The Hunter 2018 Volume, Issue January / February | Page 9

NANA NANA Announces Sale of Four Anchorage Hotels N ANA has announced the sale of four Anchorage hotels that it had an ownership interest in, effective Nov. 7, 2017. This sale will allow NANA to concentrate further on Alaska’s resource development industries, including the Red Dog Mine, and it's strong federal and commercial group opportunities. NANA (60 percent owner) and Sodexo (40 percent owner) sold the jointly- owned Courtyard, Midtown Springhill Suites, and Residence Inn, as well as the University Lake Springhill Suites, which was owned 100 percent by NANA. NANA Management Services, LLC (NMS) has managed and operated the properties since the hotels opened. “The NANA board of directors set a goal to increase profitability at NANA,” said President and CEO Wayne Westlake. “Part of that strategy, as I shared at NANA’s 2016 Annual Meeting, is to sell certain assets when the time is right. This was the right time and the right deal for NANA,” he added. NANA and its partner opened the Courtyard, Midtown Springhill Suites, and Residence Inn in the late 1990s. In the mid-2000s NANA opened the University Lakes Springhill Suites to complement the existing properties in its portfolio. NANA worked closely with the new owners, JL Properties, to ensure that hotel staff was transferred to the new management company. In addition, job search and placement assistance within the NANA family of companies was offered to shareholder employees if they preferred to remain with NANA. NANA shareholders will continue to receive discounts at the Anchorage hotels. Learn more and find Anchorage hotel discount instructions at nanatkut.com/shareholder-rates.  Iñupiaraaqta! -Let’s speak Iñupiatun! Speak Iñupiaq phrases Qanniksuq – It’s snowing Qaŋa tai! – Longtime no see Uqsruq – Seal oil The “Iñupiaraata” app was a project of the Iñupiaq Language Commission and supported by NANA and Maniilaq Association. The Iñupiaq Language Commission is responsible for guiding Iñupiaq language revitalization initiatives in the region. “Iñupiaraaqta!” means “Let’s Speak Iñupiatun!” Want to hear these words and more? Download the app Iñupiaraaqta from the iTunes App Store on your iPhone or iPad, or on your android device at the Google Play store. Meet Your Writers The Hunter was established in the early years of NANA as a way to communicate with shareholders. Ever since, shareholders have been a valuable part of the team that works to publish this important tool. In this series, we will introduce you to some of the shareholders who work on “The Hunter.” N arvauġauraq Hilda Woods-Haas was born and raised in Shungnak. Her parents are the late Wesley Woods and Josephine Woods, who will be 89 in April. Iñupiaq is Hilda’s first language. She learned English in school. At home, she said, “We’d watch movies and talk back to the screen in Iñupiaq. If we were startled, we’d yell, ‘Aachikkaaŋ!’” (I’m scared.) Hilda left home, at 14, to go to high school in Nome. She spent summers back home, at camp. After high school, she earned an associate degree in business from Haskell Indian Junior College in Lawrence, Kansas. She went on to study business administration at George Washington University in Washington, D.C. Her studies were interrupted so she could work full- time for U.S. Senator Mike Gravel (who represented Alaska from 1969-1980). Hilda started working at NANA in 1981. Over the years, her role has changed. Currently, she works in communications, reviewing Iñupiaq translations and conducting Elder interviews in Iñupiaq, and in external and government affairs, working with the Regional Elders Council and Iñupiaq Language Commission. It’s Hilda’s voice you hear announcing the floor numbers in Iñupiaq in NANA’s elevators in Anchorage, public service announcements on KOTZ in the region, and other multi-media for the Corporation.  Board Corner The meeting was called to order at 9 a.m. in Kotzebue on January 9, 2018. ACTIONS • Approved Lori Henry as Senior Vice President, Chief Administrative Officer of NANA Regional Corporation, Inc. and NANA Development Corporation. • Approved endorsing Elizabeth Cravalho, VP of government and external affairs, for the vacant Inuit Circumpolar Legacy Member Seat of the Arctic Economic Council. • Approved the audited financial