Former Kotzebue mayor to lead National Park Service’s Native relations program for Alaska

Musk ox grazing on the tundra by the Cape Krusenstern National Monument. (Photo by Doug Demarest/ National Park Service)
Musk ox grazing on the tundra by the Cape Krusenstern National Monument. Maija Katak Lukin has been superintendent of the Western Arctic Parklands since 2016, which includes Cape Krusenstern. (Photo by Doug Demarest/ National Park Service)

Maija Katak Lukin, a former mayor of Kotzebue, has been selected as the Native relations program manager for the National Park Service’s Alaska region.

She’s been superintendent of the Western Arctic Parklands since 2016, overseeing operations in 9 million acres that include Noatak National Preserve, Kobuk Valley National Park and the Cape Krusenstern National Monument.

Maija Katak Lukin (National Park Service photo)

Lukin says a lot of her job involves working with tribes living outside the national park boundaries

“The Park Service in the Alaska Region has really moved towards listening to Indigenous people and the first Alaskans in the management of that land because, if you look at history, we’ve been managing that land very successfully for 13,000 years,” Lukin said.

She is Inupiaq and grew up in Kotzebue and the Sisualik fish camp, where she’s spent her life subsistence hunting, fishing and gathering.

She says that her work balances the land stewardship of her ancestors with the more modern federal protections.

“We travel to all of the villages in Northwest Alaska to have these hard conversations about what land management looks like to them, and listen to what they have to say,” Lukin said. “And try to be honest about our policies at the National Park Service, and be honest about what we could and could not change.”

In her new position, Lukin hopes to take her success in working with Northwest Alaska tribal groups to tribes and Native corporations across the state.

“Giving a seat at the table to Indigenous people and the people who live around national parks, monuments and preserves,” Lukin said.

Lutkin has been a local leader in Kotzebue serving on the city council from 2013 to 2016. She was elected by her peers in 2014 and served a year as mayor. She’ll relocate from Kotzebue to Anchorage to begin her new position in March.

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