
Native America Calling
Public Radio
Interactive, daily program featuring Native and Indigenous voices, insights, and stories from across the U.S. and around the world.
Location:
Anchorage, AK
Description:
Interactive, daily program featuring Native and Indigenous voices, insights, and stories from across the U.S. and around the world.
Twitter:
@180099native
Language:
English
Contact:
4401 Lomas Blvd NE Suite C Albuquerque, NM 87110 5059992444
Episodes
Tuesday, May 26, 2026 – Border wall construction damaging sacred sites
5/26/2026
Construction crews working on the wall on the U.S.-Mexico border in Arizona significantly damaged a 1,000-year-old geoglyph located in Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge. It’s one of a number of places tribes on both sides of the border say are damaged or are threatened by the fast-tracked construction process. Tribal leaders say such desecration is happening at a record pace after the Trump administration sidelined cultural and environmental barriers to construction. We’ll hear from cultural historians and policy experts about that is being lost and what can be done about it.
GUESTS
Emily Burgueno (Iipay Nation of Santa Ysabel) – chairwoman of the Kumeyaay Digeuño Land Conservancy
David Martinez (Akimel O’odham, Hia-ced O’odham, and Mexican) – professor of American Indian Studies and Transborder Studies and director and founder of the Institute for Transborder Indigenous Nations at Arizona State University
Christina Leza (Yoeme-Chicana) – professor of anthropology at Colorado College
Felicity Amaya Schaeffer – chair of Critical Race and Ethnic Studies and professor of feminist studies at the University of California, Santa Cruz
Duration:00:56:30
Friday, May 22, 2026 — A conversation with Native wellness advocates Chelsea Luger and Thosh Collins
5/22/2026
Chelsey Luger (Anishinaabe/Lakota) and Thosh Collins (Onk Akimel O’Odham/Osage/Seneca) believe the best approaches to wellness are rooted in Indigenous knowledge. They draw from traditional teachings to find the most effective ways to improve one’s spiritual, physical, and emotional wellbeing. With their large social media presence, they educate others about healthy, traditional approaches to physical movement, sleep, masculinity, and parenthood. They are the authors of “The Seven Circles: Indigenous Teachings for Living Well” and are slated to publish a few more books on wellness. The married couple join us for a discussion about living a full and grounded life.
Break 1 Music: This Love (song) Edzi’u (artist) Tunnel Vision (album)
Break 2 Music: Traditional Side Step Song (song) Little Otter (artist) Side Step Songs (album)
Duration:00:56:30
Thursday, May 21, 2026 – Nevada’s mining boom and Winnebago Tribe’s NAGPRA victory
5/21/2026
The U.S. government and private mining corporations are ignoring the rights of tribes to free, prior, and informed consent when it comes to lithium mining in Nevada, according to a new report by Amnesty International. The report comes amid the Trump administration’s fast tracking of metals and minerals extraction. With more than 20,000 active mining claims across the state, tribes are having to weigh how every new proposal would impact their communities.
The Fourth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals agreed with the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska that the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) applies to remains buried at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School, which is under the jurisdiction of the U.S. Army. The decision gets the tribe one step closer to repatriating two children from the oldest Indian boarding school, and could establish legal precedent for federal agencies to comply with NAGPRA in the future.
GUESTS
Chairman Coly Brown (Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska)
Beth Margaret Wright (Laguna Pueblo), senior staff attorney with the Native American Rights Fund
Fermina Stevens (Te-Moak Tribe of Western Shoshone), executive director of the Western Shoshone Defense Project
Clifford Banuelos (Te-Moak Tribe of the Western Shoshone), tribal-state environmental liaison for the Inter-Tribal Council of Nevada
Break 1 Music: Chant Ancestral (song) Geneviève Gros-Louis (artist)
Break 2 Music: Traditional Side Step Song (song) Little Otter (artist) Side Step Songs (album)
Duration:00:56:30
Wednesday, May 20, 2026 – Native Playlist: Joy Harjo and Julia Keefe Indigenous Big Band
5/20/2026
Former U.S. Poet Laureate and musician Joy Harjo (Mvskoke) immerses listeners in a diverse array of jazz styles and deeply emotional poetry in her new album, “Insomnia and Seven Steps to Grace”. Co-produced by Grammy-winning artist Esperanza Spalding, the album features originals and covers, including a re-interpretation of Charles Mingus’s “Goodbye Pork Pie Hat”. Harjo also transforms her 2015 poem, “I Pray for My Enemies”, into a feverish, free-form composition, while “Rabbit Is Up to Tricks” draws on the power of traditional oral storytelling and “Stomp All Night” delivers a fun and funk-filled jam.
Acclaimed jazz vocalist Julia Keefe (Nez Perce) and the 16-piece ensemble of talented Native musicians known as the Indigenous Big Band make their album debut with “Incarnadine”. The album honors Native jazz pioneers like Mildred Bailey (Coeur d’Alene) and Jim Pepper (Kaw/Muscogee), as well as featuring innovative originals like “Wawasint8Da” and “Ddat Suite, MVT. 3 Iron Horse Gallup”. The ensemble continues to earn critical praise especially for their live performances, highlighted by their 2024 spring residency at the Kennedy Center.
We’ll speak with both Joy Harjo and Julia Keefe about their new albums in this episode of Native Playlist, our regular feature on Indigenous music.
Duration:00:56:30
Tuesday, May 19, 2026 — Native Bookshelf: “Shards of Silence” and “That Which Feeds Us”
5/19/2026
Diné author Brian Lee Young puts much of his own experience in his first young adult novel, “Shards of Silence”. Protagonist Derrick Hoskie struggles with a grueling class schedule, homesickness, and the frustration over his classmates’ ignorance at a prestigious prep school. At the same time, he is researching the life of his ailing great-grandmother. It’s a story about coming of age, identity, and healing.
Native Hawaiian writer Keala Kendall offers a different view of what many vacationing outsiders consider paradise in the supernatural thriller, “That Which Feeds Us”. Lehua follows the trail of her missing twin sister to the secluded Kōpa’a Island Resort in Hawaii. She recalls the stories her grandparents told of their homeland, which is now a commodity to wealthy resort patrons. A series of terrifying visions teach Lehua an all-too-real lesson about the land’s brutal past.
We add both books to our Native Bookshelf.
Break 1 Music: Wahine U`i [Beautiful One] (song) Linda Dela Cruz (artist) Linda Dela Cruz Hawaii’s Canary (album)
Break 2 Music: Traditional Side Step Song (song) Little Otter (artist) Side Step Songs (album)
Duration:00:56:30
Monday, May 18, 2026 – Trump administration takes aim at American buffalo
5/18/2026
The U.S. Department of Interior just canceled grazing leases for hundreds of bison on federal land in Montana. The action halts the progress of a well-funded private group, American Prairie, that has been buying up land and acquiring leases in an ambitious conservation plan. The group often provides bison to tribes that work to revive bison herds. The canceled leases also indicate a change in federal policy away from accommodating bison in favor of domesticated cattle to make federal lands more agriculturally productive. Many tribes say such actions jeopardize efforts to restore the animal that is intrinsically associated with Native Americans from the Great Plains.
GUESTS
OJ Semans Sr. (Rosebud Sioux), executive director of the Coalition of Large Tribes
Heather Dawn Thompson (Cheyenne River Sioux), vice president of Native Nations Conservation and Food Sovereignty at the World Wildlife Fund
Dallas Gudgell (Fort Peck Assiniboine and Sioux Tribes), vice president of the Buffalo Field Campaign
Keegan King (Acoma Pueblo), founder and CEO of the Native Land Institute
Break 1 Music: Buffalo (song) Algin Scabby Robe (artist) Along The Way: Round Dance Songs (album)
Break 2 Music: Traditional Side Step Song (song) Little Otter (artist) Side Step Songs (album)
Duration:00:56:30
Friday, May 15, 2026 – Native In The Spotlight: Washington State Supreme Court Justice Raquel Montoya-Lewis
5/15/2026
Raquel Montoya-Lewis (Isleta and Laguna Pueblos) built an impressive legal career that includes a foundation at tribal court systems in the Pacific Northwest. That career led her to become the first Native American to serve on the Washington State Supreme Court. She is only the second Native jurist in the country to hold a supreme court seat. That position is also a platform to educate others about her unique family lineage, offering a personal account of the history and policies that make up Native Americans’ shared experience.
Break 1 Music: Chant (song) Robert Mirabal + Ethel (artist) The River (album)
Break 2 Music: Fearless I Live (song) Courtney Yellow Fat (artist) The Lost Songs of Sitting Bull (album)
Duration:00:56:30
Thursday, May 14, 2026 – Native American voting rights advocates brace for diminished Native power at the polls
5/14/2026
The U.S. Supreme Court has, in the words of the Native American Rights Fund, diluted Native Americans’ “ability to secure good schools, adequate infrastructure, health care access, environmental protections, and economic opportunity.” Louisiana is moving fast to redraw voting districts to further minimize the political power of Native Americans and other minorities. Other states are preparing similar changes. The High Court’s recent invalidation of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act follows the 2013 decision striking down the Act’s Section 5. That eliminates the most powerful tools Native voters had in challenging the long history of demonstrated efforts to exclude Native voices from political dialogue. We’ll examine the looming implications of the Court’s decisions and examine the strategies Native voting advocates have going forward.
We’ll also discuss some important indicators for Native candidates in pivotal races, including the potential for history to be made in the upcoming Midterm Elections.
GUESTS
Patty Ferguson-Bohnee (Pointe-au-Chien), professor of law at Arizona State University and Native Vote Election Protection coordinator for the State of Arizona
Torey Dolan (Choctaw), assistant professor of law at the University of Wisconsin Law School
Samantha Blencke, senior staff attorney with the Native American Rights Fund
Mark Trahant (Shoshone-Bannock), journalist and former editor of ICT
Marjorie Childress, managing editor of New Mexico In Depth
Break 1 Music: Fool’s Paradise (song) Samantha Crain (artist) Gumshoe (album)
Break 2 Music: Fearless I Live (song) Courtney Yellow Fat (artist) The Lost Songs of Sitting Bull (album)
Duration:00:56:30
Wednesday, May 13, 2026 – How Indigenous knowledge built the foundation for today’s response to the hantavirus outbreak
5/13/2026
New infections aboard a cruise ship have thrust the hantavirus into the global spotlight. Hantavirus infections remain rare, with only about 1,000 cases reported in the U.S. in more than 30 years. What the world knows about the illness started in 1993 on the Navajo Nation. After struggling to identify the dangerous respiratory illness, medical researchers gained crucial insights from Navajo elders, noting that traditional oral histories had long associated spikes in deer mouse populations — driven by specific rainfall patterns — with deadly disease. That knowledge directly informed the scientific discovery of what we know now as the Sin Nombre virus. The discovery also offers a lesson in public notification of diseases. Early media reports labelled the pathogen as the “Navajo flu”, which stigmatized the community for years afterward. We’ll look at the history of the hantavirus and the current efforts to prevent its spread.
GUESTS
Dean Seneca (Seneca), CEO of Seneca Scientific Solutions+, adjunct professor at the School of Public Health and Health Professions at the University of Buffalo, and Adjunct Instructor at University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry
Dr. Steven Bradfute, associate professor in the Center for Global Health at the University of New Mexico School of Medicine Department of Internal Medicine
Dr. Erin Phipps, New Mexico State public health veterinarian
Break 1 Music: Healing Song (song) Judy Trejo (artist) Circle Dance Songs of the Paiute and Shoshone (album)
Break 2 Music: Fearless I Live (song) Courtney Yellow Fat (artist) The Lost Songs of Sitting Bull (album)
Duration:00:56:30
Tuesday, May 12, 2026 – High gas prices eat into business profits and personal budgets
5/12/2026
The cost of fuel is a major expenditure for farmers, commercial fishermen, long-haul truckers, and dozens of other businesses. The persistently high cost of gas since February’s start of the Iran War is eroding the profit margin for those businesses. They ultimately either absorb those costs, pass them on to customers, or shut down. For individuals, the price of oil is showing up in everything from people’s vacation plans to how much they heat their homes at night. We’ll hear about where the cost of petroleum shows up beyond just the gas pump and how Native businesses and individuals are coping.
GUESTS
Boyd Gourneau (Lower Brule Sioux), chairman of the Lower Brule Sioux Tribe
Bill McCabe (Diné), principal of McCabe and Associates
Jason Pitre (Houma), owner of Bayou Rosa Oysters
Kiera McCabe (Diné), founder of Skoden Farm
Lionel Bigthumb (Diné), co-owner and CEO of Blackstreak Holdings
Break 1 Music: Mr. Businessman’s Blues (song) DM Lafortune (artist) Beauty and Hard Times (album)
Break 2 Music: Fearless I Live (song) Courtney Yellow Fat (artist) The Lost Songs of Sitting Bull (album)
Duration:00:56:30
Monday, May 11, 2026 – What’s in the near future for urban elder health care?
5/11/2026
A dedicated effort to learn more about Native elders living in urban areas reveals they suffer a high rate of chronic illnesses and have limited social interactions. Those conclusions come from the most recent Native Urban Elder Needs Assessment Survey that aims to fill a void of information about the needs of Native American elders — the vast majority of whom live in cities. The survey is among the efforts to better understand and provide effective services for Native elders. The effort is all the more pressing as federal cuts to Medicaid and Medicare approach, costs for medical care rise, and pressure increases to cut support for the Indian Health Service.
GUESTS
Dr. Collette Adamson (Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians), director of the National Resource Center on Native American Aging and research assistant professor at the School of Medicine and Health Sciences University of North Dakota
Michael Bird (Kewa Pueblo and Ohkay Owingeh), past president of the American Public Health Association and past national consultant for AARP
Dr. Emily Haozous (Fort Sill Chiricahua-Warm Springs Apache Tribe), research scientist for the Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation
Duration:00:56:30
Friday, May 8, 2026 – What Native graduates are looking forward to
5/8/2026
A former DJ who once struggled as a student, Cailean Dakota MacColl built her way to medical school from the ground up. She’s now graduating from the University of Minnesota Medical School.
Jerrick Hope-Lang took on preserving a Tlingit clan house in Sitka, Alaska that was named on the America’s most endangered historic places. Now he’s a Henry Luce Foundation Indigenous knowledge fellow and a graduate of the Institute of American Indian Arts.
Lawren “Lulu” Goodfox is a budding actor balancing film and stage roles with especially busy extra-curricular activities like tennis, student council, honors society, and preparation for traditional dances. She is now graduating from Stillwater High School in Oklahoma and setting off to study drama at New York University’s Tisch School of Arts.
We’ll talk to each of them about what’s ahead for the class of 2026.
GUESTS
Dr. Cailean Dakota MacColl (Lac La Ronge Indian Band), University of Minnesota Doctor of Medicine graduate
Jerrick Hope-Lang ( Tlingit and Tsimshian), director of Point House Revitalization and a 2026 Luce Knowledge Fellow
Lawren “Lulu” Goodfox (Osage and Pawnee), 2026 graduate of Stillwater High School
Brandin Naabaahi Upshaw (Diné), 2026 graduate of Navajo Preparatory School
Break 1 Music: Wahzhazhe (song) Scott George (artist) Killers of the Flower Moon Soundtrack (album)
Break 2 Music: Bad Dude (song) Joe H Henry (artist) Real Things (album)
Duration:00:56:30
Thursday, May 7, 2026 – Native Fashion Week takes root in Santa Fe
5/7/2026
The Native fashion show was always among the most popular offerings at the annual Santa Fe Indian Market put on by the Southwest Association for Indian Arts. Now SWAIA’s Native Fashion Week returns for the third year as a standalone celebration of wearable Native creativity. Designers include Jamie Okuma and Lauren Good Day, who are making strides in the mainstream fashion arenas. This year, organizers aim for a scaled-back, intimate event that includes a curated fashion show, Indigenous food, vendors, and public discussions. We’ll get a preview of the upcoming Native Fashion Week in Santa Fe, N.M.
We’ll also talk with Ruth Ann Thorn (Rincon Band of Luiseño Indians), founder of the brand N8TiV, that was just named one of the TIME100 Most Influential Companies of 2026.
GUESTS
Jamie Schulze (Northern Cheyenne and Sisseton Wahpeton Oyate), executive director of the Southwestern Association for Indian Arts (SWAIA)
Jamie Okuma (Shoshone-Bannock, La Jolla Band of Luiseño Indians, Wailaki, and Okinawan), artist and fashion designer
Lauren Good Day (Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara), traditional arts designer
Ruth-Ann Thorn (Rincon Band of Luiseño Indians), founder of N8iV Beauty
Break 1 Music: Hoka Hey (feat. Jayden Paz & Dancin Dave) [Radio Version] (song) DJ krayzkree (artist) Future Generations (album)
Break 2 Music: Bad Dude (song) Joe H Henry (artist) Real Things (album)
Duration:00:56:30
Wednesday, May 6, 2026 – Tribes try to stay ahead of prediction markets on sports betting
5/6/2026
Tribes in Wisconsin are celebrating that state’s new law that gives them exclusive control over sports betting in the state, but a similar attempt to secure tribal control of sports betting fell flat in Oklahoma. Both actions come as prediction market companies like Kalshi and Polymarket are raking in hundreds of millions of dollars offering wagers on nearly everything including sports. One attorney says prediction market companies pose an existential threat to Native American gaming. We’ll speak with tribal leaders and Native academics about the legal and political fight over ground in the multi-billion dollar sports betting market.
Also, President Donald Trump’s move to reclassify marijuana to a less restrictive status is a win for the Omaha Tribe. The tribe is working to open a medical marijuana operation after tribal council voted in 2025 to legalize medical marijuana on tribal lands, but the effort continues to face roadblocks, including the Nebraska governor, who has opposed legalization.
GUESTS
Tehassi Hill (Oneida), chairman of the Oneida Nation and vice chairman of the Indian Gaming Association
Jeff Crawford (Forest County Potawatomi), attorney general for Forest County Potawatomi Community
Patrice Kunesh (Standing Rock Sioux descent), professor of law at the University of New Mexico and fellow at The Brookings Institution
Gary Pitchlynn (Choctaw), professor of law at the University of Oklahoma
Amanda Hallowell (Omaha), cannabis commission chairwoman for the Omaha Tribe
John Cartier, attorney general for the Omaha Tribe
Break 1 Music: Porcupine Singers’ Song (song) Porcupine Singers (artist) Alowanpi – Songs Of Honoring – Lakota Classics: Past & Present, Vol. 1 (album)
Break 2 Music: Bad Dude (song) Joe H Henry (artist) Real Things (album)
Duration:00:56:30
Tuesday, May 5, 2026 – Alaska MMIW case exemplifies lingering distrust in law enforcement motivations
5/5/2026
MMIP advocates fault police in Anchorage for not acting fast enough when young Alaska Native woman went missing in January. Kelly Hunt’s body was discovered in April. Her death is now under investigation. It’s the latest case revealing the persistent lack of trust Native communities have when it comes to MMIP cases. Hunt’s case comes as the Trump administration is touting a surge in federal agents in selected locations to address the backlog in unsolved serious crimes, but tribal leaders and advocates say there’s no real progress on the lingering disconnect between Native people and law enforcement officials on all levels. And despite some recent progress, there are serious hurdles when it comes to jurisdictional confusion and information sharing across agencies.
GUESTS
Regina Antone (Gila River Indian Community), lieutenant governor of the Gila River Indian Community
Stephen Roe Lewis, governor of the Gila River Indian Community
Alexis Savage (Iñupiaq), MMIP advocate
LaRenda Morgan (Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes of Oklahoma), Cheyenne and Arapaho MMIP chapter chairwoman and the governmental affairs officer for the Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes of Oklahoma
Break 1 Music: Nakoda Healing Song (song) YB Nakota (artist)
Break 2 Music: Bad Dude (song) Joe H Henry (artist) Real Things (album)
Duration:00:56:30
Monday, May 4, 2026 – Demands for action grow as details of Indigenous surveillance program surface
5/4/2026
First Nations, Inuit, and Métis leaders across Canada are calling for an investigation into the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP). That’s following a report by CBC Indigenous that uncovered evidence of a secret surveillance program targeting Indigenous organizations and individuals using wiretaps, informants, and counter subversion tactics from the late 1960s to the early 1980s. The report confirms what many Indigenous communities long suspected.
We’ll also reflect on 150 years of the Indian Act, the Canadian federal statute that defines First Nations membership or “Indian Status”. A new bill in Canada’s parliament could significantly expand status eligibility for thousands of individuals and their descendants.
GUESTS
Russ Diabo (Kahnawake Mohawk), First Nations policy analyst
Daniel Sims (Tsay Keh Dene First Nation), associate professor of First Nations Studies at the University of Northern British Columbia
Duration:00:56:30
Friday, May 1, 2026 – Efforts to improve Native student achievement under fire
5/1/2026
Following the Trump administration’s lead, state elected leaders and private advocacy groups are taking on programs, scholarships, and admissions practices aimed at improving Native student achievement. An advocacy organization filed a lawsuit challenging a scholarship program that has helped support hundreds of Native Hawaiian medical students for more than three decades. The suit claims the program is unconstitutional. Another group is going after admissions policies at the K-12 Kamehameha Schools that aim to boost Native Hawaiian enrollment. Both challenges have far-reaching implications.
We’ll also hear about a report that finds Minnesota schools are falling far short of the goals enshrined in state law to teach Native languages and culture.
GUESTS
Healani Sonoda-Pale (Kanaka Maoli), educator and community organizer
Gimiwan Dustin Burnette (Ojibwe), executive director of the Midwest Indigenous Immersion Network
Jon Osorio (Kanaka Maoli), dean of the Hawaiʻinuiākea School of Hawaiian Knowledge
Regis Pecos (Cochiti Pueblo), co-director of the Leadership Institute at the Santa Fe Indian School, chair of the Tribal Education Alliance, and former governor of Cochiti Pueblo
Break 1 Music: Aia lā ‘o Pele [Mele Honoring Pele] (song) ‘Iolani Luahine (artist) Ancient Hula Hawaiian Style: Vol. 1 Hula Kuahu (album)
Break 2 Music: Heartbreaker (song) Sage Lacapa (artist) Heartbreaker (single)
Duration:00:56:45
Thursday, April 30, 2026 – Reflecting on the milestone pipeline protest movement at Standing Rock
4/30/2026
Right now, crude oil flows unimpeded through the Dakota Access Pipeline under the dammed Missouri River in North Dakota. Construction of the pipeline that traverses Lake Oahe near the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation was a defeat for protestors who became known as “water protectors”. But the resistance against that pipeline that started ten years ago was a galvanizing moment for sovereignty and public awareness for Native Americans. It grew into a movement that eventually included thousands of Indigenous activists, tribal leaders, celebrities, and supporters from around the world. ICT News is among the outlets marking the 10-year anniversary of the #NoDAPL movement with a series of articles reflecting on the stand-off and assessing the lasting implications. We’ll hear about that and check in with people who were there.
GUESTS
Amelia Schafer (Brothertown Indian Nation descendant), north central bureau correspondent for ICT
Jon Eagle Sr. (Hunkpapa Lakota and Sisseton Wahpeton Oyate), former tribal historic preservation officer for the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe
Jasilyn Charger (Cheyenne River Sioux), grassroots organizer
Break 1 Music: Standing Rock [feat. Nick Ørbæk Jacobsen] (song) Uyarakq (artist) Miseraq (album)
Break 2 Music: Heartbreaker (song) Sage Lacapa (artist) Heartbreaker (single)
Duration:00:56:45
Wednesday, April 29, 2026 — The Menu: Traditional diet success and the first Indigenous ‘Chopped’ champion
4/29/2026
An intensive traditional foods program aimed at curbing diabetes is credited with major weight loss and health benefits for some of its participants. Native Food for Life is a collaboration between tribal health officials and the Physicians Committee on Responsible Medicine. Native America Calling had an inadvertent role in the program’s inception on the Navajo Nation almost two decades ago. It has since expanded beyond the Southwest.
Did pemmican bread pudding sway the judges who awarded Diné chef Justin Pioche champion of the “Indigenous Inspiration” episode of the Food Network’s “Chopped” cooking competition? Pioche is busy back to work at his Fruitland, N.M.-based Pioche Food Group business, but is taking time out to reach out to his fans, both new and old, after his high-profile success.
GUESTS
Justin Pioche (Diné), chef and owner of Pioche Food Group and James Beard Award Best Chef finalist
Jenson Yazzie (Diné), photographer
Dr. Josie Howard (Cherokee), psychiatrist
Dr. Neal Barnard, adjunct professor of medicine at the George Washington University School of Medicine in Washington, D.C. and president of the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine
Duration:00:56:30
Tuesday, April 28, 2026 – Oklahoma tribes work to keep Medicaid access intact as federal cuts loom
4/28/2026
The Oklahoma State Legislature is taking steps to gain more control of the state’s Medicaid payments, drawing concerns from tribal leaders and healthcare advocates. Cherokee Nation Principal Chief Chuck Hoskin Jr. warns that the predicted scaling back of expanded Medicaid eligibility enshrined in the state constitution in 2020 would disproportionately affect Native patients. He says dismantling the expansion would cost his tribe alone more than $162 million. The state’s actions come as both tribal health providers and Medicaid recipients brace for looming federal funding cuts and stricter eligibility requirements.
Also, we’ll hear from Alannah Acaq Hurley (Yup’ik). The executive director of the United Tribes of Bristol Bay recently won the Goldman Environmental Prize for her work raising awareness about a controversial open-pit copper and gold mine in the Bristol Bay region of Southwest Alaska.
GUESTS
Chuck Hoskin Jr. (Cherokee), principal chief of the Cherokee Nation
Yvonne Myers, Affordable Care Act and Medicaid consultant for Citizen Potawatomi Nation Health Services
Alannah Acaq Hurley (Yup’ik), executive director for the United Tribes of Bristol Bay
Duration:00:56:45