Articles from the December 13, 2018 edition


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  • Allen sentenced before a packed courtroom

    Ron Loesch Publisher|Dec 13, 2018

    William Christopher Allen was sentenced to 16 years in jail with nine years suspended on Monday before Superior Court Judge Trevor Stephens. Stephens said of the hearing, “It’s a grim day for everybody.” William Christopher Allen’s attorney and the State Prosecutor reached a negotiated agreement in July where the defendant will face a sentence of 16 years in jail with nine suspended, leaving seven years to serve. Allen was facing multiple felony counts following a vehicle crash on July 4, 2016 that killed Molly Parks and Marie Giesbre...

  • Mayor proclaims a half day holiday for borough employees

    Brian Varela|Dec 13, 2018

    Mayor Mark Jensen proclaimed borough employees will receive a half day holiday on Christmas Eve. “It’s been a tradition to give the employees a half day off on Christmas Eve,” said Jensen at an assembly meeting on Nov. 19 when he made the proclamation. During the first half of the day, borough employees continue work like every other day. It costs the borough approximately $10,000 to continue paying borough employees through the second half of the day that they take off. Although there is no borough wide Christmas party, individual depar...

  • Yesterday's News

    Dec 13, 2018

    No papers were published this week in 1918. December 17, 1943 The fame of the Petersburg cook book is really getting around. Recently Dr. R.W. Carr of Ketchikan ordered a number of the books and sent a copy to the editor of the New York Herald-Tribune book department. The editor, May Lamberton Becker, reviewed the cook book in the Tribune book column, and sent a clipping of her review to Dr. Carr, who mailed it to the P.T.A. Says the Tribune review : Dr. R.W.C., Ketchikan, Alaska, sends the Guide one of the best regional cookery books I have se...

  • Art show showcases local women artists

    Brian Varela|Dec 13, 2018

    The theme for the women's invitational art show at the Clausen Memorial Museum on Friday was "Shift", which offers the 13 women artists the opportunity to interpret the theme in their own way. "I think it's just a nice way to support women artists and highlight what they're doing in their individual practice and how they're growing," said Cindi Lagoudakis, one of the event's organizers. Though the event has been hosted irregularly for over ten years, Lagoudakis said she wants to host the event...

  • To the Editor

    Dec 13, 2018
    1

    Problem at playground To the Editor: We have a problem on the Stedman Elementary playground. People are not picking up their dog's poop. I have a suggestion. Reuse your bread bags, cereal bags and plastic grocery bags. Tie them on your leash, then scoop your dog's poop. Emi Anderson, 3rd Grade Stedman Elementary Student Council Slow down and consider impacts To the Editor: I was born in Petersburg in 1947, completed grade and high school, married and raised my family, invested in some...

  • Volunteer fire fighters search for gas leak downtown

    Dec 13, 2018

    The Petersburg Fire Department checked every propane tank in the downtown area for a possible gas leak on Friday following reports of individuals smelling gas. While some said it smelled like propane, others said it smelled like oil burning, said borough manager Stephen Giesbrecht. Checking every known propane tank in the downtown area, the fire department was unable to locate the source of the smell. “[The volunteers] hit downtown really hard and went into every nock and cranny looking for potential leaks and just didn’t find anything,” said...

  • Correction:

    Dec 13, 2018

    In a story covering the Brew and Stew Festival in the Nov. 29 issue of the Petersburg Pilot, the four dishes in the fish and game category were described as two having moose meat, one having black bear meat and one having mountain goat meat. The two dishes with moose meat had venison, not moose meat....

  • Officer safety week

    Dec 13, 2018

  • Police report

    Dec 13, 2018

    December 5 — Donald Pleasants, 51, was issued a citation for speeding in a school zone. A verbal warning was given to Wayne Collins for illegally camping at the 400 block of Hungerford Hill Rd. An intoxicated individual was removed from a residence on Ira St. for trespassing. December 6 — Wayne Collins was given a notice to move his vehicle by Dec. 7, or it would be considered abandoned and impounded. A power outage was reported on Kings Row Rd. Extra patrols were requested on Mitkof Highway. December 7 — A deer was stuck in the muskeg at a...

  • Four wrestlers place first at regional tournament

    Brian Varela|Dec 13, 2018

    The Petersburg High School girls wrestling team came in third place and the boys team came in fifth place for the Division II schools at the regional tournament in Juneau this past weekend, with four wrestlers placing first in their weight classes. "We wrestled really well," said Head Coach Daniel Van Swearingen. "The kids wrestled tough." Jolyn Toyomura placed first in the 119 weight class scoring the team 20 points. She had been injured most of the season and was cleared last week to go to...

  • Alaska Fish Factor: Salmon Sisters add wild salmon Skin Serum as first wellness product to popular line of ocean-themed goods

    Laine Welch|Dec 13, 2018

    An Alaskan sisterhood of sorts is advancing a line of tundra botanicals mixed with the sea to create potent anti-aging skin care products bearing the best of both. A wild salmon Skin Serum is the first wellness product the Salmon Sisters have added to their popular line that features original designs on clothing and other ocean-themed goods. "We love how smooth and light it feels. There are beautiful notes of crowberries, which we picked throughout our childhood on the tundra behind our...

  • Ketchikan city officials mull cruise passenger fee ruling

    Dec 13, 2018

    KETCHIKAN, Alaska (AP) — Ketchikan city officials are mulling the potential impacts of a federal court decision on the use of cruise ship passenger fees. U.S. District Court Judge H. Russel Holland last week ruled that while Juneau can keep collecting the fees, their use must constitute a service to the ship. The decision restricting use of the fees came in a lawsuit brought against Juneau by the cruise industry. Other communities, such as Ketchikan, have their own passenger fees. There is also a state head tax. Juneau officials have not a...

  • Warmer-than-normal water mass emerges in Gulf of Alaska

    Dec 13, 2018

    JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) — Another mass of warmer than normal water is slowly re-emerging in the Gulf of Alaska, scientists said. The new “blob” could affect weather and fisheries in southeastern Alaska, but scientists said it doesn’t appear as strong as the first one in 2013, KTOO Public Media in Juneau reported Monday. Washington State Climatologist Nick Bond coined the term “blob” to refer to water mass in the Pacific Northwest. “Without winds to draw heat out of the ocean and to mix up colder water from below, the near-surface waters, again...

  • Sons of Norway hosts 44th annual pickled contest

    Brian Varela|Dec 13, 2018

    Last night, the Sons of Norway hosted their 44th annual pickled herring and smoked seafood contest. About 175 guests turned out to sample the 24 dishes submitted into the pickled herring, pickled seafood, smoked salmon, smoked seafood and people's choice appetizer categories. Contestents dropped off their dishes at 5:30 P.M. and judging began at 6:30 P.M. The doors opened to the public at 7 P.M. Sig Mathisen won the smoked seafood category with his smoked eel. Kurt Kvernvik won the pickled...

  • Mikof Island Dance Troupe performs The Nutcracker to full house

    Brian Varela|Dec 13, 2018

    The Mitkof Island Dance Troupe performed The Nutcracker last Friday, Saturday and Sunday to a full house at the middle school auditorium. There were a total of 180 dancers in this year's performance, up from December 2016 when The Nutcracker was last performed. This performance included new music and new parts that haven't been included in any performance of The Nutcracker anywhere in the world. "We're really starting to make it our own program," said Kathleen Boggs, a teacher and a...

  • Fresh snack

    Dec 13, 2018

  • Obituary: Sherri Lynn (Green) Eide, 68

    Dec 13, 2018

    After courageously battling CREST Syndrome, an autoimmune disease, for most of her life. Sherri Lynn (Green) Eide, 68 went to be with Jesus on November 9, 2018 in Salem, Oregon. She was born June 10, 1950 in Sanger, California, to Jacob (Bud) Green and Pauline (Parker) Green. She later moved to Newport, Oregon with her family, graduated from Newport High School in 1968, and then attended Linn Benton Community College. As she had an adventurous spirit, Sherri lived and traveled up and down the... Full story

  • Purse seine task force shows below average run for pink salmon harvest

    Brian Varela|Dec 13, 2018

    At a Southeast Alaska Purse Seine Task Force meeting on Nov. 28, members from the Alaska Department of Fish and Game gave a detailed run down of the pink salmon seine harvest from the 2018 season showing a below average year for the Petersburg-Wrangell, Sitka and Ketchikan areas. The Petersburg-Wrangell purse seine areas include Districts 5, 6, 7 and 9. The 2018 harvest shows pink salmon coming in below the average annual harvest consistently throughout the four Districts. Between Kuiu Island...

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