Shop Native-Owned
Sunday, December 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, crafters and makers in Alaska and beyond. Their business profiles, photos of their work and links to online shops and/or social profiles are below. Please consider supporting them if you can!

Gunalchéesh, Háw’aa, T’oya̱xsmt ‘nüüsm!

Amiah Johnson: Little Bear Designs

Amiah Johnson, who is Tlingit and Filipina, beads, weaves chilkat, ravenstail and cedar, and sews to create earrings, headbands, pendants and qaspegs. She said that she began beading when she was young, after her maternal grandmother and mom taught her how.

The name of her small business is Little Bear Designs, as her indigenous name, Xóotsk’, means ‘little bear.’ Amiah does not accept customer orders, but you can find products available for purchase on her Instagram @xootsk.

Autumn Shortridge: Seal Fur by Autumn

Autumn Shotridge, Yaandakin Yeil (Tlingit), creates unique beaded seal fur jewelry and accessories such as handbags, purses, wallets, headbands, hats, pop sockets, and more.

Though she currently resides in Washington State, Autumn was born in Ketchikan. She developed her love of beading at a young age by learning from her grandmother, Esther Sea, the matriarch of the Teikweidee clan. Living in the Pacific Northwest, she has developed a wide range of artistic talents that she has learned from a number of artists. But much of her inspiration comes from her young daughter, Aria: “I am setting an example for her, as my own mother has set for me… our culture’s future is in the hands of our youth,” Autumn said. While seal fur is the main material that Autumn works with—it allows her spirituality to shine through, she said— she occasionally allows herself to pursue whatever sparks her artistic interest. Autumn recently created a small collection of abalone and glass trade bead earrings, which appear in the fourth image, as well as a few pairs with wooden laser cut flowers. She continues to introduce new items including barrettes, hair combs, ornaments, fanny packs, and baby shoes.Check out Autumn’s Etsy store, Seal Fur by Autumn, which she recently launched to showcase pieces available for sale. She also welcomes commissions via Instagram and is active on Facebook.
Eva Rowan

Eva Rowan, sx̱een (Tlingit and Pueblo), is currently working on a project that involves beading earrings inspired by album art from Native music artists. She said that she sees this as an opportunity to “promote other Native artists’ craft while creating her own.”

Eva, who is from Klawock, said that her work is driven by her love of making regalia for loved ones. She started beading earrings in 2016, and now sells them via Instagram (@yeilgirl). “I truly enjoy creating for others,” Eva said.

One of Eva’s recent collections was inspired by Dakota and Boricua hip hop artist and producer Tufawon. Profits from all pieces inspired by album art are shared with the music artist.

Visit Eva’s Instagram to learn more about her work and collections inspired by music artists. To place and order, send Eva a direct message.

Gertrude Ezell: Dragon Queen Soaps

Gertrude Ezell creates soaps, lip balms, face masks, and smoked salts with her mom, Deborah Hudson, and the help of her two sons through their small business, DragonQueen Creations. The team hopes to venture to bath bombs and lotions in the near future.

Their products can be purchased via Etsy (etsy.com/shop/DragonQueenSoaps) or Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/DragonQueenCreations).

Joshua Clark: Creative Native Marketplace

Joshua Clark recently started up Creative Native Marketplace, a platform to support small Native-owned business and individual sellers.

The marketplace helps vendors in the U.S and Canada to share their creations and products with the world in an effort to “make a cultural connection that we can all be proud of.”

Products available for purchase range from jewelry, to face masks, to salves and balms, and more. The website has a built-in share function to allow anyone to easily share marketplace products to Facebook, and a giveaway system that all sellers can utilize to promote their business.

To shop or learn more, visit creativenativemarketplace.com

Kylie Kookesh: Deisheetaan Designs

Deisheetaan Designs is owned by Kylie Kookesh, Kyalxtin (Tlingit). She creates mostly jewelry but recently started to bead ornaments, keychains, and headbands.

Kylie said she decided to learn how to bead after seeing other passengers crafting their beadwork while traveling to Thorne Bay via ferry for volleyball practices. “I told myself I need to learn how to bead like that,” she said, “I have been doing this for about four years now, and I’ve improved, to say the least.”

You can keep up with Kylie and learn more about her products on Instagram and Twitter.

In the market for a unique holiday gift? She is currently accepting orders through Facebook messenger.

Liane Crosta: FromtheCAlaska

Liane Crosta and her husband Chris create salmon leather jewelry and accessories using salmon byproducts, as well as halibut, rockfish, and seaglass and shells gathered from beaches in Alaska.

Lifelong Alaskans, they were both taught from an early age how to catch, clean, smoke, cure, and jar wild salmon. More than a decade ago, they realized how beautiful the salmon skins were, and decided they could find a purpose for materials that are usually wasted or thrown away; Liane and Chris also utilize bones and vertebrae for jewelry and art.

Through their business, From the C, the pair sells unique items such as journals, travel bags, boot bling, in addition to earrings, necklaces, bracelets, purses, and more. Their newest line of products is a wedding and formal wear collection. Find Chris and Liane on Instagram (@FromTheCAlaska) and Facebook  (facebook.com/fromthecalaska), or check out their website at https://fromthec.com/.

Lisa Anderson: Tlingit Botanicals

Lisa Anderson said she is fortunate that elders noticed and nurtured her interest in traditional remedies. Their support led Lisa to start Tlingit Botanicals, a small business through which she sells all-natural and sustainable salves, balms, and topical skin care goods made in Hoonah, Alaska.

One of Lisa’s most popular products is the Devil’s Club 2x salve, a traditional handmade healing salve that can be used to treat eczema, burns, scratches, and dry skin, or aching muscles, arthritis, bruises, and small wounds.

Native to the arboreal rainforests of Southeast Alaska, Devil’s Club—Sʼáxtʼ (Tlingit)—is an adaptogenic plant, meaning its compounds strengthen the body’s ability to manage various stressors. The plant has been used for centuries by our Tlingit, Haida, and Tsimshian people, as well as other Pacific Northwest indigenous cultures, for a wide range of medicinal and spiritual purposes.

Highly potent and culturally relevant, the Tlingit Botanicals Devil’s Club 2x salve has a five-star rating from nearly 80 reviews. Other products available for purchase include a spruce lip balm, itch relief oil, seaweed lotion bar, beard salve, and more.

Shop Lisa’s handmade products online at tlingitbotanicals.com.

Miciana Alise: Miciana Alise Creations

Miciana Alise (Tlingit) said that she was inspired to become an artist by her grandmother, Alberta Aspen, who is a renowned button robe and regalia artist. “Watching her create beautiful traditional work growing up made me want to create my own, but with a modern twist,” Miciana said.

She strives to acknowledge her mixed heritage through her work—she makes and sells leather and suede earrings, assorted jewelry, digital art, stickers, and photography prints featuring unique form line designs. Miciana has even created new form line emoji GIFs that you can add to stories and posts by simply opening the GIF search bar and typing in @tlingitstickers (must include the @ symbol).

Check out Miciana’s work on Facebook at Miciana Alise Creations for further info on pricing and available designs. To place an order, send her a direct message.

Myrna Gardner: Soft Gold Fur

Myrna Gardner, who is Tlingit and Haida, designs and creates fur clothing, jewelry, accessories, and homegoods using traditional wild furs from Alaska including Northern Sea Otter, Mink, and Ermine.

She sells her products under the label Soft Gold Fur. Find her work on Facebook (facebook.com/SoftGoldFur), Instagram (@softgoldfur), or email Myrna for inquiries (solfgoldfur@icloud.com).

Rayana White: With the Rain

Ketchikan gets an average of 14 feet of rain per year. That’s why Rayana White, who is Tsimshian and Tlingit, decided to start making her SLUGS fleece rain boot liners. “We live in our rain boots,” she said.

The purpose of the fleece socks is to “prevent that annoying problem of socks slipping down your boots,” as they are long enough that the top cuff can be folded over. They are available in a variety of colors and prints sure to jazz up up a pair of XtraTuffs, though they also fit leather or snow boots. There are styles for the whole family, from neutral plaids to bright florals, as well as children’s sizes. Most of all, they keep your feet warm, dry, and cozy!

Rayana has been in business for ten years, and she sells her boot liners on Etsy—where she has a five-star rating from nearly 1,500 reviews—and at the world-famous Pike’s Place Market in Seattle. She started making face masks in the wake of the pandemic, which are also available for purchase.

You can find Rayana on Instagram and on Etsy at withtherain.Etsy.com.

Reine Pavlik: Alaska Soles

Through Alaska Soles, Reine Pavlik (Tlingit) creates and sells beaded and skin-sewn accessories. As she continues to practice her craft, Renee said that she is excited for the opportunity to expand her product range, which currently includes moccasins, purses, wallets, and more.

Reine was recently commissioned to make a pair of moccasins for a newlywed couple in Minnesota. Her approach to custom orders is intentional and careful, so before getting started, Renee did her research. Hoping to learn more about loons, she said found it interesting that a bird’s plumage, or the pattern and color of feathers, is not too different between males and females.

Reine said that this made her think of Tlingit Lovebirds, the Raven and the Eagle, both of which are monomorphic species that lack prominent gender differences—at a glance, you cannot tell if you are looking at a male or female. Stitch by stitch, Renee created a pair of moccasins to reflect that same theme of coequality and balance.

While the beadwork features loons, the story of the Tlingit Lovebirds is woven into the fabric. Coincidentally, though loons do not mate for life, eagles and ravens do—the final product, pictured, is not only beautiful but symbolic.

Looking for a thoughtful gift that your loved ones will cherish? Check out more of Reine’s work on Instagram (@AlaskaSoles) or Facebook.

Trickster Company

Trickster Company is an indigenous owned design shop founded by siblings Rico and Crystal Worl with the goal to promote innovative indigenous design. As designers we strive to represent the way in which traditionally rooted people represent themselves in modern context and fashion.

We focus on Northwest Coast art and explore themes and issues in Native culture and strive to represent a prestigious lineage of art in fresh and energetic ways as a celebration of Northwest Coast culture as it lives today. We are active advocates of diversity in community and work to promote diversity in civic engagement.

We hope to provide products which act as cultural objects which modern indigenous people can represent their heritage, create products that non-native people can wear and appreciate without appropriating via cultural exchange, and to represent modern indigenous lifestyle to a broader audience.

To check out their work, visit them on Instagram or on their website.

Violet Sensmeier

Violet Sensmeier Aandayeen (Tlingit and Koyukon Athabascan), said that she loves documenting and taking photographs, as well as creating jewelry with beads, metals, and natural materials.

She graduated from The Rocky Mountains School of Photography in 2013. “It is by far the best thing I have ever done for myself” Violet said. “Follow your dreams and do more of what makes you happy.”

Creative from a young age, was taught to bead and sew by her grandmother, Lillian Olin, and her mother, Eva Olin Sensmeier and MaryAnn Portner. “Sitting around the table learning how to string beads and untie knots while enjoying tea and homemade rolls is a nice memory,” Violet said. She shares the skills with her own daughter, Amiah Grace Johnson, who is now a successful Native artist.

You can find Violet’s jewelry on Instagram (@VioletSensmeier), Facebook (facebook.com/AlaskanViolet), and Etsy (etsy.com/shop/alaskanviolet).

Additional Native-owned businesses: 

  • Made by Raven: handcrafted traditional Alaska Native inspired jewelry, garments, and accessories, as well as Alaska Native Herbal Remedies. Raven is only able to sell products on Instagram, other platforms restrict the sale of marine mammal products. You can find her page here.

News Search


38 results found

Posted 8/13/2024
Posted 8/13/2024
The Sealaska board of directors met on Friday, July 26 to welcome new board members and receive updates from the management team. The board focused on efforts for long-term strategic planning, led by the management team, with a goal of strengthening Sealaska’s internal team, vision for the future and community partnerships. This strategic planning will continue at the September meeting… Source

Posted 5/1/2024
Posted 5/1/2024

Sealaska shareholders are invited to join us at our upcoming in-person and virtual community meetings to learn more about Sealaska business operations, upcoming opportunities and connect with fellow shareholders and descendants.


Posted 12/21/2023
Posted 12/21/2023
Dear Shareholders, Serving Sealaska has been one of my life’s great honors, and I am filled with gratitude for the years we have spent together, through my nine years of service as president and CEO and the eight years prior as your chief investment officer. In the weeks since my departure was announced, I have been humbled by your kindness and resolve to keep working together toward our… Source

Posted 6/13/2023
Posted 6/13/2023
At Sealaska, shareholders are at the center of everything we do. We cherish every opportunity we have to meet with each of you, learning more about your values, priorities and vision for our shared future. This May, we were grateful to host meetings in 10 communities — the first time we have been able to host a full community meeting rotation since 2019. Sealaska shareholders were invited… Source

Posted 4/19/2023
Posted 4/19/2023
The Sealaska Board supports the LGBTQIA2S+ community, language grants and community donations through board action at the April board meeting. The Sealaska Board of Directors approved several important resolutions at a board meeting on Friday, April 14. The meeting was held on Sheet’ka Kwaan (Sitka) in a gesture of support for the critical work being done by the Herring Protectors to… Source

Posted 3/24/2023
Posted 3/24/2023
Sealaska is proud to welcome the Moananuiākea Voyage to the traditional lands of the A’akw and Taku Kwaan people this summer. The Moananuiākea Voyage is a four-year journey by the Polynesian Voyaging Society (PVS) to circumnavigate the Pacific. The voyage’s leaders hope to inspire future navigators while bringing awareness to our changing climate and the impact climate change is having on our… Source

Posted 1/9/2023
Posted 1/9/2023
Happy New Year! As we greet 2023, we at Sealaska also invite you to join us in reflecting on the 2022 year. In 2022, we celebrated 50 years; made strides toward our goal of ocean health; and continued on the path of financial stability despite continued investment market challenges. There is much to be thankful for: our hardworking employees, our creative, collaborative partners and our… Source

Posted 7/21/2022
Posted 7/21/2022
Sealaska and its partners in the Seacoast Trust gathered last week in Juneau to celebrate meeting the first major fundraising milestone — $20 million — for the newly created trust. In September of 2021, Sealaska and its partners in the Sustainable Southeast Partnership announced the creation of the trust as a long-term, sustainable and sovereign funding vehicle for SSP. Sealaska’s initial $10… Source

Posted 1/21/2022
Posted 1/21/2022
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… Source

Posted 12/28/2021
Posted 12/28/2021
As we welcome 2022, we at Sealaska have much to be grateful for. We end the year safe and successful, despite facing continued challenges and disruptions from the COVID-19 pandemic. Sealaska continues to prioritize the health of our employees and deeply appreciates their tireless efforts to maintain COVID precautions while working to achieve business growth and enhance shareholder benefits. Source

Posted 12/13/2021
Posted 12/13/2021
A new fund that aims to support a prosperous, post-timber economy in Southeast Alaska has gotten a boost with twin $1 million investments from two private family foundations: Rasmuson Foundation in Alaska and the Edgerton Foundation, based in Los Angeles. The foundations are delighted to announce their partnership in support of the Seacoast Trust endowment, which will be led by Indigenous values… Source

Posted 9/15/2021
Posted 9/15/2021
Today, Sealaska joins with several other organizations committed to the long-term health and success of our region in announcing a new vision and funding model for community economic development in Southeast Alaska. Sealaska is proud to commit $10 million to the establishment of the Seacoast Trust. Our $10 million is being matched with $7 million from The Nature Conservancy… Source

Posted 7/21/2021
Posted 7/21/2021
Sealaska welcomes the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s announcement last week that it is dedicating $25 million toward sustainable opportunities for economic growth and community well-being in and around the Tongass National Forest – the traditional homelands of the Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian people. The announcement of the Southeast Alaska Sustainability Strategy… Source

Posted 6/25/2021
Posted 6/25/2021
Sealaska issued a statement expressing its position on the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling on Friday, June 25 that settled litigation over whether Alaska Native Corporations qualify for federal CARES Act funding. Click here to read Sealaska’s statement. Answers to additional questions shareholders and tribal citizens may have on the decision and Sealaska’s role are below. Source

Posted 4/25/2021
Posted 4/25/2021
Every few years, Sealaska reaches out to shareholders as part of an ongoing effort to gather shareholder opinions and feedback. Sealaska is launching the most recent shareholder survey the week of April 19. We look forward to hearing from shareholders through the work. Why commission the surveys? Surveys are a great way to engage with shareholders. Since 1981, we’ve been reaching out to… Source

Posted 3/17/2021
Posted 3/17/2021
Sealaska invests in Southeast Alaska businesses through a yearly commitment to Spruce Root, Inc. Spruce Root supports businesses through loan capital and support services to promote economic, social, cultural and environmental resiliency. Sealaska economic development partner Spruce Root just announced the winners of its annual Path to Prosperity business competition… 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 10/19/2020
Posted 10/19/2020
Sealaska established a $10 million language endowment to focus on the revitalization of Tlingit (Lingít), Haida (X̱aad Kíl) and Tsimshian (Sm’algya̠x) languages. In Alaska, very few birth speakers of these traditional languages remain. All are older than 70, and a majority are 80 or older. The group includes four birth speakers of Sm’algya̠x, three birth speakers of X̱aad Kíl… Source

Posted 10/13/2020
Posted 10/13/2020
Sealaska is pleased to announce the nomination of Joe Nelson as the Alaska Federation of Natives (AFN) board co-chair. Nelson has served as a Sealaska director since 2003 and has been board chair since 2014. Nelson has a long and distinguished career working as a practicing attorney and advocating for youth while working for the University of Alaska Southeast. Nelson is a tribal member of the… Source

Posted 9/28/2020
Posted 9/28/2020
(September 25, 2020) – Shareholders from around Southeast Alaska filled their smokehouses, pantries and freezers with the rich red of sockeye salmon this week, courtesy of a unique partnership between Sealaska and the Alaska Longline Fishermen’s Association (ALFA), in conjunction with tribal leadership in each community. The first of its kind, this salmon distribution netted a total of 51,000… Source

Posted 9/18/2020
Posted 9/18/2020
This month, a partnership between Sealaska and the Alaska Longline Fisheries Association (ALFA) will result in the distribution of 49,000 pounds of salmon to families reliant on subsistence fishing from Yakutat to Hydaburg. ALFA received a $250,000 grant from the Alaska Community Foundation and Catch Together, a Massachusetts-based nonprofit that helps small-scale fishing communities ensure… Source

Posted 9/15/2020
Posted 9/15/2020
Late this summer, a series of happy coincidences led 40 Yakutat kids out of the doldrums of the pandemic and into the icy waters of the North Pacific for a series of surf camps in Yakutat’s legendary waves. Their time in the water brought welcome joy, healthy connection to the ocean, and an opportunity to open minds and overcome fears. “I’ve been so used to everything being sad this year… 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 6/19/2020
Posted 6/19/2020
We had a chance to connect with Sealaska Board Youth Advisor Maka Monture, a Tlingit and Mohawk from Yakutat, Alaska. She currently resides in Anchorage, Alaska, and is working on a few different projects at the time of this interview. We wanted to catch up on what she has been doing and, more importantly, learn more about why she is so dedicated to leading a youth charge on climate change and… 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 5/8/2020
Posted 5/8/2020
The sudden passing of Byron Mallott — Elder, leader, mentor and tireless advocate for indigenous people across the globe — is a devastating loss for our people and our communities. Byron brought a profound belief in fairness and inclusion to our communities, our corporation, our state and the world. As a business executive, public servant and elected leader, Byron fought every day for unity… Source

Posted 5/6/2020
Posted 5/6/2020
As we strive to heed the words of our Elders, we also strive to ensure their health and well-being, even more so during these unprecedented times. With the help of Sealaska’s COVID-19 relief and recovery package, a nonprofit organization is using its funding to continue supporting our most vulnerable populations. Southeast Alaska Independent Living (SAIL) is a nonprofit organization… Source

Posted 5/4/2020
Posted 5/4/2020
In light of COVID-19, food banks all over the country have seen an onslaught of demand as store shelves have gone bare, and unemployment rates have climbed. Mike Reusser, director of operations for the Food Bank of Alaska , says it hasn’t been any different in Alaska, with distribution numbers up 50 percent since the crisis ensued in mid-March, totaling in at approximately 1 million pounds of… Source

Posted 4/21/2020
Posted 4/21/2020
In early April 2020, Sealaska’s board of directors approved a $55,000 donation to the Yakutat Tlingit Tribe (YTT) to support the construction of a crime victim shelter in Yakutat. The funding builds on a 2019 Safe Shelter grant from the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which allowed YTT to utilize $691,768 of grant funds set aside for tribal entities from the DOJ Office for Victims of Crime (OVC). Source

Posted 3/9/2020
Posted 3/9/2020
Sealaska is increasing its involvement in the education of shareholders and descendants long before they are eligible for a college scholarship. One example is our sponsorship of the Alaska Native Science and Engineering Program (ANSEP) Middle School Academy. ANSEP, as the program is known, is based at the University of Alaska. Over the past 20-plus years, the program has evolved into a… 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 1/2/2020
Posted 1/2/2020
Sealaska seeks the next Board Youth Advisor and is accepting applications for 2019-2020 term. Each year, Sealaska directors select a non-voting youth advisor to the board to provide input, gain board membership training and gain knowledge of Sealaska’s operations. Key eligibility requirements: The deadline to submit completed applications, supporting documents… Source

Posted 8/16/2019
Posted 8/16/2019
Southeast Alaska Independent Living (SAIL) has been administering a demonstration project over the last three years to increase culturally appropriate independent living services in the region. The project is called Independent Living Services for Alaska Natives with Disabilities (IL STAND) and serves about 100 people, including elders and people with disabilities. Each year SAIL serves… Source

Posted 3/19/2019
Posted 3/19/2019
Sealaska is growing, and that growth is rooted in core businesses that are working to manage healthy lands, create exponential value and demonstrate sustainable stewardship. Our recent financial stability has enabled us to increase investments in what we care most about: our people and communities. This October, Sealaska invested in a local community program that directly betters elders in rural… Source

Posted 1/18/2019
Posted 1/18/2019
In January, Sealaska made the board chair position full-time to foster a stronger connection and communication between the board and Sealaska shareholders. Current Board Chair Joe Nelson is now leading an effort to increase opportunities to listen, engage, and inspire participation among Sealaska and shareholders. Dear Sealaska Shareholder, We need you — your perspective… Source

Posted 12/7/2018
Posted 12/7/2018
All around the world at precisely the same time, weather balloons are released and rise to the top of the earth’s atmosphere. Sensors attached to the 5-feet wide balloons take snapshots of the weather every few seconds – temperature, humidity, pressure, and wind speed – as they rise up to 100,000 feet and drift as far as 125 miles depending on wind speeds. Source

Posted 8/24/2018
Posted 8/24/2018
This is the first story in a series featuring the 2018 Sealaska summer interns. See the businesses through their eyes, understand their impact on Sealaska and experience the reconnection with their Alaska Native roots. Since the early 1980s, Sealaska’s internship program has been offering shareholders and shareholder descendants paid professional work experience and on-the-job training… Source