UAF professor honored for tribal transportation work
November 6, 2014
Byron Bluehorse, assistant professor of tribal management at UAF Interior-Aleutians
Campus, has received an award for helping Alaska tribes develop transportation systems and
hosting a major conference on the topic.
Bluehorse received the 2014 Dan Moreno Award from the Alaska Mobility Coalition during
the annual Alaska Transit Conference. The award is given to individuals and tribal
organizations for significant contributions supporting and developing tribal transportation
across the state.
“Byron was honored for his work at UAF and for successfully hosting the 17th Annual
National Tribal Transportation Conference,” says David M. Levy, executive director
for the Alaska Mobility Coalition. “During the conference, he arranged for national
policy makers and funders to tour Bethel and Tuntutuliak’s lack of transportation
infrastructure so they can better understand Alaska’s funding needs. This gave them
an eye-opening experience of the unique transportation challenges faced by Alaskans
living independently and successfully in off-the-road communities.”
The National Tribal Transportation Conference is an annual meeting for delegates from
the seven Tribal Technical Assistance Program centers and stakeholders from tribal,
federal, state, and local communities. Attendees meet with federal officials, get
training and learn about transportation-related technology.
Alaska Business Monthly recognized Bluehorse as a “Visit Anchorage Meeting Champion”
for bringing 500 delegates to Anchorage from across the state and the Lower 48 for
the conference, which had a $715,000 economic impact.
Bluehorse administers the Alaska Tribal Technical Assistance Program Center in the
UAF Interior-Aleutians Campus' Tribal Management Program. The program is made possible
by a $1.55 million grant from the U.S. Department of Transportation Federal Highway
Administration. Bluehorse provides onsite and distance education throughout Alaska
helping tribes develop transportation resources, infrastructure and development opportunities.
“I am thankful Alaska has Byron because he listens to all the tribes and tries to
meet everyone’s tribal transportation needs,” said Natasia “Jackie” Levi, president
and tribal administrator for the Village of Lower Kalskag, located on the lower Kuskokwim
River.
An enrolled member of the Navajo Nation, Bluehorse earned a master’s degree in Community
and Regional Planning from the University of New Mexico. From 1993-1997, Byron served
in the U.S. Marine Corps, an experience which led him to Japan, Panama, and the Philippines.
After receiving an honorable discharge, Byron returned home to New Mexico to pursue
a higher education. While in graduate school, Byron served as an AmeriCorps volunteer
where he helped to establish the University of New Mexico Tribal Service Corps. After
moving to Alaska in 2005, Byron began working as a Contracts and Grants Specialist
for the Bureau of Indian Affairs. In this capacity, he provided technical assistance
in the area of P.L. 93-638 Indian Self-Determination contracting to tribal entities
in the Interior and Arctic Slope regions.