For more than 60 years, the Eklutna River north of Anchorage had been dammed up, stifling the salmon runs that fed generations of Dena’ina people in the area. Before the damming, for hundreds of years, the area surrounding Eklutna Lake was populated by the Dena’ina people. Curtis McQueen says the inhabitants were originally more nomadic. “They settled these lands here and never left because of the rich abundance of habitat in this area,” Curtis McQueen said of the originally nomadic Dena’ina. McQueen is the former CEO of Eklutna Inc., the Tribe’s for-profit corporation. “And the Eklutna River, which was a raging, massive river at the time, has– and still has — all five species of salmon, which is not… a lot of rivers don’t have all five species.” McQueen is Tlingit, but was formally adopted by the Eklutna people. In his time working with the Tribe, he says he’d heard stories about how bountiful the river used to be. “We lost an elder recently named Alberta Stephan,” McQueen said.