As CODIE celebrates Cesar Chavez Day, we will be closed on Monday, April 1, 2024, from 8:30 am to 5 pm.
 
Our services will resume on Tuesday, April 2, 2024, and can be accessed through VP, email, or in person.
 
Email: Info@codie.org
Videophone: 951-801-5674
Voice: 951-275-5000
 
For after-hours emergency interpreting requests, please call LifeSigns at 800-633-8883.
 
[Image Description: The image shows the sun shining over a mountain and land. On the right side, there is a black and white portrait picture of Cesar Chavez with a yellow duotone, smiling towards the camera.]
As CODIE celebrates Cesar Chavez Day, we will be closed on Monday, April 1, 2024, from 8:30 am to 5 pm. Our services will resume on Tuesday, April 2, 2024, and can be accessed through VP, email, or in person. Email: Info@codie.org Videophone: 951-801-5674 Voice: 951-275-5000 For after-hours emergency interpreting requests, please call LifeSigns at 800-633-8883. [Image Description: The image shows the sun shining over a mountain and land. On the right side, there is a black and white portrait picture of Cesar Chavez with a yellow duotone, smiling towards the camera.]

CODIE SERVICES

We provide services at no cost.

Gray banner: First column: CODIE (CENTER ON DEAFNESS INLAND EMPIRE) logo with yellow rain cross and arrowhead above the i. Next: "BELIEVES IN DIVERSITY, INCLUSION, & BELONGING" Second column: Red banner: "INCLUSIVE" Orange banner: "EQUITABLE" Yellow banner: "DIVERSE" Green banner: "ACCEPTING" Light blue banner: "WELCOMING" Blue banner: "SAFE SPACE" Purple banner: "FOR EVERYONE" Third column shows an image of Current Pride Flag.

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HONORING ORIGINAL INDIGENOUS INHABITANTS LAND ACKNOWLEDGE

Land acknowledgment is a traditional custom that dates back centuries in many Native nations and communities. Today, land acknowledgments are used by Native Peoples and non-Natives to recognize Indigenous Peoples who are the original stewards of the lands on which we now live.

At Friends of the Inyo, we work to protect and care for lands that have been, for over ten thousand years, and still very much are, inhabited by the Paiute (Nuumu), Shoshone (Newe) and Timbisha peoples. Many of these lands are now known by names recognizing people who never set foot here. These lands are called Payahuunadu or Panawe by the Nuumu and Newe peoples, respectively. This land acknowledgment is a recognition of the original inhabitants of the Eastern Sierra, and is intended as a show of respect for Native peoples and to surface the often-suppressed colonial history of our country.

We would like to begin by respectfully acknowledging that the Town of Mono resides within the traditional territory and ancestral lands of the Tionontati (Petun), Attawandaron (Neutral), Haudenosaunee (Six Nations), and Anishinaabe peoples.

We also acknowledge that the Town of Mono resides within the treaty lands named under Treaty 18: the Nottawasaga Purchase of 1818;

These traditional territories upon which we live and learn, are steeped in rich Indigenous history and traditions. It is with this statement that we declare to honour and respect the past and present connection of Indigenous peoples with this land, its waterways and resources.

Riverside County: We would like to respectfully acknowledge and recognize our responsibility to the original and current caretakers of its land, water, and air:

  • The Cahuilla
  • Tongva, Luiseño, Serrano
  • Chemehuevi peoples and all of their ancestors and descendants, past, present, and future.

San Bernardino County: We would like to respectfully acknowledge that we are on the traditional territory and homelands of:

  • Luiseño/Payómkawichum people

For more information please go to www.csusm.edu/cicsc

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