Goldbelt Heritage Foundation (GHF) is a nonprofit organization committed to preserving and revitalizing the culture, language, and ways of knowing of the Tlingit people of Southeast Alaska. Through educational programming, language revitalization, arts, and community collaboration, GHF fosters Indigenous knowledge and strengthens cultural identity for current and future generations.
Position Summary:
The Youth & Education Program Manager leads the development, coordination, and implementation of youth and education initiatives that advance the mission of the Goldbelt Heritage Foundation. This position oversees culturally grounded programming designed to support Indigenous youth in strengthening cultural identity, leadership skills, and educational success.
The Youth & Education Program Manager works collaboratively with community members, elders, educators, schools, and partner organizations to deliver programs that connect youth with Tlingit culture, language, and traditional knowledge. This position is responsible for managing program planning, supervising staff, overseeing budgets and grant deliverables, and ensuring programs are implemented effectively and in alignment with GHF values and goals.
This position requires a high level of independence, initiative, and cultural competency, and involves coordination of multiple programs, partnerships, and community-based activities throughout the year.
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The annual salary for this position is $85,000 DOE.
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Goldbelt, Incorporated is an urban Alaska Native, for‐profit corporation headquartered in Juneau, Alaska. Incorporated on January 4, 1974 following the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA), Goldbelt’s primary mission is to manage assets and conduct business for the benefit of its more than 3,600 shareholders. Goldbelt first ventured into the logging and timber industry but later expanded its operations into tourism, which still remains an integral part of its operations. Today, the majority of Goldbelt’s revenue and income derives from government contracting and services.
Goldbelt’s shareholder base consists of Alaska Natives who are of Tlingit and Haida descent. The Tlingit and Haida tribes are the indigenous people of Southeast Alaska, whose rich history spans more than ten thousand years in the region. Goldbelt shareholders own the entire 272,000 shares of Goldbelt stock, representing assets in excess of $100 million in addition to over 32,000 acres of land in the vicinity of Juneau. Goldbelt seeks to honor and preserve the Tlingit culture - its history, art, dance, legends, and the traditions of its Alaska Native shareholders. Learn more about Goldbelt Heritage.
The company is named after a richly mineralized zone in Southeast Alaska that encompasses 33,000 acres of Goldbelt’s land holdings— an area that stretches along the mainland from Frederick Sound to Berners Bay. Learn more about Goldbelt Lands.