Sealaska Native Rights Advocacy Update
Friday, January 21, 2022

Every two years, Sealaska conducts a shareholder survey to identify your priorities. Those priorities are the road map to our public policy work and help guide the shareholder benefits we are grateful to be able to provide through the success of our businesses.

In 2021, Sealaska’s board and executive leadership launched what will be a multiyear effort to hold leadership meetings in communities where our shareholders live in high concentrations. That means meetings in nearly every community in our region, plus Anchorage, Fairbanks, Seattle, Portland and San Francisco. In conversation with leaders in local municipalities, ANCSA urban and village corporations, tribes and community groups, we seek to support and elevate the local priorities.

The following are a few of the issues we’re working on in early 2022 on behalf of shareholders and descendants:

  1. A New Vision for Regional Economic Development
  2. New Hope for Landless Communities
  3. CARES Act Update
  4. Sealaska Backs Tribal Recognition Ballot Initiative
  5. HR 784 Provides Culturally Relevant Foods for WIC Participants 

1. A New Vision for Regional Economic Development

In September, Sealaska announced a bold, Indigenous-led vision to transform the economy of Southeast Alaska and center Native values in regional land-management decisions through establishment of the Seacoast Trust.

The Seacoast Trust will one day be a $100 million trust whose earnings will support community priorities. Sealaska launched the trust with $10 million in matching funds, which was met in September with $7 million from The Nature Conservancy. The Rasmuson and Edgerton foundations committed another $2 million in December.

Collaboration between an Alaska Native corporation and one of the world’s largest conservation groups may seem surprising to some, but it’s nothing new to us. Sealaska, The Nature Conservancy, the U.S. Forest Service, state agencies, local and tribal governments, nonprofits, and private industry have been working together in Southeast Alaska for more than 10 years through a network called Sustainable Southeast Partnership. Projects like recently completed affordable housing in Yakutat, a salmon predation study of Klawock Lake, and the distribution of 49,000 pounds of salmon to traditional communities in the summer of 2020 are just a few of the projects that have been made possible through this network, and we can’t wait to do more of it.

Sealaska and its partners at The Nature Conservancy are actively seeking donors to help us fully capitalize our self-sustaining vision for regional economic development. The next major fundraising milestone is $20 million, and we’re almost there. The earnings will begin generating around $1 million in unrestricted funds to support the work of SSP in the region. That means regional philanthropy will be guided by local and Native values, not the interests of foundations and donors outside Southeast

People often ask, how can my community benefit? It’s simple. This network is powered by people who want to work together on shared priorities. The door (or more accurately, the Zoom meeting) is open to all. To learn how your community can get involved, email Ralph Wolfe at ralph@spruceroot.org.

2. New Hope for Landless Communities

The 50th anniversary of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act was on December 18, 2021, and for five landless communities in Southeast, the fight to be included in the land legislation continues.

Over the years, Sealaska, the Southeast Alaska Landless Corporation (SALC), and many others have worked with Alaska’s congressional delegation to advance proposal after proposal to resolve the inexplicable injustice that left Haines, Ketchikan, Petersburg, Tenakee Springs and Wrangell out of ANCSA. Their exclusion — which historians and ANCSA scholars have never been able to explain — left Alaska Natives in the five communities without the opportunity to form urban corporations and make land selections in their communities.

With more than a decade of personal experience pushing legislation at the federal level, meeting with community advocates and pouring over maps, Jaeleen Kookesh, Sealaska’s vice president of policy and legal affairs, is more optimistic now than she ever has been.

Latest Legislation Includes Specific Land Selections

In May, Rep. Don Young introduced H.R. 3231, the Unrecognized Southeast Alaska Native Communities Recognition and Compensation Act, and Sen. Lisa Murkowski followed with a Senate version of the bill in mid-November. It’s definitely not the first time bills have been introduced, so why is Kookesh optimistic?

First, the legislation was introduced early enough in the current two-year session of Congress for committee meetings and hearings to be held and support generated.

Second, staffers from Murkowski’s office spent a lot of time in the five communities this summer, meeting with locals and pouring over maps to identify specific land selections for each community. Maps were included with the proposed legislation for the first time in 2020, but that bill was introduced too late in the session to receive a hearing.

“This is the first time there will be real discussions around the map,” Kookesh explained. “Conservation interests have told us, ‘We don’t disagree there’s inequity, but we can’t support you because we don’t know where you’re going.’”

The 23,040 acres owed to each of the five communities will come from adjacent federal lands. Kookesh described the process as “squeezing the Jell-O” because when a selection is made in one area, it impacts other interest groups. The amount of discussion and negotiation can be overwhelming at times.

However, the grassroots work done in Alaska with a broad range of stakeholders to identify land selections gives hearings in Congress significantly more substance because the land selections are no longer theoretical.

For the most current information on the status of the legislation, please visit withoutland.org and sign up for the Alaska Natives Without Land newsletter.

You Can Help

Alaska’s congressional delegation is well informed and uniformly supportive of resolving this injustice in ANCSA.

Shareholders and descendants can help push the legislation forward by signing the Unrecognized Southeast Alaska Native Communities Recognition and Compensation Act petition to show your support. Signatures from shareholders in Washington state, Oregon, California, Arizona, Nevada and elsewhere are especially important because we need lawmakers from outside Alaska to get behind the cause!

3. CARES Act Update

Sealaska would like to extend its thanks and appreciation to our partners at Central Council of the Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska, who helped distribute $5.3 million to Sealaska shareholders through our joint Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act program. The funding was provided by the U.S. Department of the Treasury to tribes and Alaska Native corporations to help Native communities disproportionately impacted by COVID-19. Sealaska was allocated $4.2 million under the Treasury Department’s funding formula, and Tlingit & Haida added $1.1 million, allowing us to provide $500 payments to 10,600 shareholders.

4. Sealaska Backs Tribal Recognition Ballot Initiative

Sealaska recently joined Alaskans for Better Government in support of a proposed ballot measure to institute formal legal recognition of all 229 Alaska Native tribes by the State of Alaska. This ballot initiative would provide Alaskans – rather than the Legislature – a chance to vote on the matter directly and finally ensure an equal, government-to-government relationship between Tribes and the state. All Alaska tribes have been federally recognized since 1994.

“This isn’t about tribal authority or sovereignty,” said Sealaska Chair Joe Nelson. “Tribal authority pre-dates Alaska and any colonial presence in our communities. This is about the health, safety and self-determination of all of our communities, especially our villages.”

With no recognized government-to-government relationship in place, the state is not currently compelled to collaborate to create solutions or operate alongside tribes as equal partners. This gap is especially seen with issues disproportionately faced by tribal citizens, such as access to justice, public safety, education and more. By definition, Alaska’s tribes work to strengthen and protect our communities. Formal recognition by the state would represent a meaningful declaration of partnership, establishing a more productive, cooperative relationship for all three governments – tribal, federal and state – to work together successfully for the benefit of all Alaskans.

The Alaska Tribal Recognition Act – co-chaired by Central Council of the Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska President Chalyee Éesh Richard  Peterson and Sealaska directors La quen náay  Liz Medicine Crow and Wáahlaal Gíidaak  Barbara Blake – will advance discussion of the benefits and role of tribal sovereignty in relation to citizens as well as the wider state of Alaska. Seeing this initiative on the ballot will capitalize on the momentum of the upcoming 2022 elections, inviting candidates to speak to Native issues and Tribal sovereignty and tell voters where they stand.

Similar efforts have been made in previous years through various avenues, including a bill introduced in the 2021 legislative session by Representative Tiffany Zulkosky. Despite inroads made with prior administrations, the relationship between tribes and the state has remained ambiguous at best, and often tumultuous or even litigious, as the State of Alaska has sued tribes more than any other state in the country. By utilizing the ballot measure process, the decision would be placed in the hands of Alaska voters, rather than the Alaska Legislature. Polling has indicated majority support for the ballot initiative, signifying a likely path to success.

5. HR 784 Provides Culturally Relevant Foods to WIC Participants

Alaska Rep. Don Young recently introduced a resolution to ensure low-income women and children have access to culturally relevant, nutritious foods.

H.R. 784 would allow pregnant, postpartum and breastfeeding women, infants, and children up to age 5 participating in the WIC (Women/Infants/Children) supplemental nutrition program to use program funds to purchase cultural foods like salmon.

The legislation gives the authority to state-level WIC program officers to determine which foods are best suited to meet the nutritional needs of their residents. In Alaska, this includes Sealaska shareholders and descendants, among other Alaska Natives.

Our shareholders and Native communities deserve the ability to feed themselves and growing children the absolute most nutritious food available,” said Sealaska director Wáahlaal Gíidaak Barbara Blake. “That just happens to be our Indigenous foods. We know that a large portion of our people have food allergies to many of the foods currently available within the WIC program. This is a great opportunity to give our mothers and children the absolute best nutrition available.”

Sealaska believes that access to healthy, traditional foods is critical to the health and well-being of our people. We appreciate the special attention Young has given to this issue through his advocacy, and will continue to fight for equity for our people at the federal, state and local level.

For more information on Alaska’s WIC program and a list of foods that are included in the program, visit https://dhss.alaska.gov/dpa/Pages/nutri/wic/approved-foods.aspx.


News Search


44 results found

Posted 10/28/2024
Posted 10/28/2024
Gunalchéesh Anax X’aséigu Yé Desiree Jackson for offering us this insight into One Sealaska and the many avenues of our community-focused work! We are working hard to provide our shareholders with a comprehensive understanding of all we do, focusing always on strengthening our people, culture and homelands. Through Woocheen, we promote ocean health, renewable energy and a holistic vision of… Source

Posted 8/30/2024
Posted 8/30/2024
Sealaska interns unload after a long journey to Howkan, a traditional Haida village site. Sealaska interns left to right: Evan Link, Operations Fellow at Icemar; Allison Mills, Natural Resources Intern at Sealaska; Addy Mallot, Storytelling & Engagement Intern at Sustainable Southeast Partnership; and Alicia Maryott, Traditional Food Security Intern at Tlingit & Haida Earlier this summer… Source

Posted 7/29/2024
Posted 7/29/2024
It’s that time of year again! Bring OUR FUTURE to life during the 2024 #SealaskaWayOfLife photo contest for a chance to win prizes. The contest begins Monday, July 29 and runs through Friday, August 30. Storytelling is at the heart of who we are at Sealaska. We want to continue to tell our story from your vantage point. Introduced in 2020 as a way to foster connection and engagement… Source

Posted 2/1/2024
Posted 2/1/2024
Sealaska is now accepting applications for 2024-2025 language grants, which support efforts to preserve Sm’algyax, X̱aad Kíl and Lingít. Applications will be accepted on a rolling basis until all funds are allocated. Learn more and apply at https://sealaska.com/stories/language-revitalization/. Sealaska’s investment in languages is made possible by a $10 million endowment… Source

Posted 10/31/2023
Posted 10/31/2023
Look for link to download portraits at the bottom. The smell of sanded cedar filled the Steele Gallery at the Heard Museum on October 28. About 40 Sealaska shareholders, all at once, were sanding their own small dance paddles in preparation for painted formline designed by Tlingit master artist Doug Chilton. The sound of 40 people sanding at once echoed through the facility. Source

Posted 8/2/2023
Posted 8/2/2023
“Indigenous Resistance: Now & Then” is a powerful telling of stories of resistance from Indigenous perspectives, sharing recent history and the impacts of colonialism on culture – and the ways in which our communities continue to stand up against it. Sealaska shareholders can preview it here until August 8. This award-winning short documentary by Haida director ‘Wáats’asdiyei Joe Yates stands in… Source

Posted 7/17/2023
Posted 7/17/2023
It’s that time of year again! Bring OUR VALUES to life during the 2023 #SealaskaWayOfLife photo contest for a chance to win prizes. The contest begins Monday, July 17 and submissions will be accepted through Friday, August 11. Storytelling is at the heart of who we are at Sealaska. We want to continue to tell our story from your vantage point. Introduced in 2020 as a way to foster… Source

Posted 7/6/2023
Posted 7/6/2023
In early June, Sealaska welcomed 35 students from across Alaska and the rest of the country to Juneau for the 2023 Sealaska Intern Connect Week — five days full of learning and bonding for Sealaska’s 2023 intern class. For the next few months, Sealaska’s interns will embark on different projects across the country — and globe — spanning diverse fields, from finance and investment to cultural… Source

Posted 2/23/2023
Posted 2/23/2023
On Monday, Jan. 20, ‘Fancy Dance’—a film about matrilineal love and the complexities of family and care in Indigenous communities—premiered at Eccles Theater at the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah. Sealaska shareholder and descendant Miciana Áak’w Ta Sháa Alise co-wrote the film alongside Seneca–Cayuga filmmaker Erica Tremblay, who recently worked as a writer and executive story… Source

Posted 1/13/2023
Posted 1/13/2023
“Molly of Denali” is one of the biggest shows on PBS — so big that it was recently nominated for the Children’s and Family Emmys in two categories: Outstanding Preschool Animated Series and Outstanding Writing for a Preschool Animated Program. The team behind that outstanding writing includes four Sealaska shareholders: Frank Henry Kaash Katasse, Vera Starbard, X̱’unei Lance Twitchell and ‘Wáats’… Source

Posted 12/14/2022
Posted 12/14/2022
More than 2,300 shareholders — nearly 10 percent of Sealaska’s shareholder base! — participated in Sealaska’s virtual holiday party held on Wednesday, Dec. 14. Shareholders and their families gathered from their homes and phones to celebrate the magic of the season and learn more about the past year’s achievements. The event included door prizes, seasonal greetings from Sealaska’s board of… Source

Posted 11/7/2022
Posted 11/7/2022
Sealaska published a special edition Shareholder Newsletter. The following was included. In 2019, Shyla Germain, who works in Shareholder Relations at Sealaska, was sitting in the lobby of the company headquarters talking to people about enrolling to become a Sealaska shareholder. It was during Celebration, and many Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian people filled the streets of downtown Juneau. Source

Posted 6/27/2022
Posted 6/27/2022
Irish company will expand global geosciences capabilities June 28, 2022 (Seattle, WA)—Sealaska and Causeway Geotech Limited, one of the leading independent ground-investigation contractors in Ireland and the United Kingdom, today announced Causeway is becoming part of Sealaska’s ocean-health business platform. Run through a Seattle-based company called Woocheen… Source

Posted 6/27/2022
Posted 6/27/2022
A deep appreciation for the outdoors, for people and for problem-solving united Darren O’Mahony, Paul Dunlop and Ciaran Doherty when they were colleagues at Glover Site Investigations in Northern Ireland. So when Glover liquidated in the wake of the global financial crisis in 2011, their strong working relationships saw the trio reunited again in a new, fledgling company that was set up to target… Source

Posted 6/23/2022
Posted 6/23/2022
The inaugural Clarence Jackson Sr. Language Awards were presented at the 2022 Annual Meeting of Shareholders. The award recognizes individuals for the tremendous impact on Lingít, Xaad Kíl and Sm’álgyax language revitalization. The first awards recognized Elder/birth speakers. The new Sealaska language awards are named after Galtín Tá Gooch Clarence Jackson Sr. for his championing of language… Source

Posted 6/15/2022
Posted 6/15/2022
“Knowing Sealaska is rooting for me is much more meaningful than just the money.” This spring, look for stories from some of Sealaska’s scholarship recipients. Each student is on a different path, with diverse personal, academic and professional goals. Sealaska believes in their dreams. By helping to further the education of these future leaders, we are investing in our people’s shared… Source

Posted 4/12/2022
Posted 4/12/2022
Blood Quantum Q & A In the past year, Sealaska has hosted a variety of conversations on Native identity and conducted extensive outreach to shareholders and descendants about the issue. The purpose of these efforts was to better understand how blood quantum impacts our community, and to provide background and context to shareholders. Topics included how blood quantum was incorporated into...

Posted 4/12/2022
Posted 4/12/2022
Over the past six months, Sealaska reached out to shareholders and descendants to ask a seemingly simple yet profoundly personal question: How does blood quantum impact you? Through a variety of mechanisms, including an open-ended questionnaire, a formal survey and virtual events, we heard from thousands of you. To ensure we obtained a statistically valid view of shareholders’ thoughts on… Source

Posted 12/17/2021
Posted 12/17/2021
Gunalchéesh, Háw’aa, T’oya̱xsut ‘nüüsm for joining us today! This year, Sealaska had two opportunities for shareholders to win cash prizes: All cash prizes will be delivered in the manner you receive your deposits via MySealaska.com. Over 1,000 of you that tuned into the holiday fair were automatically entered for event door prizes. Congratulations and thank you all for attending. Source

Posted 10/20/2021
Posted 10/20/2021
In early September, Sealaska asked shareholders to tell us how blood quantum impacts their lives. So far more than 600 people have responded. We are sharing a selection of quotes and perspectives in social media and on our website to help advance the discussion around blood quantum, and to better understand how it impacts shareholders and descendants. Sealaska is exploring the possibility of… Source

Posted 10/14/2021
Posted 10/14/2021
Sealaska’s board of directors recently approved a $25,000 contribution in support of the creation of a totem pole that will serve as a monument and acknowledgement of the healing journey undertaken by women and children as they move from abusive family circumstances to healthier ones. The totem is being carved by master carver Wayne Price of Haines, and will be erected at the Kaasei… Source

Posted 9/24/2021
Posted 9/24/2021
Sealaska is proud to share the winners of our 2021 #SealaskaWayOfLife photo contest! We created the #SealaskaWayOfLife photo contest in 2020 because we want to see what the Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian way of life looks like through your lens, celebrate our culture and heritage and foster connection within our communities and beyond—especially amid the pandemic. This year… Source

Posted 8/9/2021
Posted 8/9/2021
What does the Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian way of life look like through your lens? Show us in a snapshot during this year’s #SealaskaWayOfLife photo contest! Sealaska is dedicated to doing our part to improve ocean health and protect our way of life. Over the past six years, we’ve advanced our twin goals of economic prosperity and environmental protection by investing in a range of… Source

Posted 8/2/2021
Posted 8/2/2021
Educator and Sealaska shareholder Karen Lauth Elliott has been celebrating a lot of graduations over the past few years, culminating on June 12 this year, when she and her youngest son, Emad Al-Shamasawi, both received diplomas on the same day. Elliott earned her master’s in education policy from the University of Washington (UW) that day while her son graduated from Ingraham High School in… Source

Posted 7/7/2021
Posted 7/7/2021
Every year, Sealaska directors select a shareholder descendant to serve a one-year term as the Board Youth Advisor (BYA). Tiadola Silva was selected as the 2021-2022 BYA. In this position, Silva will provide input and gain board membership training and knowledge of Sealaska’s operations. Silva is originally from Angoon and now lives in Juneau. Her parents are Jeremy Martin and Juanita Silva. Source

Posted 4/19/2021
Posted 4/19/2021
The next time you find yourself on a beach, grab a handful of sand and look at it closely, suggests oceanographer Jesse McNinch. That sand is a detective story, he says, encoding the tales of millions of years of natural history. “Geology is like the earth’s stenographer,” Jesse says. “It’s always recording everything that’s happening. The exciting part is being able to read and interpret it.”… Source

Posted 4/1/2021
Posted 4/1/2021
As Sealaska’s board finalizes the spring distribution to Sealaska shareholders in a meeting on Friday, April 2, the company’s business operations continue a trend of increasing profitability. Thanks to the incredible dedication and skill of so many at Sealaska, several of our businesses actually saw record financial results in 2020. Their efforts enabled us to keep our employees safe… Source

Posted 2/24/2021
Posted 2/24/2021
San Diego’s new mayor, Todd Gloria, is Tlingit, Filipino and has Dutch and Puerto Rican roots. He often describes himself as the proud son of a hotel maid and a gardener. Gloria is San Diego’s first non-white mayor, and also its first LGBTQ mayor. “I’ve been the first of many things in my career,” Gloria said. “The goal is always not to be the last one. Source

Posted 2/9/2021
Posted 2/9/2021
During the month of February, we are highlighting shareholders who are contributing to policy and advocacy efforts and who positively impact people and communities. Washington State Representative Debra Lekanoff is a champion for environmental policy and protections. She has given her time at the tribal, village, state and national level. Her efforts and professional background led some… Source

Posted 12/20/2020
Posted 12/20/2020
It is the holiday season, and a great opportunity to support local, Native-owned businesses, artists and entrepreneurs. Sealaska invited its shareholders, descendants and others in the Alaska Native community to share their businesses and artistry with our audiences so we can help promote them during an otherwise very difficult year. We were flooded with submissions from all sorts of artists… Source

Posted 11/22/2020
Posted 11/22/2020
Earlier this year, Sealaska marked an important milestone in its growth and development as a company – following the board election this spring, our board is now majority female, with seven of 13 members who are women. Balance and reciprocity are important values we hold as Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian people, and they’re part of our company values at Sealaska, too. Source

Posted 11/17/2020
Posted 11/17/2020
Caitlin Way never had any intention of being an entrepreneur. Even after becoming a business owner, she had a hard time embracing the identity. When she returned home to Sitka after graduating from Fort Lewis College in Durango, Colorado, with a bachelor’s degree in exercise science, she didn’t quite know what her next step would be. Way, who is Tlingit, said she was operating under… Source

Posted 8/5/2020
Posted 8/5/2020
Each year, Sealaska directors select a shareholder descendant to participate as a board youth advisor to the board for a one-year term. Michaela Demmert from Juneau was selected for the board youth advisor position for the coming year. In her role as board youth advisor (BYA), Michaela serves as a non-voting member on the board and will be asked to provide input, while learning about the company’s… Source

Posted 7/7/2020
Posted 7/7/2020
Sealaska wants to see what the Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian way of life looks like through YOUR lens, and we invite you to participate in the “Our Way of Life” photo contest! This is an opportunity for Sealaska to not only engage with you directly, but also gain perspective on how our audience views our Native way of life. Creativity and freedom of interpretation is welcome and encouraged! Source

Posted 6/22/2020
Posted 6/22/2020
After discussing where Maka came from and how she was taking on her current projects on climate change and social injustice, we asked her flat out, “why?” Why youth, why now? Her answer… “My people are resilient people. I remember, as a child, sitting at our old wooden kitchen table after dinner while my grandfather spoke about how the Tlingit people trained to stay strong and healthy. Source

Posted 6/4/2020
Posted 6/4/2020
It is natural that Morgan Howard sees the future of Sealaska – as well as its challenges – through the lens of communications. As founder of Morgan Howard Productions, a communications company specializing in video, web, and social media, he has been telling the stories of Alaska Native people and Alaska Native Corporations (ANCs) since the mid-1990s. Howard said he believes that… Source

Posted 3/3/2020
Posted 3/3/2020
Sealaska is partnering with the Sustainable Southeast Partnership (SSP) and Allen Marine to support a new position within SSP, a regional catalyst for regenerative tourism, which will focus on: Sealaska looks at the uniqueness of Southeast Alaska as an opportunity to educate and inspire. Sealaska supports Sealaska Heritage Institute’s newest endeavor to establish Heritage Square in… Source

Posted 2/27/2020
Posted 2/27/2020
Alana Peterson learned the value of hard work at a very early age. When she was just 10 years old, she worked alongside her father, who was an artist, selling hand-painted wood trinkets to tourists. Throughout her life, Peterson has grabbed every opportunity to work, to help others fulfill their dreams, and to improve the local economy. Her resume includes several unique experiences that has… Source

Posted 2/19/2020
Posted 2/19/2020
Sealaska is answering the call of the United Nations. In December 2019, the United Nations concluded its year of focus on indigenous languages around the world. But now there is a call for a decade of focus! Currently, a critical situation exists with the disappearance of indigenous languages around the world. Sealaska is committing $10 million over the next decade to focus on the revitalization… Source

Posted 11/25/2019
Posted 11/25/2019
Dear Sealaska family, At a recent meeting, we established a fund to support Lingít (Tlingit), Xaad Kíl (Haida) and Shm’algyack (Tsimshian) language revitalization for the next 10 years. We anticipate spending $500,000 annually from the interest earned on this $10 million fund. We have limited time and resources, i.e., speakers and money. We need to use them efficiently and effectively. Source

Posted 4/23/2019
Posted 4/23/2019
At the end of 2018, Sealaska commissioned an online survey for all shareholders to participate. Thank you to everyone who participated! This study is part of an ongoing effort Sealaska has undertaken since 1981 to ask shareholders their opinions. 2,702 Sealaska shareholders opted to participate, with demographics similar to Sealaska’s overall shareholder base. The surveys were conducted by DHM… Source

Posted 9/6/2018
Posted 9/6/2018
A blog post about intern development week by Andrew Wysocki, 2018 Sealaska communications intern Several times this spring, my grandmother and parents urged me to apply for Sealaska’s ten-week summer internship. They saw it as a great source of experience and told me to take advantage of the opportunity in front of me. I was hesitant in even starting the application process simply because… Source

Posted 5/7/2018
Posted 5/7/2018
The bereavement program is a new benefit that can finally be added by Sealaska as a result of the company’s success and steady growth over the last five years. Sealaska’s board of directors announced its approval today of a shareholder bereavement benefit to provide support for its shareholders after the loss of a loved one. This program is a result of Sealaska’s growing financial strength… Source