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Cuts to a federal workforce program could hurt training for Native Americans

The Native Professional Advancement Center provides training to Native Americans interested in being apart of New Mexico's film industry.
Jakob Owens
/
Unsplash
The Native Professional Advancement Center provides training to Native Americans interested in being apart of New Mexico's film industry.

More than half of in New Mexico live in urban areas, and many rely on programs to help them transition from the reservation to cities, including workforce training. But the Trump administration is proposing that could defund such programs.

The was founded in 1961 when advocates demanded the Bureau of Indian Affairs and Department of Labor create a workforce training program for Native Americans in New Mexico.

鈥淲e have a large group of people that just kind of make the urban setting a little easier for Native peoples,鈥 said Deanna Aquiar (Isleta del Sur Pueblo), director of programs and development for the center. 鈥淎 lot of the time we're coming out of our reservations and into the cities for the first time, you don't really have that connection that you did back on the reservation.鈥

The center has 76 worksites around the state and has helped over 4,000 Native Americans access education. It also provides training opportunities, and helps place people in jobs. Since 1972 it鈥檚 been funded by the . But that program has been targeted for cuts by the Trump administration.

Aquiar said if federal funding goes away the center would likely be turned over to the state, but that could be detrimental.

鈥淲e've been overlooked by the states, just because we don't have a large participant base and that often leads to the state overlooking us, and we end up invisible,鈥 she said.

She said it鈥檚 critical to continue programs like this to address poverty in Indigenous communities.

鈥淭he poverty that our communities have been known for for decades. To rise above that, we need access to education and good jobs. And access to that is not readily made to those who are coming off the reservation,鈥 she said.

The program began its new year on July 1st, and is safe for now, but Aquiar is uncertain if they will be able to continue in the years to come.

Support for this coverage comes from the Thornburg Foundation.

Jeanette DeDios is from the Jicarilla Apache and Din茅 Nations and grew up in Albuquerque, NM. She graduated from the University of New Mexico in 2022 where she earned a bachelor鈥檚 degree in Multimedia Journalism, English and Film. She鈥檚 a former Local News Fund Fellow. Jeanette can be contacted at jeanettededios@kunm.org or via Twitter @JeanetteDeDios.
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