From Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov Thu Dec 1 09:43:12 2022 From: Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov (Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA) Date: Thu, 1 Dec 2022 16:43:12 +0000 Subject: [Nmtriblibs] Fw: [EXTERNAL] CNAY Announces Brave Heart Fellowship In-Reply-To: <223e0b1d162b2beeef552be29.69c32f5881.20221201161555.04916780ee.a880618e@mail121.atl11.rsgsv.net> References: <223e0b1d162b2beeef552be29.69c32f5881.20221201161555.04916780ee.a880618e@mail121.atl11.rsgsv.net> Message-ID: Cassandra E. Osterloh, MLS, MA (Cherokee Nation) Pronouns: she/her/hers [cid:2ce79680-214d-4d42-b44a-eee850365c97]Tribal Libraries Program Coordinator Library Development Bureau, New Mexico State Library 1209 Camino Carlos Rey Santa Fe NM 87507 505-264-2427 (cell) 505-476-9764 (office) cassandra.osterloh at dca.nm.gov ________________________________ From: Center for Native American Youth Sent: Thursday, December 1, 2022 9:16 AM To: Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA Subject: [EXTERNAL] CNAY Announces Brave Heart Fellowship CAUTION: This email originated outside of our organization. Exercise caution prior to clicking on links or opening attachments. Call for 2023 Brave Heart Fellows! Call for Fellows: 2022 Brave Heart Fellowship [https://mcusercontent.com/223e0b1d162b2beeef552be29/images/26d955c4-0ee0-6f1a-b200-d11e35319e44.png] November 28, 2022, Washington, DC ? The Center for Native American Youth (CNAY) at the Aspen Institute is proud to announce a call for applicants for the inaugural Brave Heart Fellowship (BHF). This fellowship, based in the Midwest region of the United States, uplifts youth voices while addressing the representation gap and inequities facing Indigenous Peoples in the fight for climate justice. At CNAY, our work is led by Indigenous values and methodologies, allowing us to center and partner alongside Native communities effectively. The Brave Heart Fellowship will directly support community members and like-minded organizations addressing environmental disruption by developing a network of climate activists and climate-driven organizations and working together through Indigenous ways of knowing. When we engage with community partners, we can change the discourse surrounding environmental education and social change. The work of the Brave Heart fellows will impact all of us. The fellowship has been created for self-identified Native American and Indigenous youth, ages 18-24 years old, living in one of the following states: Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, or Wisconsin. It will equip Native youth to advocate and mobilize across their communities to protect traditional lands, waterways, and sacred sites. Through a culturally immersive curriculum, BHF will prioritize intergenerational learning spaces with tribal leaders and community elders who have long been on the front lines of climate change. If you or someone you know lives in the Midwest and are passionate about climate advocacy, we encourage you to become a fellow! Apply Here The deadline for applications is December 16, 2022, at 11:59 PM CST. If you have any questions, please contact Will Wilkinson at William.Wilkinson at AspenInstitute.org [https://mcusercontent.com/223e0b1d162b2beeef552be29/images/abfc6de1-e309-ecc4-c7ec-7be751c20f3d.png] Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Outlook-apewu2w1.png Type: image/png Size: 63286 bytes Desc: Outlook-apewu2w1.png URL: From Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov Thu Dec 1 09:43:29 2022 From: Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov (Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA) Date: Thu, 1 Dec 2022 16:43:29 +0000 Subject: [Nmtriblibs] Fw: [EXTERNAL] Accepting Applications for 2023 Native American Library Services Basic Grants In-Reply-To: <1139586677152.1121448818245.1877395919.0.341131JL.2002@scheduler.constantcontact.com> References: <1139586677152.1121448818245.1877395919.0.341131JL.2002@scheduler.constantcontact.com> Message-ID: Cassandra E. Osterloh, MLS, MA (Cherokee Nation) Pronouns: she/her/hers [cid:51b63b8f-7f4f-4d01-988c-62e63160e862]Tribal Libraries Program Coordinator Library Development Bureau, New Mexico State Library 1209 Camino Carlos Rey Santa Fe NM 87507 505-264-2427 (cell) 505-476-9764 (office) cassandra.osterloh at dca.nm.gov ________________________________ From: Institute of Museum and Library Services Sent: Thursday, December 1, 2022 9:32 AM To: Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA Subject: [EXTERNAL] Accepting Applications for 2023 Native American Library Services Basic Grants CAUTION: This email originated outside of our organization. Exercise caution prior to clicking on links or opening attachments. March 1, 2023 is the application deadline for these one year, non-competitive grants. [https://r20.rs6.net/on.jsp?ca=3448b4a8-d854-4189-8053-ba8787aa481b&a=1121448818245&c=74f1bd4e-804c-11ec-9959-fa163e7b09ec&ch=74f2fb50-804c-11ec-9959-fa163e7b09ec] [https://files.constantcontact.com/546fe8b1501/b25c3c0f-6ea3-4bc1-ba52-4d47e9cf55f1.jpg] Accepting Applications for 2023 Native American Library Services Basic Grants Application Deadline is March 1, 2023 WASHINGTON, DC?The Institute of Museum and Library Services is now accepting applications for Native American Library Services Basic grants through March 1, 2023. Native American Library Services Basic grants are noncompetitive one-year grants of $6,000 to $10,000, which can include up to $3,000 in eligible professional education and assessment activities or travel. The grants are available to federally recognized Native American tribes and Native Alaskan villages, corporations, and regional corporations and are designed to support existing operations and maintain core services of tribal and Native village libraries. Grants may be used to buy library materials, renew subscriptions, fund salaries and training, provide internet connectivity and computers, or purchase library furnishings, for example. Libraries may request up to $3,000 for staff to attend library courses or training workshops; attend or present at conferences related to library services; or hire consultants for onsite professional library assessments. Potential applicants can learn more about the FY 2023 application process in an on-demand webinar. Application materials can be found on the grant program page. For more information, please visit the IMLS website. View this email online. About the Institute of Museum and Library Services The Institute of Museum and Library Services is the primary source of federal support for the nation's libraries and museums. We advance, support, and empower America?s museums, libraries, and related organizations through grantmaking, research, and policy development. IMLS envisions a nation where individuals and communities have access to museums and libraries to learn from and be inspired by the trusted information, ideas, and stories they contain about our diverse natural and cultural heritage. To learn more, visit www.imls.gov and follow us on Facebook and Twitter. Direct comments or errors with your subscription to webmaster at imls.gov. Connect with IMLS [Facebook] ? [Twitter] ? Institute of Museum and Library Services | 955 L'Enfant Plaza North SW, Suite 4000, Washington, DC 20024 Unsubscribe cassandra.osterloh at state.nm.us Update Profile | Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by imlsnews at imls.gov -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Outlook-2rc4phw1.png Type: image/png Size: 63286 bytes Desc: Outlook-2rc4phw1.png URL: From Dale.Savage at dca.nm.gov Thu Dec 1 11:28:54 2022 From: Dale.Savage at dca.nm.gov (Savage, Dale, DCA) Date: Thu, 1 Dec 2022 18:28:54 +0000 Subject: [Nmtriblibs] New Mexico Librarians' Lounge - Noon - 12:40pm Message-ID: Greetings everyone, Join us today for the 1st Thursday New Mexico Librarians' Lounge. There's no agenda for today, so this is your opportunity to drop in and talk with us or other New Mexico librarians. Dale Savage - NMSL is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting. Join Zoom Meeting https://us02web.zoom.us/j/889311899?pwd=MXpZeEticlIxWEdRNFN6a1ZDWm1CZz09 Meeting ID: 889 311 899 Passcode: nmsl See you soon! Dale Dale Savage Library Development Bureau Chief New Mexico State Library -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov Thu Dec 1 12:56:28 2022 From: Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov (Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA) Date: Thu, 1 Dec 2022 19:56:28 +0000 Subject: [Nmtriblibs] Fw: [EXTERNAL] Need Better Broadband? Newly Released FCC Maps Need Public Input In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Cassandra E. Osterloh, MLS, MA (Cherokee Nation) Pronouns: she/her/hers [cid:aadcfec4-4f9e-40dc-a54c-7bf389a5e89f]Tribal Libraries Program Coordinator Library Development Bureau, New Mexico State Library 1209 Camino Carlos Rey Santa Fe NM 87507 505-264-2427 (cell) 505-476-9764 (office) cassandra.osterloh at dca.nm.gov ________________________________ From: New Mexico Broadband Connections Sent: Thursday, December 1, 2022 12:29 PM To: Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA Subject: [EXTERNAL] Need Better Broadband? Newly Released FCC Maps Need Public Input CAUTION: This email originated outside of our organization. Exercise caution prior to clicking on links or opening attachments. New Mexico Broadband Connections [http://cdn.mcauto-images-production.sendgrid.net/a6daf5f896ec64bd/1526ee8b-c73d-484f-9b3f-713d929d89fb/225x225.png] [http://cdn.mcauto-images-production.sendgrid.net/a6daf5f896ec64bd/d9152203-9f9f-4c4c-a6c3-608ded83cc78/573x200.jpg] Need Better Broadband? Newly Released FCC Maps Need Public Input >From the Broadband Director?s Desk For years, states around the country have been collecting broadband access data from providers to produce accurate, granular, and timely maps to identify gaps and guide investment. These efforts were designed to fill a void created by a federal approach to broadband mapping that was?well ?not particularly accurate, granular, or timely! Fortunately, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is launching a new approach that addresses these shortcomings?and gives the public a chance to weigh in directly. This edition of our newsletter is devoted to bringing this exciting opportunity to life. New Mexicans around the state are encouraged to check out the new map, compare it against their experience, and provide feedback directly to the FCC through the map. As the Office of Broadband Access and Expansion puts its mapping outreach and engagement strategy into action, we will continue to invest in our own broadband maps to make certain that we leave no home, business, or community institution without the bandwidth they need. [Director Schlegel's informal field validation] Director Schlegel's informal field validation! New Mexico broadband providers should continue to provide access data for the state?s interactive map and they can expect a letter clarifying this request soon. New Mexico residents should check out the new federal map, submit feedback, and help us spread the word! [http://cdn.mcauto-images-production.sendgrid.net/a6daf5f896ec64bd/e6b57a14-99f8-4e22-a0f0-2e524075156a/372x65.png] Director New Mexico Office of Broadband Access and Expansion A New National FCC Broadband Map On November 18, the FCC released the first draft of a new National Broadband Map, a map that displays where broadband internet services are and are not available across the country. The map is the first release in an ongoing, iterative process that will integrate data submitted by service providers, challenges from the public, and verifications and audits by the FCC. The map will be used to allocate $42.5 billion in federal funds to states and territories through the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) program by June 30, 2023. The public is now able to view the map at broadband map.fcc.gov, search for addresses to see information about the fixed and mobile services that internet providers report are available there, and register feedback with the FCC to improve the map?s accuracy. [FCC Broadband Map] For more context on the new maps, see What Is the FCC?s New Broadband Map and Why Does it Matter? from The Pew Charitable Trusts. Understanding the Map & Challenge Process The FCC broadband map is built on two distinct data sets: 1) what is known as the ?broadband serviceable location fabric? (often referred to as ?the fabric?) and 2) broadband provider-submitted service availability data. The fabric shows individual structures such as homes and small businesses that might subscribe to mass market broadband service, while the provider data shows where ISPs currently offer broadband service. To improve the accuracy of these data sets, the FCC created a process for states, local communities, and the public to challenge both the fabric and service availability data. Since Sept. 12, the FCC has been accepting feedback to the fabric from providers and state, local, and Tribal governments. However, the FCC?s newly published map does not yet include results from these location challenges. Once fabric challenges are resolved, the updated data will be distributed to providers before the next round of reporting, which starts on Dec. 31. [New Mexico Office of Broadband in the field] New Mexico Office of Broadband in the field What Can Be Challenged Fabric location data, fixed service availability data, and/or mobile service availability data can all be challenged. * Fabric data can be challenged via the map, such as updating an address or changing the building type on the property that is the serviceable location. The map also allows users to request adding a location that is missing. * Individuals can easily submit fixed service availability challenges using the map interface, while states and other entities can also submit ?bulk? challenges using the FCC?s Broadband Data Collection system. * For mobile service coverage challenges, consumers need to submit on-the-ground network performance data (i.e., speed test data) collected using the FCC Speed Test App as evidence to support mobile challenges. Governments and mobile service providers can also submit bulk data, with certain qualifications. For more on the challenge process, see the FCC?s Fact Sheet included with the mapping announcement. For those interested in filing bulk challenges to the FCC's broadband map, the FCC will be hosting a tutorial on the bulk challenge process on Nov. 30. Challenge Timeline Although public challenges to the map will be accepted on a rolling basis, there is a short window for a challenge to affect the BEAD funding allocation formula. The National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) recommends submitting challenges before January 13 in order to make it into the version that will be used to set the state BEAD allocation, which will be announced by June 30. If the full scope of unserved locations in a state is not reflected on the map by that time, that state might not receive its full share of funding. Further, the process for submitting challenges can be complicated and time-consuming, making it difficult for stakeholders to submit valid challenges in time. For example, speed tests, a common tool for crowdsourcing maps of broadband service, are not considered by the FCC as sufficient evidence on their own for challenging fixed service on the map, although they will be allowed for challenging mobile service. [Broadband Mapping Timeline] After registering ?Type 1? challenges to the FCC?s Broadband Serviceable Location Fabric, ensuring that these New Mexican homes and businesses are included among those locations assured of continued or improved broadband access, the New Mexico Office of Broadband Access and Expansion plans to support local governments, community organizations, and individual New Mexican households and businesses in providing location-specific feedback on the accuracy of the FCC?s Fixed Availability Map. [Connect New Mexico Pilot Program Award Announcement] Connect New Mexico Pilot Program Award Announcement Federal Broadband Funding 101: Resources for Local Government [Federal Broadband Funding 101: Resources for Local Government] U.S. Senator Ben Ray Luj?n invites local government leaders, staff, and partners from throughout New Mexico to the first of his Broadband for New Mexico Webinar Series. This first virtual event is aimed at supporting local government as essential partners for broadband. This webinar will be an introduction to what counties and municipalities need to know to meaningfully participate in broadband and digital inclusion efforts and connect their communities to high speed internet. Speakers will include Sen Luj?n and representatives from the National Telecommunications Information Administration (NTIA), the National Association of Counties (NACO), the New Mexico Office of Broadband Access and Expansion (OBAE), New Mexico Counties, and the New Mexico Municipal League, as well as local broadband leaders. Please join for this special opportunity to hear from and ask questions to federal, state, and local officials by registering in advance and spreading the word with others who might benefit from this webinar. For more information, contact Melanie Goodman at (575) 520-6492. Register for the Dec 7 Webinar Funds Available for ACP Outreach! On Nov. 10, the FCC released a Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO)?a formal announcement of the availability of grant funds?to develop innovative outreach strategies to reach historically underserved and unserved communities, to raise awareness of the Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP), and help eligible individuals enroll in the program. Eligible entities?which includes community-based organizations, nonprofits, housing agencies, social service providers, and more?are able to request grants of a minimum amount of $50,000 to a maximum of $1,000,000. The funds can cover costs including: * In-person ACP application assistance, * Creation and distribution of outreach materials, * Direct mail outreach, * Personnel costs, * Planning, travel, facility rental, and supplies, and * Consumer research and focus groups The FCC hosted a webinar on Nov. 15 outlining the application process. Applications are due on Jan. 9, 2023. The FCC will announce awards by March 10, 2023. The FCC also released this fact sheet about the funding opportunity. For details on the ACP Outreach Grant Program, see the Benton Institute for Broadband & Society?s Apply Now to Receive Support for Your ACP Outreach Efforts. In addition, Next Century Cities published this one-pager, What Local Leaders Need to Know About the FCC?s ACP Outreach Grants. New Report from the Benton Institute: Broadband Benefit Programs are Helping to Close the Digital Divide [Broadband Benefit Programs are Helping to Close the Digital Divide] Read the Report Analysis of recently-released American Community Survey data shows sharp increases in home broadband adoption from 2019 to 2021?more than twice the growth in broadband adoption that occurred in the 2017 to 2019 timeframe. There have been similar increases in household ownership of computing devices. The increases have been most pronounced in U.S. cities with the highest poverty rates. Cities with home wireline broadband subscriber growth of more than 10 percentage points since 2019 are: Detroit, Cleveland, Albuquerque, and Baltimore. The data suggest that federal, state, and local efforts to get more people online during the height of the pandemic had an impact. Read more in It's No Time to Disarm in the War Against the Digital Divide. The report identifies 4 lessons for policymakers and other decision makers: 1. Discover, grow, and replicate programs that have had an impact in getting more people online. 2. Subscription vulnerability (i.e., challenges low-income households face in maintaining connectivity) is a persistent problem. It is not amenable to a one-time fix. 3. Focus more on affordability and less on technology: Worry less about whether subscriptions are for wireline or wireless service and more on enrolling eligible households in the Affordable Connectivity Program regardless of the technology they choose. 4. Take a bow, but don't take a rest: The growth in broadband adoption underscores the need to expand & sustain federal programs such as the ACP, as well as state & local programs, that help make internet service and computing devices more affordable for low-income households. News & Articles Nov 28 | Utility pole access is key to broadband on tribal lands (Op-Ed, Albuquerque Journal) Nov 28 | Zuni Pueblo to receive full broadband coverage after Continental Divide project (New Mexico Inno Reporter) Nov 21 | New Mexico scrambles to meet a federal date to map internet gaps (The Durango Herald) Nov 18 | FCC Requires Broadband Providers To Display Labels to Help Consumers (FCC) Nov 18 | Elections Matter (Benton Institute for Broadband & Society) Nov 17 | Co-op set to improve broadband in Magdalena (El Defensor Chieftain) Infrastructure Investment & Jobs Act: One Year Later (Benton Institute) * Nov 17 | A Year One Update on the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act: Investing in Broadband Adoption * Nov 16 | A Year One Update on the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act: Investing in Broadband Deployment * Nov 15 | The Infrastructure Law is Still about More than Money Nov 12 | Midterm Control of Congress Remains Uncertain, But States Got Answers to Broadband Votes (Broadband Breakfast) Nov 7 | Pathways to Digital Equity: How Communities Can Reach Their Broadband Goals?and How Philanthropy Can Help (Benton Institute) Nov 4 | Jobs, Jobs, Jobs (Benton Institute) Subscribe to New Mexico Broadband Connections Resources New Mexico Office of Broadband Access & Expansion Connect New Mexico Broadband Grant Program Map NM Broadband Speed & Quality Testing Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP) Consumer FAQ FCC Outreach Toolkit for ACP For questions, email nmbroadbandconnections at benton.org. Looking for more broadband policy news? The Benton Institute for Broadband & Society offers a free, reliable, and non-partisan daily digest that curates and distributes news related to universal broadband. You can subscribe to this service here to learn how broadband delivers opportunities and strengthens communities. Subscribe to Benton's Headlines New Mexico Department of Information Technology [Facebook] [Twitter] [LinkedIn] Benton Institute for Broadband & Society: [Twitter] [LinkedIn] Unsubscribe - Unsubscribe Preferences -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Outlook-rz2k2qfz.png Type: image/png Size: 63286 bytes Desc: Outlook-rz2k2qfz.png URL: From Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov Tue Dec 6 07:19:44 2022 From: Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov (Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA) Date: Tue, 6 Dec 2022 14:19:44 +0000 Subject: [Nmtriblibs] Poetry Ourselves New Mexico - contest for students in 9th-12th Message-ID: >From NM Arts - guidelines and more info attached. Poetry Ourselves New Mexico A written poetry contest for New Mexico high school students, grades 9-12. This is different but related to the Poetry Out Loud recitation program. Cassandra E. Osterloh, MLS, MA (Cherokee Nation) Pronouns: she/her/hers [cid:be678ae7-f51e-4abc-9996-614d62479406]Tribal Libraries Program Coordinator Library Development Bureau, New Mexico State Library 1209 Camino Carlos Rey Santa Fe NM 87507 505-264-2427 (cell) 505-476-9764 (office) cassandra.osterloh at dca.nm.gov -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Outlook-4bdcro13.png Type: image/png Size: 63286 bytes Desc: Outlook-4bdcro13.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Poetry Ourselves New Mexico Guidelines FINAL2.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 236019 bytes Desc: Poetry Ourselves New Mexico Guidelines FINAL2.pdf URL: From Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov Wed Dec 7 09:14:38 2022 From: Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov (Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA) Date: Wed, 7 Dec 2022 16:14:38 +0000 Subject: [Nmtriblibs] Fw: [EXTERNAL] CNAY Releases 2022 State of Native Youth Report In-Reply-To: <223e0b1d162b2beeef552be29.69c32f5881.20221207161335.0740a51c76.c811269c@mail125.atl301.rsgsv.net> References: <223e0b1d162b2beeef552be29.69c32f5881.20221207161335.0740a51c76.c811269c@mail125.atl301.rsgsv.net> Message-ID: Of possible interest. Cassandra E. Osterloh, MLS, MA (Cherokee Nation) Pronouns: she/her/hers [cid:24aa9f60-9938-4e90-b4b4-5c4521e55b8d]Tribal Libraries Program Coordinator Library Development Bureau, New Mexico State Library 1209 Camino Carlos Rey Santa Fe NM 87507 505-264-2427 (cell) 505-476-9764 (office) cassandra.osterloh at dca.nm.gov ________________________________ From: Center for Native American Youth Sent: Wednesday, December 7, 2022 9:13 AM To: Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA Subject: [EXTERNAL] CNAY Releases 2022 State of Native Youth Report CAUTION: This email originated outside of our organization. Exercise caution prior to clicking on links or opening attachments. CNAY releases Center Us: The State of Native Youth CNAY Presents the 2022 State of Native Youth Report [https://mcusercontent.com/223e0b1d162b2beeef552be29/images/abfc6de1-e309-ecc4-c7ec-7be751c20f3d.png] Contact: Cheyenne Kippenberger Cheyenne.Kippenberger at aspeninsitute.org For Immediate Release Washington, DC: The Center for Native American Youth at the Aspen Institute is proud to release Center Us: The State of Native Youth. This report celebrates and honors Native youth and the issues they care about. ?Center Us is a reminder to our relatives, partners, and stakeholders to value the voices of Native American youth,? shared Executive Director, Nikki Pitre. ?In order to create a more free, just, and equitable society, we must include Native youth, they deserve to be centered." Center us serves as a space for Native youth truths, and stories. It is our hope with this intentional space, we can collectively heal and transform, together. The 2022 SNYR highlights the following Native youth truths and stories: * Indigenous Framework * Transforming Systems & Redefining Hope * Our Land, Our Connections * Social Media & Technology * Arts & Society >From Native youth authors to Native youth artists, the 2022 State of Native Youth Report is a reflection of the work of CNAY, and the future we desire to build collectively. Creative Native, Chelysa Ownes-Cyr (Fort Peck Assiniboine & Sioux, Pasqua First Nations Plains Cree & Saultea) is the featured cover artist of Center Us. The art is her interpretation of the prompt that focuses on identity and being centered. CNAY is proud to present the 2022 State of Native Youth Report as a resource and roadmap to help decrease barriers and increase opportunities for Native youth. If you are interested in ways to help these amazing young leaders or have questions about the report, please reach out to CNAYinfo at aspeninstitute.org. Click here to read the report online. [https://mcusercontent.com/223e0b1d162b2beeef552be29/images/68455029-41ca-36bc-72ec-989de1dee665.png] Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Outlook-prznrmpb.png Type: image/png Size: 63286 bytes Desc: Outlook-prznrmpb.png URL: From Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov Wed Dec 7 12:26:21 2022 From: Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov (Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA) Date: Wed, 7 Dec 2022 19:26:21 +0000 Subject: [Nmtriblibs] Reminder - TLP Library Directors' Meetup - Friday, December 9 Message-ID: A reminder that we have a meeting this Friday, December 9 at 11am. Valarie Kingsland from Little Free Library will also be joining us. Hope to see you then. Cassandra Join Zoom Meeting https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85191806574?pwd=WTNwSGEzeTFLUGJINVpCMzJuOWhmUT09 Meeting ID: 851 9180 6574 Passcode: 582565 Cassandra E. Osterloh, MLS, MA (Cherokee Nation) Pronouns: she/her/hers [cid:cdff6c04-3445-4455-91ed-e7cd84a98816]Tribal Libraries Program Coordinator Library Development Bureau, New Mexico State Library 1209 Camino Carlos Rey Santa Fe NM 87507 505-264-2427 (cell) 505-476-9764 (office) cassandra.osterloh at dca.nm.gov -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Outlook-di5kmcc4.png Type: image/png Size: 63286 bytes Desc: Outlook-di5kmcc4.png URL: From Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov Wed Dec 7 12:36:38 2022 From: Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov (Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA) Date: Wed, 7 Dec 2022 19:36:38 +0000 Subject: [Nmtriblibs] Fw: [EXTERNAL] Link Corrected- CNAY Releases 2022 State of Native Youth Report In-Reply-To: <223e0b1d162b2beeef552be29.69c32f5881.20221207193229.bac56cd2be.63e648a1@mail125.atl301.rsgsv.net> References: <223e0b1d162b2beeef552be29.69c32f5881.20221207193229.bac56cd2be.63e648a1@mail125.atl301.rsgsv.net> Message-ID: The link to the report is now corrected to send you to the 2022 report rather than the 2020 report. Cassandra Cassandra E. Osterloh, MLS, MA (Cherokee Nation) Pronouns: she/her/hers [cid:e0d031ca-9a92-48c5-b848-2d025492ed24]Tribal Libraries Program Coordinator Library Development Bureau, New Mexico State Library 1209 Camino Carlos Rey Santa Fe NM 87507 505-264-2427 (cell) 505-476-9764 (office) cassandra.osterloh at dca.nm.gov ________________________________ From: Center for Native American Youth Sent: Wednesday, December 7, 2022 12:32 PM To: Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA Subject: [EXTERNAL] Link Corrected- CNAY Releases 2022 State of Native Youth Report CAUTION: This email originated outside of our organization. Exercise caution prior to clicking on links or opening attachments. CNAY releases Center Us: The State of Native Youth CNAY Presents the 2022 State of Native Youth Report [https://mcusercontent.com/223e0b1d162b2beeef552be29/images/abfc6de1-e309-ecc4-c7ec-7be751c20f3d.png] Contact: Cheyenne Kippenberger Cheyenne.Kippenberger at aspeninsitute.org For Immediate Release Washington, DC: The Center for Native American Youth at the Aspen Institute is proud to release Center Us: The State of Native Youth. This report celebrates and honors Native youth and the issues they care about. ?Center Us is a reminder to our relatives, partners, and stakeholders to value the voices of Native American youth,? shared Executive Director, Nikki Pitre. ?In order to create a more free, just, and equitable society, we must include Native youth, they deserve to be centered." Center us serves as a space for Native youth truths, and stories. It is our hope with this intentional space, we can collectively heal and transform, together. The 2022 SNYR highlights the following Native youth truths and stories: * Indigenous Framework * Transforming Systems & Redefining Hope * Our Land, Our Connections * Social Media & Technology * Arts & Society >From Native youth authors to Native youth artists, the 2022 State of Native Youth Report is a reflection of the work of CNAY, and the future we desire to build collectively. Creative Native, Chelysa Ownes-Cyr (Fort Peck Assiniboine & Sioux, Pasqua First Nations Plains Cree & Saultea) is the featured cover artist of Center Us. The art is her interpretation of the prompt that focuses on identity and being centered. CNAY is proud to present the 2022 State of Native Youth Report as a resource and roadmap to help decrease barriers and increase opportunities for Native youth. If you are interested in ways to help these amazing young leaders or have questions about the report, please reach out to CNAYinfo at aspeninstitute.org. Click here to read the report online. [https://mcusercontent.com/223e0b1d162b2beeef552be29/images/68455029-41ca-36bc-72ec-989de1dee665.png] Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Outlook-a2ljtcnt.png Type: image/png Size: 63286 bytes Desc: Outlook-a2ljtcnt.png URL: From Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov Wed Dec 7 15:12:13 2022 From: Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov (Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA) Date: Wed, 7 Dec 2022 22:12:13 +0000 Subject: [Nmtriblibs] Language/Book Contest Message-ID: This is using the wordless, picture book Herizon by Daniel Vandever and Corey Begay (Herizon by Daniel W. Vandever ? Birchbark Books). Any language can be submitted. More information can be found at: SOSC_Herizon_CompetitionGuidelines23 (southofsunrisecreative.com) [May be an image of text that says 'NIHIZAAD NIHIDZIIL USE YOUR NATIVE LANGUAGE TO PUT WORDS TO A WORDLESS BOOK! CONTEST OPENS: 1/1/23 CONTEST ENDS: 4/4/23 HERIZON GENERAL GUIDELINES: 1st Place $250 An author/il And book. 2nd Place $100 An author signed book. 3rd Place $25 An author signed book. All entries welcome; however, manusc ipts in languages other English receive additiond consideration uscripts must clude an ?slation. Entries consent having their work shared. Email dwvandever at gmail.com for full contest guidelines.'] Cassandra E. Osterloh, MLS, MA (Cherokee Nation) Pronouns: she/her/hers [cid:610953ff-5bfb-4c91-bb34-580e399867ec]Tribal Libraries Program Coordinator Library Development Bureau, New Mexico State Library 1209 Camino Carlos Rey Santa Fe NM 87507 505-264-2427 (cell) 505-476-9764 (office) cassandra.osterloh at dca.nm.gov -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Outlook-visykgps.png Type: image/png Size: 63286 bytes Desc: Outlook-visykgps.png URL: From Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov Fri Dec 9 11:27:23 2022 From: Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov (Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA) Date: Fri, 9 Dec 2022 18:27:23 +0000 Subject: [Nmtriblibs] NM PED - Financial Transparency Portal Message-ID: This is a newer tool that allows users to look at specific schools, as well as districts, towns, and the state. One can also do comparisons. Governor Lujan Grisham asked PED yesterday to work on including more information so that Pueblos, Tribes, and Nations can see more specific breakouts as to how money, such as Impact Aid, is being used for their respective students. New Mexico Public Education Department ? Financial Transparency Website (nm.gov) Cassandra Cassandra E. Osterloh, MLS, MA (Cherokee Nation) Pronouns: she/her/hers [cid:42530487-49d7-4123-82aa-ecedbce4b324]Tribal Libraries Program Coordinator Library Development Bureau, New Mexico State Library 1209 Camino Carlos Rey Santa Fe NM 87507 505-264-2427 (cell) 505-476-9764 (office) cassandra.osterloh at dca.nm.gov -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Outlook-nr0nkfzh.png Type: image/png Size: 63286 bytes Desc: Outlook-nr0nkfzh.png URL: From Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov Fri Dec 9 12:44:50 2022 From: Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov (Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA) Date: Fri, 9 Dec 2022 19:44:50 +0000 Subject: [Nmtriblibs] Fw: [EXTERNAL] ATALM2023 Conference Location Announced In-Reply-To: <1b5fd0b3926b2a0236f0325a1.009ae9317d.20221209194332.966d3aa3bc.ecfffce0@mail88.wdc01.mcdlv.net> References: <1b5fd0b3926b2a0236f0325a1.009ae9317d.20221209194332.966d3aa3bc.ecfffce0@mail88.wdc01.mcdlv.net> Message-ID: FYI. For those who may not receive emails from ATALM. Cassandra Cassandra E. Osterloh, MLS, MA (Cherokee Nation) Pronouns: she/her/hers [cid:6dd0f2bb-2812-4a61-b765-4d2c62d78f5a]Tribal Libraries Program Coordinator Library Development Bureau, New Mexico State Library 1209 Camino Carlos Rey Santa Fe NM 87507 505-264-2427 (cell) 505-476-9764 (office) cassandra.osterloh at dca.nm.gov ________________________________ From: ATALM2023 National Planning Council Sent: Friday, December 9, 2022 12:43 PM To: Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA Subject: [EXTERNAL] ATALM2023 Conference Location Announced CAUTION: This email originated outside of our organization. Exercise caution prior to clicking on links or opening attachments. Save the dates October 24-26! Register and book your hotel accommodations early... View this email in your browser [https://mcusercontent.com/1b5fd0b3926b2a0236f0325a1/images/40d4f1ac-dc19-cfa4-012e-b9401b25a01b.png] Conference Website Dear Cassandra; The 2023 International Conference of Indigenous Archives, Libraries, and Museums will take place October 24-26 at the four-star Omni Hotel in downtown Oklahoma City. Join tribal cultural leaders, federal agencies, funders, and others to discuss the most relevant topics related to preserving and advancing Native languages, culture, and life ways. Conference links, including pre-registration, session proposal forms, scholarship applications, and other key information, may be found below. As a reminder, registration for ATALM fills up quickly. By registering now, you will be able to choose pre-conference workshops, field trips, and special events before they are announced to the general public. The conference is made possible through funding from the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS), a federal agency. Please join us in thanking IMLS for its dedication to Native people. We thank you for your support and hope to see you in Oklahoma City! James Pepper Henry, Conference Chair Walter Echo-Hawk, Chairman of the Board Susan Feller, President & CEO Key Links for ATALM 2023: * Session Proposals (February 13 deadline) * Planning Council * Conference Registration * Hotel and Travel * Exhibit at the Conference * Advertise in the Program Book * Scholarships (May 1 deadline) * Guardians of Culture Awards (June 12 deadline) * Professional Development Certificate Program * Emerging Professionals Group * Volunteer * Room or Ride Share Request [https://mcusercontent.com/1b5fd0b3926b2a0236f0325a1/images/87a64357-b8ec-98fc-95d1-0397ab4a63b1.png] This email was sent to cassandra.osterloh at dca.nm.gov why did I get this? unsubscribe from this list update subscription preferences Association of Tribal Archives, Libraries, and Museums ? 6308 Harden Drive ? Oklahoma City, OK 73118 ? USA -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Outlook-mhkpuyyd.png Type: image/png Size: 63286 bytes Desc: Outlook-mhkpuyyd.png URL: From Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov Tue Dec 13 10:28:04 2022 From: Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov (Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA) Date: Tue, 13 Dec 2022 17:28:04 +0000 Subject: [Nmtriblibs] Fw: American Indians in Children's Literature -- Annual Book List In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: FYI Cassandra E. Osterloh, MLS, MA (Cherokee Nation) Pronouns: she/her/hers [cid:bbf85d54-0333-4f44-a76d-696ff2117d75]Tribal Libraries Program Coordinator Library Development Bureau, New Mexico State Library 1209 Camino Carlos Rey Santa Fe NM 87507 505-264-2427 (cell) 505-476-9764 (office) cassandra.osterloh at dca.nm.gov ________________________________ From: American Indian Library Association on behalf of Debbie Reese Sent: Monday, December 12, 2022 12:42 PM To: AILA at SI-LISTSERV.SI.EDU Subject: [EXTERNAL] American Indians in Children's Literature -- Annual Book List CAUTION: This email originated outside of our organization. Exercise caution prior to clicking on links or opening attachments. External Email - Exercise Caution Good morning! We've made a change to our annual book list. Details -- and our list -- here: https://americanindiansinchildrensliterature.blogspot.com/2022/12/aicls-year-in-review-for-2022.html Please share the link! There is no need to ask for permission to share our posts at AICL. We want you to share them. Debbie _____________________________________ Debbie Reese, Ph.D. Tribally enrolled: Namb? Pueblo Tewa Name: P'oesay P'oekw?n Founder: American Indians in Children's Literature Twitter: debreese -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Outlook-ks1rpuej.png Type: image/png Size: 63286 bytes Desc: Outlook-ks1rpuej.png URL: From Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov Tue Dec 13 10:28:29 2022 From: Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov (Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA) Date: Tue, 13 Dec 2022 17:28:29 +0000 Subject: [Nmtriblibs] Fw: New Mexico Arts & The Military Mini Grants Available. In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: FYI Cassandra E. Osterloh, MLS, MA (Cherokee Nation) Pronouns: she/her/hers [cid:0982e666-5cec-485a-81c2-85178ede732c]Tribal Libraries Program Coordinator Library Development Bureau, New Mexico State Library 1209 Camino Carlos Rey Santa Fe NM 87507 505-264-2427 (cell) 505-476-9764 (office) cassandra.osterloh at dca.nm.gov ________________________________ From: Lenkner, Kevin, DCA Sent: Monday, December 12, 2022 12:07 PM To: Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA Cc: Guinnee, Eli, DCA Subject: New Mexico Arts & The Military Mini Grants Available. Hello Cassandra, As mentioned in an earlier email, New Mexico Arts has a new funding opportunity to support Arts Engagement for Veteran and Military connected audiences. I am including the DCA press release, along with social media post and a pdf of the guidelines. I hope some of this information could be shared with Tribal Library contracts (and anyone else who may be interested). Let me know if you have any questions. Thank you! Kevin DCA Press Release Link https://media.newmexicoculture.org/release/1485/new-mexico-arts-announces-mini-grants-fo DCA Press Release New Mexico Arts announces mini-grants for veteran and military service arts projects FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE December 12, 2022 MEDIA CONTACT Brandon Brown 505-412-3559 brandon.brown at state.nm.us Santa Fe, NM ? New Mexico Arts (NMA), the state?s arts agency, announces a funding opportunity for arts organizations and veteran-focused organizations to create or expand opportunities for veterans and active-duty service members to engage with the arts. NMA is offering $2,000 mini grants with a short application process that does not require matching funding in this first-year pilot program. ?The Arts and the Military Initiative is rooted in NMA?s mission to ensure the arts are central to the lives of New Mexicans,? said Michelle Laflamme-Childs, executive director of NMA. ?We invite arts and culture organizations from across the state to look at how these mini grants might support expanding their existing programming to include this important constituency. In addition, we encourage more traditional veteran-serving organizations to consider how the arts might be integrated into their programs.? Proposed projects should serve military and veteran audiences, including active-duty service members, reservists, National Guard members, veterans, their families and caregivers, and others. Projects could fall into three categories: Learning-based arts projects, including classes and workshops, held both in-person and online. Audience-based arts projects, including performances, exhibitions, and festivals, held in-person or online. Capacity-building projects, including professional development opportunities, consultant services, program research, development, and evaluation expenses. Eligible applicants should be Federal 501 (c) (3) nonprofit organizations, units of government, schools, colleges, universities, and Indian tribal government entities. Organizations receiving New Mexico Arts funding in other grant programs can also apply for this Arts and the Military grant opportunity. The deadline to apply for the grants is January 13, 2023, at 5 p.m. MST. New Mexico has 141,558 veterans residing in the state with military retirees in all 33 counties. 8.8% of the adults in the state are veterans, a higher percentage than neighboring states and the 12th largest veteran-to-adult population in the United States. Interested parties can find the application and guidelines for these Arts and the Military mini grants at https://www.nmarts.org/nma-military/. For more information, contact Arts and the Military Program Coordinator, Kevin Lenkner, 505-412-5791 or email kevin.lenkner at dca.nm.gov. About New Mexico Arts? New Mexico Arts is the state arts agency and a division of the?Department of Cultural Affairs. New Mexico Arts administers the state?s One Percent for Public Art program, awards grants to nonprofit organizations for arts and cultural programs in their communities across the state, and provides technical assistance and educational opportunities for organizations, artists, and arts educators throughout New Mexico. ============================================================================================== ----------------------------- Kevin A. Lenkner Program Coordinator - Poetry Out Loud, New Mexico Arts & the Military Grants Administration & Arts Education Liasion Office: (505) 412-5791 PLEASE NOTE: New Email Address kevin.lenkner at dca.nm.gov New Mexico Arts | Department of Cultural Affairs 407 Galisteo Street, Suite 270 |Santa Fe, NM 87501 www.nmarts.org www.newmexicoculture.org ?Poetry is an echo, asking a shadow to dance. ? Carl Sandburg -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Outlook-n5xopcwc.png Type: image/png Size: 63286 bytes Desc: Outlook-n5xopcwc.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Call for Proposals_NMA Arts & the Military Mini Grants 2023.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 191323 bytes Desc: Call for Proposals_NMA Arts & the Military Mini Grants 2023.pdf URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: 23 MINI GRANTS IG.png Type: image/png Size: 689285 bytes Desc: 23 MINI GRANTS IG.png URL: From Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov Tue Dec 13 13:40:32 2022 From: Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov (Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA) Date: Tue, 13 Dec 2022 20:40:32 +0000 Subject: [Nmtriblibs] Fw: Broadband News and Grants 12/13/2022 In-Reply-To: <1139636982737.1139459144619.1116980484.0.951243JL.2002@scheduler.constantcontact.com> References: <1139636982737.1139459144619.1116980484.0.951243JL.2002@scheduler.constantcontact.com> Message-ID: Cassandra E. Osterloh, MLS, MA (Cherokee Nation) Pronouns: she/her/hers [cid:e5637b9e-7769-4fac-a490-015d15735c10]Tribal Libraries Program Coordinator Library Development Bureau, New Mexico State Library 1209 Camino Carlos Rey Santa Fe NM 87507 505-264-2427 (cell) 505-476-9764 (office) cassandra.osterloh at dca.nm.gov ________________________________ From: New Mexico Tribal Broadband Sent: Tuesday, December 13, 2022 10:44 AM To: Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA Subject: [EXTERNAL] Broadband News and Grants 12/13/2022 CAUTION: This email originated outside of our organization. Exercise caution prior to clicking on links or opening attachments. [https://r20.rs6.net/on.jsp?ca=726f0791-5e87-4866-8974-8f247dfff4a0&a=1139459144619&c=f5a510cc-60ba-11ed-bf9c-fa163ee6a027&ch=f5b8a5ba-60ba-11ed-bf9c-fa163ee6a027] [https://files.constantcontact.com/babbe0d4901/edaffde1-5473-4e9d-a2e8-ded019088700.jpg] ?New Mexico Tribal Broadband News & Updates Photo by Theophilos Papadopoulos December 13, 2022 [https://files.constantcontact.com/babbe0d4901/a37fd930-af38-4f6d-93df-6a6418922852.jpg] San Ildefonso Services Awarded The Broadband Infrastructure Deployment Congratulations to San Ildefonso! President Biden wants to connect everyone in America to affordable, reliable high-speed Internet. The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law provides $65 billion in funding to help achieve that goal. These funds add to and support existing programs that expand Internet access and use. Four agencies are leading this historic effort: the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), the Department of the Treasury, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). On November 30th, The National Telecommunications & Information Administration announced the Tribal Broadband Connectivity Program grant award to San Ildefonso Services in the amount of $4,925,582.00. The Broadband Infrastructure Deployment project proposes to install fiber and fixed wireless to directly connect 255 unserved Native American households with qualifying broadband service with up to 1000 Mbps symmetrical speeds. The goal of these programs is to achieve digital equity through improved access and intentional, inclusive planning that leads to effective, impactful outcomes. Visit Internet for All for more information and for a list of the programs. If you need help with project planning or technical support, visit BroadbandUSA. To view these and additional broadband Federal Funding opportunities, visit BroadbandUSA's Federal Funding site. [https://files.constantcontact.com/babbe0d4901/6701d63b-dd7a-47d1-bfc7-274f85a40d91.png] NM Office of Broadband Access and Expansion Mapping Presentation To Eastern Navajo Agency [https://files.constantcontact.com/babbe0d4901/9919c779-4f5d-4058-a06c-78af45507b9f.png] On December 3, 2022, Diane Lindstrom, Deputy Director of the Office of Broadband Access and Expansion (OBAE) made a presentation to the Eastern Navajo Agency Council, on the importance of participating in the FCC data mapping challenge. Eastern Navajo Agency Council serves 31 chapters of the Navajo Nation. [https://files.constantcontact.com/babbe0d4901/d4de7c3f-9f12-4493-9ade-9c12aed312bf.jpg] FCC Mapping Challenge Deadline January 13, 2022 The first iteration of the Federal Communication Commission (FCC?s) broadband mapping tool is now available. Required by the Broadband DATA Act of 2020, the new map displays location level information on broadband availability throughout the country and allows individuals to search for their address, as well as review and dispute services at their location. For providers, the release of the first map comes alongside efforts already underway for submitting challenges of and corrections to the underlying ?fabric? of locations that can be served by broadband providers. The commission has stressed that this pre-production draft of the map is far from final. ? The accuracy of the maps and documenting the need in the Pueblos will ultimately determine future funding. Following the fabric and coverage data challenge processes, an updated version of the FCC map will be used to determine the allocation of $42.5 billion in Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) Program funds to each state and territory, as well as determining eligibility of areas for funding under various programs. The map, particularly after the challenge processes are implemented, aims to be the most comprehensive collection of broadband data to date. Recently, the Benton Institute for Broadband & Society supported a webinar featuring national perspectives on these federal mapping feedback processes. This recording and summary provide helpful information regarding the processes, what?s at stake, and how various stakeholders can access the federal portals to view data and share feedback. [https://files.constantcontact.com/babbe0d4901/db61105e-1517-4bd0-8c00-ea96e33b1a2b.png] Asset Mapping for Digital Inclusion Asset mapping is an approach to planning and community development centered on identifying and building on a community?s existing resources. Deep community engagement is a key part of asset mapping, used to uncover existing strengths, skills, and connections that can be leveraged. As an approach to data collection and documenting the current state of digital equity, asset mapping is inherently solution-oriented. This makes it a valuable counterbalance to more traditional assessments of needs and existing conditions, which tend to emphasize the deficiencies and barriers to digital equity that a community faces. While quantifying needs is an important step in the planning process, solely focusing on challenges tends to disregard the aspirations and strengths of community members. Rooted in the concepts of Asset Based Community Development, asset mapping recognizes that, with the necessary resources and structural support, communities possess the knowledge and skills to develop solutions from within. National Digital Inclusion Alliance (NDIA) provides Free, Easy-to-Use Asset Mapping Tools: Digital Inclusion Asset Inventory Template Digital Inclusion Asset Mapping Survey State Digital Equity Plan Toolkit NDIA advances digital equity by supporting community programs and equipping policymakers to act. Visit NDIA to learn more. [https://files.constantcontact.com/babbe0d4901/d4de7c3f-9f12-4493-9ade-9c12aed312bf.jpg] Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP) Outreach Grant Program This FCC program helps ensure that qualifying low-income households can afford the broadband they need for work, school, healthcare and more. The ACP Outreach Grant Program will facilitate the promotion of the ACP and increase awareness of and participation in the ACP among eligible households. To support this goal, the FCC seeks to enlist and empower trusted community messengers to develop innovative outreach strategies to reach historically underserved and unserved communities, including low-income households, aging populations, individuals with disabilities, individuals with language barriers, racial and ethnic minorities, and rural inhabitants. The ACP Outreach Grant Program application forms and instructions may be accessed here. The deadline is January 9, 2023. [https://files.constantcontact.com/babbe0d4901/b3570747-a35e-4643-acf9-1b6be385825a.jpg] ?The Affordable Connectivity Program Households May Receive $30-$75/month Discount on Internet Service The Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP) is a U.S. government program run by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) program to help low-income households pay for internet service and connected devices like a laptop or tablet. Households are likely eligible if income is below 200% of the Federal Poverty Line, or if a household member currently receives a government benefit like SNAP, Medicaid, SSI, WIC, Pell Grant, or Free and Reduced-Price Lunch. If a household is eligible, they could receive: * Up to a $30/month discount on internet service * Up to a $75/month discount if household is on qualifying Tribal lands * A one-time discount of up to $100 for a laptop, tablet, or desktop computer (with a co-payment of more than $10 but less than $50) * A low cost service plan that may be fully covered through the ACP* * Through a separate non-FCC initiative, additional no cost plans may be available to Affordable Connectivity Program enrollees. To learn more please visit GetInternet.gov. Only one monthly service discount and one device discount is allowed per household. To receive the connected device discount, consumers need to enroll in the ACP with a participating provider that offers connected devices (Note: not all internet company offer device discounts.) The internet company will provide the discount to the consumer. Free & Low Cost Internet Plans. ? [https://files.constantcontact.com/babbe0d4901/3246d91c-e371-4bf6-9abe-57129d0c8fc5.jpg] Department of the Treasury Tribal Recovery Report At the recent White House Tribal Nations Summit, the U.S. Department of the Treasury released the Tribal Recovery Report for the State and Local Fiscal Recovery Fund. The report highlights the historic investment of federal funds into Indian Country and calls attention to the impressive and inspiring work Native communities are doing to recover from the pandemic. Download the Tribal Recovery Report. [https://files.constantcontact.com/babbe0d4901/a45ffe33-ebfb-427a-82a3-f2f488bef9c3.png] Pathways to Digital Equity How Communities Can Reach Their Broadband Goals and How Philanthropy Can Help - FREE GUIDEBOOK For community leaders striving for digital equity, this guidebook, written by Robbie McBeath and Published November 2022 by the Benton Institute for Broadband & Society will help communities evaluate and meet specific connectivity needs. They chart three pathways?Access, Adoption, and Use?that together offer a comprehensive approach to guide communities? digital equity planning and provide structure for implementing effective solutions. Just as every community has unique features and characteristics, so too do their connectivity challenges. With this in mind, communities are encouraged to follow a variety of steps and best practices as they participate in local and regional education and planning programs to build capacity, increase community engagement, and move toward a more equitable future. Pathways to Digital Equity builds off of the belief that digital equity starts at the local level. As states, territories, and tribes develop digital equity plans, the stories, tools, and resources found here offer both guidance and inspiration for what?s possible when community members have a seat at the table. ? [https://files.constantcontact.com/babbe0d4901/f3815683-56fc-4d8f-8255-b337c5b0f6e3.jpg] New Mexico Broadband Program ? The New Mexico Department of Information Technology is the enterprise technology partner serving and supporting state agencies with innovative solutions to advance the delivery of their core missions and create progress for all New Mexicans. To better coordinate broadband deployment efforts among different state entities, 2021 Legislation established the Office of Broadband Access and Expansion and Connect New Mexico Council. To subscribe to receive e-mail notification of Council news and events, including public meeting schedules, join the NM-DoIT Subscriber Alerts mailing list. Visit the New Mexico Department of Information Technolgy for resources and information. New Mexico Tribal Broadband New Mexico Tribal Broadband | 54 Morningstar Drive, Bernalillo, NM 87004 Unsubscribe cassandra.osterloh at state.nm.us Update Profile | Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by nmtribalbroadband at gmail.com powered by [Trusted Email from Constant Contact - Try it FREE today.] Try email marketing for free today! -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Outlook-pwtv3ogq.png Type: image/png Size: 63286 bytes Desc: Outlook-pwtv3ogq.png URL: From Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov Tue Dec 13 13:41:28 2022 From: Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov (Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA) Date: Tue, 13 Dec 2022 20:41:28 +0000 Subject: [Nmtriblibs] Fw: 2023 Talk Story Grant Available In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Grant possibility. Cassandra E. Osterloh, MLS, MA (Cherokee Nation) Pronouns: she/her/hers [cid:6dc80c07-cec9-499d-b2bc-c080ba90078f]Tribal Libraries Program Coordinator Library Development Bureau, New Mexico State Library 1209 Camino Carlos Rey Santa Fe NM 87507 505-264-2427 (cell) 505-476-9764 (office) cassandra.osterloh at dca.nm.gov ________________________________ From: American Indian Library Association on behalf of Ray Pun Sent: Monday, December 12, 2022 1:00 PM To: AILA at SI-LISTSERV.SI.EDU Subject: [EXTERNAL] Fwd: [apala-l] 2023 Talk Story Grant Available CAUTION: This email originated outside of our organization. Exercise caution prior to clicking on links or opening attachments. External Email - Exercise Caution ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: Amanda Cheung > Date: Mon, Dec 12, 2022 at 9:18 AM Subject: [apala-l] 2023 Talk Story Grant Available To: > [https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/ooM7V4rHToi07qEzYI3W_5AAlfkfvvZiRSPmxYaZAgF3ILMU4jfxPK_2jDCLkzR6G_ePILu7JuFG-GqY3ZtMwkuHtHiKgt8zV4ddZavSxXgwIWF_YgnvXT1hP1hvSuyR8l6fmvfAd07ZHPLPV4PfCkL0gUWUH0OKuwppsibNENeJqAcOru7AazT70UOnfaPm] FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE For more information, please contact: Sarah Nguy?n, Patty Sumire McGowan, & Becky Leathersich APALA Co-Chairs: familylit at apalaweb.org Richenda Hawkins AILA Chair: AILA.TalkStory at gmail.com December 1, 2022 2023 TALK STORY GRANT AVAILABLE Applications being accepted for American Indian, Asian, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander programs Talk Story: Sharing Stories, Sharing Culture is a family literacy initiative that connects Asian, Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander, and American Indian communities across generations. The Talk Story grant celebrates and explores Asian, Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander, and American Indian stories through books, oral traditions, and cultural arts to provide interactive and enriching experiences for all ages. This grant provides financial support to libraries and community organizations who are motivated to promote intergenerational literacy through programming, services, and collections. Talk Story programs may be conducted in-person or virtually. Talk Story is in its fourteenth year of partnership between the Asian/Pacific American Librarians Association (APALA) and the American Indian Library Association (AILA). Eligibility Libraries, archives, museums, and community organizations that promote intergenerational literacy across Asian, Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander, and/or American Indian families and communities are eligible to apply. We encourage collaboration with related community organizations on a Talk Story program, although the applying organization must be a library, archive, or museum. With the exception of cross-border tribal organizations, all organizations must be based in the United States or U.S. territories. Organizations who have previously been awarded two Talk Story grants are ineligible for additional awards. Two grant winners for each organization (APALA and AILA), a total of four winners, will receive $500 each to fund a program that meets the criteria of the grant. Deadline and Application All complete submissions will be considered, which includes a statement of financial or economic need, narrative describing how the grant addresses community needs and promotes the Talk Story mission, an explanation of how your program empowers AANHPI and/or AIAN communities, and a proposed budget. You may apply for either an APALA grant OR an AILA grant. You may not apply to both organizations. Applications must be received by Wednesday, March 15, 2023 11:59pm AoE. Awards will be announced by Monday, May 1, 2023. "Sharing information across generations within our Asian, Pacific Islander, Native Hawaiian, and American Indigenous communities is practiced through oral, aesthetic, and movement based traditions," says Sarah Nguy?n, Co-Chair of the Talk Story grant. "We strive to provide education and funding support for libraries and communities organizations to initiate and experiment with celebrating AANHPI and AIAN histories, traditions, and progress." ?Talk Story grants enable our communities to sustain, share, and spread traditional literacies. Grant recipients are supported in their creation of family and intergenerational literacy programming that may include oral, artistic, musical, and other indigenous traditions.? ?Richenda Hawkins, Talk Story grant Co-Chair Applications are due by March 15, 2023. Application, eligibility details, submission form, and past winners can be found at www.apalaweb.org/talkstorytogether/grant/. # # # Best, Amanda Cheung APALA Media & Publicity --- You received this email because you are subscribed to the APALA-L (Asian/Pacific American Librarians Association) mailing list. To send a message, email APALA-L at lists.gseis.ucla.edu To unsubscribe, send a blank email to apala-l-unsubscribe at lists.gseis.ucla.edu If you prefer a daily digest of the day's messages, send a message to requests at lists.gseis.ucla.edu with the subject set apala-l digest -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Outlook-u5xyqmmj.png Type: image/png Size: 63286 bytes Desc: Outlook-u5xyqmmj.png URL: From Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov Wed Dec 14 15:56:27 2022 From: Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov (Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA) Date: Wed, 14 Dec 2022 22:56:27 +0000 Subject: [Nmtriblibs] Congratulations, Codi! Message-ID: [cid:a0a61ffb-153d-4006-965a-054b26b10eef] Cassandra E. Osterloh, MLS, MA (Cherokee Nation) Pronouns: she/her/hers [cid:84428330-033e-400d-875a-2dec56ea81aa]Tribal Libraries Program Coordinator Library Development Bureau, New Mexico State Library 1209 Camino Carlos Rey Santa Fe NM 87507 505-264-2427 (cell) 505-476-9764 (office) cassandra.osterloh at dca.nm.gov -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image.png Type: image/png Size: 55412 bytes Desc: image.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Outlook-ihlkqt5w.png Type: image/png Size: 63286 bytes Desc: Outlook-ihlkqt5w.png URL: From Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov Fri Dec 16 08:01:14 2022 From: Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov (Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA) Date: Fri, 16 Dec 2022 15:01:14 +0000 Subject: [Nmtriblibs] Fw: EBSCO ALA Annual Conference Sponsorship / Deadline Feb 1 In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Scholarship opportunity to attend ALA Annual this June in Chicago. Cassandra E. Osterloh, MLS, MA (Cherokee Nation) Pronouns: she/her/hers [cid:fb2d7b32-8ead-4941-bc60-57ba83f48fab]Tribal Libraries Program Coordinator Library Development Bureau, New Mexico State Library 1209 Camino Carlos Rey Santa Fe NM 87507 505-264-2427 (cell) 505-476-9764 (office) cassandra.osterloh at dca.nm.gov ________________________________ From: American Indian Library Association on behalf of Ray Pun Sent: Friday, December 16, 2022 7:51 AM To: AILA at SI-LISTSERV.SI.EDU Subject: [EXTERNAL] EBSCO ALA Annual Conference Sponsorship / Deadline Feb 1 CAUTION: This email originated outside of our organization. Exercise caution prior to clicking on links or opening attachments. External Email - Exercise Caution Please apply for the EBSCO ALA Annual Conference Scholarship. Deadline Feb 1 EBSCO ALA Annual Conference Sponsorship | Awards & Grants -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Outlook-15b4iklg.png Type: image/png Size: 63286 bytes Desc: Outlook-15b4iklg.png URL: From Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov Tue Dec 20 12:19:51 2022 From: Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov (Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA) Date: Tue, 20 Dec 2022 19:19:51 +0000 Subject: [Nmtriblibs] Fw: 15th annual Labriola Center American Indian National Book Award submission request In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: FYI. Pass along as appropriate. Cassandra E. Osterloh, MLS, MA (Cherokee Nation) Pronouns: she/her/hers [cid:be9ab826-f540-4690-aea2-c7e7b113560b]Tribal Libraries Program Coordinator Library Development Bureau, New Mexico State Library 1209 Camino Carlos Rey Santa Fe NM 87507 505-264-2427 (cell) 505-476-9764 (office) cassandra.osterloh at dca.nm.gov ________________________________ From: American Indian Library Association on behalf of Alexander Soto Sent: Tuesday, December 20, 2022 12:04 PM To: AILA at SI-LISTSERV.SI.EDU Subject: [EXTERNAL] 15th annual Labriola Center American Indian National Book Award submission request CAUTION: This email originated outside of our organization. Exercise caution prior to clicking on links or opening attachments. External Email - Exercise Caution S-ke:g tas (good day), The Labriola Center is pleased to announce the 15th annual Labriola Center American Indian National Book Award https://lib.asu.edu/labriola/bookaward. The deadline for book submissions is January 15, 2023 and the winner will be announced in April 2023. Dr. Max Liboiron, Associate Professor of Geography at Memorial University of Newfoundland in Canada University was the winner of the 14th Labriola Center National Book Award for their 2021 book Pollution is Colonialism, published by Duke University Press. The Labriola National American Indian Data Center is an Indigenous-led library center within the Arizona State University (ASU) Library where students and community members can celebrate and critically engage with American Indian and Indigenous scholarly works and creative writing. Its staff provides culturally relevant information and research support, and the Center is a culturally safe learning space for Indigenous library user. Since its inception in 1993, it is one of the only repositories within a public university library devoted to American Indian collections. Its collection holds both primary and secondary sources on American Indians across North America. The Center seeks to empower Indigenous Peoples in the pursuit of Indigenous resilience through support of Indigenous research, scholarship, cultural expression, memory-keeping, and community learning. It employs a community-engaged and collaborative approach to the stewardship of cultural knowledge to uphold and bolster Tribal Sovereignty among the Tribal Nations and communities of Arizona. Arizona State University is committed to American Indian scholarship and offers several academic programs led by noted American Indian faculty including a BS and MS degree in American Indian Studies, a MA in Indigenous Education, an Indigenous Teacher Preparation Program, an American Indian nursing program, and the Indian Legal Program. Books submitted for consideration for the Labriola Center American Indian National Book Award may cross multiple disciplines or fields of study but must focus on topics and issues that are pertinent to Indigenous peoples and nations. Authors affiliated with a Native Nation or Tribal community, First Nation, or Indigenous/Aboriginal community will be considered for the award. Authors need not be affiliated with a university, though that is desirable. Scholars may also work as independent researchers, for research institutes, Tribal offices, government agencies, and similar institutions. Please see the nomination form attached for further information. The author of the winning manuscript will receive a cash prize of $1,000 and an invitation to speak at the award announcement ceremony in the Fall of 2023. The judging committee will consist of English faculty members Dr. Henry Quintero and Dr. James Blasingame. For each nomination, please send 4 copies of the book and a completed nomination form to the Labriola National American Indian Data Center, Attn: Vina Begay, ASU Fletcher Library, PO Box 37100, Phoenix, AZ 85069-7100. For questions please email: labriola at asu.edu Sincerely, Alex Soto Director | Labriola National American Indian Data Center Assistant Librarian ASU Library Arizona State University web: https://lib.asu.edu/labriola I acknowledge, with respect, that ASU sits on the ancestral homelands of those Indigenous Nations that have inhabited this land for centuries, including the Akimel O?odham, Tohono O'odham, and Pee Posh peoples. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Outlook-4fw013dn.png Type: image/png Size: 63286 bytes Desc: Outlook-4fw013dn.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: 2022_Labriola_Book_award_nomination_form.docx Type: application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document Size: 46614 bytes Desc: 2022_Labriola_Book_award_nomination_form.docx URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: 2022_Labriola_Book_award_nomination_form.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 86829 bytes Desc: 2022_Labriola_Book_award_nomination_form.pdf URL: From Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov Tue Dec 20 12:59:36 2022 From: Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov (Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA) Date: Tue, 20 Dec 2022 19:59:36 +0000 Subject: [Nmtriblibs] Cynthia Aguilar - pictures from NAL-SIG Meeting Message-ID: At the NAL-SIG meeting this past Friday, December 16, we presented Cynthia Aguilar with a plate as a small token of NAL-SIG's appreciation for Cynthia's many years of service to NM libraries. Cynthia will be retiring at the end of the calendar year and will be truly missed. She does plan to stick around some and volunteer some at the Santo Domingo Pueblo Library, so hopefully we will all get to continue working, chatting, and laughing together. Thank you, Cynthia! You are an amazing person. (Pictures by Janice Kowemy) [cid:76bd1145-106b-4d4f-b63b-1a8b31831985] [cid:9e76bc2d-505a-4ce6-9f0e-ef3c1770a71e] Cassandra E. Osterloh, MLS, MA (Cherokee Nation) Pronouns: she/her/hers [cid:72d86529-edd1-4521-a00e-6494de69c86d]Tribal Libraries Program Coordinator Library Development Bureau, New Mexico State Library 1209 Camino Carlos Rey Santa Fe NM 87507 505-264-2427 (cell) 505-476-9764 (office) cassandra.osterloh at dca.nm.gov -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Cynthia2.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 217781 bytes Desc: Cynthia2.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Cynthia1.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 216378 bytes Desc: Cynthia1.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Outlook-jhx3ghdc.png Type: image/png Size: 63286 bytes Desc: Outlook-jhx3ghdc.png URL: From Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov Tue Dec 20 14:13:24 2022 From: Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov (Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA) Date: Tue, 20 Dec 2022 21:13:24 +0000 Subject: [Nmtriblibs] 2 Articles on Languages of Possible Interest Message-ID: UNESCO Officially Launches International Decade of Indigenous Languages December 13, 2022, was the official launch of the International Decade of Indigenous Languages 2022-2023 in Paris, organized by UNESCO. The official launching of the Decade comes with the mandate of having a global call for action and raising awareness about the critical loss of Indigenous languages and the urgent need to preserve, revitalize, and promote Indigenous languages and adopt urgent measures at national and international levels. Read more. Planting Seeds That Bloom into New Np?oq??ni?cn Speakers Amidst the strength and power of the Columbia and Spokane Rivers in the ancestral territories of the Spokane Tribe, there is a group of language warriors with the dream of keeping their languages alive. They run the Language House of Spokane using an immersion strategy to increase the number of fluent adult speakers. Read more. Cassandra E. Osterloh, MLS, MA (Cherokee Nation) Pronouns: she/her/hers [cid:7c9030e1-abf8-43ab-9e0c-689971bc5548]Tribal Libraries Program Coordinator Library Development Bureau, New Mexico State Library 1209 Camino Carlos Rey Santa Fe NM 87507 505-264-2427 (cell) 505-476-9764 (office) cassandra.osterloh at dca.nm.gov -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Outlook-ho5qdwam.png Type: image/png Size: 63286 bytes Desc: Outlook-ho5qdwam.png URL: From Patricia.Moore at dca.nm.gov Wed Dec 21 10:10:58 2022 From: Patricia.Moore at dca.nm.gov (Moore, Patricia, DCA) Date: Wed, 21 Dec 2022 17:10:58 +0000 Subject: [Nmtriblibs] FW: [NMLA 2022 Legislative Bulletin # 22 In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: From: Joe Sabatini Sent: Wednesday, December 21, 2022 12:12 AM Subject: [EXTERNAL] NMLA 2022 Legislative Bulletin # 22 Legislative Bulletin # 22 December 21, 2022 Save the Date: 2023 Library Legislative Day will be on Friday, January 27th. Rural Library Endowment Funding With the extraordinary increase in state revenues, particularly from oil and gas revenues, library funding projects are likely to receive considerable support in the 2023 Session of the New Mexico Legislature. Projected recurring revenues for FY 24 are estimated at almost $12 billion. "New money" not committed to recurring appropriations are estimated at $3.6 billion for FY24. Legislators are likely to allocate much of the new money to non-recurring projects like highway construction, broadband expansion, etc. NMLA will be working for full funding for the Rural Library Endowment. Shel Neymark has led the advocacy for the New Mexico Rural Library Initiative that was successful in getting the Endowment enacted. In the Opinion Section of today's (December 20th) Albuquerque Journal, he has a column summarizing the current status and future needs of rural libraries. He notes that there is presently $13 million in the Endowment. The Governor's budget requests an additional $15 million. The original goal was to get $50 million, and Senator Jerry Ortiz y Pino is prepared to advocate for the additional $38 million to fully fund it. Shel's column is at: https://www.abqjournal.com/2558716/state-must-step-up-and-help-rural-libraries-2.html The American Library Association asked us to share this message about federal library funding: [cid:ii_lbx9xoos0] The link contained in the blue boxes: https://oneclickpolitics.global.ssl.fastly.net/messages/edit?promo_id=18455 Joe Sabatini, Co-Chair NMLA Legislation Committee -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image.png Type: image/png Size: 156716 bytes Desc: image.png URL: From Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov Wed Dec 21 10:40:10 2022 From: Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov (Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA) Date: Wed, 21 Dec 2022 17:40:10 +0000 Subject: [Nmtriblibs] Fw: Indigenous Community Research Fellowship at the American Philosophical Society In-Reply-To: <4be149fd71884692a8cc9a9d552277cc@loc.gov> References: <4be149fd71884692a8cc9a9d552277cc@loc.gov> Message-ID: FYI. Also, please pass along as appropriate. Cassandra E. Osterloh, MLS, MA (Cherokee Nation) Pronouns: she/her/hers [cid:1d29f295-db90-4947-aff6-25e130de533b]Tribal Libraries Program Coordinator Library Development Bureau, New Mexico State Library 1209 Camino Carlos Rey Santa Fe NM 87507 505-264-2427 (cell) 505-476-9764 (office) cassandra.osterloh at dca.nm.gov ________________________________ From: American Indian Library Association on behalf of Shankar, Guha Sent: Wednesday, December 21, 2022 10:38 AM To: AILA at SI-LISTSERV.SI.EDU Subject: [EXTERNAL] Indigenous Community Research Fellowship at the American Philosophical Society CAUTION: This email originated outside of our organization. Exercise caution prior to clicking on links or opening attachments. External Email - Exercise Caution Good morning, Please take note of this fellowship opportunity aimed at a wide array of researchers at the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia. Do apply if you can and pass the notice on to your networks. Regards and happy holidays, Guha ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Indigenous Community Research Fellowship American Philosophical Society: Fellowships Location: Philadelphia, PA Deadline : Mar 03, 2023 at 11:59 PM Eastern Time The American Philosophical Society's Library & Museum in Philadelphia invites applications for the Indigenous Community Research Fellowship to support an individual or a group of researchers seeking to examine materials at the APS to further Indigenous community-based priorities. Fellows will work with the Library & Museum?s Center for Native American and Indigenous Research (CNAIR), which aims to promote greater collaboration between scholars, archives, and Indigenous communities throughout the Americas. This fellowship program is designed especially for Indigenous community members, elders, teachers, knowledge keepers, tribal officials, traditional leaders, museum and archive professionals, and independent scholars. Applicants do not need to have a specific academic background or an academic affiliation to apply, Any Indigenous community whose cultural heritage is represented in the APS's Library & Museum collections is encouraged to apply. Terms ? Up to $5,000 for travel expenses [more here] -- https://apply.interfolio.com/118784 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Outlook-b51maffk.png Type: image/png Size: 63286 bytes Desc: Outlook-b51maffk.png URL: From Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov Wed Dec 21 11:58:02 2022 From: Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov (Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA) Date: Wed, 21 Dec 2022 18:58:02 +0000 Subject: [Nmtriblibs] Updated TLP Webpages Message-ID: Good afternoon! I have been making some updates and changes to our TLP webpages. I will be adding more resources and such over the next few weeks. Please take a look through the multiple, respective pages for TLP, and let me know if there are any items missing and/or incorrect. If you want anything else added to your library's listing on the Tribal Libraries List page, please let me know. Thanks! Cassandra Tribal Libraries Program Overview | New Mexico State Library (nmstatelibrary.org) Cassandra E. Osterloh, MLS, MA (Cherokee Nation) Pronouns: she/her/hers [cid:6bcb4778-d29c-4acd-9cbe-9f714c58c657]Tribal Libraries Program Coordinator Library Development Bureau, New Mexico State Library 1209 Camino Carlos Rey Santa Fe NM 87507 505-264-2427 (cell) 505-476-9764 (office) cassandra.osterloh at dca.nm.gov -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Outlook-eogj24lp.png Type: image/png Size: 63286 bytes Desc: Outlook-eogj24lp.png URL: From Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov Wed Dec 28 09:03:20 2022 From: Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov (Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA) Date: Wed, 28 Dec 2022 16:03:20 +0000 Subject: [Nmtriblibs] Fw: Join us in the New Year at our January 2023 Events In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: For those who may not receive updates from IPCC. Cassandra E. Osterloh, MLS, MA (Cherokee Nation) Pronouns: she/her/hers [cid:ab89d484-0dab-49f6-a5c4-edb024e05c19]Tribal Libraries Program Coordinator Library Development Bureau, New Mexico State Library 1209 Camino Carlos Rey Santa Fe NM 87507 505-264-2427 (cell) 505-476-9764 (office) cassandra.osterloh at dca.nm.gov ________________________________ From: The Indian Pueblo Cultural Center Sent: Wednesday, December 28, 2022 9:00 AM To: Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA Subject: [EXTERNAL] Join us in the New Year at our January 2023 Events CAUTION: This email originated outside of our organization. Exercise caution prior to clicking on links or opening attachments. See our calendar of virtual and in-person events in the New Year View this email in your browser [https://mcusercontent.com/ff3855b8d751161588008fef7/images/38bdf7df-add4-a25c-05e3-c174f273dafe.jpg] [https://mcusercontent.com/ff3855b8d751161588008fef7/images/07078792-0f8c-2fcd-c135-be021b07421b.jpg] Hello, It?s our pleasure to share with you upcoming events and other happenings at the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center for the month of January. January?s theme is ?Sovereignty? ? we will be hosting a series of events that tie into that theme. On Jan. 6, we?ll be celebrating Three Kings Day with in-person and virtual presentations from our Cultural Educator, Jon Ghahate (Laguna, Zuni). In addition, we?ll be hosting an opening reception for our newest exhibit, ?Clay Line of the Red Willow People: A Showcase of Three Taos Pueblo Artists? on Jan. 20 from 5-7PM. Our Pueblo Gingerbread House contest entries will also be on display through Jan. 6, and the Native American Student Art Show will end this year?s run in the Artist Circle Gallery on Jan. 9. A reminder that the IPCC, Indian Pueblo Kitchen, and Indian Pueblo Store will be closed Jan. 1-2, 2023, so that our team can spend time with families and loved ones. See the full schedule of events below. January 2023 Cultural Dance Program Every Saturday-Sunday at 12PM Jan. 7-8 Cellicion Traditional Dance Group (Zuni) Jan. 14-15 Sky City Buffalo Ram Dancers (Acoma) Jan. 21-22 Howeya Family Traditional Dance Group (Acoma) Jan. 28-29 Pueblo Dance Group (Laguna, Acoma, Zuni, Hopi) See Cultural Dance Calendar [https://mcusercontent.com/ff3855b8d751161588008fef7/images/aaa4afeb-f2f2-1904-7d8a-5f237f756808.jpg] PUEBLO GINGERBREAD HOUSE CONTEST In-Person Lobby Display Dates: November 25-January 6, 2023 People?s Choice Award Nominations: December 20-January 3 The Pueblo Gingerbread House Contest is a favorite holiday tradition at the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center. Children, adults, and seniors are invited to enter a Gingerbread house inspired by a Pueblo village, house, community church or historic building, with prizes awarded in each category. This festive event is a unique way to share and enjoy Pueblo culture with your family. GET MORE DETAILS [https://mcusercontent.com/ff3855b8d751161588008fef7/images/c6546acc-3c91-679b-1659-a8f70d09db48.jpg] THREE KINGS CELEBRATION: LEADERSHIP AND SOVEREIGNTY PRESENTATION In-person and Virtual Friday 01.06, 2023 10:00 am & 2:00 pm MST (In-person) 4:00 pm MST (Virtual) As we continue our journey embracing another new year, our Pueblos recognize the celebration of the Three Kings along with the designation of our newly elected honorable officials. This is a celebration held on many Pueblos in recognition of the gifts given to baby Jesus in Bethlehem. Our Pueblos take this time to show gratitude for the bountiful gifts received from our Creator. We also commemorate our rights to existence and pray for many blessings to be upon our people?especially our community leaders and officials. IPCC Cultural Educator Jon Ghahate (Laguna, Zuni) will be giving presentations during his 10AM and 2PM museum tours; in addition, he will do a presentation via Zoom at 4PM. DETAILS & ZOOM REGISTRATION [https://mcusercontent.com/ff3855b8d751161588008fef7/images/62c1d6cb-bdc4-cf6e-9c61-2e29d6710519.jpg] INDIGENOUS CONNECTIONS AND COLLECTIONS LIBRARY BLOG ? ALASKA NATIVES AND NATIVE HAWAIIANS Online Saturday 01.07, 2023 Learn why Alaska Natives and Native Hawaiians were not mentioned in the January 2022 Indigeneous Collections and Connections blog post on Tribal Sovereignty. Both have a different history than the Indian Nations (tribes, bands, pueblos, communities, and native villages) in the contiguous United States. READ HERE STARTING JANUARY 7 [https://mcusercontent.com/ff3855b8d751161588008fef7/images/d1b21597-fae7-fe16-e1c6-6f3cb0537d46.jpg] OPENING RECEPTION ? CLAY LINE OF THE RED WILLOW PEOPLE: A SHOWCASE OF THREE TAOS PUEBLO ARTISTS Artists Circle Gallery Friday 01.20, 2023 05:00 pm - 07:00 pm MST Through their work, micaceous potter Angie Yazzie, painter Brian Taaffe, and photographer Deborah Lujan represent the resilience and beauty of the Pueblo that exists today. The commonality is clay, mud, the ground, and the strength this holds for them as Red Willow People. Admission is free through the South Entrance; light refreshments will be served. DETAILS SEE FULL CALENDAR OF EVENTS [https://mcusercontent.com/ff3855b8d751161588008fef7/images/600c364a-1f6a-b7f5-963b-2eee0343132d.jpg] [https://mcusercontent.com/ff3855b8d751161588008fef7/images/1a825105-f15c-9eaa-84c2-5b8139ca5886.jpg] [https://mcusercontent.com/ff3855b8d751161588008fef7/images/d72bb86b-b6b1-0726-614d-679e8691d617.jpg] Ongoing Exhibits [https://mcusercontent.com/ff3855b8d751161588008fef7/images/407cba06-ae0e-829b-4df1-4e02d08424e8.jpg] 42ND ANNUAL NATIVE AMERICAN STUDENT ART SHOW Artists Circle Gallery Showing Through Monday, January 9, 2023 This annual exhibition was established in 1979 to encourage creativity among Native youth, and to help them recognize that the future preservation and evolution of Native culture lies with them. This year, entries focus on personal ?superheroes? ? the place, people, or things that help them see the beauty in the world. Free for members, or with museum admission. INFO AND TICKETS [https://mcusercontent.com/ff3855b8d751161588008fef7/images/44d29fdf-f9b1-da56-8e2a-a4b6e85cf21f.jpg] PERMANENT EXHIBIT WE ARE OF THIS PLACE: THE PUEBLO STORY Museum Discover the Pueblo people?s legacy of resilience through their own words and voices. ?We Are of This Place: The Pueblo Story? is inspired by the traditions that have been passed down for generations, honoring our land and all living things. It opened in 2016 as part of IPCC?s year-long 40th anniversary celebration, and it marked the museum?s first major exhibit renovation since its founding. Through it, we hope to present with dignity and respect the history and accomplishments of the Pueblo people of New Mexico. INFO & TICKETS [https://mcusercontent.com/ff3855b8d751161588008fef7/images/12e6ba24-757b-cd4b-b4d7-629225fd0e5c.jpg] TRADITIONAL GIRL WITH A CONTEMPORARY POP: DEANNA AUTUMN LEAF SUAZO, (TAOS PUEBLO/NAVAJO) Showing Through February 18, 2023 in the Art Through Struggle Gallery This exhibition is about the beauty, humor and laughter, as well as inspiration, this young artist brought to many lives. DeAnna Autumn Leaf Suazo (Taos/Navajo) shows us her view and perspective on life. Her life was short, but her passing has brought attention to domestic violence, a prevalent issue in many Native communities. While this is only one story of many who became victims of domestic violence, this is an opportunity for all voices to be heard. Coalition to Stop Violence Against Native Women: https://www.csvanw.org INFO & TICKETS [https://mcusercontent.com/ff3855b8d751161588008fef7/images/5f1e525d-5174-3de7-8fa3-e24b3afc5105.jpg] PIVOT SKATEBOARD DECK ART Showing Through February 19, 2023 in the South Gallery PIVOT is a compelling, inspiring exhibit that features nearly 150 pieces of art ? all using skateboard decks and acrylics as the medium. Co-curated by Landis Bahe (Din?/Navajo) and Kandis Quam (Zuni), PIVOT refers to the quick transitions many Native people make between their traditional and day-to-day lives. The many styles and techniques these Native artists have created in this exhibit are with the same agility they use to navigate through the maze of days between cultures. INFO & TICKETS [Facebook] [Twitter] [Instagram] [YouTube] [Contact Us] Copyright ? 2022 Indian Pueblo Cultural Center, All rights reserved. Thank you. You opted in to this list at one of our functions, websites, or info stations here at the center which includes guest experience desks, Indian Pueblo Kitchen, and Indian Pueblo Store (formerly Shumakolowa Native Arts). Don't worry. We don't spam. You can update your preferences at anytime. Our mailing address is: Indian Pueblo Cultural Center 2401 12th St. NW Albuquerque, New Mexico 87104 Add us to your address book Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Outlook-4op2uj0v.png Type: image/png Size: 63286 bytes Desc: Outlook-4op2uj0v.png URL: From Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov Thu Dec 29 10:46:19 2022 From: Cassandra.Osterloh at dca.nm.gov (Osterloh, Cassandra, DCA) Date: Thu, 29 Dec 2022 17:46:19 +0000 Subject: [Nmtriblibs] Fw: Librarian's Lounge - Jan 5, 2023 In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: In case you had not received this invite prior.... Cassandra E. Osterloh, MLS, MA (Cherokee Nation) Pronouns: she/her/hers [cid:b7c5501f-5226-415f-8646-e13271ebbc8e]Tribal Libraries Program Coordinator Library Development Bureau, New Mexico State Library 1209 Camino Carlos Rey Santa Fe NM 87507 505-264-2427 (cell) 505-476-9764 (office) cassandra.osterloh at dca.nm.gov ________________________________ From: McCabe, Kelly, DCA Sent: Thursday, December 29, 2022 10:22 AM To: nmlibs at lists.zianet.com ; nmythserv Subject: Librarian's Lounge - Jan 5, 2023 Hello! The NMSL Development Bureau invites you to the the first Librarian's Lounge of 2023 - Thursday, January 5, 2023 at 12:00pm. At January's meeting we'll be showcasing a new resource available to all our public libraries - an Early Literacy Calendar that can be shared out to your patrons or placed on your website or Facebook page. We'll show you how to access the English and Spanish versions for each month. [cid:925d9681-5b3e-4824-923b-9ba0c20cf759] We hope you'll join us! Meeting link below: NMSL is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting. Topic: New Mexico Librarians' Lounge Time: Jan 5, 2023 12:00 PM Mountain Time (US and Canada) Join Zoom Meeting https://us04web.zoom.us/j/889311899?pwd=MXpZeEticlIxWEdRNFN6a1ZDWm1CZz09 Meeting ID: 889 311 899 Passcode: nmsl [cid:8d574b92-9289-44ed-8d75-f0e14df5c60b] Kelly McCabe, MSLS, MAEd Youth Services Coordinator New Mexico State Library 1209 Camino Carlos Rey Santa Fe, NM 87507 Please note new email address: kelly.mccabe at dca.nm.gov nmstatelibrary.org -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: JanCover.png Type: image/png Size: 402366 bytes Desc: JanCover.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Outlook-rqmexsee.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 26632 bytes Desc: Outlook-rqmexsee.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... 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