According to Benson's official biography from her website, unlike her older brothers, she was born outside of Alaska in
Yakima, Washington in 1954, while her mother was being treated for
tuberculosis. Of
Norwegian ancestry on her father's side and
Tlingit ancestry on her mother's side, her tribal identity is T'akdeintaan (Sea Tern crest of the Raven Moiety) and Tax' Hit (Snail House). Benson grew up in southeastern Alaska in foster homes and boarding school as well as logging camps with her father and in
Sitka with her grandparents. She began volunteer work with senior citizens at Ketchikan Hospital at the age of 12, and although often homeless, worked a variety of social-service–oriented jobs with the underprivileged and the elderly until she took a position with the Fairbanks Native Association. At the age of 18 Benson was the youngest person ever to serve on the FNA Executive Board, and was invited by then-
U.S. Senator Mike Gravel to work in
Washington, D.C. She was accepted to study at Stanford University but could not attend due to personal and family reasons. Benson acquired a job as one of the first female tractor-trailer truck drivers on the
Trans-Alaska Pipeline, in 1975. In 1977, after working on a gill-netter (fishing boat) in
Bristol Bay, and after completion of the pipeline, she worked numerous jobs including as a researcher for the Alaska Federation of Natives human resources department, layout artist and writer for the
Tundra Times, researcher for North Pacific Rim, and other contracts. She paid for two years of college by driving trucks in the early 1980s as Alaska's first female union concrete-mixer driver. She did volunteer research work for the Berger Commission, and from 1986 until 1988 was a
paralegal for Alaska Legal Services. Through the 1990s Benson ran the Northern Stars Talent Agency, promoting Alaska's talent in films and commercials nationally and internationally. In 2001 Benson made local and national news when she objected to her master's degree advisor's use of her clan (Snail House) in a controversial sexual abuse poem,
Indian Girls. She filed a grievance regarding disparate classroom treatment but the
U.S. Department of Education found in favor of the professor. Benson completed her master's in creative writing in 2002 at another campus and under the tutelage of Pulitzer Prize winner
N. Scott Momaday. She continues graduate studies, on a master's in public policy, at
New England College. ==Theatre and writing==