Age, Biography and Wiki
Patricia Whitefoot was born on 1950 in India. Discover Patricia Whitefoot's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is She in this year and how She spends money? Also learn how She earned most of networth at the age of 73 years old?
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We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 1950.
She is a member of famous with the age years old group.
Patricia Whitefoot Height, Weight & Measurements
At years old, Patricia Whitefoot height not available right now. We will update Patricia Whitefoot's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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She is currently single. She is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about She's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, She has no children.
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Patricia Whitefoot Net Worth
Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Patricia Whitefoot worth at the age of years old? Patricia Whitefoot’s income source is mostly from being a successful . She is from India. We have estimated
Patricia Whitefoot's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
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$1 Million - $5 Million |
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Timeline
Whitefoot is the co-host of the War Cry Podcast, which is based in the Pacific Northwest and discusses missing and murdered Indigenous people, their stories, and the historical context surrounding them. In the spring of 2021l, Whitefoot was an invited panelist for an MMIW event put on by the Washington State Women's Commission.
In recent years, Whitefoot has been awarded both the Golden Tennis Shoe Award by Washington State Senator Patty Murray (2021) and the Adeline Garcia Community Service Awards from the Seattle Indian Health Board (2019). These awards highlight not her work towards MMIW in Washington State and across the nation.
Whitefoot is also an activist for Indigenous rights and tribal sovereignty. In 2020, she urged Washington state's Redistricting Commission to redraw district boundaries to reunite the Yakama Nation into one legislative district, as the previous fracturing of district boundaries had severed relationships between state representatives and tribal leaders and made it more difficult for Yakama Nation members to win elections. These impacts created barriers and difficulties for Yakama communities, as many who are not members of the Yakama Nation don't understand its history and the importance of the treaties that created the Yakama Reservation. In 2021, she advocated for the confrontation of boarding schools and what they did to Indigenous children, stating that they were “one part of that policy of assimilation or to exterminate us as a people.” She has been directly cited in multiple books, including a section in Yakama Rising, where her views on educating holistically, language revitalization, and protecting culture are discussed.
In the 2020 presidential election of the United States, Whitefoot was honored as an elector for the state of Washington. She used a ceremonial quill pen to cast a Washington Electoral College vote for Joe Biden.
The disappearance of Whitefoot's sister compelled her to advocate for MMIW in addition to her advocacy work with Indigenous education. Whitefoot has been foundational in calling attention to the MMIW crisis, with the chief research officer of the Seattle Indian Health Board calling her work and passion "instrumental" to the movement locally. As the MMIW crisis gained more widespread attention, Whitefoot began to be interviewed more frequently on the epidemic. In interviews, she typically focuses on current legislation surrounding MMIW, the need for more and better laws, the lack of national attention on the issue of MMIW, and how justice comes into play. She has met with many congressional representatives to discuss how the crisis affects Indigenous women and girls. In 2018, Whitefoot spoke at a Women are Sacred event created by the National Indigenous Women's Resource Center.
In 2015 and 2016 Whitefoot helped to research and publish two peer-reviewed journals with subjects on HIV and Chlamydia prevention, risks and screening in Indigenous populations.
Whitefoot has testified before the United States Congress multiple times as well, and her activism on a national level requires her to attend legislative briefings and hearings in Washington DC. In 2010, she testified before the United States Senate Committee on Indian Affairs based on the proposed tribal programs and initiatives budget. At the time, she was the President of the National Indian Education Association and asked for increased funding. In 2015, she testified again, advocating for better funding of Indigenous education, citing the differences in spending on non-Indigenous students versus Indigenous students.
In 2009 Whitefoot was appointed by President Obama to the National Advisory Council on Indian Education, a council that works with the Secretary of Education on Indian Education issues that is made up of fifteen members all across the United States.
Whitefoot was also a 2009 Ecotrust Indigenous Leadership Award Finalist and was awarded 5,000 dollars. During the same time period, Whitefoot was appointed by Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration Prevention Committee.
Patsy Whitefoot has received numerous awards and recognitions from multiple organizations. Whitefoot's efforts to create culturally responsive education led the Potlatch Fund, a nonprofit that does work in Montana, Idaho, Washington, and Oregon to create the Patricia Whitefoot Education Award. She was awarded their Education Leadership Award in 2005, and since then this award and its name has been an homage to Whitefoot.
Whitefoot is a professional educator who has served in many different capacities and positions. This has provided her with a vast array of experience and knowledge, the importance of which has been recognized by her many awards and positions. Her work also expands from the state of Washington as well, as she taught in Arizona on the Navajo Reservation. She served in a variety of roles such as principal, counselor, superintendent, and program director, as well as created multiple educational programs outside of these positions. Having worked at every level of Indian education, including as the Supervisor of Indian Education for Washington State, Whitefoot ensured Indigenous students were meeting academic needs as well as cultural and traditional understanding, and helping educators provide such learning. Whitefoot has been the Indian Education Director for the Toppenish School District on Yakama Reservation since 2004, supporting Indigenous students by coordinating partnerships with community stakeholders like Yakama Nation and other reservation school districts as well as the University of Washington. In the Toppenish School District, Whitefoot has increased preschool literacy readiness skills in Indigenous students and increased the number of Indigenous graduates attending postsecondary education. Whitefoot has also been on the Board of Directors for Heritage University, a private university in Toppenish, Washington on the Yakama Indian Reservation.
In 1987 Whitefoot's younger sister, 29-year-old Daisy May Heath, was reported missing. Whitefoot was close with her sister, who helped raise Whitefoot's children while she attended college. Whitefoot was working at the Washington state superintendent's office in Olympia at the time of her sister's disappearance. Daisy was declared legally dead several years after she went missing, and the FBI has described her disappearance as a suspected homicide.
Patricia 'Patsy' L. Whitefoot (born 1950) is a member of Yakama Nation, is Indigenous elder, activist and professional educator along with being the traditional food gatherer for the Toppenish Creek Longhouse. She served as the President of the National Indian Education Association and President Obama appointed her as a member of the National Advisory Council on Indian Education. She is a prominent advocate for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, and Indigenous rights.