Henry C. Lozano has had the honor to serve on the White Bison Board of Directors for over 25 years. Henry is of Apache, Tarahumara, and European descent. He was named Deputy Assistant to the President and the Director to the USA Freedom Corps. Prior to his tenure as Director, he was appointed by President Bush and confirmed by the Senate to serve on the Board of Directors for the Corporation for National & Community Service. He was also appointed by President Clinton to serve on the President’s Advisory Commission on Drug-Free Communities and appointed as Co-Chair of the Commission by President Bush. He has served as a Senior Advisor to the Founder of U.N.I.T.Y. and currently serves on the Board of Trustees.
启点加速连不 has worked in the mental health and addictions field for over two decades. He is recognized internationally as an expert on males and trauma. In the fall of 2015, Griffin was honored to be named as a senior fellow at The Meadows. He is the owner, founder, and lead consultant of Griffin Recovery Enterprises, Inc. He served as the state drug court coordinator for the Minnesota Drug Court Initiative, from 2002 to 2010, and was also the judicial branch’s expert on addiction and recovery. Griffin was awarded Hazelden’s first training fellowship for addiction counseling in 1998. He has worked in a variety of areas in the addictions field: research, case management, public advocacy, recovery courts, teaching, and counseling. Griffin’s latest book, A Man's Way through Relationships, is the first trauma-informed book written to help men create healthy relationships while navigating the challenges of internalizing the "Man Rules." Griffin is also the author, A Man’s Way through the Twelve Steps, is the first trauma-informed book to take a holistic look at men’s recovery. He also co-authored Helping Men Recover, the first comprehensive gender-responsive and trauma-informed curriculum for men. Griffin’s graduate work was centered on the social construction of masculinity in the culture of Alcoholics Anonymous. In 2012, Griffin was one of national experts invited by SAMHSA to help build a consensus definition of the terms “trauma” and “trauma-informed.” Griffin was a founding member of Faces and Voices of Recovery and served as a Minnesota delegate at the first National Recovery Summit in St. Paul in 2001. He served on SAMHSA’s National Recovery Month Committee for over ten years. In 2004, Griffin was one of 100 experts invited from around the country to create a consensus definition of recovery from addiction for SAMHSA. Griffin helped to start the first recovery advocacy organization in Minnesota, RecoveryWorks, in 2001. The President’s Award winner in 2006 for leadership in the addiction and recovery field in Minnesota, Griffin lives in Minnesota with his wife, Nancy, and his daughter, Grace, and has been in long-term recovery since he graduated college in May of 1994. Dan’s areas of expertise include: men’s issues, trauma and trauma-informed services, addiction and recovery, recovery courts and other treatment courts, working with and understanding the twelve step culture, and the special needs of young people in recovery.
Marlin Farley is from the White Earth Reservation in northwest Minnesota. He has over 27 years of experience in working in the fields of adolescent treatment of emotional/behavioral disorders, family based social work, chemical dependency, restorative justice practices, and as a trainer/consultant in the wellness field. He is the president of Black Stone Consulting. Marlin is also a film producer/director and is the principal owner of Painted Sky Productions. Marlin is a board member and Master Trainer for White Bison Inc. and is a leader in the national Wellbriety Movement.
Barbara Plested Ph.D. is Affiliate Faculty at Colorado State University, and co-owner of Council Oak Training and Evaluation, Inc. She has thirty years of experience, serving both as an administrator as well as a therapist in the fields of mental health and substance abuse in addition to her 25 years of research experience. She serves as an evaluator and grant writer for several Native American programs and is one of the primary developers of the Community Readiness model. She has conducted community research using the model on a variety of issues: intimate partner violence, HIV/AIDS prevention, methamphetamine prevention, drug and alcohol prevention and environmental trauma. She has utilized thea model in over 3,000 communities in all fifty states, and 41 countries. Barbara has published extensively and has served on Roslyn Carter’s panel on intergenerational caregiving as well as serving as a participant in First Lady Laura Bush’s “Helping Americas Youth” initiative.
Pamela Jumper Thurman, Ph.D., a Western Cherokee, is a Senior Affiliate Faculty scholar at Colorado State University and President of Council Oak Training and Evaluations, Inc., a female and American Indian owned company. She is an award winning artist and has exhibited in New York and Washington, D. C. She has 30 years of experience in mental health, substance abuse/epidemiology research, and Capacity Building Assistance, as well as 35 years in the provision of direct treatment and prevention services as well as community work. She is a co-developer and co-author of the Community Readiness Model and has applied the model in over 3,000 communities throughout the US as well as over 41 communities internationally. She has worked with cultural issues utilizing community readiness, community participatory research, prevention of ATOD, methamphetamine treatment and prevention, prevention of violence and victimization, rural women’s concerns, HIV/AIDS, and solvent abuse. She currently serves or has served as principal investigator or co-principal investigator for 18 federally funded grants that examine community/grassroots prevention of intimate partner violence, state wide initiatives to prevent methamphetamine use, epidemiology of American Indian substance use, prevention of HIV/AIDS, and epidemiology and prevention of solvent use among youth. She has served as a member of the National CSAT Advisory Council and was also a member of one of Roslyn Carter’s Caregiving Panels as well as participating in First Lady Laura Bush’s “Helping Americas Youth” initiative. She worked collaboratively with Ohio's First Lady, Hope Taft in the integration of community readiness into Mrs. Taft's Building Bridges Statewide Project to reduce underage drinking throughout the State of Ohio. Dr. Jumper-Thurman was the recipient of a lifetime achievement award from the Capitol Hill Alumni Association, was selected as one of the Indian Elders of 2015 by AARP and was the recipient of Oklahoma State University’s Distinguished American Indian Alumni of 2017. She is the Co-Editor of Cherokee National Treasures: in their own words, a volume of stories about traditional Cherokee artists. She has published extensively on a variety of topics in various books chapters and journals and has co-produced a DVD on Community Readiness and over 25 public service announcements for HIV testing as well as coordinating the launch of a National Native HIV/AIDS Awareness Day for the past 5 years.