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  • Assembly awards bid to crush asphalt waste to be used as gravel replacement

    Ben Muir|Sep 7, 2017

    The Petersburg Borough is one step closer to saving thousands of dollars on gravel road upkeep in residential areas, said Chris Cotta, the assistant director at Public Works. The Borough Assembly approved a bid award to Reid Brothers Construction in a meeting on Tuesday for nearly $43,000 for asphalt waste to be crushed and later used as a replacement for gravel, Cotta said. “The thought has always been that we could crush up the material and turn it into usable recycled asphalt product,” Cotta said in a recommendation letter to the Ass...

  • Approved resolution starts project to rid Petersburg of scrap metal waste

    Ben Muir|Sep 7, 2017

    The Borough Assembly on Tuesday unanimously approved a resolution supporting the Southeast Alaska Solid Waste Authority recommendation to participate in a regional scrap metal recycling system. The approval fast tracks a financial plan that will organize a barge to come to Petersburg and pick up any scrap metal waste the community wants to dispose of, said Karl Hagerman, the Public Works director. A five-year “master plan” agreement with Waste Management and SEASWA has formed in surrounding regions and Petersburg committed to it this week. The...

  • Scouller arrested on multiple theft charges

    Sep 7, 2017

    Stephen Scouller, 48, was arrested on charges of theft in the 2nd degree and theft in the 3rd degree on Aug. 30. Theft in the 3rd Degree places property value at $250 to $999. Theft in the 2nd Degree places property value at $1,000 to $24,999. In a probable cause statement filed in court, contractors Thomas Greenly and Joe Aliberti both reported to police that tools and equipment were stolen from homes they were working on at Arness Heights Drive and Woodrow Wilson Drive respectively. Police...

  • 3 indicted on big game hunt charges in Alaska national park

    Sep 7, 2017

    ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — A federal grand jury has indicted three men on charges connected to illegal hunting in an Alaska national park. The indictment announced Tuesday names 44-year-old Jeffrey Harris of Poulsbo (PAWLS-boh), Washington, 72-year-old Dale Lackner, of Haines, Alaska, and 47-year-old Casey Richardson of Huson (HEW-son), Montana. Online court documents do not list their attorneys. Federal prosecutors say the hunts occurred at a lodge in Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve. The indictment says Harris and Richardson, w...

  • Fishing guide forfeits boat after repeat violations

    Sep 7, 2017

    ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — The owner of a southeast Alaska fishing charter service has been ordered to stay out of boats in Alaska waters for one year after pleading guilty to repeat fishing violations. Alaska State Troopers say 75-year-old Stuart Merchant of Klawock pleaded guilty this week to three counts of violating halibut regulations and one count of falsifying sport fish charter logbooks. He was fined $13,000, with $8,000 suspended, plus $2,000 dollars for violating probation from a similar 2015 case. He will forfeit a 26-foot (8-meter) g...

  • Private documentary screening shows ailments of ALS and a conflict with wolves

    Ben Muir|Sep 7, 2017

    After years of filming, Jeff Mittelstadt was able to offer a private screening to about 140 people in Petersburg, the town which supported the making of his whirlwind documentary, "Staring Down Fate." Mittelstadt had an idea in 2011 to put together a series of short films on the red wolf conflict in North Carolina. He would make an interactive online documentary with graphics to illuminate the science and economics of the red wolf, while telling the stories of people on all sides of the issue....

  • Unsafe bridge on Tonka Road

    Sep 7, 2017

    Forest Service System Road 43501 on the Tonka road system is closed to motor vehicles at milepost 0.513 due to an unsafe bridge. The road will be reopened when the structure is replaced according to a USFS release dated Sept. 6. "Engineers doing routine maintenance checks discovered the log stringers are failing," said Petersburg District Ranger Dave Zimmerman. "The road currently has road closure signage and boulders placed across road." A star on the accompanying map shows the location of the...

  • Southeast Conference to focus on ferries, budget

    Dan Rudy|Sep 7, 2017

    WRANGELL — Later this month the region’s economic development organization will be meeting in Haines to discuss new trends, problems and opportunities it will face in the coming year. Representing many of the area’s municipalities, federally-recognized tribes, businesses, government agencies and organizations, Southeast Conference holds two major forums each year, in the spring and in the fall. Its autumn meeting is its biggest, in past years drawing hundreds to hear about and discuss concerns unique to the region, from transportation and u...

  • State of Alaska weighing options for conducting elections

    Sep 7, 2017

    JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) — The state of Alaska is exploring options for conducting elections after 2018, as it is faced with an aging voting system and financial pressures amid an ongoing state budget deficit. A bipartisan working group established by Lt. Gov. Byron Mallott is examining the issue. Josie Bahnke, director of the state Division of Elections, said one option that has gotten attention is a hybrid system would include allowing for early, in-person voting and voting by mail. But she said discussions are preliminary and more research m...

  • Lance Mearig Named ADOT&PF Southcoast Region Director

    Sep 7, 2017

    (JUNEAU, Alaska) – Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities (ADOT&PF) Commissioner Marc Luiken has named Lance Mearig as the Southcoast Region Director. "Lance is precisely the leader we need in Southcoast Region," said Commissioner Luiken. "His professional passion is Alaska's coastal transportation infrastructure and he has long standing relationships in the communities he will be serving." Mearig has over 35 years of experience in transportation. He has most recently s...

  • Rain Forest Run on Labor Day

    Ben Muir|Sep 7, 2017

    A 13-mile race on Labor Day is often not the first activity that comes to mind on a day that celebrates hard work, yet more than a dozen Petersburg folks laced-up to run or walk a half-marathon on Monday morning. About 15 people participated in the 2017 Rain Forest Run with donations to the event going to the Petersburg Cross Country team. Joe Viechnicki organized the race before running in it, despite a dogged knee and slim expectations. "I'm a little sore," Viechnicki said the next day. "I...

  • Wrangell café raising funds for Hurrican Harvey relief

    Dan Rudy|Sep 7, 2017

    WRANGELL - A Wrangell café is raising funds for disaster relief, following the hurricane and deadly floods affecting Texas last month. Zak's Cafe owners James George and Katherine George-Byrd plan to send all earnings from their Tuesday and Wednesday sales this week to a response fund benefitting Hurricane Harvey victims. On August 24 the storm system became the first category 4 hurricane to make landfall in the United States in over a decade, and the biggest in Texas since Hurricane Carla in...

  • Fourth special session may be called for revenues

    Dan Rudy|Sep 7, 2017

    WRANGELL — Last week, Alaska’s lawmakers received word from the governor’s office another session may be called for October. On August 31 emails were sent to members of the Alaska Legislature, letting them know a special session – the fourth of the year – will likely be called to discuss revenue. During the second special session in July an operating budget was passed, with a capital budget approved the following month in another session. The spending bills came with cuts and an overhaul of the state’s oil tax credit system, but without new...

  • Correction

    Sep 7, 2017

    A story in last week’s paper said a nursing program was the first of its kind in Petersburg. There was actually a similar program over a decade ago coordinated through Weber State University, but it was a one-time opportunity. Due to a production error, that was not reflected in the article. The site coordinator, Nichole Mattingly, also noted that Rosa Mergenthal is another instructor currently leading the program in Petersburg....

  • Wrangell strike costs SEAPA with delay

    Dan Rudy|Sep 7, 2017

    Delays to line maintenance prompted by a public employee strike in Wrangell this June will cost a regional power utility an extra $103,000. Southeast Alaska Power Agency (SEAPA) chief executive Trey Acteson presented board members with a change order for the project, which would among other maintenance tasks replace marker balls along the transmission lines connecting Tyee Lake to the grid. Work had been set to start the latter half of June, during which time Wrangell would have had to run on its diesel backups. But an unrelated strike by two...

  • Sonja Ewing and Carson Paul to wed

    Sep 7, 2017

    Lynn Ewing and Liv Husvik-Perschon of Petersburg and Robin and Gary Paul of Juneau, announce the wedding and reception of Sonja Ewing and Carson Paul. The couple are residents of Petersburg with Ewing working at Petersburg Medical Center and Paul working at Rocky's Marine. The wedding will take place at the Petersburg Lutheran Church on Saturday, September 9, with a reception to follow at the Sons of Norway Hall....

  • Petersburg man, 24, drowns near resort on Mitkof Highway

    Ben Muir|Sep 7, 2017

    The body of 24-year-old Jase Payne was found late Monday near a dock at Rocky Point Resort in Petersburg, Alaska ending what had been a four-hour search by family members, state troopers and local police. Alaska Wildlife Troopers were notified at 6:52 p.m. on Monday that Payne was missing, last seen on the dock of Rocky Point Resort about 10 miles south of town. “Family members had been conducting hasty searches of the nearby Wrangell Narrows with no results,” wrote a press release. “[A] Petersburg Alaska Wildlife Trooper and Petersburg Polic... Full story

  • PMC & physicians face wrongful death claim

    Ron Loesch Publisher|Aug 31, 2017

    The Petersburg Medical Center and three of its physicians are being sued over a wrongful death claim being brought by Mary Katasse Miller. Superior Court Judge William Carey set the trial date for November 20, 2018 at a scheduling conference on August 21. Also named in the suit are PMC physicians Courtney Hess, M.D., Kris Sargeant, M.D. and Jennifer Hyer, M.D. Hess has been employed at PMC since July 2014, Sargeant since Aug. 2012 and Hyer since Aug. 2011. Miller represents the Estate of Malcom Miller and herself. Her late husband died on June...

  • NOAA frees tangled whale near Tracy Arm

    Kevin Gullufsen Juneau Empire|Aug 31, 2017

    A humpback whale near Tracy Arm became entangled in a cruise vessel’s anchor line for almost 12 hours Sunday morning, but was freed by a team of marine mammal entanglement experts Sunday afternoon. The humpback struck the Uncruise Adventures cruise vessel Wilderness Explorer at about 2:15 a.m. Sunday, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association said in a Monday press release. A responding team of marine mammal entanglement specialists believe they freed the whale by cutting an anchor chain at about 2 p.m. Sunday. “We are grateful to the cre...

  • Local rain: 2006, 2011, 2014, 2015 & 2017 are in top 10 wettest summers

    Ben Muir|Aug 31, 2017

    The rain in Petersburg came in consistent droves this summer, and temperatures were cooler than normal, leaving climatologists fixed on explaining sporadic weather patterns in the past and surely in the future. Petersburg experienced its seventh wettest summer since reports began at the National Weather Service in 1924 — yet there are two days left, said Rick Fritsch, the climate program leader with the department in Juneau. “You had an extraordinarily wet summer,” Fritsch said. “It’d be better if I reported how many days you didn’t ha...

  • Gillnet snags two bucks

    Aug 31, 2017

    A Rambler Street resident caught two bucks that became snared in a gillnet in their yard on Thursday August 24. According to the Petersburg Police Department an officer responded to the incident at 5:48 in the morning and was able to cut the gillnet from the antlers of the two deer. Gardeners often use gillnet to keep wildlife out of their gardens and flower beds....

  • Yesterday's News

    Aug 31, 2017

    August 31, 1917 – The Petersburg public schools open for the new term next Tuesday morning. Miss Burke, of Seattle to set to fill the vacancy left by Miss Murphy, of Montana. She is expected to arrive on the City of Seattle, together with Miss Kirchiem, from Tacoma. Miss Edna Miller, who has been attending the State Normal School at Bellingham for the summer term, has arrived back home on the Al-Ki. Miss Taylor, who has been here since early summer is the fourth member of the teaching corps. Arrangements as to grades to be taught by each w...

  • Assembly meets with hospital board to discuss relationship

    Ben Muir|Aug 31, 2017

    The hospital in Petersburg is an independent operation that makes its own decisions, despite being owned by the Borough. It makes finance decisions on its own with no proviso that the Borough oversee those moves. But one condition in the Borough Charter says the Petersburg Medical Center Board and the Assembly should meet annually. And they did last week — the first joint meeting since March 2015, confirmed by Borough Clerk Debbie Thompson. “There hasn’t been any dialogue between the Borough and the hospital,” said George Doyle, a hospita...

  • Correction:

    Aug 31, 2017

    There will be no school for Elementary School students on September 1. Labor Day will be observed on September 4 with no school district wide....

  • Shellfish testing clears Pats Creek and Shoemaker

    Dan Rudy|Aug 31, 2017

    WRANGELL — The Wrangell Tribe’s environmental program office announced last week that most species of shellfish have been cleared for consumption at a pair of local beaches. On August 24 results from the week’s sampling had indicated levels of saxitoxin – the root cause of paralytic shellfish poisoning – evident in mussels at Pats Creek and Shoemaker Bay beaches had dropped below federal safety guidelines. Conducting the site testing, the Indian Environmental General Assistance Program had previously issued a warning for Pats in January a...

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