
Maude Blair, Kiana, RAHI 1990 & 1992
Maude Blair grew up in Kiana, along the Kobuk River. Her parents, Dick and Harriet Blair, raised her with strong connections to both sides of her family鈥攈er mother鈥檚 roots stretch to the Upper Kobuk area, with grandparents from Ambler and Shungnak, and her father鈥檚 family hails from Ohio. She attended high school in Kotzebue, and from a young age, Maude knew she would attend college; in her family, higher education was an expectation.
It was also a given that she would apply for the Rural Alaska Honors Institute (RAHI). In the NANA region, she says, RAHI had become a tradition, something older students always talked about and encouraged others to experience. 鈥淵ou just knew you were going to apply,鈥 she remembers. When she was accepted, she joined a cohort of students from her region, which meant she never felt homesick. She loved her classes, but the outdoor adventures are what she remembers most fondly: canoeing, riding bikes, camping, and fishing. 鈥淕osh, the camping was so much fun! And just being able to go to the movies on the weekend when you鈥檙e from a small village, it all felt exciting.鈥
She also remembers smaller moments that made the experience special, like swim class, late-night conversations, and watching TV together in the lounge. RAHI taught her early on that Alaska is a small place, people-wise. 鈥淧rograms like RAHI are where you first start to learn this,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou meet people from all over, and you鈥檙e learning about different parts of the state.鈥 During her two summers, students from Greenland and Canada also attended RAHI. They compared Inupiaq and Inuit words and discovered that several were the same in both languages, a meaningful connection that highlighted shared culture.
Maude鈥檚 biggest challenge at RAHI came when she was placed in calculus at just sixteen. She took the class alongside college students outside the program and had to work hard to earn her grade. Though she briefly considered a minor in math, she ultimately followed a different path. 鈥淣ow that I鈥檓 a lawyer,鈥 she laughs, 鈥淚 do words, not numbers.鈥
After high school, Maude attended the 麻豆原创 (麻豆原创F), earning undergraduate degrees in English with an emphasis in writing and in broadcast journalism. She loved her studies and even became a TV news reporter and anchor for KTVF in Fairbanks after graduation. Her work later took her to NANA Regional Corporation, where she entered the communications field as a shareholder employee. She wrote articles for the company newsletter and worked closely with the corporation鈥檚 General Counsel to ensure accuracy. Through that collaboration, she began to learn about business law. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know the difference between a partnership, a joint venture, an S-corp, or an LLC,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut by bringing my drafts to the attorney and asking questions, I started to learn.鈥
Encouraged by NANA鈥檚 General Counsel, Maude decided to pursue law school at Arizona State University, where she earned her law degree and Indian law certificate. She began her legal career at the Native American Rights Fund (NARF), working on voting rights and tribal issues. From there, she returned to NANA to focus on shareholder and land matters. Her next step took her to the Alaska Federation of Natives (AFN), where she worked on statewide policy issues, and later to Southcentral Foundation, where she specialized in healthcare law. There, she got to work with tribal health advocates from around the state on the all-Alaska tribal health compact, an effort she describes as 鈥渁 very Alaskan thing to do鈥 with tribes and tribal health organizations joining forces to collaborate rather than compete for limited resources.
After a short time at the Alaska Native Justice Center, where she provided tribal justice training and worked in tribal criminal jurisdiction, Maude joined Chugach Alaska Corporation, where she serves as an attorney today. She鈥檚 particularly proud of Chugach shareholders鈥 recent vote to open enrollment to those born after 1971, calling it a full-circle moment for her. Years earlier, she wrote a law review article about Alaska Native corporations expanding enrollment, and now she鈥檚 helping put those ideas into practice. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really exciting,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 guess I鈥檓 a bit of a law nerd.鈥
When asked what advice she would give students considering RAHI, Maude doesn鈥檛 hesitate. 鈥淕ive it a try,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e not going to know what you鈥檙e missing out on unless you give it a try. College isn鈥檛 for everybody, but you should try a semester. Explore different careers. Talk to different people.鈥
For donors, policymakers, and lawmakers, her message is equally direct. 鈥淭his is such an important investment in students鈥 futures,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his is why I donate, and I absolutely believe RAHI should receive state and federal funding. We need to get more students into the program and expose them to new experiences, to classes, to different life paths. It鈥檚 such an important program to me personally. I鈥檓 happy to see it鈥檚 still going, and happy to keep supporting it.鈥

