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  • Assembly pushes online sales tax ordinance to its second reading

    Brian Varela|Apr 4, 2019

    The borough assembly approved ordinance #2019-02 in its first reading on Monday that would update the borough's sales tax code to include language regarding internet sales of goods and services. Although the current tax code doesn't mention internet sales tax, it doesn't forbid it, according to finance director Judy Tow. The ordinance would just broaden the language in the sales tax code to internet vendors not located in Petersburg or Alaska. According to Tow, until the state has a unified...

  • Crystal Lake hydro in need of $7.3 million refurbishment

    Brian Varela|Apr 4, 2019

    Don Jarrett of McMillen Jacobs Associates gave the borough assembly a presentation on the status of the Blind Slough Hydroelectric project and recommended a refurbishment of the powerhouse and penstock. McMillen Jacobs Associates performed a condition assessment of the project and came up with a list of recommendations for the work that needed to be done in order to keep the project operational through the remaining term of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission license, which is up in 2034....

  • Assembly approves letter to Dunleavy requesting roadshow stop in Petersburg

    Brian Varela|Apr 4, 2019

    The borough assembly approved an amended letter to Gov. Mike Dunleavy on Monday requesting that he travel to Southeast Alaska to speak on his 2020 fiscal year proposed budget and give an open-forum style meeting without involvement from Americans for Prosperity. On March 18, Dunleavy announced a statewide road show to discuss his FY2020 budget proposal. The locations included Kenai, Anchorage, Nome, Fairbanks and Mat-Su, with dates ranging from March 25 through 29. The road tour was sponsored...

  • WMC to receive new administrator as Robert Rang steps down

    Caleb Vierkant|Apr 4, 2019

    WRANGELL - Robert Rang came on as the Wrangell Medical Center's administrator in October of 2015. The hospital was only the latest step in a three-decade career. Rang said he started his career as a CNA, and he kept on slowly rising up in the business. He was working in Kodiak when he first heard about this job being available in Wrangell, he said. "The opportunity opened up, it was something I was very interested in. Small town life is what my wife and I enjoy, along with all the other...

  • Flight company ends search for Alaska plane crash victims

    Apr 4, 2019

    ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — The owners of an air ambulance that crashed in Alaska have ended a private search for the three employees on board. Officials with Utah-based Guardian Flight say the search ended Wednesday after covering 7 square miles (18 square kilometers) of ocean floor and traversing more than 700 linear miles (1,127 kilometers) by ship. Company spokesman Jim Gregory says searchers will continue to look along the shoreline. Searchers earlier found most of the plane wreckage, including the cockpit voice recorder, over a large d...

  • Coast Guard rescues stranded boaters from Alaska river

    Apr 4, 2019

    HAINES, Alaska (AP) — A U.S. Coast Guard helicopter crew rescued a group of boaters from a sandbar in an Alaska river early Sunday, according to authorities. The helicopter responded to a distress call near the southeast Alaska town of Haines and rescued the group of seven boaters and a dog from the Chilkat River shortly before 1 a.m., the Anchorage Daily News reported Sunday. The group was flown to Haines for medical checks, but no one was injured, police said. The boaters were identified as 30-year-old Gary Hinkle, 29-year-old Sierra H...

  • Women Pioneers of Alaska helping the elderly, preserving history

    Caleb Vierkant|Apr 4, 2019

    WRANGELL - The Pioneers of Alaska is one of the older social organizations in the state. According to the organization's website, the first group of pioneers, or "Igloos," was founded in Nome in 1907. The purpose of the Pioneers of Alaska is twofold, to preserve community history and to serve as a social outlet for members. At first it was a men-only club, but women were allowed in around 1912, according to the Pioneer website. From the first Igloo in Nome, the group spread across the state....

  • Tariffs force seafood industry to look beyond China

    Apr 4, 2019

    KODIAK, Alaska (AP) —Chinese tariffs are forcing Alaska’s seafood industry to look for markets beyond the Asian giant, according to an industry marketing organization. The Alaska Seafood Marketing Institute is exploring how to expand the state’s seafood brand in response to a 25 percent tariff on Pacific Northwest seafood imposed by China in summer 2018, the Kodiak Daily Mirror reported Wednesday. Alaska’s seafood sales are off by more than 20 percent so far this year and could take a big hit in China, said Jeremy Woodrow, the institu...

  • Ketchikan author discusses new fantasy novel

    Apr 4, 2019

    KETCHIKAN, Alaska (AP) — Ketchikan author Patrice Motschenbacher-Hammer has recently released her new fantasy novel, “The Weavings of Akaria,” the first in her planned series: “The Veils of Wisdom.” Motschenbacher-Hammer sat down at a local coffee shop Wednesday with her husband, Bob Hammer, to talk about the journey of publishing her first novel. “It just evolved,” she said, of completing the novel. “I like fantasy, so I wanted to write something about a fantasy type. I found that creating different worlds is wonderful.” Creating a fantas...

  • 2 Alaska high schools plan to merge their football programs

    Apr 4, 2019

    FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP) — Two Alaska high schools hope to end their difficulties fielding football teams by merging their programs, according to school officials. Monroe Catholic High School in Fairbanks and Tri-Valley School in Healy have signed an agreement to establish a joint football team, the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner reported Sunday. A teacher and a community volunteer will serve as coaches in Healy and then at least twice per week the squad will join Monroe players and coaches in Fairbanks 112 miles (about 180 kilometers) north, o...

  • ADF&G Field Dressing class

    Apr 4, 2019

    The first-ever ADF&G Small Game Hunting and Field Dressing class will be held in Petersburg on Tues., April 9 from 5:30-8:30 pm in the life science classroom at Petersburg High School. Participants will be able to field dress actual birds and learn about bird anatomy, what meat is best to preserve and how to care for it in the field. To register, go online to http://alaskansafield.adfg.alaska.gov. Click on the “Petersburg” tab. There is a fee. For information, contact Abby McAllister, Phone: (907) 465-4292, abby.mcallister@a...

  • 2019 SE Alaska Regional Sport Fishing Regulations

    Apr 4, 2019

    Juneau - The Alaska Department of Fish and Game announced the 2019 sport fishing regulations for king salmon in Southeast Alaska and Yakutat. These regulations will be effective 12:01 a.m. Tuesday, April 2, 2019 through 11:59 p.m. Friday, May 1, 2020. The regulations are: • Alaskan Resident o The resident bag and possession limit is one king salmon, 28 inches or greater in length. • Nonresident o The nonresident bag and possession limit is one king salmon, 28 inches or greater in length; o Fro...

  • Harbormaster: Petro 49, Inc. land most feasible location for new harbor maintenance shop

    Brian Varela|Mar 28, 2019

    Harbormaster Glo Wollen presented a list of possible sites for a new maintenance shop to the Harbor and Port Advisory Board on Friday that showed Petro 49, Inc.'s warehouse, that the fuel company wants to trade to the borough, as the best site. Nine properties were presented on the list that showed advantages and disadvantages of each location. Estimated costs for some of the properties were over $1 million. One possible location was at Scow Bay, but it only had one advantage, the property is...

  • Approximately 500 parking tickets issued by harbor staff

    Brian Varela|Mar 28, 2019

    About 500 parking tickets were issued by the Harbor Department between May and September 2018, which is consistent with 2017 and 2016, but only 375 tickets have been paid, according to Harbormaster Glo Wollen Vehicle owners tend to pay off their parking tickets before reaching their sixth ticket which is when a wheel clamp, or boot, is placed on the offending vehicle. In the South Boat Harbor, where most of the tickets were given, there is a seven day parking period. After the seventh day, a $15...

  • PMC begins first steps of creating negative pressure room

    Brian Varela|Mar 28, 2019

    The Petersburg Medical Center Board of Directors approved a request for proposals to Jensen Yorba Lott, Inc. for the design and administrative oversight on the renovation of a portion of the hospital. To become compliant with standards that regulate the handling of hazardous drugs, PMC will be remodeling the part of the hospital where the drugs for chemotherapy are prepared. Currently, the drugs are prepared in a negative pressure hood. The completed project will have a negative pressure hood,...

  • Elementary school to replace obsolete fire alarm system

    Brian Varela|Mar 28, 2019

    The Petersburg School Board approved $39,996.28 from the capital fund at their monthly meeting last week to replace Rae C. Stedman Elementary School's fire alarm system. The current panel was installed around 1990, according to director of facilities and maintenance Dan Tate. Every year the panel passes inspection, but about two years ago, Tate was warned that parts for the panel may soon become unavailable. Last year, parts for the fire alarm system were no longer available. "It's pretty...

  • Custodial staff implements new disinfectant spray in school district

    Brian Varela|Mar 28, 2019

    To provide a cleaner environment to students, teachers and staff free of germs and bacteria, the Petersburg School District has begun using a disinfectant spray that wraps 360 degrees around an object. Known as the Protexus, the cordless, gun-shaped device sprays magnetically charged droplets that allow the disinfecting spray to wrap around objects and get to hard to reach places. The custodial staff uses the Protexus daily to sanitize classroom furniture, bathroom fixtures, drinking fountains...

  • Police report

    Mar 28, 2019

    March 20 — Petersburg Search and Rescue was activated to South Mitkof Island to locate a stranded individual. The individual was located by friends shortly after the activation and was in good condition. March 21 — An individual was reported missing at a location on Mitkof Highway, but was located just after the call was placed to authorities. A dangerous driver was reported at a location on N. 1st St. Ivan Gil, 24, was arrested on charges of driving under the influence. Authorities responded to a report of an individual attempting to ent...

  • Noise ordinance approved at Wrangell assembly meeting

    Caleb Vierkant|Mar 28, 2019

    WRANGELL — The Wrangell Borough Assembly discussed a proposed noise ordinance once again during their meeting onTuesday. The ordinance has been the source of some controversy around town, some seeing it as the result of two feuding neighbors, or that the regulations proposed by the ordinance are unrealistic. When the ordinance was brought up for discussion in the last meeting, on March 12, there was a very large public turnout to speak their minds on the topic. During that meeting, the assembly proposed various amendments to the ordinance. P...

  • New class of US destroyer visits Ketchikan

    Mar 28, 2019

    KETCHIKAN, Alaska (AP) — One of the U.S. Navy's newest class of warships has docked at an Alaska port for a rare visit. The USS Zumwalt docked in Ketchikan for a weekend stay beginning Saturday, the Juneau Empire reported . The 610-footlong guided missile destroyer launched in October 2013 and based in San Diego was scheduled to be open for public tours Sunday in the southern Alaska city, officials said. Steve Corporon, Ketchikan's port and harbors director, said bigger fenders were needed to make sure the ship would fit without damaging the ve...

  • Amphibians of the Stikine area

    Caleb Vierkant|Mar 28, 2019

    WRANGELL - Alaska is not home to many reptiles, according to Joshua Ream, cultural anthropologist with the Alaska Herpetological Society. Alaska is home to some marine turtles, as well as garter snakes, but not much else. On the other hand, he said, the state is home to a variety of amphibians. From 2010 to 2018, Ream has researched the kinds of amphibians that can be found in Southeast Alaska, particularly around the Stikine River. There has not been much research into Alaskan amphibians, he...

  • Beginning March 22:

    Ron Loesch Publisher|Mar 21, 2019

    On March 13, Petersburg Attorney Fred Triem was ordered to provide full accounting of Hanson Class funds being held in his trust account, or face a sanction of $50 per calendar day until compliance is achieved, according to an order from Superior Court Judge Daniel Schally. The sanction begins on March 22. Triem has been ordered to provide the accounting under two orders from Superior Court Judge Menendez in May and June of 2018. Schally wrote, “Triem knew of and clearly understood Judge Menendez’s orders — the orders are brief, simple, direc...

  • Assembly requests recommendations on changes to new development code

    Brian Varela|Mar 21, 2019

    The borough assembly requested that the planning commission look at the development code, which has already been passed by the assembly, listen to comments from the public and return to the assembly with any recommendations on changes to the code or zoning map. “Obviously there’s a lot of people that feel strongly about this,” said assembly member Brandi Marohl, who requested the action item be placed on the agenda. “I think that it was somewhat misleading as to what the purpose was and so I think that a lot of people weren't maybe paying...

  • Ordinance to designate assembly seats struck down

    Brian Varela|Mar 21, 2019

    The borough assembly failed to pass an ordinance that would have designated borough assembly seats in its third reading on Monday. Ordinance #2019-01 was amended at the previous assembly to, if passed, be put on the municipal election ballot in October to allow voters to make the final decision to change the borough assembly election process. The ordinance would have required borough election ballots to no longer allow voters to choose which candidates they wanted to fill the open assembly seats, but instead, the candidates would choose a...

  • Disturbing the peace ordinance fails to move forward

    Brian Varela|Mar 21, 2019

    The borough assembly shot down the idea of creating a disturbing the peace ordinance at their assembly meeting on Monday. Assembly member Taylor Norheim requested the assembly entertain the idea of creating a disturbing the peace ordinance after a Petersburg resident asked him if the assembly could create such an ordinance because she has a neighbor who makes a considerable amount of noise at night. “She had an issue with apparently one of her neighbors who is a drug addict or something like that and does weird stuff in the middle of the night...

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