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  • Correction:

    Jul 27, 2017

    Due to a reporting error, Mayor Cindi Lagoudakis was omitted from the list of Assembly members who attended the meeting last week. She was there to lead the meeting....

  • Borough accepting candidacy forms for 2017 election

    Ben Muir|Jul 27, 2017

    Election season is descending upon Petersburg and there are 23 open positions between city boards and the Borough Assembly that will appear on the October 3 ballot. The first day to file for candidacy in the October 3 election was Tuesday and all forms must be submitted to the Borough Clerk before August 22 at 5:00 p.m. According to Borough Clerk Debra Thompson, any person who wants to have his or her name placed on the ballot as a candidate must meet the qualifications for office outlined below: The Assembly will have three open positions to...

  • Legislature to convene for capital budget session today

    Dan Rudy|Jul 27, 2017

    In a joint news release on Monday, House Speaker Bryce Edgmon (D-Dillingham) and Senate President Pete Kelly (R-Fairbanks) announced that the Alaska Legislature will call itself into another session in Juneau today at 11 a.m. The special session – the 30th Legislature’s third called for 2017 – follows extensive wrangling over the state’s fiscal deficit. A compromise operating budget was approved late last month and signed by Gov. Bill Walker on June 30. The $4.9 billion budget for the new fiscal year, which started July 1, came with a $2.5 bill...

  • New postmaster is one of the strongest men in Alaska

    Ben Muir|Jul 27, 2017

    One of the strongest men in Alaska recently took over as postmaster at the Petersburg Post office. Mark Eppihimer started work on Monday and has lived in Petersburg for about a week. He moved from the outskirts of Anchorage with his wife and two daughters, Hilda and Heidi. "This is my first day on the job, and they are just kicking butt," Eppihimer said on Monday. "We have got an excellent crew here," Eppihimer is also a power lifter who was named Alaska strongest man in 2012 and 2014, along...

  • State prosecutors allege Allen refused treatment for known a seizure disorder

    Ben Muir|Jul 27, 2017

    The Alaska Office of Special Prosecutions issued a press release on Tuesday addressing the murder and manslaughter charges against 24-year-old William Christopher Allen, the driver of a vehicle that landed upside down after running off a Petersburg road on July 4, 2016, killing two and injuring one. The state alleges that Allen was driving a Borough-owned van moments before the crash, despite warnings from doctors not to drive because of a seizure disorder that was “well-known” and “well-documented,” according to Assistant Attorney General...

  • The World bypasses Petersburg

    Dan Rudy|Jul 27, 2017

    WRANGELL – Wrapping up a visit to Wrangell over the weekend, cruise ship The World was on its way to Petersburg late Monday when a medical emergency took precedence. Wrangell Fire Chief Tim Buness received a call from the local emergency dispatcher at around 8:15 p.m., relaying that the vessel required assistance. He contacted the United States Coast Guard about the situation. At 644 feet, The World is the largest private residential ship on earth. During its several-day stay in Wrangell it r...

  • ADOT&PF seeks review of 2017-18 winter ferry schedule

    Jul 27, 2017

    (Juneau, AK) – The Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities proposed Alaska Marine Highway System (AMHS) schedule for fall, winter, and spring 2017-2018 is now available for public review. With the timing of the budget, the public comment period is slightly shorter than those in recent years, to allow the public sufficient lead time to make reservations for sailings that begin on October 1st. The draft schedule is based on established community service needs and events. It is available online with accompanying documents at dot....

  • New Wrangell manager learning ins and outs, union raise extended to non-union workers

    Dan Rudy|Jul 27, 2017

    WRANGELL – Wrangell’s new city manager sat in on her first meeting of the City and Borough Assembly Tuesday evening. Starting work last week, Lisa Von Bargen gave her first report to council members on the state of city departments. Offered the job back in April, the former Valdez economic director reported she has been getting to know the departments under her since her arrival. She has been getting together with staff at City Hall, the Harbor Department and Public Works this past week to visit sites. She further plans to meet with Parks...

  • Orca whale repeatedly rams fishing boat, Alaska man says

    Jul 27, 2017

    SITKA, Alaska (AP) – An Alaska man said his boat was attacked over the weekend by an orca during a salmon fishing excursion with his 14-year-old son and two other people. Victor Littlefield of Sitka said the killer whale repeatedly rammed the boat, yanked its anchor line and slapped the boat’s bow with its tail. The 33-foot (10-meter) aluminum boat lurched to one side during the attack, Littlefield said in an interview. The event happened while it was anchored Sunday near Little Biorka Island in southeastern Alaska. Littlefield had seen the...

  • AFDF Competition seeks entries for seafood expo

    Dan Rudy|Jul 27, 2017

    WRANGELL – A state seafood industry think tank is seeking value-added products for competitive entry. Alaska Fisheries Development Foundation will be holding its call for product for the 2018 Alaska Symphony of Seafood on October 6. The annual competition searches for new products for Alaskan seafood, hoping to encourage innovation in the multibillion-dollar industry. AFDF executive director Julie Decker explained that when the competition first started a quarter century ago it focused exclusively on salmon, in three different categories. In t...

  • Duncan Canal mountaintop radio site clean-up and disposal work continues

    Ben Muir|Jul 27, 2017

    A former radio site that used to help detect suspected Russian missile attacks in the Cold War is now being excavated to remove contaminated soil, which comes after several other locations in the site were already cleaned and treated, said Stephen Krause, the project manager. In 2014 and 2015, cleanup efforts were made at six different locations at the same site near Duncan Canal, except for one, which is called "DA001," that started mid-July and might continue into September, Krause said. The...

  • Five initiatives on the October ballot so far

    Ben Muir|Jul 20, 2017

    The ballot in October has five initiatives for Petersburg residents to vote on so far, including an amendment to the Charter, a tax break for business owners, off-road vehicles on public roads, a ban of fluoride and the development of the Scow Bay fishing yard. The change to the Petersburg Charter would allow the City of Kupreanof its own dock within the Petersburg Borough. All the docks on the island are owned by the state of Alaska, currently. But Kupreanof has passed ordinances that would allow it to maintain a dock. Now the Charter must be...

  • Coast Guard cutter visits

    Ben Muir|Jul 20, 2017

    One of the newest United States Coast Guard fast response cutters, the John McCormick, made a stop in Petersburg on Tuesday as part of its southeast Alaska tour of the communities it serves. "We definitely didn't want to miss you guys," Capt. Michael Moyseowicz said about Petersburg. "Being the new ship, we wanted to stop in all the communities that we serve." The cutter is 154 feet in length, it holds 16,000 gallons of fuel and can remain at 12 knots speed for 13 consecutive days. There are...

  • Road improvement work under way this week

    Jul 20, 2017

    On Tuesday, the Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities (DOT) began chip seal road resurfacing on some Petersburg roads to fix cracks and provide a new road surface. Crews are expected to work on Mitkof Highway from the ferry terminal in town to Papke’s Landing Rd., Haugen Dr. from the airport to 8th St, and the length of Scow Bay Loop. Rd. Work should be completed by the end of July. Machinery will be on the road, painted center line markings will not be present, and speed and other road conditions will be changing. Pay c...

  • Mark select troll fishery to close

    Jul 20, 2017

    The mark select troll fishery (MSF) will close to the retention of Chinook salmon at 11:59 p.m., Friday, July 21. The MSF target harvest of 1,500 Chinook is expected to be reached by this time. All Chinook salmon harvested in the MSF must be offloaded prior to resuming trolling. All processors and trollers are required to submit fish tickets to the department within seven days of landing. A catcher-processor (FAS) that retains coho salmon onboard after the MSF closure must submit a fish ticket to the department within seven days after...

  • Correction:

    Jul 20, 2017

    Due to a reporting error, Eric Castro’s name was omitted from the list of Assembly persons named in the recall application that is being reviewed by the City Attorney. Power and Light employee Gary Morgan submitted the application to the Deputy City Clerk last Tuesday....

  • Voters to weigh-in on Scow Bay development

    Ben Muir|Jul 20, 2017

    Qualified voters in Petersburg will be asked to weigh-in on development of the Scow Bay fishing yard, and decide whether to authorize the Borough to put $500,000 down on the project, a fraction of the total cost but a concise statement that would turn the discussed expansion into a reality. Four members voted in favor and one against a decision to pass the spending question to voters, which asks if the city should use $500,000 of the Economic Fund --- a job-creation and economic development account --- to help build a small vessel haul out and...

  • Public housing office closed, will be managed from Juneau

    Ben Muir|Jul 20, 2017

    The most sought-after low-income housing program in the nation is closing its office in Petersburg and will hence be managed from Juneau, said Cathy Stone, the director of public housing with the Alaska Housing Finance Corporation. The director of the Petersburg Housing Choice Voucher Program, Bev Lopez, is retiring after 27 years. Instead of replacing her, housing officials selected a plan to manage the program from Juneau. “We can spend our money on staff, or we can spend our money on housing people,” said Amy Hiley, the manager of pol...

  • Assembly approves Petersburg Municipal Power & Light remodel

    Ben Muir|Jul 20, 2017

    The Borough Assembly voted on Monday to approve a nearly $540,000 bid to remodel the Petersburg Power & Light building, which comes after members appeared ambivalent about the deal in past meetings, said Borough Manager Steve Giesbrecht. The lowest bid to remodel the Power & Light facility was from Rainforest Contracting, Inc. for $538,600. The Borough passed the due date to accept or deny the bid after the Assembly postponed the decision in June, and the following meeting was canceled, leaving Giesbrecht worried the firm would back out. But...

  • Wrangell assembly and union reach 3-year agreement

    Dan Rudy|Jul 20, 2017

    WRANGELL – Wrangell's City and Borough Assembly and the city's public employees union finally reached a settlement over a collective bargaining agreement last week, bringing to a close three years of negotiations. On July 13 Assembly members voted to implement a proposed amendment to the contract terms it had imposed the previous month, which had taken effect at the start of the new fiscal year on July 1. The amendment was the product of negotiations between International Brotherhood of E...

  • Newly found fungus could threaten Southeast Alaska trees

    Jul 20, 2017

    JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) – A fungus that damages trees is making its way through the state of Alaska. The fungus, spruce bud blight, has left damage in Southcentral and Interior Alaska, and now has been discovered for the first time in the southeast part of the state. The infection was discovered in Southeast Alaska in late June, the first reported sighting in the region, CoastAlaska News reported Thursday. The blight infects Sitka spruce, one of the most common trees in Southeast Alaska’s rainforest. “Right now, I’m considering it potenti...

  • William Christopher Allen indicted in July 4th 2016 crash

    Jul 20, 2017

    PETERSBURG — On July 20, the Juneau Grand Jury issued a four-count indictment against William Christopher Allen. The charges stem from a vehicle crash on July 4, 2016, that claimed the lives of Molly Parks and Marie Giesbrecht, and injured Catherine Cardenas, all of Petersburg, according to a news release from the Petersburg Police Department. Charges on the indictment include: (2) Counts of Murder in the 2nd Degree, (2) Counts of Manslaughter, and (1) Count of Assault in the First Degree. An arrest warrant was issued by the Juneau Court w... Full story

  • State prosecutors allege Allen refused treatment for a seizure disorder

    Ben Muir|Jul 20, 2017

    The Alaska Office of Special Prosecutions issued a press release on Tuesday addressing the murder and manslaughter charges against 24-year-old William Christopher Allen, the driver of a vehicle that landed upside down after running off a Petersburg road on July 4, 2016, killing two and injuring one. The state alleges that Allen was driving a Borough-owned van moments before the crash, despite warnings from doctors to not because of a seizure disorder that was “well-known” and “well-documented,” according to Assistant Attorney General Andrew Pet... Full story

  • Recall application sought for three Assembly members

    Ben Muir|Jul 13, 2017

    The Petersburg Assembly is being accused of violating the Alaska Open Meetings Act in a recall application that is sponsored by 12 community members, including city employees and two former mayors. The petition seeks to oust three members from office, including Nancy Strand, Jeigh Stanton Gregor and Kurt Wohlhueter. Member Jeff Meucci is immune to recall because of his recent appointment, according to Alaska Statute 29.26.240. And member Bob Lynn's term is over in October. Mayor Cindy...

  • Unimak and Vesta property owners can't reach majority approval to pave

    Ben Muir|Jul 13, 2017

    A paving project was struck down after failing to reach a majority vote. Petersburg residents with property on Unimak and Vesta Streets couldn’t reach a majority vote to approve a project which they would have paid for to pave their gravel roads, said Chris Cotta, the assistant Public Works director. Thirteen owners on Unimak were in favor, while one opposed --- there had to be 16 for it to pass, a two-thirds majority, Cotta said. Vesta property owners sent seven approvals and five disapprovals. Cotta said it appeared Unimak property owners w...

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