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  • Artist puts wilderness of Alaska to canvas

    Brian Varela|Dec 26, 2019

    Jaynee Fritzinger ventured outside of her comfort zone by capturing the natural beauty above water in her paintings that were on display in her art show "Alaskan Wilderness" on Friday at FireLight Gallery & Framing. Fritzinger said she has always been painting, but in 2017, she began to take her art more seriously. After a successful show in that same year that featured fish and underwater scenes, Fritzinger was inspired to paint more, but she wanted to appeal to a wider audience. She motivated...

  • SEAPA unsure whether to replace or repair faulty cable

    Brian Varela|Dec 26, 2019

    One of four submarine cables providing Petersburg with power from the Southeast Alaska Power Agency has been damaged and needs to either be repaired or replaced, but the SEAPA board is concerned with the success of repairing the cable and the price tag of a new one. Bob Lynn, Petersburg's voting member on the SEAPA board, said the board was updated on the condition of the submarine cable, which is located between Woronkofski and Vank islands, at their meeting earlier this month. According to...

  • PMC picks up phase one master planning discussion

    Brian Varela|Dec 26, 2019

    The Petersburg Medical Center Board of Directors continued their talk about the upcoming completion of phase one of the master plan to build a new hospital at their board meeting last Thursday, which began at a joint work session with borough assembly earlier this month. Several analyses have been conducted by NAC Architecture in order to prepare the master planning documents. Dan Jardine, project manager with NAC Architecture, said at the joint meeting that the master planning would be...

  • PMC has operating loss in November

    Brian Varela|Dec 26, 2019

    Petersburg Medical Center had an operating loss of $205,855 for the month of November, according to the hospital's financial report. PMC's net operating revenue came in above the budgeted $1,313,250, at $1,493,828. Year-to-date, PMC is above its net operating revenue by $928,060 with a budgeted $6,956,250 and a total of $7,884,310 for the first five months of the fiscal year. The year-to-date net operating revenue is just enough to make up for the year-to-date total operating expense of $7,873,6...

  • Assembly votes against OHVs on borough roads

    Brian Varela|Dec 19, 2019

    The borough assembly failed to pass an ordinance in its first reading that would allow off-highway vehicles on borough roads, citing a 2017 public vote against a similar ordinance and concerns of overriding the public's will. The ordinance would have allowed residents to operate their OHVs on borough owned and maintained streets under the conditions that the operator has a valid driver's license, the OHV is registered with the borough and the OHV is insured. Richard Burke spearheaded the effort...

  • Dec 19, 2019

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  • MDT performs game-themed dance recital

    Brian Varela|Dec 19, 2019

    With months of preparation under their belts, the 164 student Mitkof Dance Troupe took to the stage this weekend to perform "Game Night," a variety of dance routines centered around well-known board games and activities. The performance was split over four nights. Last Thursday, tots and kinders performed six dances, including Go Fish, Mouse Trap and Twister. On Friday and Saturday, first graders and up performed a combined total of 21 dances. Their performances interpreted such classic games,...

  • Assembly strikes down letter of dissatisfaction to Forest Service

    Brian Varela|Dec 19, 2019

    The borough assembly failed to pass a letter to the Secretary of Agriculture and the United States Forest Service at an assembly meeting Monday expressing discontent with the process of reviewing the Roadless Rule in the Tongass National Forest. The letter, which was drafted by Assembly Member Chelsea Tremblay, notes that when the Forest Service presented their six alternatives to the Roadless Rule at a public meeting in November, it seemed as if the decision to go with the alternative six,...

  • School board discusses cell phone policy

    Brian Varela|Dec 19, 2019

    With the increasing presence of cell phones in the district, the Petersburg School Board held a discussion on the district's cell phone policy at a school board meeting last week. At Rae C. Stedman Elementary School, cell phones are not allowed to be seen during school hours, and must be kept in students' backpacks. Principal Heather Conn said she hasn't seen any cell phones this year so far, though she has seen them in past years. When a student is caught with their cell phone out, they must dr...

  • Birders identify 58 species during bird count

    Brian Varela|Dec 19, 2019

    Eleven birders spent their Saturday identifying 58 species of birds and counting over 8,000 birds total for this year's Christmas Bird Count in Petersburg. Every year, thousands of volunteers from the United States, Canada and other countries in the Western Hemisphere count birds within a 24-hour period to document numbers and species of birds for the National Audubon Society's Christmas Bird Count, according to Brad Hunter, the organizer for Petersburg's bird count. The data from the bird count...

  • Hydro project under construction near Kake

    Brian Varela|Dec 19, 2019

    Inside Passage Electric Cooperative is building a hydro electric project that will utilize Gunnuk Creek and supply Kake with 55 percent of its annual energy usage. The Gunnuk Creek Hydro Electric Project has an installed capacity of 500 kW, according to Service Operations Manager Brandon Shaw. It's estimated to produce 1,600 MWhs annually, which is around 55 percent of Kake's energy usage. Over the course of 50 years, the hydro project will save approximately 6.2 million gallons of diesel fuel....

  • Dredging project estimated to cost $4.8 million

    Brian Varela|Dec 12, 2019

    The United States Army Corps of Engineers went over the status of the project to dredge South Boat Harbor, along with associated costs to be covered by the borough and the next steps in the project at a public meeting on Dec. 3. In 2017, the Petersburg Borough and the USACE entered into a feasibility cost share agreement wherein both entities agreed to split the costs of a feasibility study to determine a solution to the compromised egress in South Boat Harbor. The borough and the USACE equally...

  • PSD passes policy restricting sex offenders on campus

    Brian Varela|Dec 12, 2019

    The Petersburg School Board approved a board policy in its second and final reading regarding restrictions on sex offenders on campus. "We are not putting this policy into place because we are currently dealing with a situation," said School Board President Mara Lutomski. "There is no crisis going on within the school." Board Policy 3515.5 was on the agenda at the October school board meeting, but school board members present wanted to receive clarification on the policy and vote on it with a...

  • Deer, moose harvests explained at F&G, FS lecture

    Brian Varela|Dec 12, 2019

    Fish and Game Area Biologist Frank Robbins and Forest Service Regional Biologist Dan Eacker held a lecture on deer and moose harvests and deer density on Mitkof Island last Thursday. Robbins started off the lecture by comparing deer harvests in Unit 1B and Unit 3 from 2011 to 2018. In Unit 1B, the area east of Mitkof Island on the mainland, the average number of deer harvested was 100. In the past five years, the deer harvest in Unit 1B averaged 115. In Unit 3, which includes the Petersburg and...

  • Nate Hepp new station manager at Petersburg airline terminal

    Dec 12, 2019

    Nate Hepp, 30, is the new station manager at the Alaska Airline Petersburg terminal. Six years ago he started out as a ramp agent with Horizon Air in Portland and for the past four years has held supervisory positions in Portland, Los Angeles and Anchorage for Alaska Airlines. Hepp describes his job as being, "a go-to person for his customer service agents. I give them the tools they need to do their jobs." He will also be working to strengthen and maintain ongoing relationships with the...

  • Borough assembly names four to SEAPA board

    Brian Varela|Dec 12, 2019

    Assembly Member Bob Lynn and Robert Larson were appointed as voting members on the Southeast Alaska Power Agency Board by Mayor Mark Jensen at an assembly meeting last week, with Utility Director Karl Hagerman and Planning and Zoning Commissioner Tor Benson serving as alternate voting members. Each year, Petersburg and Wrangell appoint one voting member and one alternate member to serve on the SEAPA board. Ketchikan appoints two voting members and two alternates each year. However, there is one...

  • Master planning for new hospital nearly complete

    Brian Varela|Dec 12, 2019

    In a joint work session between the Petersburg Borough Assembly and Petersburg Medical Center Board of Directors last week, Dan Jardine, project manager with NAC Architecture, updated both entities on the status of the master plan and revealed the preferred layout of a new hospital. In their efforts to design a new hospital, NAC Architecture has been conducting tests to determine possible sites for a new building and what a new facility would feature. In January, NAC Architecture plans to...

  • Paintings, photos show beauty of Southeast

    Brian Varela|Dec 12, 2019

    Strong colors and erratic brush strokes could be seen in Joe Viechnicki's paintings on display at a joint art show with photographer Mark Kubo at FireLight Gallery & Framing on Friday. All of Viechnicki's paintings depicted landscapes around Southeast Alaska, such as the Stikine River, Duncan Canal and Level Island. Some of his paintings were completed on location, or at least started, while most were done back at his home with the use of photos taken of the landscapes. He named his art show...

  • Borough and Chris Allen dismissed from liability suit

    Ron Loesch|Dec 5, 2019

    Both the Petersburg Borough and former Parks and Recreation Department employee Chris Allen have been dropped as defendants in a wrongful death lawsuit brought by the Estate of Molly Parks, one of two women killed in a July 4, 2016 crash on South Nordic Drive. Allen was the driver of the parks and recreation van, which crashed after Allen suffered a seizure while driving with three other persons in the vehicle. Allen is serving a 7-year sentence after entering a guilty plea to a single...

  • Borough assembly votes against supporting, repealing Roadless Rule

    Brian Varela|Dec 5, 2019

    The borough assembly took a neutral position on the future of the Roadless Rule at Monday's assembly meeting when they voted against a resolution that supported keeping the Roadless Rule intact and a resolution repealing it. Resolution #2019-14 was in support of alternative one of the draft environmental impact statement released by the United States Forest Service regarding the future of the Roadless Rule. Alternative one, or the do nothing option, keeps the Roadless Rule in place. Resolution #...

  • Hoopie Davidson named this year's tree lighter

    Brian Varela|Dec 5, 2019

    People in Petersburg know her has their school bus driver or driver's education teacher, but on Friday evening Hoopie Davidson was this year's tree lighter during the annual Christmas tree lighting ceremony. Davidson was born in Petersburg, but moved to Squaw Harbor on Unga Island in third grade with her family to catch crab. The family then moved to Kodiak in time to experience the Good Friday earthquake of 1964, an earthquake with a magnitude of 9.2 that hit near Prince William Sound. Later...

  • Brew and Stew Festival: Best in Show

    Brian Varela|Dec 5, 2019

    Rachel Newport's Peruvian turkey soup and Bev Siercks' crabapple cordial were named best in show in this year's Brew and Stew Festival hosted by the Petersburg Chamber of Commerce and Petersburg Ragnarök Rollers on Friday. There were 28 submissions in this year's festival, up from the 21 submissions last year. Contestants entered homemade "brews" and "stews" in various categories and were judged by participants in the festival who went around sampling each submission. Though each category had...

  • Borough in talks to continue maintenance of Ernie Haugen area

    Brian Varela|Dec 5, 2019

    The borough is in the process of renewing an agreement with the state to receive $6,200 annually for the maintenance of the Ernie Haugen public use area, according to Public Works Director Chris Cotta at an assembly meeting on Monday. At an assembly meeting last month, the borough assembly approved letters to Sen. Bert Stedman and Rep. Jonathan Kreiss-Tomkins asking them to inquire into cooperative agreements between the borough and the Alaska Department of Natural Resources for the management...

  • French woman undertakes Northwest Passage

    Brian Varela|Dec 5, 2019

    Leila Gharbi recounted her journey from Newfoundland to Port Townsend, Washington through the Northwest Passage, while sharing pictures and stories to a captive audience at the Petersburg Public Library last Wednesday. Gharbi was working for a film archive in Paris, one of the most famous archives in the county, when she read the book, "Woman at Sea" by Cathrine Poulain. The novel tells the story of Lili, a French woman who leaves her country in search of adventure and ends up working on a...

  • Local Coast Guard Auxiliary faces disbandment

    Brian Varela|Dec 5, 2019

    Petersburg's Coast Guard Auxiliary Flotilla is down to zero members, and if at least five members don't joined by February, the flotilla could be dissolved. Division One Commander F. Stuart Robards and Ketchikan Flotilla Commander Renee Schofield held two meetings this week encouraging members of the public to join the local Coast Guard Auxiliary. From 2015-2018, Ketchikan's flotilla almost disbanded as members retired and remaining members were unable to fill their roles, according to...

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