School opened on Friday, April 1. If you are interested in having your child attend one of the Mashpee schools, please visit https://www.mpspk12.org/enrollment/school-choice and complete the application. All applications must be received in the Superintendent’s Office by 4:00 PM on April 29. Seats are limited. Also, Mashpee is not offering school choice for grades 10, 11 and 12.

Education Department at NIEA Hill Week & Speakers Bureau

The State Tribal Education Partnership Team participated in the National Indian Education Association’s Week on the Hill in Washington D.C. last month. Team members met with legislators, leaders, and federal education employees to effectively communicate the needs of our native students, and current challenges and work towards unified solutions for a healthier, educated future for our native children.

The team learned more about the National Native American Boarding School Healing Coalition, which currently has legislation on the table S. 2907 and H.R. 5444, that aims to develop this federal commission to locate and analyze the records from the 367+ known Indian boarding schools operated in the U.S.

Education Department Extends Survey; Win a Galaxy Tablet

The Education Department remains hard at work! A survey was released for students and parents to assess the needs and desires of future programing from the department. We will be keeping the Survey open until April 8th. That Friday at 4:00 pm, we will close the Survey and host the raffle live on our Facebook page for a brand new Samsung Galaxy Tablet. The education department will then begin analyzing the results over the next few weeks to help identify supporting programs that can be developed under our current grants and the potential need to seek funding for future programs.

Honoring Our Herring Day on April 20

Please join the Mashpee Wampanoag Indian Education Department, the Wôpanâak Language Reclamation Project and Mashpee Indian Museum for family fun, activities, singing, dancing, fishing, and more at the annual Honoring Our Herring event. The family event will be held at the Mashpee Wampanoag Indian Museum on Wednesday, April 20 from 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.

Tribal Education Department Highlights Programming

Roxanne D. Mills Brown, director of the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe Education Department, and Indian Education Coordinator Gertrude (Kitty) Hendricks-Miller announced a series of programs and services provided by the department through the Indian Education Formula Grant last month at a virtual public hearing.

The virtual public hearing was held on March 15 and highlighted an opportunity for parents and teachers in Barnstable, Bourne, Falmouth, New Bedford, Sandwich and Wareham to receive information and give feedback.

MWCDC Partners with Sister Sky Incorporated

The CDC is partnering with Sister Sky Incorporated to host an Empowerment Workshop this upcoming June 8th and 9th from 11 am to 5 pm. Presenters will be hosting this option through zoom but the board is looking into using space at the community and government to host the virtual workshop for those who would like to attend in person. Be on the lookout for the link to register on our website and through the tribes eblast.

MWCDC Solar Survey

As the Mashpee Wampanoag Community Development Board continues to meet and negotiate with two solar energy proponents on the solar panel projects at the community and government center and Maushop farm, we are looking for a bit of feedback from the community. Please participate in this brief survey so we can take any questions, concerns, and opinions into our negotiation meetings. Again, for those who are unaware of the work done into the possibilities of solar on tribal properties.

Results from CDC Survey

The Community and Development Corporation released a Community Survey back in November. Here are some of the results from the 55 Tribal members who have participated. Of those who participated about 15% were from the age 25-34, 22% aged 35-54,and 55% were 55 and older. 60% were currently employed and about 20% of those employed members are self employed.

ICWA schedules New ICWA Sacred Parenting Workshops: Starts April 11

The Mashpee Wampanoag ICWA Department will once again host a series of Sacred Parenting workshops. Workshops will start on Monday, April 11 at 6 PM and continue through June 6. Everyone that attends will receive $40 for each session and a sacred parenting box with crafting supplies.

The program consists of 8 workshops that will help parents heal the past and move forward in strength. Attendees will work to honor one’s identity, which includes the scars of the past, share our legacy, and bring the healing process for our children while remaining connected to our own indigenous identity.