Navajo Nation

Choice Broadband and Tarana Partner to Narrow Navajo Nation’s Digital Divide

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, March 27, 2024

Choice Broadband, the wireless broadband branch of the Navajo Tribal Utility Authority, and Tarana, creator of next-generation fixed wireless access (ngFWA) technology, have officially launched a new ngFWA broadband network in Tohatchi, New Mexico.

Key Points: 
  • Choice Broadband, the wireless broadband branch of the Navajo Tribal Utility Authority, and Tarana, creator of next-generation fixed wireless access (ngFWA) technology, have officially launched a new ngFWA broadband network in Tohatchi, New Mexico.
  • View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20240327601200/en/
    Choice Broadband and Tarana have officially launched a new ngFWA broadband network in Tohatchi, New Mexico.
  • In fact, Choice Broadband was able to expand their coverage footprint to nearly 400 previously unreachable locations with ngFWA.
  • Basil Alwan, Tarana CEO, added, “We are so proud to be partnering with Choice Broadband.

SOURCE Global, Microsoft Collaborate to Help Provide Clean Drinking Water in Navajo Nation

Retrieved on: 
Friday, March 22, 2024

SOURCE Global, PBC and Microsoft today announced an initiative to provide 100 Navajo Nation families with SOURCE Hydropanel drinking water systems.

Key Points: 
  • SOURCE Global, PBC and Microsoft today announced an initiative to provide 100 Navajo Nation families with SOURCE Hydropanel drinking water systems.
  • An estimated 30 percent of Navajo Nation residents — about 70,000 people — don’t have access to clean, safe drinking water.
  • Access to clean drinking water is not just an issue reserved for developing nations, more than 2M Americans lack access to clean water in their home.
  • “Microsoft’s Climate innovation Fund was launched in 2020 to address climate-related challenges like water access,” said Eliza Roberts, Water Lead at Microsoft.

Navajo Nation Awards $74 Million to ZenniHome to Fuel Expansion and Provide Sustainable Housing

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, April 2, 2024

WINDOW ROCK, Ariz., April 2, 2024 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- In a first-of-its-kind partnership, the Navajo Nation has awarded a total of $74 million in grants to ZenniHome, a producer of sustainable, affordable factory-made homes using high-quality materials.

Key Points: 
  • The grants include $50 million from the Navajo Nation's Community Housing and Infrastructure Department to provide a minimum of 250 ZenniHome units to high-need residents across the Navajo Nation.
  • A 2011 Navajo Nation Housing Report found that 90 percent of all Navajo Nation housing were in need of replacement or major repairs.
  • "ZenniHome is committed to addressing the housing crisis within the Navajo Nation head-on," said ZenniHome CEO and Founder Bob Worsley.
  • This first-of-its-kind public-private partnership between the Navajo Nation and ZenniHome underscores a mutual commitment to building a substantial new industry to export from the Navajo Nation.

American Student Assistance Announces More Than $6 Million in Grants to Increase Access to Career Readiness Opportunities for Youth from Underserved Communities

Retrieved on: 
Monday, March 25, 2024

The grantees' initiatives are focused on improving career readiness outcomes for middle and high schoolers from under-resourced communities.

Key Points: 
  • The grantees' initiatives are focused on improving career readiness outcomes for middle and high schoolers from under-resourced communities.
  • The grant will fund the launch of a youth advisory board, paid internship program, and an alumni program to support mentees post-program.
  • Big Thought envisions a world in which young people in marginalized communities have the same opportunities and experiences as their peers.
  • High school students will move through three phases, including career exploration, career launch, and youth entrepreneurship launch.

BANFIELD FOUNDATION RELEASES 2023 IMPACT REPORT CELEBRATING $3.3 MILLION TO HELP REMOVE BARRIERS TO CARE AND MOBILIZE VETERINARY TEAMS

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, March 20, 2024

VANCOUVER, Wash., March 20, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Banfield Foundation, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization and the charitable arm of Banfield Pet Hospital®, today released its 2023 annual Impact Report detailing how $3.3 million in grants helped mobilize veterinary care, deploy veterinary teams and enable disaster relief.

Key Points: 
  • The 2023 report outlines how the Banfield Foundation meaningfully delivered on its mission of making preventive care possible for the pets that need it most.
  • Some of this care was delivered through the donation of six mobile veterinary units to nonprofit partners, totaling more than $750,000 in support.
  • In 2023 alone, nearly 65 veterinarians and veterinary technicians volunteered 3,450 hours with the Banfield Foundation caring for vulnerable dogs and cats.
  • "Our work is only possible because of the incredible teams of veterinary professionals that help deliver on that care.

Former Tesla Director Joins ZenniHome, Driving Innovation in High-Tech Manufactured Housing

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, March 19, 2024

PAGE, Ariz., March 19, 2024 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- ZenniHome, a manufacturer of high-tech manufactured homes, is excited to announce the appointment of Dr. Michael Schmitt as its new chief operating officer.

Key Points: 
  • "I'm thrilled to join ZenniHome and bring my experience in advanced automotive manufacturing to tackle the housing crisis," Schmitt said.
  • We can apply these same techniques to deliver homes that are higher quality and lower cost with faster delivery times."
  • ZenniHome, which operates in a decommissioned coal plant in the Navajo Nation near Page, Arizona, is known for its pioneering approach to manufactured housing.
  • "With his expertise and our shared vision, we will help shape the future of housing."

Private companies are exploiting outer space, but the law is struggling to catch up

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, April 3, 2024

The goal was to deposit human remains on the lunar surface, and to release the content of the capsules in space.

Key Points: 
  • The goal was to deposit human remains on the lunar surface, and to release the content of the capsules in space.
  • NASA’s response was telling: they were unable to check the payloads’ contents, as they belonged to a private company.
  • International law needs to promptly and carefully regulate all space activity in order to safeguard the future of space exploration.

Anthropogenic contamination: the human footprint in space

  • Our species’ space footprint can be divided into two broad categories: evidence of human presence in the form of objects or artefacts (including “space junk”), and the release (intentional or unintentional) of biological substances, such as the scattering of human remains in space by private companies like the Arch Mission Foundation.
  • Article IX of the 1967 Outer Space treaty, which applies to all space activities, states that countries must consider the interests of other states when conducting space operations.
  • Accordingly, they must also take steps to avoid the harmful contamination of outer space, including the Moon and other celestial bodies.

Space accidents

  • In the 2019 Beresheet accident, a privately funded Israeli spacecraft crashed on the Moon during its landing attempt.
  • It allegedly spilled samples of human DNA along with thousands of tardigrades, tiny invertebrate animals able to survive under extreme conditions that are used in experiments to test the limits of survival in outer space.
  • In this instance, the international laws which exist also to protect the lunar environment from contamination were quite easily evaded, raising serious doubts as to space law’s effectiveness.

Gaps in space law

  • Given the intensifying human presence in space, these need to be promptly addressed, especially in the case of novel privately funded activities like space tourism.
  • It is imperative that states adopt or tighten national laws ensuring that all operators, public and private, conduct activities in line with international space law.
  • Importantly, such laws must also ensure that space operators adhere to environmental protection – for example by carrying out environmental impact assessments (EIA) – to avoid creating additional risks to space activity, as is the case with space debris.


Manolis Plionis has been a member of the independent consultant body: European Space Science Committee, for two terms since 2018. Anthi Koskina no recibe salario, ni ejerce labores de consultoría, ni posee acciones, ni recibe financiación de ninguna compañía u organización que pueda obtener beneficio de este artículo, y ha declarado carecer de vínculos relevantes más allá del cargo académico citado.

Five Tribes Join Federal Agencies to Manage Bears Ears National Monument

Retrieved on: 
Friday, March 8, 2024

Bears Ears National Monument, Utah, March 8, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- For the first time in U.S. history, a coalition of five Tribal Nations have collaborated with federal agencies to craft a management plan for their ancestral homelands and sacred sites on public lands.

Key Points: 
  • The Commission was established during the Obama administration, following the President's proclamation that established Bears Ears as a National Monument.
  • "The petroglyphs, artifacts, landmarks, and landforms in the Bears Ears region help Hopi people trace our migration histories" said Craig Andrews, Vice Chairman of the Hopi Tribe and Co-Chair of the Bears Ears Commission.
  • "In the face of modern challenges, such as the management of Bears Ears National Monument, our commitment to collaboration remains unwavering," said Yanito.
  • "The draft resource management plan represents the culmination of our shared knowledge and insights, offered willingly to federal agencies for the betterment of the Monument.

THE TRANSFORMATIVE POWER OF LEARNING

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, February 27, 2024

SANTA BARBARA, Calif., Feb. 27, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Fielding University Press is proud to announce the publication of The Transformative Power of Learning (ISBN: 173-7943980), which encapsulates the essence of lifelong learning and its transformative power.

Key Points: 
  • SANTA BARBARA, Calif., Feb. 27, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Fielding University Press is proud to announce the publication of The Transformative Power of Learning (ISBN: 173-7943980), which encapsulates the essence of lifelong learning and its transformative power.
  • Fielding Graduate University extends an invitation to educators, scholars, students and lifelong learners to engage with The Transformative Power of Learning.
  • Fielding Graduate University also released "The Voices of Fielding," a film directed by Jean-Pierre Isbouts, D.Litt., to complement The Transformative Power of Learning.
  • The Transformative Power of Learning is now available on Amazon and other online retailers.

Why having human remains land on the Moon poses difficult questions for members of several religions

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, February 13, 2024

Sending human remains to the Moon on the first commercial lunar lander, Peregrine 1, on Jan. 8, 2024, along with scientific instruments, caused a controversy.

Key Points: 
  • Sending human remains to the Moon on the first commercial lunar lander, Peregrine 1, on Jan. 8, 2024, along with scientific instruments, caused a controversy.
  • The inside of the lander was to be a kind of “space burial” for remains of some 70 people.
  • Each of the families had paid over US$12,000 for a permanent memorial on the Moon.

Jewish death rituals and purification

  • There were many ways in which one could become ritually unclean, and each level of pollution was cleansed by an appropriate purification rite.
  • After the Romans destroyed the Temple in 70 C.E., Jewish religious practice changed dramatically, including rules about purification.
  • These days, after a burial or visit to a cemetery, many Jewish people wash their hands to wash away negative spirits or energy.

Christian death rituals over the centuries

  • Corpses or cremated remains were interred in burial places outside cities and town – in the necropolis, literally a city of the dead.
  • As monotheists, Christians rejected belief in the Greek and Roman gods and goddesses, including the Moon goddess called Selene or Luna.
  • They also refused to participate in Roman state religious rituals or activities based on pagan polytheism.
  • Unlike some other religions, neither Judaism nor Christianity considers the Moon divine or sacred.
  • In both Jewish and Christian spiritual writing, the Moon is used as a spiritual analogy: in Judaism, of the majesty of God, and in Christianity, of Christ and the church.

Islamic beliefs on burial

  • After death, the deceased is ritually washed, wrapped in shrouds and brought for burial in a cemetery as soon as possible.
  • The soul of the deceased is said to visit their loved ones on the seventh and 40th days after death.
  • In September 2007, when the first Muslim astronaut from Malaysia got ready to go into space, the Malaysian National Space Agency published religious directives on burial rituals for Muslims in space.

Hindu and Buddhist funerary practices

  • Hinduism is a diverse religion, and so funeral practices often vary according to culture and context.
  • Most commonly, death and the period following a person’s death are associated with ritual pollution.
  • In the many forms of Buddhism, death provides an opportunity for mourners to reflect on the impermanence of all things.


In older forms of Buddhism in Nepal and Tibet, the Moon was understood to be identified with the god Chandra, who rides on a chariot. The Moon is also one of the nine astrological deities whose movement provides insight for reckoning individual and collective futures.

Difficult questions

  • Peregrine 1 never made its soft landing on the Moon because of an engine malfunction, and its payload was destroyed after entering the atmosphere.
  • As more people decide to send their ashes into space, however, religious conflicts are bound to arise.


The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.