Articles from the October 31, 2024 edition


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  • Two new hires at PIA

    Olivia Rose|Oct 31, 2024

    Petersburg Indian Association (PIA) filled two positions in October, hiring Jalyn Pomrenke to the Tribal Administrator position and Hillary MacDonald as Director of Finances. "I am excited to have this opportunity to listen to and uplift the voices of tribal citizens in Petersburg," Pomrenke said in a message to the Pilot. Born and raised in Petersburg, Pomrenke has a career in residential property management and real estate, working at Petersburg Properties LLC and at PIA in her previous role...

  • Wedding on the water

    Oct 31, 2024

    David Woolley and Britni Birchell got married last Saturday at the face of LeConte Glacier. The extraordinary ceremony took place with the couple and their wedding parties aboard the MV Golden Eagle and more friends and family witnessing the nuptials from nearby aboard the FV Monsters and the MV Sikumi....

  • Borough to borrow for Scow Bay water, wastewater

    Olivia Rose|Oct 31, 2024

    Petersburg Borough is set to request over $3.5 million in state loans to help fund the long-anticipated vessel haul-out and work yard project at Scow Bay. The Petersburg Borough Assembly passed a resolution on Oct. 21, authorizing the loan application to the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation (ADEC) for the Scow Bay infrastructure project. It passed unanimously in a 6-0 vote, with assembly member Bob Lynn excused. The borough will apply to ADEC's revolving fund program for...

  • Peltola stresses bipartisanship while Begich attacks Biden administration

    Iris Samuels, Anchorage Daily News|Oct 31, 2024

    The differences between Democratic incumbent Rep. Mary Peltola and her Republican challenger Nick Begich were on full display last Monday during the final planned debate of Alaska’s U.S. House race. Begich, a businessman who lost twice to Peltola in 2022, is again vying for Alaska’s lone U.S. House seat against Peltola, a former state lawmaker who won the seat in 2022 after leading for several years an intertribal fish commission. The outcome of the race could have far-reaching impacts in determining control of a closely divided chamber, dra...

  • Yesterday's News: News from 25-50-75-100 years ago

    Oct 31, 2024

    October 31, 1924 – Thursday evening, November 6, in the schoolhouse, the Petersburg Parent-Teacher Association will once again convene. There is to be a business meeting which will likely not be long. The following program will be rendered for the pleasure of those present: piano solo, Miss Reep; reading, “Maggie Clancy has her say,” Lanore Martin; vocal solo, “The Hour of Memory,” Mrs. Martin Enge; and a reading by Miss Thorp. Refreshments are promised. So bring yourself, a friend and lots of pep and interest! October 28, 1949 – The ski tow...

  • New guidelines in the works for sales of borough-owned tidelands

    Olivia Rose|Oct 31, 2024

    An updated set of procedures for future sales of borough-owned tidelands could be codified this November. The Petersburg Borough Assembly is considering a new ordinance that would update municipal code to clarify the process of selling borough-owned tidelands and establish that such sales would be considered at no less than the appraised value —rather than the assessed value— of the land. The ordinance would add not one, not two, but three new sections under the Tidelands chapter of borough mun...

  • To the Editor

    Oct 31, 2024

    Ballot Measure 2 To the Editor: I often find myself frustrated by our state and national politics being strictly dominated by two political parties. If you’re anything like me, you’re frustrated when there are two candidates and neither of them agrees with your views enough to feel like they’ve earned your vote. Politics always require compromise, but the dominance of two parties at the state and federal level means that the goalposts between which those compromises occur gets decided by powerful political influencers instead of the voter...

  • Guest Editorial: Nation is at risk if we don't learn to live together

    Larry Persily|Oct 31, 2024

    It’s not only the fault of the people who post insults on social media, who embrace the politically inspired lies and accept the politically driven threats of violence as a necessary means to the end they favor. Nor is it only the fault of people on the other side of the political world who lecture but don’t listen, who can’t understand why so many Americans are drawn to the ever-expanding lies and ever-cruder insults yet sit by all too quietly, waiting for the turmoil to pass. It’s like the entire nation is living through a Florida hurricane,...

  • Police report

    Oct 31, 2024

    October 23 – An officer responded to a report of suspicious activity on Haugen Drive and provided a courtesy transport to an individual in need. A deer was struck by a motor vehicle on Mitkof Highway. Its meat was not salvageable. Additional patrols were requested on South 3rd Street. An officer responded to a noise complaint on North 1st Street and determined it was unfounded. October 24 – An officer responded to a reported disturbance on Ira II Street and determined it was unfounded. The Petersburg Police Department (PPD) received a pos...

  • Ham radio system donated and installed at the fire hall

    Olivia Rose|Oct 31, 2024

    A century-old technology has been added to Petersburg's fire hall for emergency communication when all else fails. Amateur radio —or ham radio— is a form of two-way radio communication that allows specially licensed operators to communicate over long distances using radio frequencies reserved for non-commercial use. Think walkie-talkie, but much more powerful. Depending on the equipment and frequency range, ham radio operators can communicate with neighboring communities, countries on the oth... Full story

  • Young Vikings gain experience, Kaden Duke places second in Southeast Showdown

    Aiden Luhr|Oct 31, 2024

    The PHS Wrestling team grappled through their second meet in Juneau-Douglas over the weekend. While the young squad didn't have the best results, Head Coach James Valentine is focused on the experience his young team is getting early in the season. The majority of the Vikings who traveled to this meet were freshmen, except for sophomore Fyscher Humphrey and senior Kaden Duke. "It was still their very first tournament ... the first tournament in Hoonah. It was a majority learning curve...

  • Winner of Juneau's Halloween Half Marathon

    Oct 31, 2024

    Petersburg's Uriah Lucas, age 20, wins Juneau's Halloween Half Marathon in 1:16:05 on Saturday along North Douglas Highway. The actual distance of the half was slightly longer at 13.27 miles. 53 runners entered the Half Marathon and another 51 the 5K....

  • PHS Volleyball loses at home against Ketchikan Kings

    Oct 31, 2024

    The PHS Volleyball team lost their first home matches of the season against the Ketchikan Kings on Oct. 25-26, though the Vikings were able to be more competitive against the 4A Kings, compared to earlier in the season, in part due to some lineup adjustments. We put "people in specific positions and it helped us a lot being defensively and offensively stronger – all of our games, I think the biggest emphasis was to find points," Head Coach Jaime Cabral said. "We took a set off of them [Kings] o...

  • Oktoberfest ArtShare

    Oct 31, 2024

    Oktoberfest ArtShare...

  • U.S. Capitol Christmas tree gets a big Wrangell send-off

    Sam Pausman|Oct 31, 2024

    It seemed everyone in Wrangell piled into to the Nolan Center to witness the blessing of the U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree. Led by the Wrangell Cooperative Association, the event was moved indoors after a persistent storm turned a cloudy afternoon into a rainy one. The event was attended by folks from Wrangell, from throughout Alaska and from Washington, D.C. Even Smokey the Bear made a surprise appearance. Kate Thomas, the borough's economic development director, played emcee for the afternoon,...

  • Alaska's seafood industry lost $1.8 billion last year, NOAA report says

    Yereth Rosen|Oct 31, 2024

    A variety of market forces combined with fishery collapses occurring in a rapidly changing environment caused Alaska’s seafood industry to lose $1.8 billion from 2022 to 2023, a new federal report said. The array of economic and environmental challenges has devastated one of Alaska’s main industries, said the report, issued by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. And the losses extend beyond economics, casting doubt on prospects for the future, the report said. “For many Alaskans the decline of their seafood industry affec... Full story

  • Wrangell resident succeeds with Zarembo Island's sole elk tag

    Sam Pausman|Oct 31, 2024

    Two thousand and ninety to one. Those were the odds of winning the only elk-hunting permit on Zarembo Island this year — the first time in nearly 20 years the state Board of Game has permitted elk hunting on Zarembo after they were urged to do so by the Wrangell Fish and Game Advisory Committee. Quite literally against all odds, Wrangell resident Curtis Kautz won the lottery. His prize? A 31-day window to try and bag a creature Kautz described as smart, skittish and fast. "They're hard to s...

  • U.S. Justice Department stresses protection of voters' rights 

    Ariana Figueroa|Oct 31, 2024

    WASHINGTON — With less than a week before the polls close on Nov. 5, the U.S. Justice Department Wednesday reiterated its efforts to protect voters’ access to the ballot box through its civil rights, national security and criminal divisions. “Protecting the right to vote, prosecuting election crimes, and securing our elections are all essential to maintaining the confidence of all Americans in our democratic system of government,” the Justice Department said in a press release. The Justice Department said that any complaints relating to viol... Full story

  • Labors of love

    Oct 31, 2024

    On Saturday, the Petersburg Lutheran Church Sanctuary hosted the Rain Country Quilters annual quilt show. Attendees cast their votes for best in show, and this year's honors went to Wende Westre's Ode to Mom, pictured hanging second from the left. This quilt, first started in August of 2022, was completed in partnership with four of Wende's close relatives to help commemorate her mom, Bev Hammer....

  • Artifact Archive

    Oct 31, 2024

    The Pacific Spiny Lumpsucker, or Eumicrotremus Orbis, is a species of bony fish in the family Cyclopteridae. Lumpsuckers are tiny round fish, typically measuring from one to three inches long. They have wide mouths with large lips and protruding eyes. Their rounded shape and small fins make Spiny Lumpsuckers feeble, haphazard swimmers, but the Lumpsucker has a pelvic fin that acts like a large fringed suction cup, allowing the fish to attach itself to solid objects. A Lumpsuckers body is...

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