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Smallholder farmers in West Africa's Sahel face a harsh and worsening climate. Rainfall is erratic, temperatures are rising, soils are degrading, and droughts have become more frequent.


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227
 
 

Think of the destruction of Earth's rainforests and a familiar image may come to mind: fires or chainsaws tearing through enormous swaths of the Amazon, releasing masses of planet-warming carbon dioxide.


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228
 
 

The riskiest behavior in humans peaks in adolescence. Researchers from the University of Michigan and James Madison University expected to find risky behavior to peak in adolescence in a study of chimpanzees as well. But instead, they found that chimpanzee infants take the greatest risks.


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229
 
 

Scientists at Nagoya University in Japan have identified the genes that allow an organism to switch between living as single cells and forming multicellular structures. This ability to alternate between life forms provides new insights into how multicellular life may have evolved from single-celled ancestors and eventually led to complex organisms like animals and plants.


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230
 
 

Much of south-eastern Australia is currently in the grip of a heat wave, which is expected to peak over the next two days. Heat waves often trigger bushfires, particularly if combined with strong winds.


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231
 
 

Australia's climate is changing rapidly due to rising global greenhouse gas emissions. Extreme weather events such as tropical cyclones, east coast low pressure systems, flash floods, droughts, bushfires, severe storms, and both land and marine heat waves are becoming increasingly common, as the National Climate Risk Assessment makes clear.


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232
 
 

Across Australia, forests are quietly changing. Trees that once stood for decades or centuries are now dying at an accelerating rate. And this is not because of fire, storms, or logging. The chronic stress of a warming climate is killing them.


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233
 
 

Artificial intelligence is changing how we predict river flow—but a new study led by researchers at the University of British Columbia shows that these models often get the right answers for the wrong reasons.


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234
 
 

JAKARTA — The Indonesian government has announced what it describes as a sweeping, science-based effort to reassess environmental governance, zoning and corporate accountability in the wake of floods and landslides that killed more than 1,100 people across the island of Sumatra. The disasters were triggered by extreme rainfall linked to Tropical Cyclone Senyar, but government officials, scientists and environmental researchers say the scale of the destruction can’t be attributed to the weather alone. They point instead to long-term land-use changes — including deforestation and large-scale forest conversion — that have weakened natural buffers in Sumatra’s upland watersheds, leaving landscapes unable to absorb intense rainfall. The government has acknowledged that human-driven changes to land cover have fundamentally altered Sumatra’s landscapes, reducing their capacity to prevent severe flooding and landslides when extreme weather hits. “These changes are caused both by anthropogenic factors — such as the conversion of forest cover into non-forest areas — and by heavy rainfall, combined with the geomorphological characteristics of our soils, which are unable to adapt to these pressures,” Environment Minister Hanif Faisol Nurofiq said. The acknowledgment marks a significant shift in tone. Rather than treating the disasters solely as natural events, the government is now explicitly linking loss of life and environmental damage to development decisions, land-use planning and corporate activity — and signaling that permits and licenses may no longer shield companies from accountability. On Dec. 23, 2025, Hanif announced a three-pronged intervention covering Aceh, North Sumatra and West Sumatra, the provinces most severely affected…This article was originally published on Mongabay


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235
 
 

Freezing temperatures plunged swathes of Europe into a second day of travel chaos on Tuesday, with six people dying in weather-related accidents during the continent's bitterest cold snap this winter so far.


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236
 
 

Researchers are proposing a new strategy for local governments to make municipalities more resilient against climate change. The "compounded resilience" strategy lays out how local governments can take advantage of opportunities to both limit adverse impacts of climate change on their communities and reduce the greenhouse gas emissions that drive climate change.


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237
 
 

Indonesia's conservation park on Tuesday released a video showing the progress of a giant panda cub, 40 days after his birth in the country.


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238
 
 

Researchers are trying to understand why some wild species do better than others over time, as the environment changes.


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239
 
 

Australia's forests are losing trees more rapidly as the climate warms, a new study examining decades of data said Tuesday, warning the trend was likely a "widespread phenomenon."


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240
 
 

Like other developing countries, Indonesia is facing a familiar dilemma: how to feed a growing population while protecting its extraordinary biodiversity.


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241
 
 

The European Union’s antideforestation law, known as EUDR, has officially been delayed for a second year. The amendment was published in the Official Journal of the European Union on Dec. 23, 2025. The EUDR bans the import of commodities, including cocoa, coffee, soy, beef, timber, palm oil and rubber, that come from areas deforested after December 2020. Producers need to provide geolocalized data to prove that their commodities aren’t from land with recent deforestation. The law was first approved in 2023 and originally set to apply from the beginning of 2024. But following pressure from producers, lobbyists and governments, the law was delayed for a year. Now, it has been pushed back another year. The latest amendment approved by the EU notes that large operators will need to comply with the law from Dec. 31, 2026, and smaller operators from mid-2027. But European politicians also included a revision period in April 2026, opening space for further delays and rollbacks. The following timeline details how the latest delay came about: September 2025 The European Commission, the EU’s executive body, says its IT system is not yet ready to handle the demands of the EUDR and proposes postponing it for another year. October 2025 The European Council, comprised of EU leaders who set general political direction, proposes a soft delay of the law, rather than a postponement, proposing a six-month grace period. The proposal includes amendments that water down the law, such as an exemption for micro and small operators from low-risk…This article was originally published on Mongabay


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242
 
 

Sulfur butterflies glide across Zorrillo Canyon, hundreds of them, moving back and forth against the cerulean sky. It's nothing short of a fairy wonderland for the scientists below.


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243
 
 

Italy is preparing to host the 25th Winter Olympic Games next month—from Feb. 6 to the 22nd, followed by the Paralympic Games from March 6 to the 15th.


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244
 
 

Nika Bartoo-Smith
Underscore Native News+ ICT

Spokane, Washington — Sitting at a small desk in the basement of a single-family home converted into a school, Graham Wiley-Camacho patiently helped his youngest daughter, Kłaʔmásq̓t (Irie), work through a fractions math problem in n̓səl̓xčin̓ (Colville-Okanagan Salish).

As he helped Kłaʔmásq̓t, whose English name is Irie Wiley-Camacho, and six other elementary school kids work on division problems, the students asked and answered questions on a worksheet all in Salish.

paˤłxʷ, whose English name is Graham, is Sinixt Lake Band from the Colville Confederated Tribes. He is the lead elementary school teacher at Salish School of Spokane, which was founded by his mother, N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ, whose English name is LaRae Wiley, in 2009.

Courtesy of the Salish School of Spokane. Credit: Shown here is the Washington Corrections Center for Women, where the Women Sisterhood Powwow was held Sept. 9, 2023. (Photo by Jarrette Werk Underscore News / Report for America)

N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ (LaRae), Sinixt citizen of the Colville Confederated Tribes, is a founder and former executive director of the school. She is now serving as an elder linguist. paˤłxʷ (Graham)’s dad, ʔaˤn̓n̓, whose English name is Chris Parkin, is the school’s principal.

“That’s just how language revitalization works,” paˤłxʷ (Graham) said. “Because if the goal is to restart intergenerational transmission and create Salish speaking households again, then that kind of implies families and extended families.”

Next door to paˤłxʷ (Graham) and Kłaʔmásq̓t (Irie), paˤłxʷ’s (Graham)’s wife Sx̌mn̓atkʷ whose English name is Dominique Wiley-Camacho, taught middle school math in Salish. Their oldest daughter, X̌sčn̓itkʷ, whose English name is Seneca Wiley-Camacho, quietly worked on her math assignment as her mom answered questions.

“Our grandparents made the school, our parents are both teachers, we speak Salish a lot, like at home too,” X̌sčn̓itkʷ (Seneca) said. “And it’s a really small school so everyone here is like family.”

For 94 years, no children in N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ’s (LaRae)’s family were raised speaking Salish. She changed that with her language journey, now having three grandchildren who attended Salish School of Spokane and grew up immersed in their language.

Courtesy of the Salish School of Spokane. Credit: Though much different than powwows held outside prison walls, Unkitawa worked to bring a sense of familiarity and excitement to the Sept. 9, 2023, powwow at Washington Corrections Center for Women. Jeremy Garretson planned a competition powwow, bringing in dancers from outside the prison to compete. (Photo by Jarrette Werk Underscore News / Report for America)

For students like N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ’s (LaRae)’s grandaughters X̌sčn̓itkʷ (Seneca) and Kłaʔmásq̓t (Irie), growing up at an immersion school, hearing, speaking, reading and writing in Salish is normal. Even at home, they speak Salish with their parents and grandparents, often using it to communicate out in public to have more private conversations.

“I get emotional because I think about what my great grandmother would think if she saw these little kids speaking our language,” N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ (LaRae) said. “My grandmother went through so much suffering and pain, and so to just have this joy and this revival of the language, it really touches my heart.”

Inspired by her uncle and grandmothers, N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ (LaRae) has brought back Salish not only for her family, but for many others in Spokane. While Salish School of Spokane educates a whole new generation of Salish speakers, families and teachers alike, N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ (LaRae), ʔaˤn̓n̓ (Chris) and their family are also sharing language revitalization efforts with other communities.

The making of an immersion school

On a crisp fall day in early November, students and staff gathered outside of Salish School of Spokane to start their school day the same as any other — with songs in Salish. When the snows come in and the weather is too cold, staff and students squeeze together in the multi-purpose room within the school.

Students ranging from 1 to 13 years old gather with teachers and administrators to take turns calling out which Salish song they will sing.

“We have a morning circle every morning and everybody drums together, from our smallest baby,” said k̓ʷaʔk̓ʷíslaʔxʷ (Kim Richards), Apache and Santa Anna Pueblo, co-executive director of Salish School of Spokane. “We come together as a community every single morning.”

Throughout the classrooms, hallways and playground, hardly a word of English is spoken, as students and teachers alike talk to each other in Salish, even when not in active instruction time.

paˤłxʷ, whose English name is Graham Wiley-Camacho, helps his youngest daughter Kłaʔmásq̓t, whose English name is Irie Wiley-Camacho, work through a math problem on November 6, 2025. (Photo by Nika Bartoo-Smith, Underscore Native News / ICT)

Salish School of Spokane sits in the middle of traditional Southern Interior Salish languages. There are 29 Salish languages throughout the region of what is now known as Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana and British Columbia, Canada. Of those, there are 22 Coast Salish languages and 7 Interior Salish languages, according to the Salish School of Spokane website.

At Salish School of Spokane the goal is the revitalization of the four Southern Interior Salish languages, with a focus on n̓səl̓xčin̓. The curriculum enables staff to teach both n̓səl̓xčin̓ (Colville-Okanagan Salish) and n̓sélišcn̓ (Spokane-Kalispel-Bitterroot Salish), bringing learners to an advanced level of fluency.

The “fluency transfer system” created and used at Salish School of Spokane is made up of audio recordings of a first-language fluent elder, Sʕamtíc̓aʔ (Sara Peterson); transcriptions; Salish curriculum; and immersion teaching strategies.

Through this system, Salish School of Spokane staff are helping to create a whole community of Salish speakers. From students and staff to their parents, who are also required to take language classes.

“That’s the goal, is to create a community of new speakers,” N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ (LaRae) said.

Growing up, N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ (LaRae) never heard her language, Salish, spoken.

“I knew that my grandma and my great grandma spoke the language, but they didn’t pass it on to my dad, because they didn’t want him to have to deal with all the racism and everything,” she said.

N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ, whose English name is LaRae Wiley, Sinixt citizen of the Colville Confederated Tribes, is a founder and former executive director of the Salish School of Spokane. She is now serving as an elder linguist. She smiles for a photo on November 6, 2025. (Photo by Nika Bartoo-Smith, Underscore Native News / ICT)

The need to learn her language struck N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ (LaRae) in her late 30s, at her great uncle’s funeral in February 1997, when she found out he spoke Salish. Though she had grown up with her uncle, she never heard him speak Salish. He was the last Salish speaker in her family.

At the funeral, N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ (LaRae) remembers someone speaking about the need for new language learners. “We need our young people to learn language and teach language. Every year we’re losing our fluent speakers,” N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ (LaRae) recalls them saying.

That struck N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ (LaRae), who taught in the Chewelah School District in Washington at the time. In her last position, she taught middle and high school choir along with high school social studies and language arts.

“I thought ‘well, maybe I can learn our language and I can teach it and pass it on to other people, N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ (LaRae) said. “I can bring it back to my family.”

From then on, she committed to learning Salish.

Initially N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ (LaRae) enrolled in a Salish class in Wellpinit, Washington. There, she took classes learning n̓sélišcn̓ (Spokane-Kalispel-Bitterroot Salish) before she volunteered to teach for a few years.

“It wasn’t the language of my family, but it’s my sister language,” said N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ (LaRae ), whose family spoke n̓səl̓xčin̓ (Colville-Okanagan Salish). “It really was powerful to learn any Salish language, and feel that connectedness to place and to ancestors.”

After volunteering, N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ (LaRae) was hired on to teach for another year, working with kids from head start through fourth grade. As she worked to learn the language herself, she simultaneously created new materials to turn around and teach the language to her students.

At the time, N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ’s (LaRae)’s husband, Chris, who is non-Native, was a Spanish teacher at Gonzaga Prep. She realized how different their language jobs were. By the end of four years, learning Spanish one hour a day, students were able to hold full conversations in Spanish, with a plethora of materials to pull from. That was not the case with Salish.

ʔaˤn̓n̓, whose English name is Chris Parkin, is principal/business and grants manager for the Salish School of Spokane. He sits at his desk for a photo on November 6, 2025. (Photo by Nika Bartoo-Smith, Underscore Native News / ICT) Credit: Braylee Dempsy, left (Blackfeet and Navajo), and Jaliauna Templeton (Blackfeet) take a break from dancing to pose for their photo in front of the tipi Unkitawa staff brought and set up prior to grand entry. (Photo by Jarrette Werk Underscore News / Report for America)

Together, N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ’ (LaRae ) and Chris, who’s Salish name is ʔaˤn̓n̓, decided to begin by making audio recordings with a fluent elder. They worked with Spokane elder Anne McCray, who also helped create the first book, that N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ’ (LaRae) taught during a n̓sélišcn̓ (Spokane-Kalispel-Bitterroot Salish) college class she led in Wellpinit.

While teaching, N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ’ (LaRae) applied to be an apprentice learner of n̓səl̓xčin̓ (Colville-Okanagan Salish) with her tribe. Once approved, she drove 138 miles and more than two-and-a-half hours back and forth between Wellpinit and Omak for the next year, immersed in both n̓sélišcn̓ (Spokane-Kalispel-Bitterroot Salish) and n̓səl̓xčin̓ (Colville-Okanagan Salish).

There, she met Sʕamtíc̓aʔ (Sarah Peterson), Lower Similkameen Indian Band, one of 10 fluent n̓səl̓xčin̓ (Colville-Okanagan Salish) speakers at the time.

“I found out that our language was super endangered,” N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ’ (LaRae) said. “I just felt this urgency. We need to figure out how to do this so that we can start creating new speakers.”

That urgency propelled N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ’ (LaRae) to not only dive into learning her language, but expanding curriculum so she could teach future n̓səl̓xčin̓ (Colville-Okanagan Salish) speakers as well.

In the summer of 2004, N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ’ (LaRae) and ʔaˤn̓n̓ (Chris) rented a house in Omak and embarked on a language intensive with Sʕamtíc̓aʔ (Sara).

paˤłxʷ, whose English name is Graham Wiley-Camacho, is Sinixt Lake Band from the Colville Confederated Tribes. He is the lead elementary school teacher at the Salish School of Spokane. (Photo by Nika Bartoo-Smith, Underscore Native News / ICT)

N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ’ (LaRae) and ʔaˤn̓n̓ (Chris) created 30 lessons with Sʕamtíc̓aʔ (Sarah) that first summer. Each day, ʔaˤn̓n̓ (Chris) would record Sʕamtíc̓aʔ (Sarah) then give the recordings to N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ’ (LaRae) who would study them until late in the evening. The next day, N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ’ (LaRae) would teach that lesson to ʔaˤn̓n̓ (Chris) along with their son, paˤłxʷ (Graham) and his friend Jake La Mere, the four of them huddled together in the rented single-wide trailer.

“It was so successful that in six weeks, we caught up to apprentices who had been there for two years in terms of what we could say and what we could understand,” ʔaˤn̓n̓ (Chris) said.

By the end of the summer, N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ’ (LaRae) and ʔaˤn̓n̓ (Chris) sold their house in Chewelah and moved to K̓ɬy̓aˤn̓q̓úʔ (Paul Creek) near Keremeos in British Columbia of Canada to live with Sʕam̓tíc̓aʔ (Sarah) and her family. They continued working with the language and creating curriculum.

They were able to lead eight weeks of intensive language training a year later.

The following year N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ’ (LaRae) and ʔaˤn̓n̓ (Chris) moved to Deer Park, a small town north of Spokane, to help take care of their first grandchild. They spoke to their granddaughter, Mireya Parkin-Pineda, in Salish. Mireya Parkin-Pineda is now in her first year in the honors college at Western Washington University in Bellingham, 40 minutes south of the U.S.-Canada border.

This inspired N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ’ (LaRae) to reach out to three other Sinixt mothers, including her daughter and sister, and create a pilot Salish immersion nest in Spokane. The first class was made up of four kids, including N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ’ (LaRae) and ʔaˤn̓n̓ (Chris)’s granddaughter. The pilot ran from January to June 2009 out of one of the mother’s basements.

Students from the kindergarten to second grade classroom sit at their desk together at the Salish School of Spokane on November 6, 2025. (Photo by Nika Bartoo-Smith, Underscore Native News / ICT)

In September 2010, that basement pilot program became Salish School of Spokane, starting with an immersion preschool program for six kids and evening language classes for their parents. The curriculum was all from what N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ’ (LaRae), ʔaˤn̓n̓ (Chris) and Sʕamtíc̓aʔ (Sarah) created together.

Salish School of Spokane has continued to grow ever since. Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, it briefly expanded to a pre-K to 12th grade program with 74 students aged 1 to 17 years in 2017 with a bilingual, Salish-English, secondary program.

Unfortunately, the pandemic took a toll on Salish School of Spokane. With a lack of teachers, the school went back to a preschool to grade 6 with 32 students enrolled for the 2021 academic year.

In 2024, the Salish immersion Language Nest classroom re-opened and Salish School of Spokane expanded back up to 8th grade.

Salish School of Spokane runs because of intentional collaboration and community-building between teachers, students and families, according to N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ’ (LaRae).

“They give their heart and soul to the school and the language, and this wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t for folks who really want the language back for their families,” N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ’ (LaRae) said.

In particular, Sʕamtíc̓aʔ (Sarah)’s legacy lives on through her contributions to the school. When first starting Sƛ̓x̌atkʷ N̓səlxcin Sn̓mam̓áy̓aʔtn Salish School of Spokane, there were a few dozen books in Salish to pull from, according to paˤłxʷ (Graham). Sʕamtíc̓aʔ (Sarah) translated around 600 books for the students at Salish School of Spokane.

Salish immersion curriculum

This September, 50 students enrolled in Salish School of Spokane, ages 1 year to 14. They also have 26 teachers in daily intensive language training classes and 48 adults, primarily students’ parents, in evening classes.

At Salish School of Spokane, classes are broken up by age  ranges. Starting with the Salish Language Nest for 1 and 2-year-olds. The early childhood education and assistance program is for preschool students, 3 and 4-year-olds. Then a combined kindergarten through second grade class, followed by a combined third through fifth grade class, and then finally a combined class for sixth through eighth grade.

Students from the pre-K classroom at the Salish School of Spokane gather with their teachers on November 5, 2025. (Photo by Nika Bartoo-Smith, Underscore Native News / ICT) Credit: Oklahoma filmmaker Sterlin Harjo speaks to a reporter a the premiere of groundbreaking series, "Reservation Dogs," on Aug. 2, 2021, in Tulsa, Oklahoma. The series will begin its third and final season with FX on Hulu starting Aug. 2, 2023.  The series was created by Harjo, Seminole and Muscogee of Oklahoma, and Taika Waititi, who is Maori. (AP Photo/Sean Murphy/FILE PHOTO)

All subjects are taught in Salish. Subjects include math, reading, writing, science, art, piano lessons, powwow drumming and dancing. Middle schoolers also take Spanish classes.

“Our kids are growing up as quasi first language speakers of this critically endangered language,” ʔaˤn̓n̓’ (Chris) said.

While students get instruction in Salish, they still take standardized tests in English. Most of the students score at or above grade level in all subjects, according to ʔaˤn̓n̓’ (Chris).

By the time students are in middle school, they spend about 30% of their time outside the classroom learning. This includes harvesting traditional foods and medicines; learning to ride and care for horses; and testing water quality with Spokane River Keeper, a nonprofit working to protect and restore the Spokane River; according to N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ (LaRae).

“I think it’s really cool that we can get out of the classroom, not just learn about it, but also do it,” said X̌sčn̓itkʷ (Seneca), who is 13 and in eighth grade. “You learn about horses, and then you get to go take care of horses. You learn about berries, and then you can go pick the berries.”

When digging for roots and picking huckleberries, students get to use baskets that they learned to weave in their textiles classes.

Inside the classrooms, students in the elementary and middle school work closely with their teachers, often breaking up into smaller groups with only a few kids for each teacher or teacher’s assistant.

Students from the middle school classroom at the Salish School of Spokane gather together on the morning of November 5, 2025. (Photo by Nika Bartoo-Smith, Underscore Native News / ICT)

Even classes like science and math are a place for learning Salish.

In a morning middle school class, Sx̌mn̓atkʷ (Dominique), Taíno from Puerto Rico, was teaching a geology unit. Sx̌mn̓atkʷ (Dominique) is the lead middle school teacher. During class, she realized that she did not know a good translation for the word “lava.”

Sx̌mn̓atkʷ (Dominique) and her students decided to break the word down to come up with a translation together. They needed to find a word that captured that lava is a “melted rock” and that it “flows.” They landed on tyísxn̓, meaning “a rock that flows,” with help from paˤłxʷ (Graham), the lead elementary school teacher for third through fifth graders.

“That was a piece of our class time to then help us continue talking about these geology concepts, where then the kids are actually being very thoughtful about the terms that they’re using, and the cultural connection and representation of that word,” Sx̌mn̓atkʷ (Dominique) said, describing how word analysis is a huge part of language learning. “I think it’s fun.”

A community school

Salish School of Spokane as an intergenerational community school, aims to nurture a community of new Salish speakers.

N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ (LaRae ) and ʔaˤn̓n̓’ (Chris) both work at the school along with their son paˤłxʷ, (Graham) and his wife, Sx̌mn̓atkʷ (Dominique). paˤłxʷ (Graham) and Sx̌mn̓atkʷ (Dominique)’s two daughters also attend the school.

This is common at Salish School of Spokane, for parents to teach their children and the other students.

“That’s been the highlight for me, is watching them become highly advanced speakers and then take it into their homes and use it with their kids,” N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ (LaRae) said. “Another highlight has been being able to speak to my own grandkids in the language.”

X̌sčn̓itkʷ, whose English name is Seneca Wiley-Camacho, Sinixt Lakes Band from the Colville Confederated Tribes, works on a computer while her mom, Sx̌mn̓atkʷ, whose English name is Dominique Wiley-Camacho, Taíno from Puerto Rico, teaches other students at the Salish School of Spokane on November 6, 2025. (Photo by Nika Bartoo-Smith, Underscore Native News / ICT)

Not only educating little ones, everyone involved with the school — from staff to parents — are also taking language classes to actively learn Salish. Parents are required to attend evening classes and log at least 60 hours of Salish learning each year. Childcare is provided along with dinner for each evening class.

All staff members at Salish School of Spokane spend 90 minutes every school day in language classes, according to N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ (LaRae).

“Half of our programming is creating new fluent adults, and that’s the piece that most organizations are missing,” paˤłxʷ (Graham) said.

For many language programs, hiring new teachers means hiring people that already speak the language. At Salish School of Spokane, they are first training people to speak Salish, as there are very few speakers left of the critically endangered language.

“A school is a great way to bring people together, because you really need an economic hub for people,”  N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ (LaRae) said, describing how a school enables them to offer employment for language learning, breaking down a significant financial barrier.

Signs around the Salish School of Spokane label what school supplies are in n̓səl̓xčin̓, Colville-Okanagan Salish. (Photo by Nika Bartoo-Smith, Underscore Native News / ICT) Credit: Photo by Sage Sohier, courtesy of David Bunn Martine

“The idea is using the school as a hub, kind of like an economic engine, and being able to hire folks from the community to teach them language and teach them how to become teachers,” she continued.

Salish School of Spokane has a Salish language educator development program as well, training adults to be advanced fluent speakers of Salish. Those in the program participate in one year of intensive language immersion with six hours a day of instruction and two hours each day in the classroom with students of the immersion program.

After that year, trainees often continue with 90 minutes per day of Salish instruction and then begin teaching as associate Salish immersion teachers.

For many of the families and teachers involved at Sƛ̓x̌atkʷ N̓səlxcin Sn̓mam̓áy̓aʔtn (Salish School of Spokane), learning Salish is about reconnecting with their own Indigenous language.

Students from the third through fifth grade classroom at the Salish School of Spokane sit together and work on a math problem in n̓səl̓xčin̓, Colville-Okanagan Salish, on November 6, 2025. (Photo by Nika Bartoo-Smith, Underscore Native News / ICT)

“One of the root reasons that I was attracted to working here is because I wanted to learn that component about my culture,” said C̓əq̓cq̓al̓qs (Brea Desautel), Sinixt Lakes Band from the Colville Confederated Tribes, co-executive director of Salish School of Spokane. “[Language] and traditions and knowledge that wasn’t necessarily able to be passed down to me.”

Working with students, C̓əq̓cq̓al̓qs (Brea) is constantly impressed by the language skills and knowledge of the youth at Salish School of Spokane who are growing up immersed in Salish.

“These kids are going to have that opportunity to pass on what they know, pass on what they’ve learned,” C̓əq̓cq̓al̓qs (Brea) said. “I just think that that’s really cool, that we are giving them that power back, because a lot of our elders, they didn’t necessarily have that power.”

Dreaming for the future

As interest and investment grows in the Salish School of Spokane they’re quickly outgrowing their space. That’s soon to change though. In February 2026 construction will begin on a new campus. It will sit on over two acres of land that borders the Spokane River, gifted to the school, by Catholic Charities Eastern Washington.

The new campus will allow for growth at Salish School of Spokane. The construction of the new school building will allow a double in enrollment capacity — increasing student enrollment from 60 to 125. Eventually, this will allow the school to bring back a high school program.

The new Salish School of Spokane campus will eventually include housing, a school, a cultural and recreation center, and a sports field. Construction for the new campus, situated along the Spokane River, will begin February 2026. (Image courtesy of Salish School of Spokane) Credit: President Joe Biden speaks with members of the press before boarding Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House, Thursday, Feb. 17, 2022, in Washington. Biden is en route to Ohio to promote his infrastructure agenda. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

Along with a new school building, Salish School of Spokane plans to build a Cultural Recreation Community Center. For many current students, this is one of the most exciting pieces — having a gym for recreation.

The community center will also allow space for Salish School of Spokane to host larger cultural and community events such as powwows and stick games, according to N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ (LaRae).

The new campus will also vastly expand the outdoor classroom of Salish School of Spokane. Nestled next to the Spokane River, much of the surrounding area is protected pine forest. They hope to start bringing back more traditional foods and medicines throughout the property.

Floor plans outline the design for the new Salish School of Spokane campus, of which the groundbreaking will occur in February 2026. (Image courtesy of Salish School of Spokane)

“We’re hoping to get a greenhouse so we can propagate traditional plants and stuff like that,” N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ (LaRae) said. “And then also have hide tanning spots and meat drying racks all along here.”

Down the line, the dream is to have housing at the property as well, for teachers, families and the broader community.

The school and expansion to a new property is an attempt to recreate a winter village, according to paˤłxʷ (Graham).

A group of elementary school students from third through fifth grade sit in the library of the Salish School of Spokane on November 6, 2025, doing math lessons with their teacher in n̓səl̓xčin̓, Colville-Okanagan Salish. (Photo by Nika Bartoo-Smith, Underscore Native News / ICT) Credit: Natasha Bickar, Cherokee, has focused on cultural connection with Unkitawa while serving her sentence at the Washington Corrections Center for Women in Gig Harbor, Wash. She helped close out the celebration by thanking guests for attending and acknowledging the Medicine Creek treaty tribes, whose land the prison is built on. (Photo by Jarrette Werk Underscore News / Report for America)

“It’s been over 100 years since there has been an intact language culture community speaking Salish,” paˤłxʷ (Graham) said. “That’s one of the things we’re trying to do with the new campus is to eventually put housing there, so this way, for the first time in a century, we’ll have that stable base.”

As Salish School of Spokane continues its own dream of expansion, wrapping up a capital campaign to raise funds for the new campus, N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ’ (LaRae) and ʔaˤn̓n̓ (Chris) and their family are actively working to bring the Indigenous Language Fluency Transfer System to other communities working on language revitalization.

This summer, ʔaˤn̓n̓ (Chris) and N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ’ (LaRae) launched a new nonprofit, Indigenous Fluency Now. Currently a board of three, including N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ’ (LaRae), and staff of two, including ʔaˤn̓n̓ (Chris), the goal of the organization is to promote language revitalization and create a network of communities doing this work.

Kłaʔmásq̓t, whose English name is Irie Wiley-Camacho, Sinixt Lake Band from the Colville Confederated Tribes, works through a math problem in n̓səl̓xčin̓, Colville-Okanagan Salish, on November 6, 2025. (Photo by Nika Bartoo-Smith, Underscore Native News / ICT)

Watching young language learners keeps N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ’ (LaRae) committed to the work, thinking about her great grandmother and what it would mean if she got to see new language speakers. N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ’ (LaRae) hopes to share that with other Indigenous communities committed to language revitalization.

“Sometimes we get all teary when we watch them because it’s such a miracle that they’re speaking their language and doing their drumming and everything in the language,”  N̓ʔiy̓sítaʔtkʷ (LaRae) said.

“There’s no stigma,” she added. “It’s just normal. They’re so confident, and I’m just so happy that they get to have that experience of knowing their language, knowing their culture, and it really does just ground them and who they are.”

This story is co-published by Underscore Native Newsand ICT, a news partnership that covers Indigenous communities in the Pacific Northwest.

The post Building a community of n̓səl̓xčin̓ speakers appeared first on ICT.


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Judith Enck is a former regional administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, appointed by President Barack Obama, and the founder of Beyond Plastics, an organization dedicated to eradicating plastic pollution worldwide. She joins Mongabay’s podcast to discuss how governments can implement policies to turn off the tap on plastic pollution, which harms human health and devastates our ecological systems — solutions she outlines in her new book with co-author Adam Mahoney, The Problem with Plastic: How We Can Save Ourselves and Our Planet Before It’s Too Late. “We now have all of this evidence. We have no choice but to act. Because who’s going to stand by and let us turn the ocean into a watery landfill? Who’s going to stand by and read health study after health study about microplastics in our brains and breast milk and testicles? Not taking action is not an option,” she says. Microplastics — the tiny particles of plastic that break down from larger pieces in the environment — are now so ubiquitous that they have penetrated deep into the human body, crossing the blood-brain barrier and leaching potentially thousands of toxic chemicals into humans’ vital organs. They have been found in the deepest part of the ocean and near the summit of Mount Everest. These plastic bits are also harming wildlife, with potentially unforeseen, devastating consequences. Micro- and nanoplastics (even smaller particles than microplastics) are now impacting phytoplankton, which are vital to marine food chains, storing carbon and making oxygen. “This is…This article was originally published on Mongabay


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MITÚ, Colombia — Beneath the rising sun, people from nearby Indigenous communities navigate across the Vaupés River in traditional wooden canoes toward Mitú, a rapidly expanding town in the Colombian Amazon. The canoes are packed with fish, plucked from the river’s tea-colored waters hours before, and produce, harvested from their traditional gardens. To reach the town’s market, where merchants wait above a concrete slipway, the canoes stream past huge concrete sewage pipes and a statue of the Virgin Mary. As they navigate farther in, they’re no longer in the Great Vaupés Indigenous Reserve, an Indigenous territory whose borders surround Mitú and its connecting highway. They’re now in an urban frontier experiencing staggering changes in the middle of the Amazon Rainforest. Today, Mitú’s population has swelled to almost 30,000, from just over 4,000 five decades ago. This is due to an influx of Indigenous people who move between their traditional communities and the urban center, and non-Indigenous settlers who have established businesses or work for research centers or NGOs. The population boom is also due to illegal gold mining by organized crime groups and the illegal extraction of critical minerals in the wider region, including coltan, which is used in electronics and in electric vehicle batteries. Residents, NGOs and authorities have also reported an expansion in cattle farming and the illegal extraction and trafficking of timber, fish and animals. Members of the Indigenous Macaquiño community take Mongabay to visit their traditional forest garden, or chagra, in September 2025. Image by Aimee…This article was originally published on Mongabay


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Unnamed1Last Updated on January 6, 2026 It’s been over six years since the Senate passed Savannah’s Act and the crisis of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women has continued to perpetuate — tragically, undeterred, and under-reported. However, the tragic and woefully marginalized situation may have taken a stunning and hopeful turn — giving the jaded and shunned families […]

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Ownership and navigability of the river could have implications for mining and subsistence in the area.


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