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  • Monofill project heads present plan to Wrangell populace

    Dan Rudy|Aug 24, 2017

    WRANGELL - Project heads for a contaminated site reclamation met with townspeople Monday evening to address concerns with a proposed monofill. The monofill – a landfill meant for only one substance, in this case treated, lead-contaminated soil – would be the second phase of the Byford junkyard cleanup, an operation which was undertaken last year by Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation, Environmental Protection Agency and various contractors. In use as a private landfill and junkyard s...

  • Southeast fisheries drawing to a close for summer

    Dan Rudy|Aug 24, 2017

    WRANGELL — One of Wrangell’s two seafood processors has drawn down production early for the season due to lower than expected returns this summer. Updated twice daily, on Tuesday the Alaska Department of Fish and Game’s Blue Sheet reported just over 143 million salmon have been harvested statewide, though numbers were not available for the Bristol Bay, Kuskokwim and Aleutian Islands districts. Seventy-four percent of these are pink salmon, with over 106 million already reported in. Coming off of last year’s season – declared a “disaster...

  • Retail marijuana owner applying for grower's license, current grower nearing harvest

    Ben Muir|Aug 24, 2017

    A Petersburg woman who owns a retail marijuana shop appears to be in the early stages of expanding her operation into a growing facility as well. Susan J. Burrell, owner of The 420, a cannabis shop located behind The Fisherman's Net Cafe, has officially applied for three marijuana licenses, according to the Alcohol & Marijuana Control Office. The applications focus on growing marijuana near or above her shops on North Nordic Drive. Burrell is applying for a Standard Marijuana Cultivation...

  • Wrangell resident participates in war memorial proceedings

    Dan Rudy|Aug 24, 2017

    WRANGELL - A Wrangellite had a unique opportunity to take part in some Alaskan history this year, while revisiting her own family history in the process. Johanna Joseph and her sister, Ann Conatser a Walla Walla resident, were invited by the Ounalashka Corporation to attend an event in Unalaska commemorating the 75th anniversary of the Battle of Dutch Harbor. The town had been the birthplace of their mother, Theadosia Stepitan Nauska, known as Fanny to friends and family. The battle itself was...

  • Wrangell water situation back to normal

    Dan Rudy|Aug 24, 2017

    WRANGELL – Public Works changed its summertime water management conservation level back to normal last week, ending a month of minor restrictions. Up until last Friday, users of Wrangell’s water utility have been advised to use less water starting in mid-July, when the city entered the first of a three-stage response status. Better water management has been a key issue with the city this year, with an emergency response plan formally adopted in April. Last summer demand outpaced the water treatment plant’s ability to supply, prompting the b...

  • Women's health clinic

    Aug 24, 2017

    Women, 29 years old and under, with limited or no access to health care can get exams and reproductive health services on a sliding scale at the Petersburg Public Health Center’s Women’s Health Clinic August 28-30. The clinic will offer exams and reproductive health services, as well as STD testing. All services will be provided by a nurse practitioner with Public Health Nursing, the Alaska Division of Public Health. Appointments are required. No one will be refused service if unable to pay. Screenings for chlamydia and gonorrhea, as well as...

  • State Representative Kreiss-Tomkins

    Aug 24, 2017

    State representative Jonathan Kreiss-Tomkins will be here Fri. August 25, holding public office hours from 9-10 am at the Salty Pantry and 10-11 am at Java Hus. No appointment necessary, just stop on by. If you have any questions or can’t make it to office hours, email rep.jonathan.kreiss-tomkins@akleg.gov or call the Representative’s office at 747-4665....

  • Wolf headlines rainbow art show with an ocean theme

    Ben Muir|Aug 24, 2017

    Grace Wolf unveiled paintings full of colorful starfish, sea urchins, jellyfish and more at Miele Gallery & Framing last Friday evening. "I always thought I couldn't be a real artist," Wolf said. "And, well, now I am." Her depictions of sea creatures and kayaks include the same seven colors in every painting, she said. It often takes Wolf 18 hours of painting before she can ensure it is finished and bright enough. "I paint in rainbows, I know," she said. "But everything in here goes...

  • Cindi Lagoudakis seeks mayor's post

    Ben Muir|Aug 17, 2017

    Cindi Lagoudakis, the interim mayor of Petersburg, has decided to run for the permanent seat in October, retracing strong indications that she wouldn't. "A number of people had asked me to reconsider," Lagoudakis said. "And after giving it some hard thought, in the end I decided to run." Debbie Thompson, the Borough clerk, confirmed last week that Lagoudakis filed for candidacy. Before becoming interim mayor, Lagoudakis spent time on the Assembly, where her experience was rewarding, she said....

  • William Christopher Allen released on bond

    Ben Muir|Aug 17, 2017

    A Petersburg man was released from custody on $50,000 bond last week while facing 6 charges of murder, manslaughter and assault. William Christopher Allen is on house arrest and awaiting a murder trial that is scheduled for November 13, but will likely be pushed to next year. He paid $25,000 in cash bond last week and will have to pay another $25,000 if he violates the conditions of release. Allen is charged with two second-degree murder counts, two manslaughter counts, one count of assault and one count of unsworn falsification in the second d...

  • Power & Light gives update on city projects

    Ben Muir|Aug 17, 2017

    Karl Hagerman, the Petersburg Power & Light interim supervisor, recently outlined about a dozen city projects in a 30-minute update to the Assembly. "The Utility has a very large reserve," Hagerman said. "So the Assembly wanted to know what projects could be accomplished with those savings." This also comes after the Assembly requested an overview of those projects before moving forward with finding the permanent replacement to head the department. Now that Hagerman gave that report, he said it...

  • Assembly approves upgrade, lease deal, & two ordinances

    Ben Muir|Aug 17, 2017

    The Borough Assembly in its meeting last week approved a bid award to upgrade radios, renewed a lease with a fuel company and adopted two city ordinances. The Petersburg Volunteer Fire Department will be upgraded with new radio operations for ambulances, fire trucks and other vehicles, according to a letter of recommendation from Sgt. Randal Holmgrain. ProComm Alaska, a Motorola certified company, will be installing the radios for nearly $45,000. The Assembly approved a new five-year lease with Petro 49, the fuel company land near South Nordic...

  • Candidacy deadline approaching, 8 applications submitted so far

    Ben Muir|Aug 17, 2017

    The deadline to submit applications for candidacy in the October election is next week, and there has been an unusually low amount of submissions so far, said Debra Thompson, the Borough clerk. “It’s going to get better,” Thompson said. “I promise it will.” There are 23 elected positions this year and only eight people have filed for candidacy, Thompson said, with the deadline approaching on Tuesday, August 22. “Yeah, that’s no good,” Thompson said. “I sure hope something changes. We have way too many open seats.” The mayoral seat will b...

  • The 'Great American Eclipse' is approaching

    Ben Muir|Aug 17, 2017

    The country is preparing for an astronomical moment that hasn’t happened in 99 years, and southeast Alaska will witness about 60 percent of it. For the first time since 1918, a total solar eclipse will cut through the United States on Mon., August 21. A 70-mile wide totality line will move through the country, starting at Oregon and ending in South Carolina. People within that line will see the moon pass between the sun and earth completely, causing a brief period of daytime darkness, said Rick Braun, a land surveyor and Petersburg resident w...

  • Petersburg police report makes news in Ketchikan

    Aug 17, 2017

    Two separate police reports from the Petersburg Pilot made news in the Ketchikan Daily News Weekend Edition column, Southeast Log on Aug. 12-13. The log is a compilation of news taken from newspapers published in Southeast Alaska and in Canada. Under the heading, “Uh, gee, thanks for calling!” the columnist noted, “Police received a report of suspicious activity, but the location was not disclosed.” Another headlined: “Seriously?” stated, “Police conducted traffic stops on the Drive Down Dock.” Traffic stops were made at several locatio...

  • Petersburg Borough Assembly & Hospital Board Work Session

    Aug 17, 2017

    The Petersburg Borough Assembly and Hospital Board will hold a joint work session to discuss the Borough/Hospital relationship, the Hospital’s ideas for a potential new building, and financial health and planning at 10:00 a.m. on Wednesday, August 23 in the Assembly Chambers of the Municipal Building. The work session is open to the public and the public is invited to attend, but no public testimony will be taken....

  • Golf outing makes $3,200 for cancer care

    Ben Muir|Aug 17, 2017

    WRANGELL – Fifty women from Petersburg and Wrangell played in a golf outing on Saturday to raise money for cancer patients in southeast Alaska at the 2017 Rally for Cancer Care. The outing, sponsored by the Wrangell Medical Center Foundation, generated more than $3,200 to help pay for travel costs that cancer patients have. The Muskeg Meadows Golf Course hosted 34 players from Petersburg and 16 from Wrangell. Others came just to donate, participate in the silent auction and eat breakfast and l...

  • Newspaper files for bankruptcy protection, gets new owners

    Aug 17, 2017

    ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — The Alaska Dispatch News has announced it is filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and is in the process of transitioning to new ownership. KTVA reports the newspaper’s potential buyers might pay as much as $1 million for the paper. Those buyers included four siblings — Ryan Binkley, Wade Binkley, James Binkley and Kai Binkley Sims — as well as Alaska Media LLC, publisher of the Arctic Sounder, The Bristol Bay Times and the Dutch Harbor Fisherman. A statement from Dispatch News publisher Alice Rogoff called the decisio...

  • Alaska mayor questions tax cap for local government

    Aug 17, 2017

    FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP) — An Alaska mayor is having second thoughts about a voter-imposed ceiling on how much money the borough government can collect from year to year. Fairbanks North Star Borough Mayor Karl Kassel said budgeting for the future based on a mathematical formula is flawed. No formula can take into account all of the unforeseen circumstances that impact local government, he said. Kassel’s comments come as the tax cap marks 30 years in effect, the Fairbanks Daily News reported. Signatures are being collected to put the tax-cap que...

  • Passenger recalls emergency plane landing near Alaska island

    Aug 17, 2017

    JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) — Luck Dunbar was napping during a routine flight when he heard a loud noise, woke up and realized the commuter plane was dropping. Dunbar was one of five people aboard the plane Monday morning when it was heading from Skagway to Juneau, Haines radio station KHNS reported. An engine failure prompted pilot Joshua Poirier to make an emergency landing in the ocean. “(Poirier) pointed over by Coghlan Island and he said, ‘I think we’re going to lay her down over here,”‘ Dunbar said. As the plane dropped, Dunbar said he was thin...

  • Nationwide teacher shortage amplifies Alaska schools' woes

    Aug 17, 2017

    JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) — A teacher shortage across the nation has added to Alaska’s ongoing problem of educators fleeing the state, leaving school districts scrambling for teachers with just a few weeks until classes start, school officials said. Numbers from August 4 show 155 teaching positions and 90 special education positions are open across the state, according to Alaska Teacher Placement. About half of Alaska’s school districts are still looking for teachers to hire for this school year, KTOO-FM reported. Lower Kuskokwim School Distr...

  • New NOAA monitoring possible in 2018

    Aug 10, 2017

    Beginning in 2018, Alaska fishermen, some of whom may not have the space on their vessel or life raft capacity for a NOAA Fisheries observer, will have the option to use an electronic monitoring (EM) system instead. NOAA Fisheries is integrating EM into the North Pacific Observer Program for the 2018 fishing year. An EM system uses cameras and associated sensors to passively record and monitor fishing activities-work traditionally accomplished by human observers placed onboard commercial...

  • School Board member takes aim at open Assembly seat

    Ben Muir|Aug 10, 2017

    An appointed member of the Petersburg School Board has decided against running for an open position in the October election and instead hopes to be a candidate for one of the open seats on the Borough Assembly. Brandi Thynes Marohl was appointed to the School Board last year. She was expected to run for one of the two open seats in the October election. That is until she announced publicly during a School Board meeting Tuesday that she submitted candidacy paperwork for a seat on the Assembly ins...

  • Construction of Alaska police training facility almost done

    Aug 10, 2017

    BIRCHWOOD, Alaska (AP) – Construction at an Alaska police training facility is nearing completion and project managers have said it should open this fall. The Southcentral Law Enforcement Tactical Training Center in Birchwood will have four shooting ranges for local, state and federal law enforcement agencies. Construction is expected to cost $4.6 million, the land was purchased for $1.95 million, and the project design costs were approximately $487,000, said Alan Czajkowski, director of maintenance and operations for the Anchorage Public W...

  • Kings closed Coho open for trollers

    Aug 10, 2017

    Chinook Salmon A total of 66,000 non-Alaska hatchery origin (treaty) Chinook salmon were harvested by trollers during the first summer opening and mark select fishery, leaving an estimated 31,000 treaty Chinook salmon remaining from the annual troll allocation. However, with many of the Chinook salmon stocks from Alaska, Canada, and Washington that contribute to Southeast Alaska/Yakutat commercial troll fishery exhibiting poor production and not meeting escapement goals or objectives in 2017, conservation measures are necessary to reduce...

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