July 2, 2008
SMSC Supports Sung Maka Ska With $120,000 Grant
July 1, 2008
Pow Wow Dancing at Exhibition at Mall of America August 14
June 30, 2008
SMSC Donation Supports Haskell Indian Nations University
$150,000 to be used for Endowment, RED Center
June 30, 2008
Public Television Show Recipient of SMSC Grant
June 24, 2008
SMSC Donates 11 More Automatic External Defibrillators (AEDs)
June 19, 2008
SMSC Donation Encourages Indian Youth to Pursue Careers in Dentistry
June 18, 2008
SMSC Donates $1 Million to Yankton Sioux Tribe
June 17, 2008
SMSC Helping Send Kids to Camp
June 16, 2008
SMSC to Open Water Bottling Plant on Community Lands
June 16, 2008
Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community To Sponsor Annual July 4th Fireworks
June 11, 2008
Drug Abuse Prevention Efforts Supported by SMSC Donations
June 10, 2008
Water Softeners to Become Obsolete at SMSC
June 5, 2008
Fantastic New Playstructure Is Star Attraction as Playworks Atrium Re-opens
June 4, 2008
SMSC Native American Preference Policy Working to Build Native American Workforce
June 3, 2008
Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate to Receive Another $1 Million Shakopee Grant
June 2, 2008
SMSC Releases Annual Water Reports
July 2, 2008SMSC Supports Sung Maka Ska With $120,000 GrantPrior Lake, Minnesota - A grant from the Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community will support a small business on the Lower Brule Reservation in South Dakota. Sung Maka Ska (“White Earth Horse” in the Dakota Language) employs five full-time individuals who otherwise would have no work. The business makes – in assembly line manner – contemporary gift items from traditional materials like hide, leather, and beadwork. Each of the handmade and hand painted items are low cost and can be produced in quantity while ensuring quality. The product line currently includes rawhide and leather ornaments, Road Smudge Kits, sample bags of popcorn and beads, corporate gift packages, and more. The products made are marketed to the tourist trade and gift shops. Sung Maka Ska was created through the Lower Brule Summer Training and Employment Program and when it appeared it was workable, it was formally organized with a loan from the tribal economic development committee. The business was incubated and supervised under the Cultural Resources/Public Information Office of the Lower Brule Sioux Tribe. The SMSC grant will be used for working capital to provide assistance with marketing and for purchase of a new building. The building, situated on a corner that every visitor to the reservation passes, offers a small space for retail products as well as visitor/tourist information. Previous to the purchase of this building, there was no local retail outlet for these products or a visitor information site. Since the unemployment rate of the total labor force of 673 at Lower Brule is 48% and of those employed, 25% remain below the federal poverty line, the jobs this business provides makes an important difference in the lives of their employees. After a year and a half in business, it continues with its original employees and has generated community enthusiasm. There are two to three prospective employees for each employee currently on the payroll. “With assistance from the SMSC, we will be much closer to our primary goal, to create sustainable employment at Lower Brule by developing permanent businesses with enthusiastic and highly motivated employees in an environment that offers continued expansion and training opportunities. It is crucial that these small business ideas and opportunities are sensitive to the cultural issues and the preservation of their culture, and that these opportunities train employees from the ground up, while helping them to feel ownership in the products they create. The Lower Brule Council and I whole heartedly support this new business effort and its success in creating jobs here in our community,” wrote Michael B. Jandreau, Chairman of the Lower Brule Sioux Tribe. SMSC Chairman Stanley Crooks commented on the donation, “During this time of economic downturn, jobs are crucial to give people a sense of hope. Sung Maka Ska is doing that while providing an opportunity for Lower Brule tribal members to also create a tangible product, both of which benefit their entire community.” |
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