Editorial


Nika Bartoo-Smith (she/her)
Osage and Oneida descent
Underscore + ICT Reporter

Nika is a journalist with a passion for working to center the voices and experiences of communities often left behind in mainstream media coverage. Of Osage and Oneida Nations descent, with Northern European and Indonesian ancestry, Nika was born and raised in Portland. A joint reporter with Noeledrich + ICT since March 2023, she previously worked as the health and social services reporter at The Columbian in Vancouver, Washington. Nika received a degree in journalism from the University of Oregon. Her favorite way to unwind is by trying a new recipe, browsing a local bookstore or beading jewelry.

LinkedIn: Nika Bartoo-Smith
Email: [email protected]
Check out Nika’s work here.


Luna Reyna (she/her)
Little Shell Ojibwe descendant
Underscore + ICT Northwest Bureau Chief 

Luna Reyna is a writer and broadcaster whose work has centered the voices of the systematically excluded in service of liberation and advancing justice. Before coming to Noeledrich and ICT (formerly Indian Country Today) as the partner organizations’ Seattle-based Northwest Bureau Chief, Luna was Crosscut’s Indigenous Affairs Reporter, and her work has appeared in the South Seattle Emerald, Prism Reports, Talk Poverty and more. Luna is proud of her Little Shell Chippewa heritage and is passionate about reporting that sheds light on colonial white supremacist systems of power.


X: @LunaBReyna
Email: [email protected]
Check out Luna’s work here.


Christine Trudeau (she/her)
Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation
Managing Editor

Christine oversees Underscore’s newsroom and directs its journalism. She supervises the editorial staff in alignment with Underscore’s mission to provide impactful reporting at the intersections of sovereignty and justice for Indigenous communities of the Pacific Northwest. Christine is passionate about reporting that serves, informs and helps build agency for Indigenous people. She is a committed advocate for mentoring the next generation of Indigenous journalists. Christine is the first Indigenous managing editor of Noeledrich, and also serves as the board president of the Indigenous Journalists Association, previously known as the Native American Journalists Association. She has reported for outlets such as NPR, High Country News and National Native News, while also serving adjunct professor roles at the Institute of American Indian Arts and University of Montana School of Journalism.

LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/trudeauchristine/ 
Bluesky: @trudeaukwe.bsky.social
Email: [email protected]


Jarrette Werk (he/him)
Aaniiih & Nakoda Nations
Reporter + Photographer
Report for America Corps Member

Jarrette is a multimedia journalist with experience in digital news, audio reporting and photojournalism. He joined Underscore in June 2022 in partnership with the national Report for America program. Originally from Montana, Jarrette is a proud member of the Aaniiih and Nakoda Tribes of the Fort Belknap Indian Community. He previously served as an associate producer for Nevada Public Radio’s (KNPR) “Native Nevada Podcast,” an eight-part podcast series highlighting the culture, issues and perseverance of the 27 tribal nations in present-day Nevada. He has earned a national Hearst Journalism Award and regional Edward R. Murrow Award for his journalism, along with numerous awards for his reporting and photography from the Indigenous Journalists Association, Report for America and Society of Professional Journalists.

Email: [email protected]
Read Jarrette’s work here and check out more of his photos here.


Audience


Kyra Antone (she/her)
Coeur d’Alene and Tohono O’odham
Audience Engagement Manager

Kyra, whose Indian name is Kiohod (Rainbow), grew up in the Pacific Northwest. She is Coeur d’Alene and Tohono O’odham and is a direct descendant of Chief Spokane Gary. She is passionate about storytelling in its many forms and centers her work on uplifting the voices of Indigenous communities. Before joining Underscore, Kyra taught Native youth how to create podcasts with Voices to Hear, was a communications consultant for the Center for Native American Youth at the Aspen Institute, worked as a production assistant on the PBS series Native America 2.0 and served as the communications specialist for the National Indian Child Welfare Association.

LinkedIn: Kyra Antone
Email: [email protected]


Operations


Myers Reece (he/him)
Executive Director

Myers has been executive director of Underscore since early 2022, overseeing the hiring of all personnel, fundraising, strategic planning, program development and community relationship building. He was previously a founding member and managing editor of the Flathead Beacon in Montana. His award-winning journalism and essays have appeared in newspapers, magazines, literary journals and anthologies across the country. He serves on the board, including as president in 2023, of the Portland chapter of the Asian American Journalists Association (AAJA). As a non-Native Japanese American, he has unwavering belief in the mission of elevating BIPOC voices and communities in the media.

Email: [email protected]


Sabrina Smith (she/they)
Operations Director

An ardent believer in uplifting BIPOC communities to tell their own stories, Sabrina joined Noeledrich in 2023 as Operations Director. She brings years of experience in nonprofit administration, workplace equity and inclusion leadership, and lived experience as a non-Native woman of color to her role as head of operations at UNN. In between budget meetings, strategic planning sessions, and serving as a one-person HR department, Sabrina can be found digging through the funk, soul, and disco sections of record stores or snuggling with their cat, Joy.


Journalism Fellows


McKayla Lee, 2022

McKayla Lee (Diné) is a student at the University of Montana, where she double majors in Journalism and Native American Studies. She was born and raised in Whale Rock, Arizona on the Navajo Nation and is an enrolled citizen of the Navajo Nation. McKayla spent four years as a reporter at the Southern Ute Drum in Colorado and has won awards for her writing and photography from the Indigenous Journalists Association, SPJ and others.


Carrie Johnson, 2023

Carrie Johnson is Chickasaw and Pawnee from southern Oklahoma. She graduated from Austin College in 2024 and was accepted into New York University’s graduate journalism program. She has been a fellow for the Indigenous Journalists Association, a mentee for NPR’s NextGenRadio: Indigenous, an intern for the Chickasaw Press, a freelancer for the Sherman Herald Democrat and a staff writer for Austin College’s The Observer.


Aislin Tweedy, 2024

Aislin Tweedy is a journalist in Missoula, Montana. She is an enrolled member of the Nakoda tribe from Fort Belknap Reservation. She was the Editor in Chief of North Idaho College’s student newspaper, the Sentinel, and a news reporter for the Montana Kaimin at the University of Montana. She was an intern for the Daily Montanan in 2023. She focuses on state politics, student government and Native American politics and sovereign rights.


Board of Directors


Stone Hudson, Chair

Stone Hudson, an enrolled citizen of the Three Affiliated Tribes, is a Program Officer to tribal communities for Meyer Memorial Trust, using his experience in government to better inform public-private funding partnerships. Previously, he has overseen government relations to tribes on behalf of U.S. Congressman Earl Blumenauer and the City of Portland, where he worked for two years in the Tribal Relations Program.


Marcella Miller, Vice Chair

Marcella Miller is an organizational culture and equity analyst with the Oregon Department of Human Services. Her well rounded experience in nonprofit management, community direct service and organizational development has spanned dozens of organizations and communities across Nebraska, Oregon and national projects.


Casey Pearlman, Treasurer

Casey Pearlman, Inupiaq and mixed settler descent, is the Executive Director of ATNI-EDC. She is an alum of the Rematriating Economies Apprenticeship and a board member-at-large for the Center for Inclusive Entrepreneurship. She graduated from Portland State University with a Bachelor of Arts degree in both Business Management and Human Resource Management and an Associates in International Business earned while studying abroad in Salzburg, Austria.


Mago Torres, Secretary

Mago Torres is an investigative journalist who specializes in research, access to public records and project leadership. She is the Data Editor at The Examination, a nonprofit newsroom that investigates global health threats. Before that, she worked with Open News and was the data editor with CLIP. She worked for ICIJ on the investigations for the Pandora Papers, FinCEN Files, Luanda Leaks and Pulitzer Prize-winning Panama Papers. She was a JSK Fellow at Stanford University and holds a Ph.D. in Humanistic Studies.


Joseph Bull, Member

Joseph Bull is Dean of the Maseeh College of Engineering and Computer Science at Portland State University and the first Native American dean of engineering in the U.S. He previously served as Tulane University’s John and Elsie Martinez Biomedical Engineering Chair. He holds fellowships at the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering and American Indian Science and Engineering Society. Dr. Bull, an enrolled member of the Delaware Tribe of Indians, has worked tirelessly to improve racial equity and diversity.


Erin Dysart, Member

Erin Dysart is Managing Director of Strategic Services at Meyer Memorial Trust. Before joining Meyer, she helped administer the U.S. State Department’s Fulbright Scholar Program at the Institute of International Education and managed scholarship programs at AFS Intercultural Programs. Most recently, she volunteered with the Fund for Education Abroad, a program that strives to make study abroad more accessible for underrepresented groups.


Paige Parker, Member

Paige Parker is an enrolled member of the Northern Cheyenne Tribe and descends through her grandmother from the Little Shell Chippewa Tribe. A former education and public health reporter and journalism teacher, Paige is now a storyteller for the Oregon Community Foundation. Paige graduated from the University of Montana with a Bachelor’s Degree in both Journalism and Native American Studies.