Charles Sams

Charles F. Sams III (Cayuse and Walla Walla) is an American conservationist who is the 19th and current director of the National Park Service since 2021. A member of the Northwest Power and Conservation Council, Sams is the first Native American to serve as head of the NPS.

Early life and education
Sams is a native of Pendleton, Oregon. His great-great-great-grandfather Peo Peo Mox Mox, the head of the Walla Walla people, was among the signatories of a treaty that established the Umatilla Indian Reservation. He graduated from Pendleton High School in 1988. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in business administration from Concordia University in 2003 and a Master of Legal Studies from the University of Oklahoma College of Law in 2020.

Early career
From 1988 to 1992, Sams served as an intelligence specialist in the United States Navy, where he was assigned to VA-128, Carrier Air Wing Two, Joint Intelligence Center, and the Defense Intelligence Agency Headquarters.

After leaving the navy, Sams was a data analyst and spokesman for the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation. When the tribes started a land buyback program, Sams wrote an editorial explaining how the Dawes Allotment Act of 1887 led the reservation to be subdivided and sold to white settlers. He served as executive director and vice president of the Earth Conservation Corps. In 2003 and 2004, he was the executive director of the Community Energy Project. From 2004 to 2006, he was a member of the Columbia Slough Watershed Council. From 2006 to 2010, Sams was the national director of the tribal and native lands program at the Trust for Public Land.

Sams also held administrative positions at the Umatilla Tribal Community Foundation and Indian Country Conservancy. In April 2021, Sams was appointed to serve as a member of the Northwest Power and Conservation Council by Oregon Governor Kate Brown.

Director of the National Park Service
He was unanimously confirmed as the National Park Service (NPS) director on November 18, 2021, and sworn in on December 16 of the same year. Sams, an enrolled member of the Cayuse and Walla Walla tribes, is the first Native American to serve in that position.

As director of the NPS, Sams has identified improving accessibility in national parks through funds allocated through the Great American Outdoors Act as a policy priority. In 2022, he stated that the NPS will work to improve how it tells Native American history in educational resources.