> > HISTORY
OF TCC
In
the beginning
.
"Where the two rivers meet"
Tanana Chiefs Conference, the traditional tribal consortium
of the 42 villages of Interior Alaska, is based on a belief
in tribal self-determination and the need for regional Native
unity.
The history of the Tanana Chiefs Conference (TCC) reflects
the importance of balancing the traditional Native values with
the modern demands facing us as indigenous peoples. TCC is a
non-profit organization that works toward meeting the health
and social service challenges for more than 10,000 Alaska Natives
spread across a region of 235,000 square miles in Interior Alaska.
"Nuchalawoya"
For thousands of years, Athabascan leaders have gathered at
a place called Nuchalawoya - "where the two rivers meet"
- to discuss tribal matters through the voice of the people.
Today the village of Tanana exists there, and the two rivers
are known as the Tanana and the Yukon.
TCC's movement into the modern era began with the advancement
of non-Natives into the Interior. Tribal leaders strengthened
their loose confederation to protect traditional rights.
The first land dispute came in 1915 when the chiefs organized
to protect a burial ground in Nenana from the Alaska Railroad.
As a result, the railroad avoided the cemetery. Conflicts became
an increasing problem; the threat of loss of Native land grew
after statehood in 1959.
The Alaska Statehood Act recognized Native land rights, yet
the state administration began planning as though it did not.
It had two plans that were of particular concern. One was to
build a road to the Minto Lakes area northwest of Fairbanks
and the Rampart Dam project. That project and another ill conceived
idea - creating a harbor at Point Hope on the Northwest coast
with nuclear blast - contributed substantially to the rise of
the land claims movement. A remarkable array of young, educated
Native leaders began pushing the land claims toward a suitable
outcome.
One of the first was Al Ketzler, Sr. of Nenana. He helped organize
a meeting of 32 villages at Tanana in June 1962. Out of this
meeting the Tanana Chiefs Conference was incorporated.
Acting as the conference's first president, Ketzler contacted
national Indian organizations and met with the Alaska Native
Brotherhood, formed by Tlingits and Haidas of Southeastern Alaska
in the early part of the century. He also met with Inupiat Paitot,
the forerunner of the Arctic Slope Native Association, and
with the Association of Village Council Presidents in the Lower
Kuskokwim area. In 1963, Ketzler flew to Washington D.C. to
present a petition from 24 villages asking Secretary of the
Interior Stewart Udall to freeze state land selections until
the Native land claims were settled.
Ketzler left TCC from 1964 until 1969 to go back to Nenana,
but other young leaders - Ralph Purdue, John Sackett and Tim
Wallis - took over. In October 1966, TCC met in Anchorage with
other Native leaders from around the state and formed the Alaska
Federation of Natives.
In 1968, Alaska Natives were ready when oil was discovered
on the North Slope. The first land settlement bill had been
introduced in Congress and claims had been registered for most
of the land in question. Secretary Udall, acting on Ketzler's
petition, had frozen the status of land titles in the absence
of a Native land claims settlement in late 1966.
The land freeze sharpened the interest of the state and the
oil companies to settle the land disputes. After a historic
struggle in which Ketzler and dozens of other Alaska Natives
lived in Washington D.C. for weeks, Congress authorized a settlement
of more than 40 million acres and nearly $1 billion to Alaska
Natives through a corporate structure.
The Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA) of December
1971 set up 13 regional for-profit corporations for Alaska Natives
- 12 in the state and one based in the Lower 48 for Alaska Natives
living in the continental United States and nearly 200 village
corporations.
The act created the regional corporations for the management
of land and financial assets, and overseeing the development
of natural resources. Village corporations, representing individual
Native communities, has its own natural and financial resources
to maintain.
TCC incorporated Doyon
Limited as the regional for-profit corporation for the specific
purpose of making a profit for their stockholders. The act left
a place for non-profit corporations to administer health and
social service programs for the people. The Tanana Chiefs Conference,
became the non-profit corporation for the TCC region.
With the land claims settlement, a major goal had been accomplished.
But other pressing needs remained.
Under the leadership of Mitch Demientieff, a 20 year-old University
of Alaska student when elected TCC president in 1973, TCC developed
a regional health authority for a tribal health programs. The
organization acted quickly when the Indian Self Determination
and Education Act of 1975 allowed it to become the responsible
provider for dozens of programs in the region.
Contracts with the Bureau of Indian Affairs were established
to transfer the responsibility for management and delivery of
services such as housing, lands management, tribal government
assistance, education and employment and natural resources programs
to TCC.
Contracts with the Alaska Area Native Health Service were established
for Community Health Aide services, outreach services, environmental
health, mental health and substance abuse services, and other
programs in a gradual sequence.
In the late 1970's, TCC successfully bid to receive a number
of grants from the state of Alaska for delivery of health care,
social services and public safety services to all residents
of the interior.
In 1980, TCC moved to decentralize the operations of its programs
away from Fairbanks, through the establishment of subregional
offices in Fairbanks, Fort Yukon, Galena, Holy Cross, McGrath
and Tok. During the 1980's, this process allowed for more local
employment, attention to subregional program priorities, and
better access by TCC clients to information and services.
In the mid-1980s, under the leadership of President William
C. "Spud" Williams, TCC successfully assumed management
of the Alaska Native Health Center in Fairbanks (renamed the
Chief Andrew Isaac Health Center after the late Traditional
Athabascan Chiefs from Dot Lake), and the contract health care
program.
In the late 1980s, other new facilities and services were developed,
including the Paul Williams House, the CAIHC Counseling Center,
the new TCC Dental Clinic and Eye Clinic, and several remote-site
alcohol recovery camps.
Underlying all these programs are the commitments started by
the Tanana Chiefs generations ago where the two rivers meet.
The commitment translates into political advocacy for land rights
and self-determination. It means working for a strong priority
under law for the subsistence rights of rural Alaskans. And
it includes support for local village governments that choose
to enforce their own laws under their own authority.
The modern world forces Athabascans to deal with issues that
are far more complex than those faces by their ancestors. But
the values of hard work and sharing go on, as always, in the
spirit of Nuchalawoya and the voice of the people.
Organizational Structure
The Tanana Chiefs Conference is a non-profit organization
with a membership of Native governments from 42 Interior Alaska
communities. The full board of Directors are 42 representatives
selected by the village councils of member communities. The
board meets each spring in Fairbanks.
The nine-member Executive Board is elected by the Board of
Directors. The president of the Board of Directors is elected by
the full board and serves as the chief executive officer of the
corporation.
The agency has its main office in Fairbank. Programs funded by the Bureau of Indian Affairs,
the Department of Labor and the Alaska Native Health Services
are available to tribal governments, and eligible Alaska Native
and American Indians. Services financed by the state of Alaska
are provided for all residents of the region.
The Tanana Chiefs Conference has almost three hundred
and fifty full-time employees and numerous part-time and seasonal
positions. About two-thirds of the staff members work in village positions, and about two-thirds of the employees
are Alaska Native.
Demographics
The Tanana Chiefs Conference region covers an area of 235,000
square miles, an area equal to about 37 percent of the state
of Alaska, and just slightly smaller than the state of Texas.
The total population of the region is 86,130 of which 10,623
are Natives. About one-half of the entire Native population
resides in Fairbanks, which is the only urban area in the region.
Fairbanks is surrounded by 47 smaller communities with populations
varying from 20 to almost 1,000. The economy of these villages
is predominantly subsistence (hunting, fishing and gathering).
Unemployment ranges from a low of about 20 percent to a high
of 90 percent or more. The average annual income for a family
of four in the region is about $12,800, compared to $43,316
per year for the average four-person Alaska family. The cost
of living in these villages is estimated to be 30-40 percent
higher than the cost of living in Anchorage or Fairbanks.
The temperature in Interior Alaska ranges from a low of 70
degrees below zero to well over 100 degrees above. On the shortest
day of the year, December 21, the sun rises at 9:59 am and sets
at 1:41 pm. On June 21, the sun rises at 1 minute before 1 am
and sets at 10:38 pm.
Only nine of the villages are accessible by road, and the remainder
of the villages are accessible only by air (or by river during
the brief summer months of June through mid-September).