Articles from the October 16, 2025 edition


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  • Jaime Cabral: Alaska's Assistant Principal of the Year

    Orin Pierson|Oct 16, 2025

    Jaime Cabral, Petersburg High School and Mitkof Middle School Assistant Principal and Activities Director, was named the 2026 Assistant Principal of the Year by the Alaska Association of Secondary School Principals (AASSP) at a ceremony in Anchorage last weekend. The recognition came while Cabral was already in Anchorage, in the middle of coaching his volleyball team at a tournament. Cabral's wife Heidi picked him up between games, drove him across town to accept the award, and rushed him back...

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

    Oct 16, 2025

    ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Subscribers can use the link below to access this week's PDF Edition, or use the E-Editions button on the homepage for all of our current and archived PDFs. ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________...

  • Alaska Airlines pledges to continue flights as government shutdown jeopardizes Essential Air Service payments

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|Oct 16, 2025

    Though the federal government shutdown jeopardizes the program that subsidizes scheduled air service to more than 170 cities nationwide - including Wrangell and Petersburg - Alaska Airlines has said it will continue uninterrupted service to its contract communities in the state. The U.S. Department of Transportation, which manages the almost 50-year-old Essential Air Service program, had notified participating carriers that funding would run out on Oct. 12. But the department later sent out a...

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

    Oct 16, 2025

    October 16, 1925 – There is just one reason for this paper being started – to sell news – news that is news, constructive news. The South Alaska Publishing Company, with papers in Ketchikan, Petersburg and Sitka, is organized to conduct an independent press – a press that will, without bias of fear or favor, no matter what its editorial opinion may be, print both sides of a story. Free speech has made the American nation a great country. Those intolerant of free speech and honest discussion of public issues, though they may call themsel...

  • Election results certified, electees look ahead

    Olivia Rose, KFSK Radio|Oct 16, 2025

    Petersburg's municipal election received the highest number of ballots this year in over a decade. A total of 1,280 ballots were cast and canvassed, including one outstanding ballot. It was the highest turnout since Petersburg voted to become a borough in December 2012, which saw just over a hundred more ballots than this year. There were a couple of contested races for local office this year, namely for mayor and for Petersburg's Borough Assembly. It was Bob Martin's first time running for an a...

  • To the Editor

    Oct 16, 2025

    No Kings is a Love-America day To the Editor: This Saturday, Alaska Day, millions across this nation are gathering for peaceful protests against the Trump administration’s authoritarian takeover of our government. Last Friday, Speaker Mike Johnson described this coming Saturday’s No Kings rally as the “Hate-America” rally that would draw the “antifa people.” They are so worried that We the People will speak truth and show power through peace. Antifa is short for Anti-Fascism. It is not an organization or terrorist group. Antifa is about refus...

  • Guest Editorial

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel publisher|Oct 16, 2025

    The federal government shutdown, driven by politics and personalities and posturing, is starting to cause a real mess. Particularly for travelers, where a shortage of air traffic controllers has led to delays and cancellations at several airports around the country. Maybe the bickering blame game will subside long enough this week to restore whatever order is salvageable in Washington, D.C., but it depends on congressional Democrats and Republicans and President Donald Trump putting the public ahead of their own elections grandstanding. Until t...

  • Both plane occupants OK after rocky emergency landing on Kupreanof Island

    Olivia Rose, KFSK Radio|Oct 16, 2025

    The engine of a small plane failed on Oct. 7 near Petersburg with two occupants on board. The pilot emergency landed on a remote road on northern Kupreanof Island. But the plane - a Cessna 172 wheeled general aircraft, with small tires - hit a rock when landing and flipped over in the muskeg; both occupants were able to get out and walk away uninjured. That's according to two people from Petersburg's volunteer fire department, the pilot from Petersburg who picked them up from Kupreanof, and...

  • Police report

    Oct 16, 2025

    October 08 – The Petersburg Police Department (PPD) received a report of a loud horn being sounded and determined it was the ferry. An officer conducted a welfare check on North 1st street. An officer responding to a report of possible smoke on Fram Street determined it was a building’s heating system exhaust. An officer provided lockout assistance on Kiseno Street. PPD received a report of suspicious activity on South Nordic Drive. PPD received a report of bike theft on North Nordic Drive. October 09 – An officer conducted a welfare check...

  • Harbor Department's new steel shed coming right along

    Orin Pierson|Oct 16, 2025

    Construction is underway on an open-sided equipment storage shed adjacent to the Petersburg harbormaster's office, a project designed to protect the harbor's maintenance equipment from winter weather. The steel structure, being built on an existing timber dock at the intersection of Excel Street and Harbor Way, features a 10-foot interior clearance that slopes to 13 feet. The roof-only design, with open sides, will shelter harbor equipment including a telehandler, four-wheelers for snowplowing,...

  • Commemorating Indigenous Peoples Day

    Oct 16, 2025

  • TalisWoman returns: Women's art show opens Saturday at Petersburg library

    Orin Pierson|Oct 16, 2025

    This Saturday, the Petersburg Public Library is hosting the opening reception for TalisWoman, this year’s iteration of Petersburg’s long-running Women’s Art Show. While the library regularly features art displays and maintains a permanent art collection, hosting a curated exhibition complete with an opening reception is a rare occasion. The last time the library hosted a curated art show was the touring exhibition “Decolonizing Alaska” back in 2018, which spanned the library and the Clausen M...

  • PHS Drama students bring Dracula to stage and to Scotland

    Orin Pierson, Pilot writer|Oct 16, 2025

    "I wanted to do something different, challenge myself as a director and challenge the students," says Elsa Wintersteen, director of Petersburg High School's drama program. "Doing something scary... that can actually evoke feelings of discomfort in people is a really hard thing to do." For this fall's production of Dracula, that challenge includes scaring the hometown audience, then, next summer, taking their show on the road to the largest theater festival in the world - Edinburgh Scotland's Fri...

  • Songwriter Abby Posner to perform in Petersburg, lead workshop

    Orin Pierson|Oct 16, 2025

    Los Angeles multi-instrumentalist/singer-songwriter Abby Posner will perform in Petersburg on Saturday, Oct. 18 and will lead a morning workshop on music theory and songwriting. Posner, who won the 28th Annual USA Songwriting Contest in 2023, is making a special stop in Petersburg during a weeklong Alaska tour centered around Parlor in the Round, an Anchorage-based songwriter showcase. Though Petersburg is not hosting the full Parlor event this year, the Petersburg Arts Council made special...

  • One dead, dozens rescued and roughly 1,000 displaced in western Alaska communities hit by ex-typhoon

    Corinne Smith, Alaska Beacon|Oct 16, 2025

    Search and rescue efforts continue in the Kuskokwim River delta in the aftermath of devastating storm surge and hurricane-force winds brought by the remnants of Typhoon Halong. The storm tore homes from their foundations and sent them floating away. One woman was found dead in Kwigillingok on Monday, according to Alaska State Troopers. The search for two more people unaccounted for in that community will continue, by boat and air, the state troopers said on a Facebook post. Search and rescue is... Full story

  • Alaska education officials walk back proposal to restrict local governments' funding for schools

    Corinne Smith, Alaska Beacon|Oct 16, 2025

    Officials with the Alaska Department of Education and Early Development have walked back a proposal to limit local governments’ funding for public schools, instead asking the State Board of Education to take no action on the item last week. The State Board of Education was set to vote on a controversial measure that many school officials and education advocates say would bar local municipalities from providing much-needed funding and support services to local schools. Instead the board voted unanimously on Thursday, at a DEED official’s req... Full story

  • PHS Varsity Volleyball starts season strong at the Lumen Christi Spiketacular Tournament

    Aiden Luhr|Oct 16, 2025

    The Petersburg High School Varsity Volleyball team played their first games of the season this past weekend to a solid start. At this point last year, the team was 1-8. Heading into their first conference games of the season, the team brings a 6-4 record to the court. “We played such an array of different teams that had different tendencies and played different styles, so that was huge for us,” head coach Jaime Cabral said. “We’re not extremely huge height wise, but athletically is where we can compete and our speed and ball control.” These gam...

  • Young PHS wrestling squad grapples with the unknown

    Aiden Luhr|Oct 16, 2025

    For several seasons, the Petersburg High School Wrestling team has had reliable veterans such as Markus Anderson, Angus Olsen and Kaden Duke, who all graduated last year. The program is now entering a new era of Vikings wrestling with a wave of young talent and the coaching staff focused less on results and winning and more on unlocking the potential of this squad. “This team that we have is young. We have one senior [Tyson Reid] and he hasn’t wrestled since middle school. We have two juniors and everybody else is sophomores and fre...

  • Artifact Archive

    Oct 16, 2025

    Hollywood starlet Alice Walker was 'discovered' in Petersburg, Alaska, by a visiting family friend and it was decided she must go off to Hollywood to become an actress. Born on January 7, 1913, to Adolf and Alice G. Norberg, Terry left her home in Petersburg to chase her dream in 1927. She took classes in singing and dancing, worked as a lounge singer, changed her name (twice!) and went on to secure roles in more than twenty films. This studio portrait was taken circa 1920 at the Fred Hartsook...

  • Obituary: Alvin Lee Nussbaumer, 75

    Oct 16, 2025

    Alvin Lee Nussbaumer was born June 19, 1950, in Bremerton, Washington, to Edwin and Maxine Joy Nussbaumer. After graduating from North Kitsap High School in 1972, he enlisted in the Army and served in Germany. After his discharge he went on to earn an associate degree in electronics. Alvin moved to Petersburg, Alaska, in 1978 and got a job at Petersburg Fisheries where he eventually became a supervisor. He also worked as a bartender at the Harbor Bar and Kito's Kave until around 2005. A very... Full story

  • Seniors and teens becoming more important in Alaska's workforce

    Yereth Rosen, Alaska Beacon|Oct 16, 2025

    As Alaska’s population of working-age adults shrinks, according to economists, other demographic groups have become bigger segments of the labor force: seniors and teenagers. Residents who are 65 and older made up 6.2% of the Alaska worker population in 2023 after steadily increasing over two decades, according to an analysis by the state Department of Labor and Workforce Development. In 2003, that age group made up just 1.8% of all working Alaskans, according to the data. For teenagers, the two-decade trend has been different. In 2003, t... Full story

  • Flor painting selected for international realism show

    Oct 16, 2025

    Beth Flor's oil painting, Entwined Lemons, was selected for the International Guild of Realism Fall Salon online show. Works were selected from 200 artists from fifteen countries. The show will be exhibited on the IGOR website and the American Art Collector website from Oct 15 to Dec 20....

  • Oct 16, 2025

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

  • Oct 16, 2025

    Petersburg Pilot Classifieds...  PDF

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