About HUṠWEJ

Board of Directors

The HUṠWEJ Board of Directors provides governance, oversight, and organizational stewardship for the Tribally-guided nonprofit. 

Serving under the direction of the Nevada City Rancheria Nisenan Tribal Council, the Board helps translate Tribal priorities into sustainable nonprofit strategy, policy, and operations. 

The Board supports HUṠWEJ’s mission by ensuring transparency, sound governance, and long-term organization capacity, while remaining grounded in accountability to Tribal leadership and the Nisenan community the organization exists to serve.


HUṠWEJ BOARD OF DIRECTORS

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Julie is the CEO of Californians for the Arts and California Arts Advocates (Sacramento). As the CEO of California’s statewide arts advocacy organizations since 2018, Julie has worked to increase the legislative clout and visibility of the arts and culture communities by building coalition across the for and non-profit sectors of California’s creative industries, championing a month-long arts awareness and advocacy campaign every April, and fighting for resources and legislation to serve and protect artists and cultural workers. She has served as the California State Captain to Americans for the Arts’; National Arts Action Summit, the co-chair of the creative economy working group at the CA Economic Summit and as the recent co-chair of the Western Arts Advocacy network for WESTAF. She is the board president of California Heritage: Indigenous Research Project and was elected to the Nevada County school board in November of 2020. She is also an appointed member of the State of California’s 2022 Entrepreneurship & Economic Mobility Task Force (EEMTF). Julie is the recipient of the 2021 Americans for the Arts Alene Valkanas State Arts Advocacy Award that honors an individual at the state level whose arts advocacy efforts have dramatically affected the political landscape.

Over the years, Julie has owned a fine arts gallery for emerging artists, co- founded Flow art fair — a satellite to Art Basel Miami Beach — opened a consulting firm Julie Baker Projects and curated an annual world music series at the Crocker Art Museum. Earlier in her career she was President of her family’s arts marketing firm in New York City and worked at Christie’s Auction house before moving to California in 1998. Julie also served for eight years as the Executive Director of The Center for the Arts, a non-profit performing arts venue and California WorldFest, an annual music and camping festival located in Grass Valley, CA. She is the recipient of the inaugural Peggy Levine Arts & Community Service Award from the Nevada County Arts Council.

JULIE BAKER, President

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Working under the guise of "MamaWisdom1", Nikila is a Cultural Community Artist from the Hawaiian Islands, raised between Oahu and the Bay Area. Self-taught in the multidisciplinary arts as a muralist, designer, performer, and arts educator, she has dedicated her skills to serving cultural, environmental, youth, and social justice projects for over 25 years. 

Nikila has painted walls from California to New York, Hawaii to Puerto Rico, including murals for clients such as: Hawaiian Airlines, Pow Wow Hawaii, Worldwide Walls, Covered California, and many California Indigenous Tribes. She is a long time member of Bay Area Arts Collective Audiopharmacy, Hawaii’s Mana Maoli Collective, a long time affiliate of Native Hawaiian organizations Huli and La Hoihoi Ea, and sits on the Board of the Nevada City Rancheria Nisenan Tribe’s 501c3 HUSWEJ

NIKILA BADUA, Vice President

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Elizabeth is a senior program officer at the Water Foundation. She has spent the last several decades working at the nexus of program strategy and philanthropy delivering resources to address environmental issues in the water sector. Previously, as part of the Strategic Partnerships team at the Water Foundation, Elizabeth helped develop and deliver on fundraising strategies.

Before joining the Water Foundation, Elizabeth was Senior Director of Conservation and Development at American Rivers and launched initiatives on in-stream flows and mountain meadow restoration. Prior to that, she was Director of the Sierra and Africa Rivers Program at the Natural Heritage Institute where she led programs in adaptive management in the context of river restoration and floodplain management.

For four years, she was Science, Engineering and Diplomacy Fellow at USAID’s Regional Center for Southern Africa based in Botswana. There, she worked on transboundary river management with a focus on the Okavango River. Elizabeth serves on the boards of the Consensus Building Institute, Stockholm Environment Institute – US, and TreeSisters. She also sits on the advisory board of the South Yuba Citizens League. She received a BA in English Literature, a BS in Biological Sciences, and an MS in Biological Sciences from Stanford University and a PhD in Wildlands Resource Science and River Science from UC Berkeley. Elizabeth lives with her husband, daughter, several dogs, goats and chickens on a tiny farm in Nevada City, CA.

ELIZABETH SÖDERSTRÖM, Treasurer

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Current sitting Tribal Chairman of the Nevada City Rancheria Nisenan Tribe, Richard was the last male child to be born on the Nevada City Rancheria reservation land. When he was two years old, he and his brother, along with the other Tribal children, were forcibly removed from the Tribal reservation, their families and Culture, and put into foster care. Though Richard was raised away from his Tribal family, he was able to spend time during the summers at the Rancheria with his grandparents, Pete and Margaret Johnson. Richard is an author of the book History of Us, that details the legacy of injustices perpetrated against his family and the rest of the Tribal membership. Richard came back to the Culture later in life, but embraces the privilege to stand in this leadership position as Tribal Chairman. 

RICHARD JOHNSON, Board Director

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Marie was born on the Humboldt coast in Arcata, California. When she was two her family moved to the Sierra Nevada foothills in the Yuba River watershed in Northern California, to pursue their dream of farming and living off the land. She was raised on their small farm whose surrounding lands were originally occupied by the Nisenan people before the cultural and environmental decimation that occurred at the hands of expansionist migrants and settlers during the gold rush, and has come to be known as Nevada City (the Nisenan still survive in tragically small numbers and continue to fight for visibility and Federal recognition).

Marie grew up surrounded and deeply touched by music—going to bluegrass festivals and listening to her father’s bluegrass band—but held no particular personal musical ambitions. However, she taught herself to play the guitar at 18 while volunteering at a school for Mapuche children in Patagonia, Argentina, and wrote her first songs here while taking refuge from the Patagonia winds indoors. She continued finger picking and writing songs and would make two home-recorded albums purely at the urging of friends. In 2007 she released her first studio album, Faces in the Rocks, on which she collaborated with Native American flutist Gentle Thunder and which achieved a dedicated cult following that would propel her career to this day. She began touring Europe as well as North America and has continued ever since.

MARIE SZOBO, Board Director

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JOSIE ANDREWS, Recording Secretary

Josie came into contact with the Nevada City Rancheria Nisenan Tribe in 2014 while working in her capacity as a librarian for Nevada County. With other County staff, Josie helped spearhead an MLS grant, culminating in: the first Nisenan collection of written materials housed today at the Doris Foley Library in Nevada City, a digital kiosk containing Tribal stories, songs, histories, and a contact timeline, a four part Nisenan speaker series, which highlighted Nisenan Language and Cultural revitalization, and finally, helped to produce the book, ‘Ani’to’o’pe that features Nisenan Tribal Elder Carmel Rose Jackson. Josie works in her current capacity as a librarian at Nevada Joint Union High School and serves on the HUṠWEJ Board as Secretary.