fbpx
facebook app symbol  twitter  linkedin  instagram 1
 

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. — Tribal Business News has added a veteran journalist to its growing reporting team. 

Tamara Ikenberg joined Tribal Business News as a senior reporter on Dec. 7. Based in southern California, Ikenberg will take a lead role in reporting on Indian Country’s arts and tourism industries, as well as coverage of the Alaska Native business community.

Previously, Ikenberg was a contributing writer for Native News Online, where she participated in a four-month project focused on covering the broad effects of the COVID-19 pandemic in Indian Country, touching on issues ranging from arts to sovereignty. She also contributed to Tribal Business News as a freelancer.

“Tamara has a keen eye for stories and an innate ability to pull on various threads in her reporting to identify issues that deserve attention and help inform our readers,” said Levi Rickert (Prairie Band Potawatomi), editor of Tribal Business News. “She’s a great addition as we continue to build our reporting team and explore the $130 billion tribal economy.”

Ikenberg’s nomadic culture-writing career has brought her to Alabama, Alaska and several other states. Her interest in Indigenous issues and culture was sparked in Alaska, where she was an arts and entertainment writer for The Alaska Dispatch News and a grant and article writer at Juneau-based Sealaska Heritage Institute, a nonprofit promoting and perpetuating the art of Southeast Alaska tribes. 

Prior to that, she covered pop culture, fashion, classical music and more for publications including The Courier-Journal in Louisville, The Mobile Press Register, NYLON Magazine and The Baltimore Sun. 

Ikenberg has journalism degree from Northwestern University and won first place in the culture category in 2018 from the Alaska Press Club for her First Alaskans magazine piece about reviving traditional Southeast Alaskan Native halibut hooks. She currently resides in Southern California. 

Ikenburg joins reporter Chez Oxendine (Lumbee-Cheraw) and managing editor Joe Boomgaard in the Tribal Business News virtual newsroom. The publication is currently seeking to hire a full-time general assignment reporter in a joint position with Native News Online, as well as add additional freelance and contract writers to its reporting staff. Contact [email protected] for more details.

More Stories Like This

Native News Weekly (August 25, 2024): D.C. Briefs
Native News Weekly (August 4, 2024): D.C. Briefs
President Biden Appoints Janie Simms Hipp to Community Development Advisory Board
Call to Campaigns: See Indian Country
NCAI Condemns Racist Remarks by Trump-Backed GOP Montana Senatorial Candidate

Following the release of the U.S. Department of the Interior's final report, we at Native News Online took a moment to reflect on our extensive three-year effort to highlight the traumatic legacy of Indian boarding schools. By covering all 12 Road to Healing events and publishing over 250 articles, we have amplified survivors' voices and illuminated the lasting impact on Indigenous communities. Our work continues. Please consider donating to help fund our ongoing coverage of Indian boarding schools.

About The Author
Native News Online Staff
Author: Native News Online StaffEmail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Native News Online is one of the most-read publications covering Indian Country and the news that matters to American Indians, Alaska Natives and other Indigenous people. Reach out to us at [email protected].