Meet Colleen Echohawk: The ‘Peoples’ Candidate and Yours Too

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Colleen Echohawk ’s family taught her that as human beings, we are responsible for one another. This early lesson set Echohawk on a lifelong path of investigating the root causes of homelessness, a journey which began in rural Alaska, where she was born and raised, and continued when she moved to Seattle, Washington where she has lived for the last two decades. Driven by her responsibility to her fellow human beings, Echohawk is running to become Seattle’s next mayor — and if elected, she would become the City’s first Indigenous person to hold the title. For too long, Indigenous life and culture has been devalued and misrepresented, and Echohawk wants to change these notions by honoring and bringing the wisdom of Indigenous peoples and tribes to the forefront.

Echohawk is an enrolled member of both the Kithehaki Band of the Pawnee Nation and the Upper Athabascan people of Mentasta Lake. In addition to tackling Seattle’s homelessness issue, Echohawk has served as the executive director of the Chief Seattle Club and is a commissioner of Seattle Community Police Commission , appointed by former mayor Ed Murrary. In both roles she has pushed for solutions on economic, racial and criminal injustice. Echohawk is working towards a vision of Seattle that uses a people-first approach rooted in police reform and public safety, food sovereignty, climate justice and more. Here, Echohawk discusses her People First Platform , why she became a pragmatic progressive, and how she plans to inspire a generation of truth tellers.

What was your position before deciding to run for mayor?

Before I decided to announce my campaign to run for office, I was executive director of the Chief Seattle Club, which is a native-led human service agency and day center. I resigned after I decided that if I am going to do this, I will do it all the way. My campaign has been running full time for the past four months.

Working to help Seattle’s unhoused is one issue at the forefront of your plans. How did you get involved in working on this issue, especially as it pertains to your original community- Alaskan Native peoples?

CE: I grew up in rural Alaska to two parents who were amazing people. They instilled in my siblings and I that we were responsible for one another as human beings. My dad would pick up hitchhikers in the middle of Alaska and sometimes they lived in our house. That’s how deep it went. When I moved out to Seattle, I always supported the homeless community in various capacities, such as in volunteer roles, working as a teacher’s assistant to homeless youth and as a board member at the Chief Seattle Club, which led to me eventually becoming director. It changed my life as I got to know hundreds of people experiencing homelessness while understanding the breadth of the issue here in Seattle. We have over 12,000 people experiencing homelessness with over 5,000 outside every night. These are not just numbers to me but babies, elders and people that I love and appreciate.

Back home in Alaska, native people have some of the highest rates of homelessness. This is a symptom of the continued systemic racism that is a part of everyday life there. True equity requires us to look at the historical injustices and wrongdoings and try to understand how this is still impacting us today. On the policy side of things, I was almost always the only Native person and person of color at the table. I feel that this moment [ running for mayor] was my ancestors pushing me towards this work and following my value system to step up and support the community. This is why I am running for mayor.

How do you balance the view often associated with the unhoused — yes, that people need access to stable and safe housing but also that it’s looked upon as a “blight” to the community?

I believe that the unhoused of the city have the answers and they simply need the opportunity to get stabilized. As mayor, I look forward to the opportunity to share those stories and integrate better communication to our larger public about how we’re going to solve this issue. This is so our entire community can help solve this crisis together.

In a recent Seattle Times piece, you pegged yourself as a pragmatic progressive- what does that mean to you?

To me, that means understanding the systems and knowing that it will not change overnight. As a pragmatic person, I know that we need laser focus to be able to make that shift. I also believe that I am exhausted by always having to be on the other side of the table. I hope to one day get to the point where I don’t have to be in this [pragmatic] mode anymore.

Considering the current white supremacist attempt to push back against admitting to America’s true history, regarding critical race theory and more, how do you mitigate and navigate these conversations?

We’re really lucky here in Seattle to be largely progressive. We’re thinking about reparations, land banking and the ways in which we can right those systemic wrongs. I see myself as a truth teller. As someone who has worked in the trenches with the native community, who have collectively experienced so much trauma regarding historical injustices, my work is not just informed —I am never separated from it. I grew up with aunties and uncles who were victims of the boarding school systems. I’ve seen and worked with members of the Chief Seattle Club whose homelessness is directly connected to that system. It’s all intertwined with my human experience. What impact will my candidacy and hopefully role as a mayor make on my children and children to come? What does it mean to have Deb Haaland , the Secretary of the Interior, who is also an Indigenous woman, in such a position?

To you, what would it mean to be the first Indigenous mayor of Seattle?

I am not a Coast Salish tribal member [this includes territory of the Puget Sound, encompassing southeastern Vancouver Island and southern mainland British Columbia]. I am from the Pawnee Nation [federally recognized and based in Oklahoma] and Athabaskan [Alaska Native peoples] community. I am very conscious of that and will be striving to honor the leadership of the Coast Salish tribes in this region by making sure their communities are truly centered if I am elected.

Iris M. Crawford is an environmental and climate justice journalist based in the San Francisco Bay Area. Her second love is arts and culture. Follow her on Twitter @IrisMCrawford

Joshua Adams is a Staff Writer for Colorlines. He’s a writer, journalist and educator from the south side of Chicago. You can follow him @JournoJoshua

Donovan Peoples-Jones is all over the field at Browns training camp

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BEREA, Ohio – Donovan Peoples-Jones had one catch on Monday. Don’t let that fool you. He has been as visible as anybody in Browns training camp.

On Monday he was running routes, blocking downfield, fielding punts and covering punts. That one catch came against Greedy Williams in full team drills. It was good for about 15 yards.

One target. One catch. First down. Efficient.

That is becoming Peoples-Jones’ MO. Last season he was one of the most efficient wide receivers in the NFL. He didn’t get that kind of hype, though, because he had only 14 catches. If you’re looking for a player who could carve out a larger role for himself in 2021, Peoples-Jones seems like a good candidate.

He made a memorable catch nearly every day through the first four days of camp. First it was a leaping grab while taking contact, then a deep crossing route that got the fans in attendance to cheer. Then it was battling with John Johnson III for a pass over the middle.

Both players fell to the ground refusing to give up their grasp on the ball. When whistles finally blew and teammates pulled them apart, Peoples-Jones got up and signaled a first down.

He’s doing all this with Odell Beckham Jr. mostly watching team drills and 7-on-7 so far in camp. But that’s how Peoples-Jones got on the field last season. Injuries opened the door.

Next thing you knew, he caught the game-winning touchdown against the Bengals in the same Week 7 game that saw OBJ suffer his knee injury. A few weeks later he caught a 75-yard touchdown pass against the Titans. A week later he caught a 2-point conversion pass that went off Kareem Hunt’s hands, helping the Browns continue to rally against the Ravens.

Taking over for JoJo Natson last season, he struggled as a returner, averaging only 4.28 yards per punt return and 21.0 yards per kickoff return (ranked 19th).

But he definitely had an impact in is primary role. In Weeks 12-14, Peoples-Jones had eight catches on nine targets for 221 yards and a touchdown.

“Donovan did a nice job for us last year as a rookie,” Stefanski said last week. “You saw his role grow throughout the course of the season. A very intelligent football player, and we knew that from the jump with him. He could line up everywhere and do his job. We are looking forward to seeing what he can do, as he grows and get gets more comfortable with what we are doing.”

Last season he caught 14 of his 15 catchable passes, had 11 first downs, and an overall catch rate of 70 percent. That made him a DVOA darling. The efficiency metric (which stands for defense-adjusted value over average) ranked him second among those with fewer than 50 targets (he had 23 including the playoffs).

DVOA measures value per play. It’s cousin, DYAR (defense-adjusted yards above replacement) measures overall value and ranked Peoples-Jones fifth among the sub-50 target crowd. (Beckham ranked 40th in DYAR for sub-50 targets last season.)

Another way to measure Peoples-Jones’ impact is with expected points added (EPA), which measures the value of a play, carry, catch, etc… in terms of points it generates on a drive. It is built around the understanding that a three-yard run on third-and-2 has more value than a three-yard run on first-and-10.

Peoples-Jones’ EPA per target last season was 0.72, which led all Browns receivers. The Vikings’ Justin Jefferson (0.47) and the Chiefs’ Tyreek Hill (0.45) led the NFL in this metric last season (minimum 115 targets).

Another stat to measure efficiency and production is yards per route run (YRR), which adds context to total catches and receiving yards by considering how often a receiver runs patterns. The top receivers in the NFL consistently lead in this category. When he was with the Giants, Beckham was among those league leaders, averaging a YRR of 2.35 over his five seasons.

Peoples-Jones’ 2.34 YRR led the Browns last season and ranked 10th among all receivers.

If all that’s too much to wrap your head around, there’s this: Peoples-Jones was third in the NFL in yards per catch last season (21.7) and first among those with at least 20 targets.

Again, these are all based on a small sample size. But it’s a great place for a young receiver to start.

“Donovan, just thinking about it, he came up big for us in moments last year. He came up big in spots. When we called his number, he was available,” Stefanski said. “Excited about him moving forward. … He is covering punts, he is catching punts and he is playing receiver. He is all over the field right now.”

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Severe drought reignites decades-old conflict between Oregon ranchers, Indigenous peoples

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Stephanie Sy:

The water in Klamath Lake has irrigated farms like Kliewer’s on the surrounding Klamath Project since 1907, but not this year. When there’s not enough water to go around, the Endangered Species Act requires that lake levels are high enough to protect fish.

Back in May, the Bureau of Reclamation turned off the water from this canal. It’s the main source of water for farmers and ranchers in the Klamath Project. Since then, a few have set up camp here to protest and are threatening to turn the water back on themselves.

There just isn’t enough water for anyone, including the birds in the national wildlife refuges that depend on run-off from the Klamath Project farms that won’t be coming this year.