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  • 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...

  • 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... Full story

  • 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...

  • 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

  • Forest Service flight moratorium lifted in Southeast Alaska

    Orin Pierson|Jul 17, 2025

    The U.S. Forest Service has received approval to resume aviation operations in Southeast Alaska after a flight moratorium that halted much of the forest management work across the region's remote federal lands. "The Tongass National Forest has recently received approval to move forward with securing aviation support for its work," Paul Robbins Jr., Public Affairs Officer for the Tongass National Forest told the Petersburg Pilot on Friday. "Due to the geographic layout of Southeast Alaska and...

  • Correction:

    Jul 17, 2025

    In a photo caption published on 7/10/25 a Petersburg youth playing the Pick My Nose game at the KFSK Kids Carnival was misidentified as Nathan Buotte, but in fact his name is Ethan Buotte. In the photo caption accompanying the story “Stronger than ever” published on 7/10/25 it was misstated that Corl was the first to summit the mountain in her age group. The runners were sent up the mountain in three waves; Corl was the first in her wave to reach the summit, but not her whole age group. And in a photo caption on the cover on 7/3/25, the Pil...

  • Petersburg School District receives major federal literacy grant

    Orin Pierson|Jul 17, 2025

    When Petersburg School District switched to science-based reading instruction three years ago, the results were nothing short of remarkable. At Stedman Elementary, kindergarten reading proficiency soared from 10% to 89% in a single year. First grade jumped from 24% to 74% proficient, while second grade improved from 38% to 61%. These dramatic gains – which significantly outperformed state and national averages – caught the attention of education researchers nationwide. Petersburg is now being fe...

  • Police chief's lawsuit against Petersburg Borough ends with $70,000 settlement

    Olivia Rose|Jul 17, 2025

    Petersburg's police chief sued his employer, the Petersburg Borough, and the two parties have officially resolved the matter with an out-of-court settlement. That means the remaining claim about the chief's First Amendment rights will not go to trial this summer. Police Chief James Kerr testified against enforcing a masking mandate during a fall 2021 borough assembly meeting. He said he was speaking as a private citizen. This ultimately snowballed into a multi-year legal battle between Kerr and...

  • US Senate Republicans advance bill stripping funds from NPR, PBS, foreign aid

    Jul 17, 2025

    WASHINGTON — The U.S. Senate on Tuesday night moved one step closer to canceling $9 billion in previously approved funding for several foreign aid programs and public broadcasting after GOP leaders addressed some objections. Nearly all the chamber’s Republicans voted to begin debate on the bill, though Maine’s Susan Collins, Kentucky’s Mitch McConnell and Alaska’s Lisa Murkowski opposed the procedural step along with every Democrat. The 51-50 vote marked a significant moment for President Donald Trump’s rescissions request, which faced more... Full story

  • Petersburg Borough goes on record against 'irresponsible' public land sales

    Olivia Rose|Jul 17, 2025

    The recently passed budget reconciliation bill, signed into law by President Donald Trump last week, does not include U.S. Senator Mike Lee's (R-Utah) withdrawn proposal that could have potentially sold off areas of the Tongass and Chugach National Forests and parts of the Interior in Alaska. But even so, the Petersburg Borough is going on the record against selling public lands. At a meeting on Monday, assembly members and community members voiced support for the borough resolution that formall...

  • Rikki McKay hired as WAVE executive director

    Lizzie Thompson|Jul 17, 2025

    Rikki McKay is the new executive of Petersburg non-profit Working Against Violence for Everyone. Since its inception in 1982, WAVE has worked to provide compassionate advocacy, empower survivors and prevent violence within our communities. Like many non-profits the pandemic was hard on WAVE. Since Executive Director Everett Bennett left their position in May 2024, keeping the doors open has been a challenge. "With the transition between Everett leaving and then hiring someone and losing them,...

  • Wrangell totem raising events will span four days this week

    Jonathon Dawe|Jul 17, 2025

    WRANGELL – For the first time in 38 years, the Wrangell Native community will raise new totem poles in town, with four days of events planned for Thursday through Sunday, July 17-20. Unveiling the five new poles marks a significant revival of a centuries-old Tlingit tradition. The event honors the carvers and apprentices who transformed logs into cultural masterpieces, continuing a legacy nearly lost to time. By the early 1900s, most of the town's 30 to 40 totem poles had decayed or fallen, and...

  • Sick leave is now mandatory in Alaska

    James Brooks, Alaska Beacon|Jul 10, 2025

    On July 1, Alaska’s new sick-leave and minimum wage increase law took effect. Approved by voters in November, it states that someone working at a business with 15 or more employees will earn one hour of paid sick leave for every 30 hours worked, up to a maximum of 56 per year, unless the employer voluntarily increases that limit. Someone working at a business with fewer than 15 employees earns sick leave at the same rate, but the maximum per year is 40 hours. The law also raised the state’s minimum wage to $13 per hour. The minimum wage ris... Full story

  • Dugout canoe completes Hutli Plaza at Sandy Beach Park

    Orin Pierson|Jul 10, 2025

    After years of planning and months of craftsmanship, Petersburg Indian Association has installed a traditional dugout canoe at Sandy Beach Park, marking the completion of the Hutli Plaza portion of their broader cultural and recreational project. The 10-foot children's canoe, carved by Juneau-based ­­artists Herb Sheakley Jr. and his brother Samuel Sheakley, now sits on a sandy foundation near the 3,000-year-old fish traps that mark the site as a historic fish camp. The canoe, called a "yaakw" i...

  • A healing center for Kake

    Mary Catharine Martin, The Salmon State|Jul 10, 2025

    For years now, Organized Village of Kake President Joel Jackson has had a dream: a cultural healing center that can reintroduce people looking to heal from alcohol and drug addictions and intergenerational trauma to their culture. For the last couple of years, that dream has been moving toward reality. Fifty-two miles from Kake and twelve miles from Petersburg, in Portage Bay, is an old Forest Service administration bunkhouse. For decades, it has sat empty. The first time he saw it, Jackson...

  • PMC offers Medicaid and Medicare information sessions amid federal cuts

    Hannah Weaver, KFSK Radio|Jul 10, 2025

    Significant cuts to Medicaid alongside impacts to Medicare are included in the budget reconciliation bill signed into law by President Donald Trump last week. Alaska is second only to New Mexico in the highest rate of people using Medicaid. About 38% of Alaskans are on it, according to the state's Department of Health. Medicaid is a health insurance option for low-income people, and Medicare is a federal program providing health insurance for eligible seniors and people with disabilities. Much...

  • Contract awarded for Scow Bay generator part

    Jul 10, 2025

    For the past few years, the Petersburg Borough has been working to bolster its fleet of diesel generators to be better prepared for power outages when the hydropower system fails. On Monday, the Borough Assembly took one step closer by awarding a contract to GD Partners to manufacture a new generator part for up to $274,000. The part is crucial for Petersburg’s in-progress Scow Bay diesel generation project. The borough already bought the new diesel generator and is storing it in Texas right now. But for the generator to work properly, it n...

  • Newlywed Salvation Army officers arrive in Petersburg

    Orin Pierson|Jul 10, 2025

    Petersburg welcomes two new Salvation Army officers this month. Lieutenant Joe Duran and Captain Ashley Duran, married just weeks ago, have taken up residence above the Salvation Army Petersburg Corps Center at First and Fram Streets and are eager to get to know the community. The newlywed couple's love story began in an unexpected way-through a homework assignment. While Joe was in training at the Salvation Army's college program, he wrote a mock press release that featured himself as "Major...

  • PMC Youth Program Theater Camp presents Peter Pan this Friday

    Orin Pierson|Jul 10, 2025

    After five weeks of theater games, character development, and intensive rehearsals, 26 young performers are ready to take flight in two back-to-back performances of Peter Pan this Friday evening at the Sons of Norway Hall. The PMC Youth Program's Theater Camp, now in its third year under the direction of Brad Younts, has grown to accommodate its most participants yet - splitting into two groups of 15 and 11 students, ranging in age from 7 to 13 years old. Connected to the Kinder Skog Nature...

  • Petersburg celebrates first Amy Hallingstad Day with memories of the civil rights leader's legacy

    Hannah Weaver, KFSK Radio|Jul 3, 2025

    Friends, family and community members gathered near the Petersburg Indian Association's Hallingstad-Peratrovich Building on June 28 to celebrate the town's first annual Amy Hallingstad Day, honoring a Tlingit woman who shaped Petersburg's history in the 20th century. Nicole Hallingstad, Amy Hallingstad's granddaughter, flew in from Anchorage to welcome attendees to the event, which was organized with PIA. She said her grandmother's decades of activism for Alaska Native rights inspired her to...

  • Southeast closes sport retention of king salmon to nonresidents on July 7

    ANNA LAFFREY, Sitka Daily Sentinel|Jul 3, 2025

    Nonresident anglers fishing in state and federal waters can’t retain any Chinook salmon that they catch in Southeast Alaska between July 7 and when the season ends Sept. 30, the Alaska Department of Fish and Game announced Monday. The department projects that the sport sector, including both residents and nonresidents, would exceed this year’s sport harvest target by about 5,000 Chinook if no action were taken to curb the nonresident catch, ADF&G Sitka area management biologist Troy Tydingco said in a phone call with the Sentinel on Tue...

  • Hatchery areas remain open to nonresident king salmon sport fishing

    PETERSBURG PILOT|Jul 3, 2025

    Two hatchery release sites near Petersburg will continue allowing nonresident anglers to harvest king salmon even after a broader regional closure takes effect July 7. The statewide closure announced this week prohibits nonresident anglers from retaining king salmon in most Southeast Alaska waters starting July 7. However, the restriction does not apply to the two terminal harvest areas near Petersburg. City Creek will remain open to nonresident king salmon fishing until July 14, when special regulations for that area expire. The Blind Slough...

  • Gov. Dunleavy forces early vote on education veto override with special session in August

    Corinne Smith and James Brooks, Alaska Beacon|Jul 3, 2025

    Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy issued a proclamation for a special session on Wednesday, calling Legislators back to Juneau in August to pass legislation on education reform and his executive order creating a new Department of Agriculture. The special session also means that lawmakers cannot wait until January to vote on overrides to the governor’s budget vetoes and his vetoes on several policy bills. They must vote in the first five days of the special session. That’s significant, because 45 votes are needed to override a budget veto, and whi... Full story

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