Session Speakers
Nancy Bainbridge
Executive Vice President & Director of Tribal and Construction Lending | Chickasaw Community Bank
Kris Beecher
Navajo Nation
Attorney | Dickinson Wright Law Firm
David Black
Community Development Expert | Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
Gary Cunningham
Consultant | Cunningham & Associates, LLC
Rohit Chopra
Director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
Robin Danner
native Hawaiian
CEO & Co-Founder -Homestead Loan Fund | Chairwoman – SCHHA | NCN National Policy Chair
Patricia Dominguez
State Director of New Mexico | U.S Department of Agriculture – Rural Development
Andrew Gordon
Executive Advisor | Clearinghouse CDFI
Phil Gover
Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah
Policy Fellow | Center for Indian Country Development | Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
Lisa Hasegawa
Regional Vice President | NeighborWorks America
Sheila D. Herrera
Executive Director | Tiwa Lending Service
Catherine Houlihan
Manager of Single-Family Affordable Lending Strategy and Initiatives | Freddie Mac
Jessie Huff
Arizona Energy Coordinator and VAPG Contact | USDA Rural Development
Brett Isaac
Navajo Nation
Founder & Executive Chairman | Navajo Power
Adrian John
Navajo Nation
IDA Coordinator & Credit Counselor | Native Partnership for Housing
Onna LeBeau
Omaha Tribe of Nebraska
Director | Office of Indian Economic Development Department of Interior
Marilynn Malerba
MOHEGAN TRIBE
Treasurer of the United States
Robert J. Miller
Eastern Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma
Professor of Law at Arizona State University | Author | Reservation Capitalism
Ben Navarro
Advisor – Affordable Housing Strategies for Rural and Native American Markets | Fannie Mae
Tim Rios
Senior Vice President | Rural Strategy Leader | Social Impact & Sustainability | Wells Fargo
Pilar M. Thomas
PASCUA YAQUI TRIBE
Partner | Quarles & Brady, LLC
Pete Upton
Ponca Tribe of Nebraska
CEO | Native CDFI Network & Executive Director | Native 360 Loan Fund
Jim VanWinkle
AVP/Mortgage Loan Officer | Chickasaw Community Bank
Deborah Webster
Principal | Concept Consulting Group, LLC
David Westfall
Affordable Lending Initiatives Senior | Freddie Mac
Wava White
Navajo Nation
Principal Economic Development Specialist | Navajo Nation
Rollin Wood
Cherokee
Executive Director| Native Partnership for Housing
Denise Zuni
Isleta Pueblo
Owner | Sh’eh Wheef Law Offices
Onna LeBeau
Omaha Tribe of Nebraska
Director | Office of Indian Economic Development Department of Interior
Onna LeBeau, a member of the Omaha Tribe of Nebraska, serves as the Director of the Office of Indian Economic Development (OIED). Onna comes to the Department of Interior as the former Executive Director of the Black Hills Community Loan Fund since 2015, where she had the honor of expanding the loan fund from a solely homeownership focused non-profit to one that provides the community with options for credit building and business development. Onna’s passion for community development started in 2001 shortly after graduating from Northern State University in Aberdeen SD, with degrees in finance and economics. Onna worked for the Bureau of Indian Affairs, Great Plains Region, office of Economic Development, serving as loan specialist for the BIA loan guarantee program from 2002-2007.
Onna wanted to further her experience working with the people and left the federal government to pursue her career in the non-profit world by working at Oweesta Corporation as Lending and Reporting Director. Onna furthered her education at the University of Nebraska Lincoln, where she earned her Master’s in Applied Sciences with an emphasis on non-profit management in native communities and native community development, after which time she spent working at the Great Plains Tribal Leader’s Health Board as Development Director and Partners with Native American’s where she focused on native food sustainability projects and managed the American Indian education fund. Onna’s passion for the people led her to advocate for those who are driven to survive their historical trauma by providing a means to a healthier way of living financially and in a way that further empowers the individual by providing access to technical assistance and loan capital.
Tim Rios
Senior Vice President | Rural Strategy Leader | Social Impact & Sustainability | Wells Fargo
Tim Rios is a senior vice president in Wells Fargo’s Social Impact and Sustainability group. He is responsible for implementing the company’s rural and Native American / Alaska Native strategic and philanthropic initiatives. Rios formerly led a team of Community Relations professionals in northern and central California, Inland Empire, as well as San Diego and Imperial counties.
A 24-year Wells Fargo veteran, Rios has held various positions throughout the course of his career at the company including positions in retail, wholesale, and business banking.
Rios’ dedication to economic development has earned him recognition from the California State Legislature. In 2005, he received national honors from U.S. Small Business Administration when presented with its Financial Services Champion award. Rios has also received local, state, and national accolades including Hispanic Association on Corporate Responsibility’s Young Hispanic Corporate Achiever Award, Grizzly Award for executive leadership under the Bank on California Program, and Fresno West Coalition for Economic Development’s Risk Takers Dream Makers Community Champion Award. In 2013, Craig School of Business at California State University, Fresno, recognized him with the Top Dog Award, one of the highest honors bestowed on alumni.
A graduate of California State University, Fresno, Rios earned a degree in finance. In 2006, he completed a three-year executive banking program at University of Virginia.
An avid advocate for the communities he supports, Rios contributes his leadership and advice to multiple organizations and serves on various boards including the James Irvine Foundation. In 2004, he was appointed by Governor Schwarzenegger to the California Economic Strategy Panel where he served for four years. In 2016, he co-founded the Central Valley Latino Giving Circle–an effort dedicated to promoting strategic philanthropy among Latinos who wish to make a positive impact in the lives of underserved families.
Nick Tilsen
Oglala Lakota
President & CEO | NDN Collective
Nick Tilsen is a citizen of the Oglala Lakota Nation, father of four and founder of the NDN Collective. Nick has over 18 years of experience in working with nonprofits and tribal nations on projects that have a social mission. Prior to NDN, Nick founded and served as the Executive Director of the Thunder Valley Community Development Corporation for 12 years. Working in his home community on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation to build place-based innovations that have the ability to inform systems change solutions around climate resiliency, sustainable housing and equitable community development.
Nick created the NDN Collective to scale these place-based solutions while building needed hilanthropic, social impact investment, capacity and advocacy infrastructure geared towards building the collective power of Indigenous Peoples. Nick has received numerous fellowships and awards from Ashoka, Rockefeller Foundation, Bush Foundation and the Social Impact Award from Claremont-Lincoln University. In 2017 Nick received an honorary doctorate degree from Sinte Gleska University. Nick continues his community organizing work and sits on the boards of the Indigenous Peoples Power Project, and the Oceti Sakowin Community Academy.
Ben Sanders
Northern Cheyenne Tribe
Chief Financial Officer |Native American Development Corporation
Mr. Sanders (an enrolled member of the Northern Cheyenne Tribe) is the current Chief Financial Officer of the Native American Development Corporation.
Mr. Sanders has a Bachelor of Science degree in Exercise Physiology with a minor in Business Administration from Rocky Mountain College and holds an MBA from Gonzaga University with a focus in American Indian Entrepreneurship. His experience includes management roles in tribal finance and tribal business as Treasurer, Comptroller, Board Member and CEO. Currently, Mr. Sanders is leading an initiative to expand the financial capacity at NADC to accommodate the organization’s recent growth.
Before joining, Native American Development Corporation in 2021, Ben worked as an independent consultant providing services to tribes and tribal entities in financial management.
Jeff Tickle
General Manager | Inlet Lending Centers
Jeff Tickle arrived in Alaska in August of 92’ landing in Sand Point, an Alaska Native Aleut Community on the edge of the Alaska Peninsula in the Shumigan Islands. After working in the private banking and mortgage industry for 8 years, Jeff was thrilled to join and lead the Cook Inlet Lending Center team when he learned the focus was in helping our State of Alaska communities and families towards the goal of homeownership and small business entrepreneurship. “The community of Sand Point, Alaska welcomed me upon my arrival years ago and it is with great honor to be able to give back to our Alaska Native communities in the pursuit of their dreams of homeownership and entrepreneurial spirit.
Xochitl Torres Small
Under Secretary for Rural Development
Before coming to Rural Development, Xochitl was a United States Representative for the fifth largest district in the country. In the midst of the COVID-19 crisis, Xochitl kept a rural hospital from closing its doors, improved constituent access to healthcare over the phone, and helped secure tens of millions of dollars for broadband in New Mexico through USDA’s ReConnect Program. Prior to the coronavirus pandemic, Xochitl raised the alarm on broadband disparities, serving on Majority Whip James Clyburn’s Rural Broadband Taskforce and as an original cosponsor of the Accessible, Affordable Internet for All Act. As a member of the House Agriculture Committee, Xochitl helped champion the needs of dairy farmers and sponsored legislation to help local producers and rural communities invest in infrastructure to navigate new markets. Xochitl forged additional bipartisan solutions on the House Armed Services Committee and as chairwoman of the Oversight, Management, and Accountability subcommittee of the House Homeland Security Committee. Xochitl was the first woman and first person of color to represent New Mexico’s second congressional district.
The granddaughter of farmworkers, Xochitl Torres Small grew up in the borderlands of New Mexico. She came home from college to work as a field organizer, working in colonias in southern New Mexico. She continued serving rural New Mexico as a field representative for Senator Tom Udall, where she collaborated with local grassroots leaders, business owners, elected officials, and regional and state economic development officials to help communities rebound from the Great Recession. Inspired by Senator Udall’s work on water in the West, Torres Small studied water law and worked closely with rural water utilities. After law school, she returned home to clerk for United States District Court Judge Robert C. Brack. Throughout her career, Xochitl has employed her experience working in vulnerable, rural communities to achieve lasting investments that combat persistent poverty.
Xochitl has a law degree from the University of New Mexico School of Law, an undergraduate degree from Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service, and an international baccalaureate from Waterford Kamhlaba United World College of Southern Africa. She’s happily married to her husband, New Mexico State Representative Nathan Small
Sheila D. Herrera
Executive Director | Tiwa Lending Service
Sheila D. Herrera is the Executive Director of Tiwa Lending Services with over 35 years’ experience in the lending industry and with experience in coordinating and directing the implementation of economic/community development. As Tiwa Lending Services’ Executive Director, Ms. Herrera operates and manages Tiwa Lending Services, performing all home loan activities, including the origination and underwriting of loans, providing financial and homeownership counseling, preparing loan documents, closing loans, monitoring construction, disbursing payments and tracking the loan capital. Ms. Herrera is one of the founding members of Tiwa Lending Services. She was instrumental in developing the incorporation documents to establish Tiwa Lending Services and in developing the organizational and developmental capacity of Tiwa Lending Services. Ms. Herrera’s duties include planning, budgeting, financial reporting, bringing in private capital, as well as long-range planning to provide business lending and other financial related products and services.
Prior to coming to work with Tiwa Lending Services, Ms. Herrera managed the Isleta Pueblo Housing Authority’s Home Loan Program and served as a Homeownership Counselor. Ms. Herrera owned a mortgage brokerage business for seven years and worked in the banking industry. Ms. Herrera is a certified Homeownership Counselor and provides one-on-one counseling to applicants and borrowers. She also conducts Homeownership and Financial Literacy and Education workshops for Isleta Pueblo community members.
Robert J. Miller
Eastern Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma
Professor of Law at Arizona State University | Author | Reservation Capitalism
Robert J. Miller is a professor at the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law at Arizona State University where he is also the Willard H. Pedrick Distinguished Research Scholar and the Director of the Rosette LLP American Indian Economic Development Program. He is the Chief Justice for the Pascua Yaqui Tribe Court of Appeals and an appellate judge for other tribal courts. He graduated from Lewis & Clark Law School in 1991 and then clerked for Judge Diarmuid O’Scannlain of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in 1991-92. He practiced litigation and Indian Law from 1992-99. Bob was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 2014, the oldest learned society in the United States. He has written dozens of articles on Indian Law issues and has authored and co-authored five books, including Reservation “Capitalism”: Economic Development in Indian Country (Praeger Publishers 2012) and Creating Private Sector Economies in Native America (Cambridge University Press 2019). Bob is a citizen of the Eastern Shawnee Tribe.
Robin Danner
native Hawaiian
CEO & Co-Founder -Homestead Loan Fund | Chairwoman – SCHHA | NCN National Policy Chair
Robin Puanani Danner (native Hawaiian) is the CEO and Co-Founder of the Homestead Community Development Corporation (HCDC) operating the Homestead Loan Fund, and affordable housing and community facility projects, including a certified kitchen, marketplace, and enterprise center. As a 501c3 incorporated in 2009, the HCDC mission is to create affordable housing, jobs and capacity building on or near Hawaiian Home Lands.
Ms. Danner is also the elected chairman of the oldest and largest coalition of self-governing homestead associations – the Sovereign Council of Hawaiian Homestead Associations (SCHHA). She is a former bank executive, tribal housing authority executive, a county housing and economic development director and the founder of the Council for Native Hawaiian Advancement (CNHA). She has been awarded numerous national leadership and housing awards, as well as small business awards including the SBA Minority Business Advocate of the year, twice – once for the State of Alaska and another for the State of Hawaii. A nonpartisan, Ms. Danner advocates for good public policy regardless of party or identity of a policy-maker, and instead focuses on the implementation of goals that achieve priorities of an agency or government leaders (state, federal, tribal and homestead associations).
She is from the island of Kauai, born and raised in Niumalu, and attended public schools on the Navajo and Hopi Indian reservations, as well as the north slope of Alaska. She is the product of life-long educator parents specializing in Native children and built a successful career in banking and Native solutions to housing and economic development. She is well versed in both private sector and public sector agencies, each of which play vital roles in the well-being of Native peoples. Ms. Danner resides on Kauai with her husband where they raised four children.
Pilar M. Thomas
Pascua Yaqui Tribe
Partner | Quarles and Brady, LLC
Pilar Thomas is a partner in the firm’s Energy, Environment & Natural Resources Practice Group. She focuses her practice on tribal renewable energy project development and finance, tribal economic development, federal Indian Law, and natural resource development.
Pilar assists clients with strategic legal advice on tribal energy policy and planning; clean energy and infrastructure project development and finance; federal and state energy regulatory, programs, and policy efforts; and federal requirements for tribal lands development. She has negotiated or assisted with agreements related to transmission lines, landfill gas, solar projects, a natural gas power plant, and mineral development on tribal lands. She serves as general counsel for several tribes, Section 17 and tribal business entities.
Representative Matters
- Negotiate leases and right of ways for utility scale renewable projects
- Shepherd through federal regulatory process for land into trust decisions and related environmental reviews
- Draft HEARTH Act leasing regulations
- Draft tribal laws, regulations, and policies related to economic development, land use, and environmental review
- Tribal consultation practices
- Monitor, review, and draft comments on federal and state agency actions
- Monitor, review, and draft federal legislation related to tribal energy development
Prior to entering private practice, Pilar was the Deputy Director for the Office of Indian Energy Policy and Programs at the US Department of Energy, where she was responsible for developing and implementing policy and program efforts within the department and federal government to achieve the office’s policy objectives related to the promotion of energy development, electrification, and infrastructure improvement on tribal lands. She also is the former Deputy Solicitor of Indian Affairs for the US Department of the Interior; served as the Interim Attorney General and Chief of Staff to Chairwoman Herminia Frias of the Pascua Yaqui Tribe; and was a trial attorney in the US Department of Justice, Environmental and Natural Resources Division, Indian Resources Section.
Mel Willie
Navajo Nation
Director of Native Partnerships and Strategy | NeighborWorks
Mel Willie leads NeighborWorks America’s Native work to expand its investment in tribal communities. He is a national leader in Indian Country with more than 23 years of experience in nonprofit management, government, political, public and intergovernmental affairs and has represented tribal interests at the local, tribal, state and national level. He is a member of the Navajo Nation, born and raised on the reservation in northeast Arizona.
Before joining NeighborWorks, he served as principal of Chee Consulting, working with a range of clients to advance and strengthen tribal communities. Having served as past executive director of the National American Indian Housing Council (NAIHC) and as special advisor to one of the nation’s largest public housing authorities, he is intimately familiar with providing affordable housing through highly regulated federal programs. Kennedy school.
Gary Cunningham
Consultant | Cunningham & Associates, LLC
Gary L. Cunningham is a consultant and the former President and CEO of Prosperity Now, a national organization dedicated to advancing racial and ethnic economic justice headquartered in Washington, D.C. He lead the organization from 2019 to 2023. Under his direction, Prosperity Now strengthened its strategic focus, centering those most directly impacted by injustice and expanding its approach from simply mitigating the effects of a broken, racist system to testing, investing, and scaling systems-change solutions that will completely transform our economy.
For more than 20 years, Gary has served as a top leader of philanthropic, health care, public policy, and educational organizations. In addition to leading NorthPoint Health and Wellness Center, he was Associate Superintendent of Minneapolis Public Schools, the Deputy Director of Civil Rights for the City of Minneapolis and CEO of the Metropolitan Economic Development Association (MEDA) — a minority entrepreneurial organization — and Chaired the Community and Economic Development Committee for the Metropolitan Council the Twin Cites Planning and transportation agency.
Gary is a recognized and respected expert on entrepreneurship, job creation, racial wealth equity, housing and economic development and is a sought-after thought leader on building a more inclusive economy. A native of Minneapolis, MN, he holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in Public Policy from Metropolitan State University and a Master of Public Administration from Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government.
Michou Kokodoko
Project Director – Community Development and Engagement |Minneapolis Federal Reserve | Center For Indian Country Development
Michou Kokodoko is a project director in the Minneapolis Fed’s Community Development and Engagement department. He leads the Bank’s efforts to promote effective community-bank partnerships by increasing awareness of community development trends and investment opportunities, especially those related to the Community Reinvestment Act.
Jodie Harris
Director |U.S. Department of the Treasury’s CDFI Fund
Jodie Harris is the Director of the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Community Development Financial Institutions Fund (CDFI Fund). The CDFI Fund generates economic growth and opportunity in some of our nation’s most distressed communities. By offering tailored resources and innovative programs that invest federal dollars alongside private sector capital, the CDFI Fund serves mission-driven financial institutions that take a market-based approach to supporting economically disadvantaged communities.
Jodie has worked in both the public and private sectors for over 25 years. Following her start as a commercial real estate and community development credit analyst, Jodie served as president of a small non-profit consulting firm providing technical assistance and education to small businesses and entrepreneurs. She spent several years in the Strategy and Business Architecture division of Accenture, LLC, working with a range of clients including financial institutions, nonprofits and technology companies. Jodie has extensive experience in policy research, and worked as a policy analyst with New York University’s Institute for Education and Social Policy, and with the U.S. Department of Agriculture where she focused on low-income food programs.
Jodie joined Treasury in 2007 as an Associate Program Manager with the CDFI Fund, and later served as Senior Advisor to the Director of the CDFI Fund. During her time with Treasury, she has managed grant programs and developed legislative and policy proposals for a wide range of issues with a focus on access to capital, community development banking, and financial inclusion. Most recently, as the Director of Treasury’s Office of Small Business, Community Development and Affordable Housing Policy, Jodie led a team of policy analysts in the development of policies and programs that support community and economic development nationwide.
Jodie originally hails from Philadelphia and completed her undergraduate studies at the University of Maryland. She holds a MBA and MPA from New York University.
Chrystel Cornelius
Ojibwe; Oneida
CEO & President | Oweesta
Chrystel Cornelius is the President & CEO of the Oweesta Corporation, a national Native CDFI intermediary predominantly serving Native communities across the United States, Alaska, and Hawaii.
Ms. Cornelius has worked with Native communities for most of her professional career, with more than 23 years of experience working in the Native economic development field. She is an enrolled member of the Oneida Nation of Wisconsin and a member of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians located in North Dakota. Ms. Cornelius has dedicated her career to capitalizing Native communities upholding tribal sovereignty and self-determination measures through the issuance of capital and organizational capacity building efforts.
Chrystel Cornelius is a founding steering committee member and previously held the position as the Board Secretary for the Native CDFI Network (NCN). Ms. Cornelius is also a former board member of Opportunity Finance Network (OFN), is a current board member of the Community Reinvestment Fund (CRF) and holds the position of Treasurer for the Red Feather Development Group. She is a BALLE Fellow and Skoll Fellow.
Ms. Chrystel Cornelius attained a bachelor’s degree in Business Management from the University of Mary in Bismarck, North Dakota.
Angie Main
Fort Belknap Gros Ventre Tribe
Executive Director | NACDC Financial Services, Inc.
Professional background includes over 30 years’ experience in grants administration & management, fund raising, business and financial literacy education, training and technical assistance for small business, and community development in Tribal communities. Since 2011, Executive Director for NACDC Financial Services, Inc., a Native Community Development Financial Institution (CDFI), located in Browning, MT, providing training, technical assistance and capital access to the eight (8) Montana Reservation communities. Since 2010, fundraised over $15 m in lending and operating capital.
Experience includes leveraging resources for housing, community and organizational development; business; non-profit; strategic and business planning; and resource development.
Former employment includes Executive Director, Montana Tribal Business Information Network, Missoula, MT; and Vice President, Fort Belknap College, Fort Belknap, MT. Current board member for Blackfeet Reservation Development Fund, Montana Nonprofit Association and Montana Community Foundation. Received the 2017 Visionary Leader Award at the annual Native CDFI Awards Reception and Ceremony, OFN Conference in Washington, D.C. Enrolled member of the Montana Fort Belknap Gros Ventre Tribe.
Casey Lozar
Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes and Fort Peck Assiniboine & Sioux Tribes
Vice President/Director | Minneapolis Federal Reserve Bank | Center For Indian Country Development
Casey is responsible for leading all aspects of the work of the Center for Indian Country Development (CICD). In this role, he helps to identify research and policy priorities, and to increase CICD’s visibility, impact, and relevance. Based at our Helena Branch, Casey, an enrolled member of the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes, is also deeply involved in the Bank’s early childhood development work in Montana.
Before assuming leadership of the CICD, Casey was assistant vice president/outreach executive in the Bank’s department of Public Affairs, and the leader of our Helena Branch.
Prior to joining the Minneapolis Fed in 2018, Casey served in economic development and higher education roles for the state of Montana. Additionally, he held executive leadership positions in national Native American nonprofits, including the American Indian College Fund and the Notah Begay III Foundation.
Casey received degrees from Dartmouth College and Harvard University and an MBA from the University of Colorado-Denver. He serves as the chair of the board of regents of the Montana University System.
Casey is the 2021 recipient of the Janet L. Yellen Award for Excellence in Community Development and a 2022 recipient of the Honorary Leadership Award from the Native American Finance Officers Association.
Janis Bowdler
Counselor to the Secretary (Racial Equity) | U.S. Treasury
Janis Bowdler has spent the last two decades advancing economic equity solutions for communities of color and breaking down the barriers that underpin the disparities in wealth and financial security by race and gender.
Janis’ career has spanned local service, national advocacy, and international philanthropy. She launched her career in her native Northeast Ohio with Famicos Foundation, a community development corporation working in the Hough and Glenville neighborhoods of Cleveland, Ohio. As a Project Manager she developed and preserved affordable homeownership and rental opportunities for the residents of these historically African American neighborhoods.
She then spent 10 years at UnidosUS, then National Council of La Raza, advocating for economic mobility opportunities for Latino families. As the Director of Economic Policy, she led research, advocacy, and policy development in the areas of job creation and job quality, retirement security, housing, banking, community development and consumer protection.
Most recently, Janis served the President of the JPMorgan Chase & Co. Foundation. Under her leadership, the firm launched several critical initiatives that have expanded capital for entrepreneurs of color, improved access to banking products and services, expanded access to new job skills, and built more inclusive neighborhoods. Janis played a critical role in developing the firm’s incremental $30 billion racial equity commitment.
Janis has authored a number of publications on financial opportunity and economic mobility. Most recently, she co-authored “Building Equitable Cities: How to Drive Economic Mobility and Regional Growth” with Henry Cisneros and Jeff Lubell.
Janis received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Malone College in Canton, Ohio and a Master of Science degree from Cleveland State University. She is a proud Latina, a yoga instructor, mom to one daughter, two dogs, and a bunny. She lives with her husband and her family in Takoma Park, Maryland.
Jesse Van Tol
President & CEO | National Community Reinvestment Coalition
Jesse Van Tol is NCRC’s President and CEO. He has been with NCRC since 2006 and has held a variety of leadership positions, most recently as Chief Operating Officer, as well as senior positions in the organizing and membership, communications, policy and research teams. His work championing fair and responsible banking has resulted in $548 billion in new investments in low- and moderate-income communities through Community Benefits Agreements with 20 banking institutions. He is a popular speaker and lecturer, and has appeared on NPR, in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post and many other outlets.
Jesse serves on the board of the Maryland Consumer Rights Coalition, and the executive committee of Americans for Financial Reform. He was a Senior Fellow with Humanity in Action, an international human rights group, and a communications institute Fellow with Opportunity Agenda. He also sits on a variety of advisory boards, including the Federal Reserve Board’s Consumer Advisory Council, and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s Affordable Housing Advisory Councils. He is a member of the consumer advisory councils of Bank of America, Fifth Third, Huntington National Bank, IBERIABANK, JP Morgan Chase, KeyBank, Quicken Loans and Santander.
Jesse received his bachelor’s degree in History and International Studies from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and is part of the current NeighborWorks Achieving Excellence cohort at Harvard’s Kennedy school.
Rep. Sharice Davids
Ho-Chunk Nation
U.S. House of Representatives · Kansas
U.S. Rep. Davids was raised by a single mother, who served in the Army for 20 years. After graduating from Leavenworth High School, she worked her way through Johnson County Community College and the University of Missouri-Kansas City before earning a law degree from Cornell Law School. As a first generation college student who worked the entire time she was in college, Rep. Davids understands the importance of quality public schools and affordable higher education. It is that foundation that allowed her to go on to a successful career, focused on economic and community development, which included time as a White House Fellow under President Barack Obama.
When she was sworn into the 116th Congress, Rep. Davids became one of the first two Native American women to serve in Congress. Rep. Davids has centered her work in office on putting Kansans first, fighting to limit the influence of special interests and make health care more affordable and accessible to everyone. She is a resident of Roeland Park.
Andrew Gordon
Executive Advisor | Clearinghouse CDFI
Mr. Gordon serves as Executive Advisor to Clearinghouse CDFI as well as collaborates on special projects including activities specific to Arizona, Native American communities and the Fvlcrum Fund. He is on CCDFI’s executive team, supports the Impact Team and the Native American Advisory Board. Mr. Gordon currently serves on the Investment Committee of the Arizona Community Foundation’s Community Impact Loan Fund.
Prior to joining Clearinghouse CDFI in 2015, Mr. Gordon was the founding President of Arizona MultiBank Community Development Corporation, the heritage nonprofit CDFI that was established in 1991 and evolved into Arizona MultiBank, a Division of Clearinghouse CDFI. Mr. Gordon was Senior Vice President of the legacy economic development bank to New York City Economic Development Corporation. He served as Chair of the Phoenix Local Advisory Committee of Local Initiatives Support Corporation (LISC) and Chair of its Credit Committee. Mr. Gordon was a founding Advisory Board member of a U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) licensed Small Business Investment Company (SBIC) and the SBA has recognized Mr. Gordon as a “Small Business Financial Services Champion of the Year”.
Joel Smith
Caddo Nation of Oklahoma
Senior Vice President and Chief Credit Officer | Native American Bank
Joel Smith (Caddo Nation of Oklahoma) has served as the Senior Vice President and Chief Credit Officer of Native American Bank since 2013. He has worked in financing for 14 years. He holds a M.B.A. in Finance from the University of Colorado Denver, and a dual B.B.A in Finance and Accounting from the University of Oklahoma. Joel is also an alumnus of the Graduate School of Banking at Colorado, and holds a RMA Credit Risk Certification designation. Joel was named “40 Under 40” Native Business Lenders in 2015 by National Center for American Indian Enterprise Development.
David Black
Community Development Expert | Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
David Black is a Community Development Expert in the Community Affairs Department of the Office of the Comptroller of Currency. In that role, he is responsible for a range of community development finance policy areas, including small business finance, minority and community development financial institutions, lending and investing in Indian Country, and community development tax credits. Prior to joining the OCC, Mr. Black conducted research in entrepreneurship and community development finance at The Aspen Institute and managed efforts to support community development in Pittsburgh. His formal education includes a B.A. in Studio Arts and a Master of Urban and Regional Planning from the University of Pittsburgh.
Fern Orie
Oneida
Chief Programs Officer Executive Vice President of Advocacy & Strategic Partnerships |
Oweesta
Fern Orie is the Chief Programs Officer and Executive Vice President of Advocacy & Strategic Partnerships. She recently served as the founding CEO of the Wisconsin Native Loan Fund, a statewide housing Native Community Development Financial Institution (CDFI). Fern is the Chair of the Wisconsin Indian Business Alliance since inception and the Vice Chair of the national Native CDFI Network.
She serves on the Board of Directors and Loan Committee of Bay Bank, a tribally owned bank, and serves on the Forward Community Investments New Markets Tax Credit Advisory Board. She was appointed by the Governor to the Wisconsin Economic Development Corporation’s Entrepreneurship and Innovation Committee, and the Governor’s Council on Financial Literacy and Capability. She also serves on the Wisconsin Economic Development Association Board of Directors.
Fern serves on the Program Advisory Committee for the Lac Courte Oreilles Ojibwe Community College and also the Community Advisory Committee for Associated Bank.
She has worked in the Native housing and community development industry for 20 years and holds a B.A. in Business Administration and is a certified Economic Development Finance Professional (EDFP) through the National Development Council. She is an enrolled member of the Oneida Nation of Wisconsin.
Candace Herring
Senior Community Development Oversight Analyst |Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
Candace Herring is a Senior Community Development Oversight Analyst with the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. In this role, Candace supports the Board’s oversight of Federal Reserve Bank community development programs and initiatives. Candace also leads the Board’s participation in the Central Bank Network for Indigenous Inclusion, a collaborative formed to better understand and promote economic and financial outcomes for Indigenous populations and communities.
Prior to joining the Board, Candace was an Associate Program Manager with the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Community Development Financial Institutions Fund (CDFI Fund). Candace led strategy and policy development, program design and implementation, and oversaw all aspects of the grants management lifecycle for the CDFI Fund’s flagship programs – the CDFI Program and the Native American CDFI Assistance (NACA) Program. Candace began her career with non-profit and private sector organizations focused on community development and affordable housing finance.
Candace earned a Bachelor of Science degree in Communication Studies from New York University and a Master of Business Administration degree from George Washington University.
Steven Shepelwich
Senior Community Development Advisor Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City
Steven C. Shepelwich is a Senior Community Development Advisor at the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, Oklahoma City Branch. Steven leads the Bank’s efforts to promote economic development and fair and impartial access to financial services in Oklahoma’s low- to moderate-income communities and manages the District’s workforce development program area. In this role, Steven has lead research and outreach initiatives on the District’s unbanked market, innovations in consumer financial services, asset-based approaches to rural development and workforce development strategies. Steven co-authored the bankers’ guide Engaging Workforce Development: A Framework for Meeting CRA Obligations.
Prior to joining the Federal Reserve Bank, Steven worked with national organizations focused on expanding the roles of financial institutions in low-income communities including leading banks and credit unions, microenterprise funds, and affordable housing loan funds throughout the country. Steven began his career by working internationally with microfinance, rural development, and refugee programs in Kenya, Burundi, and India for over six years.
A native of Fort Worth, Texas, Steven holds a B.B.A in Marketing from Texas A&M University and an M.S. in Resource Development from Michigan State University. He is a graduate of the Graduate School of Banking at the University of Wisconsin at Madison.
Ammar Askari
Director for Community Affairs Outreach | Office of the Comptroller of Currency
Ammar Askari is the director for Community Affairs Outreach within the Bank Supervision Policy Department at the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC). In this role, Mr. Askari supervises a team of Community Affairs Officers who serve as liaisons among the agency, OCC-supervised banks, and the community on issues related to the Community Reinvestment Act and community development. Before joining the OCC, Mr. Askari worked in banking for nine years and in academia for 6 years.
Mr. Askari holds a master’s degree in social and applied economics from Wright State University and master’s and doctorate degrees in economics from Indiana University at Bloomington.
Ronald L. Milsap
Director | BMO Harris Bank
Ronald L. Milsap is Director, Business Banking, Industry Vertical Team, where he is responsible for managing and leading programming for under-represented and underserved, specialty programs, as well as developing specialized strategy, customized products, training and education for different industry segments across BMO Harris Bank, N.A. U.S. footprint. Ron has over 17 years of blended banking experience in commercial underwriting, business banking relationship management and sales, and retail banking management. Prior to joining BMO, Ron served as the CRA Officer for Providence Bank & Trust overseeing its lending, services, and investments into low-to-moderate income communities. Ron is passionate about serving the diverse needs of communities, non-profits and small businesses and leveraging his skills to deliver innovative, industry-specific financing and cash management solutions to help BMO clients realize their vision for success. Ron earned his Bachelor’s degree in Business Administration with a concentration in Finance from Morehouse College in Atlanta, GA. Ron is a Leadership Greater Chicago Fellow and a graduate of the Chicago Urban League’s IMPACT Leadership Development Program. Ron serves on the boards of My Block, My Hood, My City, E.G. Woode and the South Shore Chamber of Commerce, is an advisory board member of Community Desk Chicago and a volunteer and mentor with several youth-based organizations. Ron currently resides in Chicago with his wife, son and daughter.
Letticia Flores Poole
Co-Head for Black and Latinx Small Business BMO Harris Bank
I have been in banking for over 20yrs. Joined BMO Harris Bank in 2016 current role of Co-Head for BMO for Black and Latinx Small Business Program. Recently awarded the Best Small Business Product amongst 700 others- showcasing the resiliency and the commitment for our local communities. I have the pleasure of providing financial education and solutions to Small Businesses. I enjoy educating and helping people in our communities reach their financial goals through teaching, coaching and connecting. I am viewed as a trusted advisor to the businesses I work with. Recently I had the opportunity to work with our State of Minority Small Business group, where I helped our minority businesses voices be heard. I have been a part of multiple organizations from Non-profits to resource groups throughout my career, where I held multiple positions on the board from President to Treasurer to Member at Large. To name a few Supporting Professionals Network Association, South Chicago Chamber, Northwest Connection Chamber, Latinas in Childcare, North side Latinos Progress.
Letticia is married with one son and one bonus daughter and 2 grand kids. Born and raised in Chicago. Loves to bike ride and explore new bike paths.
Chad S. Marchand
Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation
Sr. Program Manager/Tribal and Indigenous Communities | Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
Born and raised in Omak, Washington, Chad is a member of the Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation. Chad earned his Bachelor of Arts (’05) in Political Science and History and his Master’s Degree (’14) in Public Administration from the University of Arizona. In May 2019, Chad received his Master’s in Professional Studies in Applied Intelligence with a concentration in Homeland Security. Chad is now a Ph.D. student at St. John’s University pursuing a degree in Homeland Security.
Chad joined the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco in August and serves in the position of Sr. Program Manager for Tribal and Indigenous Communities. Previously, Chad was with The National Center for American Indian Enterprise Development (NCAIED) and served in the role of Vice-President of NCAIED and Interim Executive Director of Native Edge Finance, Inc. from October 2018 to December 2021. Chad also currently holds the role of Chairman of the Colville Tribal Gaming Commission.
For his work, Chad was the recipient of the Arizona Daily Star 40 Under 40 Award 2009, Omicron Delta Kappa Community Service Recognition Award in February 2011, the Children & Family Services Champions for Children & Families Award in April 2011, the University of Arizona Outstanding Young Alumni Volunteer Award in May 2011, and most recently received the National Center for American Indian Enterprise Development Native American 40 Under 40 Award in October 2016. In his spare time, Chad coaches his daughter, Reagan’s softball team and loves to spend his time in the outdoors.
Megan Cruz
Osage Nation
Senior Economic Education Specialist | Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Megan Cruz is with the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis and leads the Federal Reserve’s Native Economic and Financial Education Empowerment (NEFEE) program. In her role she focuses on working with tribal nations and Native communities across the United States on implementing culture-based economic and personal finance education programs to support economic and financial wellbeing. NEFEE conducts research, in partnership with Native communities, to address barriers to financial capability and inclusion. Megan also serves as the Federal Reserve’s lead representative to the Central Bank Network for Indigenous Inclusion workgroup, supporting the Federal Reserve Board’s participation in the Network. She joined the Federal Reserve System with the San Francisco Reserve Bank and has assumed a variety of roles including in credit risk management, currency operations and security.
Megan began her career at Merrill Lynch in investment banking where she assisted tribal nations, pueblos and their enterprises in raising more than one billion dollars in financing for their economic development and reservation infrastructure projects. She graduated from Oklahoma State University with a B.S. in Economics.
Megan is a citizen of the Osage Nation from the Grayhorse District.
Rollin Wood
Cherokee
Executive Director| Native Partnership for Housing
Rollin Wood is an enrolled member of the Cherokee Nation and has served as Executive Director of NPH since 2014. Under his leadership and vision, NPH has been successful in expanding NPH operations in lending, housing counseling, and construction services, to provide clients of NPH with quality services grounded in NPH’s non-profit mission of increasing access to homeownership and contributing to economic development within Native communities.
Prior to joining NPH, Mr. Wood owned and operated Sierra Vista Resources, Inc., located in Tucson, Arizona, developing business plans and financial projections for start-up businesses, including a Navajo-owned company in the natural resource industry. His previous work experience has included providing management and field operations for several large scale mine exploration projects, as well as a lengthy prior career in the broadcast industry serving at the executive level and devoting his expertise in the areas of sales, marketing, and management throughout broadcast offices located in Phoenix, Seattle, Sacramento, Portland, and Fresno.
Rollin Wood has business training in strategic planning, sales, human resources and management through the Belo Corporation and the Tuck School of Business, Dartmouth: Building Successful Native-American Businesses. Rollin also serves on an advisory committee for Native CDFI Network, Board member on the Nation NeighborWorks Association, served on Oweesta’s Housing Committee, and on the city of Gallup, New Mexico’s Housing committee.
Courtney Haynes
Department of Energy | Office of Clean Energy Demonstrations
Courtney has been working to elevate economic opportunity and prosperity over the last 18 years, covering large-scale policy initiatives to direct service. She has worked on coalition development and policy formulation across corporate favoritism, housing, and more deeply in healthcare, education and workforce, while continuously returning to community-based organizations to understand social determinant complexities and opportunity. More recently, Courtney was the Coal Communities Lead with the Economic Development Administration at the U.S. Department of Commerce helping to build the programming, capacity, and funding opportunities under the American Rescue Plan for Coal Communities across the country. Courtney now joins the Office of Clean Energy Demonstrations with the U.S. Department of Energy and serves as the Stakeholder Engagement Specialist for the Clean Energy on Mine Lands and Energy Improvements in Rural and Remote provisions working to bring stakeholders together locally to ensure long-term, regional economic development.
Rohit Chopra
Director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
Rohit Chopra is Director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. As Director, Chopra is also a member of the Board of Directors of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the Financial Stability Oversight Council. In 2018, Chopra was unanimously confirmed by the U.S. Senate as a Commissioner on the Federal Trade Commission, where he served until assuming office as CFPB Director. During his tenure at the FTC, he successfully worked to strengthen sanctions against repeat offenders, to reverse the agency’s reliance on no-money, no-fault settlements in fraud cases, and to halt abuses of small businesses. He also led efforts to revitalize dormant authorities, such as those to protect the Made in USA label and to promote competition. Chopra holds a BA from Harvard University and an MBA from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania.
Tawney Brunsch
Oglala Sioux Tribe
Executive Director of Lakota Funds
Tawney Brunsch, a member of the Oglala Sioux Tribe, is the Executive Director of Lakota Funds, a Native community development financial institution (CDFI) serving the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. Prior to joining Lakota Funds in 2008, Tawney worked with the Black Hills Federal Credit Union for eight years as a Branch Manager/Lead Lender. At Lakota Funds, Tawney has successfully led the organization’s achievement of key organizational benchmarks, including the chartering of the Lakota Federal Credit Union, expanding Lakota Funds’ lending area to the Rosebud Reservation, efforts to become an FSA-Guaranteed ag lender, and launching the Child Development Account (CDA) program, one of the first such programs in Indian Country. Nationally known for her community development efforts, Tawney serves on a number of boards and advisory committees including the Federal Home Loan Bank of Des Moines Advisory Council, the Community Advisory Council of the Federal Reserve Board, and the Native CDFI Network’s Policy Committee.
Tawney remains committed to economic development on the Pine Ridge Reservation in her roles as Lakota Federal Credit Union Board Chairman, and the Board Treasurer of Mazaska Owecaso Otipi Financial, a fellow CDFI focused on homeownership lending. She has been a leader of the South Dakota Native Homeownership Coalition since its creation in 2013, and currently serves on the Executive Committee, Policy Committee, and Veteran’s Committee and chairs the Physical Issues Committee.
Jim VanWinkle
AVP/Mortgage Loan Officer | Chickasaw Community Bank
Jim VanWinkle has been originating mortgages for thirty years. Over the last ten years, his work has focused on Native American Home Loans both on and off the reservation. VanWinkle has originated single close construction loans, rehab loans, purchases, refinances, swaps, and assumptions.
Denise Zuni
Isleta Pueblo
Owner | Sh’eh Wheef Law Offices
Denise Zuni owns Sh’eh Wheef Law Offices in Isleta Pueblo, New Mexico. Denise is from Isleta Pueblo and has been a practicing attorney for 33 years. She represents Indian Tribes, Tribally Designated Housing Entities, and Native Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFIs) in New Mexico. Denise developed mortgage codes and home loan programs for many of the Pueblos in New Mexico and was instrumental in creating Tiwa Lending Services, Inc., a Native CDFI located in Isleta Pueblo, who provides mortgage lending. She represented the New Mexico Pueblos in obtaining congressional sponsorship and subsequent passage of the Helping Expedite and Advance Responsible Tribal Homeownership Act (HEARTH), which allows tribes to enact their own leasing laws in lieu of following the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) leasing regulations. Denise also served as a former tribal appellate judge and a tribal court judge in Isleta Pueblo. She holds a BBA from the University of New Mexico Anderson School of Management and a JD from the UNM School of Law. Denise does trainings on a national level on mortgage lending, tribal leasing laws, and housing development on Indian lands.
Arizona Energy Coordinator and VAPG Contact | USDA Rural Development
Jessie Huff works as Arizona’s Energy Coordinator and Value Added Producer Grant contact for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Rural Development office. Jessie has helped develop sustainability projects in rural and remote places, in various capacities, for the last 16 years, mostly in the state of Alaska and a little in Oregon, before moving to Arizona about a year ago. She has a bachelor’s in renewable energy and a master’s in applied resource economics, energy being the resource. Treasurer of the United States
Chief Mutáwi Mutáhash (Many Hearts) Marilynn “Lynn” Malerba became the 18th Chief of the Mohegan Tribe on August 15, 2010, and is the first female Chief in the tribe’s modern history. The position is a lifetime appointment made by the Tribe’s Council of Elders. Lynn follows in footsteps of many strong female role models in the Mohegan Tribe, including her mother, Loretta Roberge, who was a member of the Tribal Council that achieved Federal Recognition for the Tribe and held the position of Tribal Nonner (elder female of respect) as well as her great-grandfather Chief Matagha (Burrill Fielding). Prior to becoming Chief, she served as Chairwoman of the Tribal Council, and served in Tribal Government as Executive Director of Health and Human Services. Preceding her work for the for the Mohegan Tribe, Lynn had a lengthy career as a registered nurse ultimately as the Director of Cardiology and Pulmonary Services at Lawrence & Memorial Hospital. She earned a doctor of Nursing Practice at Yale University, named a Jonas Scholar. She was awarded an honorary Doctoral degree in Science from Eastern Connecticut State University and an honorary Doctoral Degree in Humane Letters from the University of St. Joseph in West Hartford, CT. She earned a Master’s Degree in Public Administration from the University of Connecticut, a Bachelor of Science in Nursing from the College of St. Joseph and her diploma in nursing from Hartford Hospital School of Nursing. Lynn was appointed by President Biden and is currently serving as the Treasurer of the United States. Prior to her current role, she served as the United South and Eastern Tribes Board of Directors Secretary. She formerly served as Chairwoman of the Tribal Self-Governance Advisory Committee of the Federal Indian Health Service (IHS), a member of the Justice Department’s Tribal Nations Leadership Council, a member of the Tribal Advisory Committee for the National Institute of Health, a member of the Treasury Tribal Advisory Committee and a member of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Center for Indian Country Development Leadership Council. Locally she served as a Trustee for Chelsea Groton Bank, Board Chair for the Community Foundation of Eastern Connecticut, and on the Provost’s Advisory Committee Member for the Harvard University Native American Program She published “The Effects of Sequestration on Indian Health Funding” in the Hastings Center Report, Nov-Dec. 2013 and authored two chapters in “American Indian Health and Nursing” Ed. Margaret P. Moss, Springer Publishing Company. She lives in Niantic with her husband Paul. They are the parents of two adult daughters, Elizabeth and Angela and grandparents of granddaughters Taylor and Charlotte and grandson Connor. Executive Vice President & Director of Tribal and Construction Lending | Chickasaw Community Bank
Nancy Bainbridge has been with Chickasaw Community Bank since inception, roughly tens years ago, and has closed over 1200 loans to Tribes and TDHES across Indian Country for SFR, Duplexes, Tri-plexes and Quadplexes as well community centers, HA buildings, park, playgrounds, etc.. Bainbridge uses her 40 years of Commercial and Construction lending experience to help tribes find solutions to housing challenges. She also directs the Single Close Construction programs for the bank. Over her career, she has held several positions at banks- President and CEO, CFO, COO, and Chief Lending Officer. She was a trustee on the Board of FaithShares Trust, an ETF, traded on the New York Stock Exchange. Nancy has an Economics Degree from Northwestern University, Evanston IL. She was on the Board of the OBAs Commercial Lending School. Bainbridge attended numerous lending trainings programs as trainer and trainee and holds several Native American Lending Certificates including -HUD 184 -Title VI. Affordable Lending Initiatives Senior | Freddie Mac
David Westfall is an Affordable Lending Initiatives senior in Freddie Mac’s Single-Family Mission and Community Engagement division. He supports the development of solutions that address some of the nation’s most persistent housing challenges, with a focus on rural housing, manufactured housing, shared equity homeownership and home energy efficiency. Mr. Westfall joined Freddie Mac in 2002, holding positions in customer education, marketing and communications and loan servicing. Mr. Westfall holds a Bachelor of Science in business administration in marketing from West Virginia University. Freddie Mac provides liquidity, stability and affordability to the nation’s residential mortgage markets. Freddie Mac supports communities by providing mortgage capital to lenders. Today, Freddie Mac is making home possible for one in four home borrowers and is one of the largest sources of financing for multifamily housing. For more information, please visit www.FreddieMac.com and follow us on Twitter @FreddieMac. Manager of Single-Family Affordable Lending Strategy and Initiatives | Freddie Mac
Catherine Houlihan is a Manager of Single-Family Affordable Lending Strategy and Initiatives in Freddie Mac’s Mission and Community Engagement Division. She manages the rural housing initiative that supports Freddie Mac’s underserved markets plan. Ms. Houlihan joined Freddie Mac in 2022 and previously worked in the nonprofit and government sectors as a researcher, grant writer, and grant manager specializing in community development, climate change mitigation, public safety, and historic preservation. Ms. Houlihan earned a Master of Public Administration degree from Florida International University and a Bachelor of Arts degree from Indiana University. Freddie Mac provides liquidity, stability, and affordability to the nation’s residential mortgage markets. Freddie Mac supports communities by providing mortgage capital to lenders. Today, Freddie Mac is making home possible for one in four home borrowers and is one of the largest sources of financing for multifamily housing. For more information, please visit www.FreddieMac.com and follow us on Twitter @FreddieMac. CEO | Native CDFI Network & Executive Director | Native 360 Loan Fund
In addition to serving as NCN’s CEO and Chairperson, Pete Upton (Ponca Tribe of Nebraska) is the Executive Director of Native360 Loan Fund, a certified Native Community Development Financial Institution that focuses on entrepreneurship and financial literacy development for Native Americans. Serving as Executive Director since 2011, Mr. Upton has built the organization from its start-up phase into a successful lending organization that continues to experience growth while ever increasing its community impact. Mr. Upton has been involved with the Native CDFI Network since it was a grassroots movement. From 2011-2012, he served on the steering committee that was instrumental in the Native CDFI Network’s initial organizational development steps. In 2012, Mr. Upton became a founding board member and served as the Chairperson for the Peer Learning Committee. As Native360 serves Native communities in three states, Mr. Upton understands the challenges of serving both rural and urban areas in various different jurisdictions. He values strong networks and cultivates partnerships to deliver technical assistance throughout a vast service area. Mr. Upton is a powerful advocate for equal access to capital. Attorney | Dickinson Wright Law Firm
Kris Beecher is an enrolled member of the Navajo Nation and is a graduate of the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law and W.P. Carey School of Business at Arizona State University and holds a Juris Doctor/MBA joint degree. Beecher is a member of the Navajo Nation Bar Association and served a 3-year term as Chairman of the Board of the largest public housing authority in Indian Country, and nearly the 8th largest in the United States. Beecher also holds a BA in Political Science from ASU where he graduated summa cum laude with a Minor in Communication and holds a certificate in Indian Law from ASU Law. Beecher is currently an attorney at the law firm Dickinson Wright, where his practice areas include Business & Commercial litigation and Indian law. He is the current Chair of the Executive Council for the Indian Law Section of the Arizona State Bar. Principal Economic Development Specialist | Navajo Nation
Wava White is a Principal Economic Development Specialist at the Navajo Nation Division of Economic Development-Project Development Department. Her overall primary responsibility is to secure businesses that create jobs and services primarily focused within the small business, commercial and some service areas of the Navajo Nation. In addition, White works as Project Manager that includes performing technical duties in all areas of construction management to develop major economic development projects. Having worked in the economic development area for over 30 years, White has extensive experience to provide the technical assistance needed to assist Navajo communities to promote and implement their economic development plans. Some of the development projects Ms. White worked on include Navajo Pine Shopping Center, Tuba City Shopping Center Expansion, Dilkon Shopping Center, White Cone Convenience Store, Karigan Child Care Center and Karigan Estates Private Home Development. In 2002, her work in the development of Dilkon Shopping Center was recognized as a major achievement in business development by the United States Department of Commerce. Originally from White Cone, Arizona, Wava has a Business Management Degree from Northern Arizona University and a Masters in Business Administration Degree from the University of Phoenix. Regional Vice President | NeighborWorks America
Lisa has more than 30 years of community development, housing and public health experience centered on racial equity. Prior to NeighborWorks, she led the National Coalition for Asian Pacific American Community Development for 15 years, then served in several capacities at the University of California, Los Angeles, including Activist in Residence at the Institute for Inequality and Democracy, Policy Advisor at the Asian American Studies Center, and Assistant Director of Federal Relations. She currently serves on boards of the Local Initiatives Support Corporation and Asian Pacific Islander Americans in Historic Preservation. She also worked at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Bureau of Primary Health Care, Office of Minority Health and White House Initiative on Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders, and also at 2 community health centers serving low income AANHPIs. She is a fourth generation Japanese Californian residing in the Crenshaw neighborhood of Los Angeles. Founder & Managing Director of Operations | Navajo Power
Clara Pratte is a member of the Navajo Nation and formerly served as the Chief of Staff for the Navajo Nation and Interim CEO of Nova Corporation. Clara was the lead for tribal consultation for the U.S. Small Business Administration and the lead for the Navajo Nation tribal governments federal affairs office in Washington DC. Clara is a Founder & Managing Director of Operations at Navajo Power. Deputy Director | Lakota Funds
Ellen White Thunder, Deputy Director for Lakota Funds, since January 2023, helped to create the South Dakota Native Homeownership Coalition’s workforce development program for the residential construction industry to increase housing stock on South Dakota’s nine reservations. This program is funded by a $5 million grant from the Economic Development Administration. Much of Ellen’s previous professional experience has been in the construction industry, and she is an International Code Council-certified residential inspector. Previously, she worked at the Oglala Lakota College where she served as an assistant archivist, vocational education director, and eventually the registrar. Prior to that, Ellen worked as a construction control inspector for Indian Health Services. Ellen has a B.S. in Construction Engineering Technology from the University of Southern Mississippi and an M.S. in Construction Engineering and Management from the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology. She is an enrolled member of the Oglala Sioux Tribe. Principal | Concept Consulting Group, LLC
As Principal of Concept Consulting Group, LLC, Ms. Webster provides assistance to TDHEs and Tribes on planning, financing, and project management for affordable and mixed income housing development. In this role, she has collaborated with CDFIs, HUD ONAP, state agencies and GSEs, such as Fannie Mae, to help secure over 190 million dollars for tribal housing since 2007. As an experienced on-the-ground developer, she helps her clients design and implement programs and housing projects and financing tools that are realistic and practical. Ms. Webster has 37 years’ experience in housing beginning in Baltimore, Maryland in 1986 and in 1995 co-founded the Enterprise Community Partners national Native American Program based in New Mexico, serving as its director until 2006. Deputy Director | Lakota Funds
Ellen White Thunder, Deputy Director for Lakota Funds, since January 2023, helped to create the South Dakota Native Homeownership Coalition’s workforce development program for the residential construction industry to increase housing stock on South Dakota’s nine reservations. This program is funded by a $5 million grant from the Economic Development Administration. Much of Ellen’s previous professional experience has been in the construction industry, and she is an International Code Council-certified residential inspector. Previously, she worked at the Oglala Lakota College where she served as an assistant archivist, vocational education director, and eventually the registrar. Prior to that, Ellen worked as a construction control inspector for Indian Health Services. Ellen has a B.S. in Construction Engineering Technology from the University of Southern Mississippi and an M.S. in Construction Engineering and Management from the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology. She is an enrolled member of the Oglala Sioux Tribe. Policy Fellow | Center for Indian Country Development | Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
Phil Gover is a Policy Fellow at the Center for Indian Country Development at the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis where he focuses on policy research and projects related to tribal enterprise and government development, housing access and the Community Reinvestment Act. Prior to serving at the Fed he was a consultant and social entrepreneur who worked on tribal development projects and helped grow a movement for educational sovereignty through the direct authorization of tribally-run, state-funded public charter schools. He also currently serves as Chairman of the Board of Directors for the Multiplier organization, a California-based non-profit incubator and accelerator. He has an MBA in Strategy & Operations from the Darden School of Business and a BA in Political and Social Thought, both from the University of Virginia. Phil is an enrolled member of the Cedar Band of the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah and descends from the Northern Paiute, Pawnee and Comanche people. State Director of New Mexico | U.S. Department of Agriculture – Rural Development
Patricia Dominguez has worked with rural communities for many years to advance policies and initiatives that will help them flourish. She grew up in a rural community and after receiving a Bachelor of Science degree from the University of New Mexico, she worked for various state and county government agencies. Patricia has served as a congressional staffer for US Senators Jeff Bingaman and Martin Heinrich for thirteen years. Her congressional service in Senator Heinrich’s office was especially meaningful because her geographic region of coverage included rural northern New Mexico where she was raised. Her firsthand experience of living in a rural community helps her understand the challenges facing rural America and also the resources that will be needed to build capacity in these areas. Patricia has experience building networks and implementing successful strategies that help rural communities develop scale appropriate ventures that will thrive and have the best chance at success. Patricia has a deep appreciation for New Mexico and will continue to be an advocate for rural communities and strive to improve quality of life and opportunities in underserved areas. IDA Coordinator & Credit Counselor | Native Partnership for Housing, Inc.
Adrian John is an enrolled Member of the Navajo Nation. Adrian currently is responsible for Individual Development Account (IDA) by intake loan applications for native clients needing mortgage, credit builder and/or consolidation loans. As a HUD housing counselor candidate and NeighborWorks America homebuyer education specialist, in his role Adrian assists in providing Credit counseling to our Native clients with emphasis in Home Site Leases. Prior to joining Native Partnership for Housing, Adrian served as a Projects Specialist with the Navajo Nation, assisting in public service to the Navajo Communities in infrastructure projects. He served as a board member for the Bureau of Indian Education (BIE) and Gallup Indian Health Service governing Navajo Nation tribal, State and Federal Funds. Adrian continues to be deeply involved in the Navajo Community by serving on the Community Land Use Planning Committee for Red Rock Chapter, Navajo Nation. Most recently, Adrian coordinated with the Navajo Nation Administration of the Navajo Nation President in hosting the Navajo Nation Housing Fair. Adrian’s customer service presents his passion in helping families obtain homeownership on or off the reservation and helps native families maintain a positive future throughout the loan process. The most important, and is his goal is to see Natives families become homeowners, and to be financially stable. His role at Native Partnership for Housing is to see more economic development in Natives communities for future generations. Founder & Executive Chairman | Navajo Power
Brett Isaac is a member of the Navajo Nation and has worked with local chapters in the Nation to execute on numerous community development initiatives. Brett collaborated with the Navajo Community of Shonto in the development of Community Owned enterprises leading to the creation of a solar company on the Nation called Shonto Energy. Brett’s company has deployed over 200 off-grid solar systems to serve households without grid electricity. Brett is a Founder & Executive Chairman at Navajo Power.
Jessie Huff
Marilynn Malerba
Mohegan Tribe
Nancy Bainbridge
David Westfall
Catherine Houlihan
Pete Upton
Ponca Tribe of Nebraska
Kris Beecher
Navajo Nation
Wava White
Navajo Nation
Lisa Hasegawa
Clara Pratte
Navajo Nation
Ellen White Thunder
Ogalala Sioux Tribe
Deborah Webster
Ellen White Thunder
Oglala Sioux Tribe
Phil Gover
Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah
Patricia Dominguez
Adrian John
Navajo Nation
Brett Isaac
Navajo Nation