New Re-1 teachers visit Ute tribe

News

New Re-1 teachers visit Ute tribe

Hayes: ‘We need your support’
Tina King gives new teachers for Montezuma-Cortez Re-1 a tour of the Ute Mountain Ute education center in Towaoc.

New Re-1 teachers visit Ute tribe

Tina King gives new teachers for Montezuma-Cortez Re-1 a tour of the Ute Mountain Ute education center in Towaoc.
Utes offer to host Re-1 meetings

Could a change of venue for a school board meeting help relations between Cortez and Towaoc?
If the Montezuma-Cortez Re-1 district held a monthly meeting in Towaoc, board members could expect royal treatment.
“I would roll out the red carpet,” said Ute Mountain Ute education director Tonya Amrine.
“One of the issues that we have here in Towaoc is a perception that everything is one-way,” she said. “We have to go to Cortez.”
She added that she’d like to host more parent-teacher conferences or move the annual Indian Policies and Procedures meeting to a more convenient location for tribal members. Held in October, the meeting allows tribal leaders to raise concerns with the district.
“It could repair a lot of past hurts,” she said.
Ute Mountain Ute tribal member and Colorado Commission of Indian Affairs executive director Ernest House, Jr., agreed. He commended Superintendent Alex Carter for reaching out to tribal officials, but said more attempts were needed to overcome a generational mistrust between Natives and whites.
“We need to shake things up a bit to strengthen the relationships,” House said.
Asked if the district would hold a board or IPP meeting in Towaoc, Carter answered with praise for the cultural tour: “We are continually looking for ways to work closer with the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe and, indeed, with our entire Native community.”
He added that the district and the tribe have partnered on projects to improve relationships.

click here to add your event
Area Events