UAA announces 2023-24 Alumni of Distinction recipients

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March 12, 2024
Pfleiger, Growden and Collins will be honored at UAA’s Alumni of Distinction Celebration Banquet on March 29 at Lucy Cuddy Hall
 
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — The University of Alaska Anchorage Office of Alumni Relations and the UAA Alumni Association are pleased to announce the recipients of the 2023-24 UAA Alumni of Distinction awards. These three distinguished UAA alumni will be honored for their outstanding contributions in their chosen fields and communities at the university’s annual Alumni of Distinction Celebration Banquet on Friday, March 29 at the Lucy Cuddy Hall on UAA’s Anchorage campus.
 
Alumni Emerging Leader
Amie Collins
M.B.A. General Management ’17, B.A. Political Science '13
Executive director of Best Beginnings
 
Growing up an avid reader, Amie Collins works to pass on that passion to future generations of children and parents by developing early literacy and education initiatives in partnership with school districts, Head Start programs and municipal and state departments. The largest of these initiatives is the administration of Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library, a national service that partners with local literacy organizations to mail free books monthly to children from birth to age five. In Alaska, Best Beginnings has offered Imagination Library to more than 14,000 children in 129 communities. In addition to her work with Best Beginnings, Collins sits on the Family Advisory Council for the Clinton Foundation's Too Small to Fail organization.
 
Alumni Humanitarian
Celeste Hodge Growden
B.S.W. Social Work ’96, A.A. General Program ’92
President and CEO of Alaska Black Caucus
 
By focusing on the four core areas of justice, education, economics and health, Celeste Hodge Growden works toward enacting racial equity through institutional reform. Since joining the Alaska Black Caucus in 2019, Growden has convinced the Anchorage Police Department to implement mandatory body cameras for officers, get the Anchorage School District to adopt Anti-Racism and Instructional Equity Policies, launch annual Blackout Days to spotlight local Black-owned businesses, and produce Alaska’s first Black health needs assessment. Before her tenure at Alaska Black Caucus, Growden worked as a family service counselor for the Anchorage Health Department before retiring as deputy director for the mayor’s office of equal opportunity. Growden also served as past president of the NAACP Alaska chapter for nearly a decade. 
 
Alumni of Achievement
A. Janelle Pfleiger
B.B.A. Real Estate ’78
Real estate agent and former national president of the Residential Real Estate Council
 
Purchasing a home can be one of the biggest, costliest transactions a person or family can make. A. Janelle Pfleiger understands the enormity of such a decision and ensures the real estate agent guiding clients through the homebuying process is beholden to the highest code of ethics. In 2016, Pfleiger served as national president of the Residential Real Estate Council, during which she championed the continuing education of real estate agents and included awarding the coveted certified residential specialist designation — considered to be the doctorate of the real estate industry. Outside her work supporting fellow real estate agents, Pfleiger served as the board chair of the Anchorage Chamber of Commerce, the board chair of the Providence Alaska Children’s Hospital, is a member of the Anchorage Athena Society, has been named REALTOR of the Year by the Anchorage Board of REALTORS in 2006, and in 2007 named the YWCA Alaska Woman of Achievement.
 
For more information, contact Alumni Relations at 907-786-1701 or seawolf.forever@alaska.edu, or visit uaa.alaska.edu/alumni.
 
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About the University of Alaska Anchorage
The University of Alaska Anchorage is Alaska’s largest university, educating nearly 12,000 students annually. UAA transforms lives through teaching, research, community engagement and creative expression in a diverse and inclusive environment. Learn more at uaa.alaska.edu.