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The Tulalip Tribes are headquartered in Tulalip, Washington. The tribe is governed by a seven-member, democratically elected Board of Directors, whose members fill designated roles as officers. Directors are elected to serve three year terms. The current tribal administration is as follows: Chairwoman: Teri Gobin; Vice Chairwoman: Misty Napeahi
AlterNative Sentencing Program, Tulalip Tribal Court, the Tulalip Tribes. Citizen Potawatomi Community Development Corporation, Citizen Potawatomi Nation. Hopi Education Endowment Fund, The Hopi Tribe. Morongo Tutoring Program - Social Services Department, Morongo Band of Mission Indians.
Quil Ceda Village (Lushootseed: qʷəl'sidəʔ ʔalʔaltəd) [2] is a municipality established by the federally recognized Tulalip Tribes of Washington within the Tulalip Indian Reservation in Snohomish County, Washington, United States. It includes the Quil Ceda Village Business Park, a commercial development constructed and operated by the ...
A new program division was established at the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) that combined several previous programs into one block grant program committed to the goal of tribal housing. The legislation has been reauthorized and amended several times since its passage.
New cold case unit will address the crisis of missing and murdered Indigenous women and people.
The meaning of the word sduhubš has been debated by linguists and tribal historians. According to the Tulalip Tribes and several ethnologists and historians, the name means "many men" or "lots of people." [4] [5] William Shelton, a prominent leader of the Snohomish people in the early 20th century, said that it meant "lowland people". [6]
Mary Ellen Johnson-Davis, of the Tulalip Tribes in Wash., disappeared in 2020. Her family is still waiting for answers. Native Woman Won $400,000 from Abuse Settlement, Then Vanished.
The name "Snoqualmie" is derived from the Lushootseed endonym of the Snoqualmie: sdukʷalbixʷ. The name is composed of a root, √dukʷ, and the suffix =albixʷ, meaning "people of." [1] The name was traditionally the name for the Snoqualmie River and all related villages located on it, not the name of a united ethnic group as it is today. [2] [3]