Recent Activities
Our team actively engages with the communities we serve through events and collaborations.
From participating in local and national conferences to facilitating workshops, trainings, and community meetings, we prioritize building meaningful relationships and supporting initiatives that align with our mission. These activities reflect our ongoing commitment to partnership, learning, and impact.
Search by Topic
- Housing 25
- Needs Assessment 14
- NAIHC 9
- Report 6
- Midwest Region 5
- Northwest Region 5
- Economic 4
- Census 3
- Southwest Region 3
- Washington State 3
- West Region 3
- EDA 2
- Leadership 2
- NADO 2
- Native Action Network 2
- Northern Cheyenne 2
- Red Cliff 2
- CICD 1
- Chief Seattle Club 1
- Crime 1
- Enterprise Community Partners, Inc. 1
- GLIHA 1
- Health 1
- Houselessness 1
- Pacific Region 1
- Pa’upena CDC 1
- Warm Springs 1
The Northern Cheyenne Health and Housing Needs Assessment
The Northern Cheyenne Tribe hosted an Initial Consultation for their Health and Housing Needs Assessment on April 2nd and 3rd, 2024, in Lame Deer, Montana. This planning session is a crucial step towards understanding and addressing the most pressing needs of the residents of the Northern Cheyenne Indian Reservation.
EDA Community of Practice
The Indigenous Economic Development Community of Practice is a dedicated space for tribal and Native economic development practitioners to share knowledge, build capacity, and identify best practices.
[ Inquiry ] Pa’upena CDC Community Needs Assessment
During the course of its 2-day consultation session with representatives from Pa’upena CDC and other homestead organizations, staff members Harry Maher and Kevin Klingbeil visited the majestic and remote Kahikinui homestead as well as the more urban Pakupalo and Lahaina homestead areas. Session participants discussed Pa’upena CDC’s recent receipt of its Right of Entry (ROE) for 127 acres of Hawaiian homelands and its authorization to engage in community design that could lead to a subsequent ROE for an additional 5,000 acres as well as an array of historical, legal, regulatory and other issues that have limited the number of native Hawaiians who have received leases to occupy Hawaiian homelands.