Indianz.Com > News > Chuck Hoskin: Cherokee Nation invests in rural transportation
Cherokee Nation Helps Make Rural Transit Possible
Monday, November 24, 2025
Cherokee Nation
If you live within the Cherokee Nation and see a rural transit vehicle, Cherokee Nation along with some great partners helped make it possible. It is a great investment.
Cherokee Nation budgets more than $2 million annually for rural transit, leveraging federal funds to support our rural transit partners. We subsidize rides for tribal citizens, which lowers their cost but also helps make low-cost rides possible for everyone. During the past five years, we have provided 27 new transit vehicles to our transit partners so they can focus more on providing services to all and less on purchasing vehicles.
If you know Pelivan, KATS, Muskogee County Transit Authority or Cimarron Public Transit, then you know our transit partners. Together we make a great team. In rural areas, we are a team of two: The tribe and our transit partners fund routes between communities. In 12 towns across our reservation, we have a third and powerful partner: local government.
Take my hometown of Vinita, for example. In a typical year, Vinita turns around $48,000 in local tax dollars into full-time, low-cost local transit service staffed by three drivers for all local citizens through an agreement with Grand Gateway Economic Development Association, which operates Pelivan.
The direct value to Vinita for that service is around $330,500. Turning $48,000 into $330,500 is possible because before Vinita spends a single taxpayer dollar, Cherokee Nation and Grand Gateway already footed most of the cost. It gets better: The National Rural Transit Assistance Program reports that every dollar spent on rural transit generates four dollars in the local economy. That translates into a $1.3 million in annual economic impact for Vinita alone.
Chuck Hoskin Jr.
is the 18th elected Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation, the largest Indian
tribe in the United States. He is only the second elected Principal Chief of the
Cherokee Nation from Vinita, the first being Thomas Buffington, who served from
1899-1903. Prior to being elected Principal Chief, Hoskin served as the tribe’s
Secretary of State. He also formerly served as a member of the Council of the
Cherokee Nation, representing District 11 for six years.
Search
Filed Under
Tags
More Headlines
Winnebago Tribe celebrates precedent in burial of children at Indian boarding school
Native America Callling: Native In The Spotlight with Justice Raquel Montoya-Lewis
Press Release: Winnebago Tribe wins decision in NAGPRA case
Source New Mexico: Tribes sue over prediction market platforms
Press Release: Navajo elder’s family criticizes plea deal for admitted suspect
Native America Callling: Native American voting rights advocates brace for diminished Native power at the polls
Native America Callling: How Indigenous knowledge built the foundation for today’s response to the hantavirus outbreak
Secretary Burgum testifies about proposed Indian Country budget cuts
MSU News: Native students connect at youth leadership summit
Tom Cole: Backing tribal law enforcement during National Police Week
Native America Callling: High gas prices eat into business profits and personal budgets
NAFOA: 5 Things You Need to Know This Week (May 11, 2026)
January Hoskin: Honoring the resilient women in our lives
Native America Callling: What’s in the near future for urban elder health care?
Native America Callling: What Native graduates are looking forward to
More Headlines
Native America Callling: Native In The Spotlight with Justice Raquel Montoya-Lewis
Press Release: Winnebago Tribe wins decision in NAGPRA case
Source New Mexico: Tribes sue over prediction market platforms
Press Release: Navajo elder’s family criticizes plea deal for admitted suspect
Native America Callling: Native American voting rights advocates brace for diminished Native power at the polls
Native America Callling: How Indigenous knowledge built the foundation for today’s response to the hantavirus outbreak
Secretary Burgum testifies about proposed Indian Country budget cuts
MSU News: Native students connect at youth leadership summit
Tom Cole: Backing tribal law enforcement during National Police Week
Native America Callling: High gas prices eat into business profits and personal budgets
NAFOA: 5 Things You Need to Know This Week (May 11, 2026)
January Hoskin: Honoring the resilient women in our lives
Native America Callling: What’s in the near future for urban elder health care?
Native America Callling: What Native graduates are looking forward to
More Headlines