About a decade after the
Alaska Statehood Act in 1959 there were two significant Federal acts that impacted Alaska Natives. The first was the
Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA) of December 1971, which set up 13 regional for-profit
Alaska Native Regional Corporations for Alaska Natives - 12 in the state and one based in the
Lower 48 for Alaska Natives living in the continental United States. The next was the
Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act of 1975. This allowed Tribal organizations to form contracts with the
Bureau of Indian Affairs and to transfer the responsibility for management and delivery of services such as housing, lands management, tribal government assistance, education and employment and natural resources programs. Also included in this was the delivery of health care services, previously supplied from the
Indian Health Service (IHS). SEARHC's contracting with IHS began in 1976 when it took over management of the Community Health Aides Program. In 1982, SEARHC took over operation of the IHS Juneau clinic and in 1986 it took over operation of Mt. Edgecumbe Hospital in Sitka. Following the creation of these anchor facilities, SEARHC began building and staffing regional outpatient facilities in most of the smaller villages it represented. In 2004, SEARHC developed the Frontier Extended Stay Clinic (FESC) program that allows five primary care clinics in remote Alaska and Washington to provide around-the-clock care for seriously injured or ill patients, and patients who require monitoring before returning home. By covering longer patient stays, the program has saved $14 million in medical evacuations and improved the quality of care for patients. In 2006 a biography of the organization was written and entitled
Gumboot Determination: The Story of the Southeast Alaska Regional Health Consortium, which won a recognition in the
American Book Awards. ==Member communities==