{"id":1857,"date":"2018-08-07T13:39:00","date_gmt":"2018-08-07T20:39:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spijue.wpengine.com\/news\/people-of-juneau-goldbelts-first-ceo-reflects-on-lifetime-of-involvement\/"},"modified":"2018-08-13T13:02:46","modified_gmt":"2018-08-13T20:02:46","slug":"people-of-juneau-goldbelts-first-ceo-reflects-on-lifetime-of-involvement","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/home\/people-of-juneau-goldbelts-first-ceo-reflects-on-lifetime-of-involvement\/","title":{"rendered":"People of Juneau: Goldbelt’s first CEO reflects on lifetime of involvement"},"content":{"rendered":"
Today, Goldbelt Inc. is a booming Alaska Native corporation that owns lands throughout Southeast Alaska and has thrived in the realms of logging and tourism.<\/p>\n
It wasn’t always that way, though. Joe Kahklen remembers.<\/p>\n
Kahklen, one of the founding members and the corporation’s first CEO, looks back fondly on the difficult years in the 1970s when the corporation was in its infancy. They were often wrapped up in litigation, Kahklen said, as people at the time assumed that the corporation had tons of money. He laughed as they talked about how wrong those people were.<\/p>\n
Kahklen, who turns 82 in September, said even he and his optimistic co-founders had their expectations lower than the heights the corporation has reached.<\/p>\n
“It’s exceeded my wildest dreams,” Kahklen said. “We had these really way-out dreams we thought we’d never achieve.”<\/p>\n
Goldbelt was incorporated in 1974 as a result of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA), which formed Alaska Native organizations and allowed them to claim land throughout Alaska. ANCSA established regional corporations, such as Sealaska Corp., and urban organizations such as Goldbelt. Sealaska was incorporated two years before Goldbelt and helped Goldbelt get on its feet financially, Kahklen said.<\/p>\n