Articles from the July 24, 2025 edition


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  • Marsh and Newman block duplex development on Haugen Drive

    Orin Pierson, Pilot writer|Jul 24, 2025

    An application by Dave Ohmer to purchase two borough-owned lots and develop them into rental duplexes came before the Petersburg Borough Assembly on Monday evening, after being unanimously recommended for approval by the Planning Commission earlier this month. The application needed four votes to be approved. Assembly Member Rob Schwartz and Mayor Mark Jensen were absent from the meeting. Assembly Members Bob Lynn, Jeigh Stanton Gregor and James Valentine voted in favor of the land sale. Vice...

  • LeConte Bay on a summer day

    Jul 24, 2025

    The view on Friday morning of LeConte Bay seen from a floatplane flying over LeConte Glacier....

  • Subscribers can click here to view the full PDF of this week's edition

    Jul 24, 2025

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  • Petersburg Borough to seek state grant for project in South Harbor

    Olivia Rose, KFSK Radio|Jul 24, 2025

    The Petersburg Borough will seek state funding for a potential float replacement project in the town’s biggest harbor. Some of “C” Float’s 50-foot fingers are several decades old. “These are circa 1970 original Middle Harbor finger floats that were repurposed in 1985 when the South Harbor was built,” Harbormaster Glorianne Wollen said. “So they saved a little bit of money, and now we get to pay for it.” At a meeting on July 21, Petersburg’s assembly agreed the borough should apply for the $617,000 state grant to help fund the float replacement...

  • Petersburg Medical Center sets a new fundraising record in 11th annual Pedal/Paddle Battle

    Aiden Luhr, Pilot writer|Jul 24, 2025

    The Petersburg Medical Center celebrated their 11th annual Pedal/Paddle Battle, raising a new high $24,201 with $15,000 from corporate sponsors and $8,501 by participants, to go towards scholarships and education. In previous years, the event has raised between $17,000-20,000. "[The corporate sponsors] led to why we got so much money this year. Participants raised over $8,000 just from family and friends, so that's significant too," Community Wellness and Public Relations Manager Julie Walker sa...

  • Yesterday's News: News from 25-50-75-100 years ago

    Jul 24, 2025

    July 24, 1925 – Fishing banks now visited by vessels of Canada and the United States give promise of little increased production. The depletion of these banks is recognized by the two governments in their halibut treaty of May 31, 1924, providing for an annual closed season on the Pacific coast banks from November 15 to February 15. Halibut fishing is a joint enterprise between the vessel owner and his crew of fishermen. Certain items of cost are paid jointly while others are paid by one or the other according to agreement. The Pacific coast m...

  • Editorial: Perceived favoritism and conflict of interest marred assembly vote

    Orin Pierson|Jul 24, 2025

    Vice Mayor Donna Marsh violated the public's trust during Monday’s assembly meeting. When presiding over the assembly’s decision whether or not to sell two borough lots for development into duplexes for affordable rentals, Marsh did not disclose that the neighbors fervently opposing the land sale are her parents-in-law. Instead of disclosing the potential conflict of interest and recusing herself from the decision, she voted to block the land sale. I recognize the difficult decision the assembly members grappled with on Monday: Should the bor...

  • Police report

    Jul 24, 2025

    July 16 - Officer responded to a report of a bear attempting to access a secured garbage bin on Unimak Street. The area was patrolled, but the bear wasn’t located. A bear was reported having accessed garbage on Skylark Way. An officer responded while the complainant cleaned up the mess in case the bear returned. A subpoena was served at 14 S Nordic Dr. Property was reported stolen. It was later found by the owner. An alarm activation frequency that was broadcasting static was reported to the Water and Waste Department. An officer responded t...

  • Contract awarded for third generator to boost Tyee Lake hydro output

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel writer|Jul 24, 2025

    The regional authority that distributes hydroelectric power to Wrangell, Petersburg and Ketchikan has approved a $12 million contract with a Washington state company to build a third turbine for Tyee Lake to meet growing demand for electricity. The total budget for the project, which includes concrete work at the power station, installation and other expenses, comes to an estimated $24 million. The Southeast Alaska Power Agency hopes construction work at the site can start next year, with the new turbine generating electricity by mid-2027,...

  • Kayaker paddles solo through Inside Passage

    Orin Pierson, Pilot writer|Jul 24, 2025

    For the past two months, Maditha Kröger, a project manager from Germany has been paddling solo through the Inside Passage from Washington State toward Skagway aboard a 17-foot sea kayak named Prudence. Along the way Kröger stopped in Petersburg for a few days rest and shared a glimpse of her adventure with the Pilot before paddling on. Two years ago, after kayaking with friends in British Columbia, Kröger discovered the book "Inside" by Susan Marie Conrad, a memoir about a solo Inside Pa...

  • Totem ceremonies bring hundreds together in Wrangell to celebrate and remember

    Jonathon Dawe, Wrangell Sentinel writer|Jul 24, 2025

    WRANGELL - One side pulls while the other side is told to hold tension in the line. Men grunt and struggle as they push against the large pole while men and women pull on the lines, all working together to maintain the balance needed to raise the large Kadashan pole at Totem Park on Saturday. Sandy Churchill believes the scene was the perfect metaphor to encapsulate the gathering of hundreds in Wrangell. "It was about everything being in harmony," she reflected. "If one side was not in harmony...

  • Search finds no evidence of invasive crab species on Mitkof Island, but organizers say 'that could definitely change'

    Hannah Weaver, KFSK Radio|Jul 24, 2025

    A group of volunteers searched the south end of Mitkof Island for European green crab on July 18, looking for any sign that the highly invasive species had reached central Southeast Alaska after other sightings southward. After a couple hours of scouring a rocky beach near Woodpecker Cove for crab carapaces (molted shells), there was a close call with a live green crab that the group captured. Sunny Rice, an agent of marine conservation group Alaska Sea Grant, hurried over to inspect it. After...

  • Feds say slower Stikine sockeye subsistence season so far, despite strong run forecast

    Hannah Weaver, KFSK Radio|Jul 24, 2025

    The state forecasted a very healthy run of sockeye salmon in the Stikine River this season, which opened to subsistence fishing June 21. They projected around 176,000 sockeye, which is about 45% more than the average of 121,000 fish. Although state biologists track the run, the U.S. Forest Service manages the subsistence fishery in the river near Wrangell Island. Ashley Bolwerk, a subsistence biologist for the federal agency, said the above-average forecast gave the green light to open up the...

  • Governor vetoes another bill, this one aimed at helping commercial fishing

    James Brooks, Alaska Beacon|Jul 24, 2025

    Gov. Mike Dunleavy has canceled a broadly supported bill proposed by a legislative task force and intended to help commercial fishers in Alaska. The governor issued his veto of Senate Bill 156 on Wednesday, marking his seventh veto of a policy bill this year. Legislators will have an opportunity to call for an override vote on most of those vetoes when they meet Aug. 2 for a special legislative session. SB 156, which was inspired by policies drafted by a joint House-Senate task force intended to evaluate the state’s commercial fishing industry,... Full story

  • Dunbar returning to cast key vote on possible budget veto override

    James Brooks, Alaska Beacon|Jul 24, 2025

    Anchorage Democratic Sen. Forrest Dunbar will be able to attend the Aug. 2 special session of the Alaska Legislature, he said late Tuesday in a post on Facebook. Dunbar, a member of the National Guard, is deployed to Poland on active-duty service but received a federal waiver that will allow him to return to Alaska for legislative work. Dunbar’s attendance is critical for lawmakers who hope to override Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s decision to veto millions of dollars in public school funding from this year’s state operating budget. Despite his atten... Full story

  • Jul 24, 2025

    Notices published in the Petersburg Pilot and all of Alaska's newspapers...  Website

  • Jul 24, 2025

    Petersburg Pilot Classifieds...  PDF