Looking for a JOB?
Posted: January 29th, 2012 23:49pm
Looking for a JOB? Interested in learning a new skill? Tell me about it!! Send me an email, letter, or give me a call and let me know what skills that you need to learn in order to find your place in the work force. If you don’t know what skills you need that will give you that competitive edge to finding a job, schedule an appointment with me to discuss your work history and interest. I welcome suggestions and ideas addition to times and dates that work best for you. TERO is designed to help you gain a job or improve your current employment. Please send your suggestions to me at darrell.moorehead@tolowa.com or by calling 707-487-9255 ext. 3190. http://www.tolowa-nsn.gov/departments/tero Read more
California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA)
Posted: January 23th, 2012 20:38pm
Tribal Administrator, Russ Crabtree, attended several CEQA meetings throughout October and the following was his response to the process.
The Tolowa Dee-ni’ are the original inhabitants of the coastline of Del Norte County. The Tolowa have lived in the area stretching from Wilson Creek in California to the South, the Sixes River in Oregon to the North, to the watershed on the Coast Range to the East, and to Point Saint George to the West since ancient times. Ethnographic and archaeological accounts document thousands of years of coastal fishing, sea mammal hunting, and harvesting within the Tolowa ancestral territories, including the fish camps as Dat Naa-svt and 8,000 years of occupation from Hiouchi, following the main course of the Smith River. Read more
Lht’vsr-me’
Posted: January 22th, 2012 20:11pm
The name of the village in this painting is Lht’vsr-me’. Lht’vsr-me’ means “Sand-In-There”. The English name of this village is Cushing Creek.
Lht’vsr-me’ village was located south of Taa-’at-dvn (Crescent-City) along the flat sandy coast at the north end the palisades running south toward Wilson Creek cove.
This painting nicely illustrates the gable roof lines of the Dee-ni’ home and the traditional round doors. Round doors honored the door ways of the great Pileated Woodpecker. Read more
Rancheria Supports Community
Posted: January 9th, 2012 21:43pm
On November 22, 2011, the Tribal Council presented Rural Human Services with a check for $1,000 for Santa’s Workshop. Tribal Council pictured from left to right: Loren Me’-lash-ne Bommelyn, Marian Lopez, Denise Padgette, Kara Miller, Joel Bravo, Joseph Giovannetti, and Lenora Hall. View the 2011 donation report here http://www.tolowa-nsn.gov/






