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  • Local laundromat changes hands

    Orin Pierson, Pilot writer|Jun 26, 2025

    Last month, after nearly 25 years of running Glacier Laundry, Carrie Peterson handed the laundromat keys to new owner Laura "Lu" Holder – who has renamed the business Viking Laundry. Holder realizes that she is taking on more than just a place to do laundry – Peterson is passing along relationships, routines, and a community institution that has served Petersburg well. "Today I helped somebody, and I was telling her like, where to put the soap," said Holder, "she turned to me and said, 'I'...

  • Petersburg prepares for inaugural Amy Hallingstad Day celebration

    Orin Pierson, Pilot writer|Jun 26, 2025

    This Saturday marks a historic milestone for Petersburg as the community celebrates the first-ever Amy Hallingstad Day, honoring the Tlingit civil rights pioneer who transformed education and social justice for Alaska Natives. "This is the first year we are having Amy Hallingstad Day. We had it formally proclaimed by the borough as an annual holiday now, and it's to commemorate Amy Hallingstad, who lived in Petersburg most of her life and was a huge proponent in a lot of civil rights matters,...

  • After Dunleavy veto, Petersburg School District spends over half a million from reserves

    Taylor Heckart, KFSK Radio|Jun 26, 2025

    Petersburg’s school district approved a budget last week that will draw down nearly $700,000 dollars from its reserves to make up for school funding vetoed by Gov. Mike Dunleavy. Dunleavy reduced education funding for school districts statewide with a line-item veto on June 12, just weeks before districts start their next fiscal years. The Legislature originally approved a $700 increase in per-student funding, known as the base student allocation (BSA). It was the first substantial increase since 2017. Dunleavy didn’t approve enough money to fu...

  • Hydroelectric lake near Petersburg spills, highlighting "balancing act" between hydro plant and hatchery

    Hannah Weaver, KFSK Radio|Jun 26, 2025

    Southeast Alaska broke records for rainfall this spring. And for the Blind Slough hydroelectric plant near Petersburg, more rain means more power. Sometimes, however, there is such a thing as too much rain, according to Petersburg Borough Utility Director Karl Hagerman. "This year, there was just too much water to deal with," he said. The hydro plant uses water from a dam at Crystal Lake to generate power. But the record-breaking precipitation Mitkof Island got in May caused Crystal Lake to...

  • Petersburg teachers state finalists for excellence

    Lizzie Thompson, Pilot writer|Jun 19, 2025

    Three teachers from the Petersburg School District are state finalists for awards in excellence – Hannah Smith and Alice Cumps, math and science teachers at the middle and high schools respectively, are two of the finalists for a Presidential Excellence Award, and Becky Martin, a third grade teacher, for the Alaska Teacher of the Year Award. The Presidential Awards for Excellence in Mathematics and Science Teaching (PAEMST) is the highest honor a K – 12 math or science teacher in the U.S. can...

  • Borough voters to decide on low-income limit for senior sales tax exemption

    Olivia Rose, KFSK Radio|Jun 19, 2025

    In an effort to generate money for essential services, Petersburg voters will be asked this fall whether to impose income limits for the community's senior sales tax exemption. That's after the Petersburg Borough Assembly approved the proposal on Monday, June 16. The change would limit the decades-old exemption to only low-income seniors who qualify for the state's Senior Benefits Payment Program, with annual incomes below $34,213 for individuals or $46,253 for couples. Revenue from...

  • Parks and Rec two-week shutdown tackles gym floors, pool systems, and facility-wide upgrades

    Jun 19, 2025

    The Petersburg Parks and Recreation facility reopened Monday after completing its annual two-week maintenance shutdown, with Parks and Recreation Director Stephanie Payne describing the closure as highly successful. "We did a lot of work that we've been wanting to get done for a long time," Payne said of the annual maintenance period that began in late May. The closure began with the facility's perennially complex project: coordinating the resurfacing of the gym floors. "Gym and racquetball...

  • An eagle crashes through a living room window in Petersburg

    Taylor Heckart, KFSK Radio|Jun 19, 2025

    Teri Toland was preparing breakfast one morning when she heard a loud crash. When she walked out of her kitchen, she found a full-grown eagle in her living room. The eagle had crashed through a nearby double-paned window, shattering the glass. Toland was used to seeing eagles fly around her house; she even enjoyed watching them race through the nearby trees, but they'd never come inside before. This eagle had also brought something extra: an orange rockfish that it left on the carpet alongside...

  • Petersburg School District enhances safety with summer construction

    Taylor Heckart, KFSK Radio|Jun 19, 2025

    Construction will be happening all summer long at the Petersburg School District. Two major projects are underway to increase safety at the schools, inside and out. The first project is a complete remodel of the high school office. The office has been entirely gutted, and will be rebuilt for visibility and safety. "The office area was such that the folks working in the office really didn't have a good, clear view of who was coming to the door," said Superintendent Robyn Taylor. In 2023, threats...

  • Scammers target planning commission applicants with fake invoices

    Orin Pierson, Pilot writer|Jun 19, 2025

    Scammers posing as Petersburg Borough Planning and Zoning Director Liz Cabrera sent official-looking emails soliciting payment of nearly $5,000 to at least two individuals with pending applications before the planning commission this month, prompting borough staff to change how they handle applicant information. The fraudulent emails, which included detailed invoices, were sophisticated enough to alarm local officials despite both targeted applicants recognizing the scam before losing money....

  • Silver Bay CEO says OBI transition is 'fully up and running'

    Olivia Rose, KFSK Radio|Jun 12, 2025

    Silver Bay Seafoods President and CEO Cora Campbell returned to her Southeast Alaska hometown of Petersburg recently to meet with the fleet. Local fishermen, processing plant staff and community members who gathered for a Silver Bay social hour in Petersburg's Sons of Norway Hall directed their attention to Campbell at front of the room. "If you find a member of the Silver Bay Leadership team, there's a very good chance that that girl grew up in Petersburg," she said. Campbell's family has...

  • Local mill owner's airplane conversation with Juneau artist leads to community cedar bark harvest

    Orin Pierson|Jun 12, 2025

    What started as casual airplane conversation between strangers last fall blossomed into a community harvest this week that supplied Petersburg's traditional weavers with a year's supply of yellow cedar bark. Juneau-based Alaska Native artist Lily Hope was flying from Seattle to Juneau in November when she struck up a conversation with her seatmate, Brett Martin, co-owner of Alaska Timber and Truss, the Petersburg sawmill located on Falls Creek Road. Hope recalled, "He said, 'Oh, you use yellow...

  • Pair of alleged scammers arrested in Petersburg operation

    Orin Pierson, Pilot writer|Jun 12, 2025

    Two Indian nationals were arrested Monday in Petersburg in connection with an elaborate scam that defrauded a Petersburg resident of nearly $200,000, authorities said. Shubham Patel, 24, and Harshilkumar J. Patel, 22, both face charges of Scheme to Defraud and Theft in the First Degree, Class B felonies carrying penalties of up to $100,000 in fines and up to 10 years in prison. The arrests resulted from an investigation that began June 2 when a local resident reported being targeted by callers...

  • Aging infrastructure complicates hospital water system repair

    Orin Pierson|Jun 12, 2025

    Petersburg Medical Center (PMC) completed a complex water system repair project last week that highlights both the ingenuity of local maintenance crews and the mounting infrastructure challenges facing the community's critical access hospital. The project began February 5 when the six-inch sprinkler main suddenly developed a hole. "We threw a patch on it that we got from the city, and that actually stopped the leak," explained Wolf Brooks, PMC's Facilities Engineer. But this leak revealed a... Full story

  • Borough raises property tax rate to balance budget, begin repayment of school maintenance bond debt

    Orin Pierson, Pilot writer|Jun 5, 2025

    On Monday, Petersburg Borough Assembly unanimously approved the resolution to set the property tax rate for the coming year, raising the millage rate from 10.0 to 10.8 mills. The new 0.8-mill increase means property owners in Service Area 1 will pay $10.80 per $1,000 of assessed property value, up from $10 last year. For a home assessed at $300,000, the annual increase would be $240. While an increase from last year, the new rate is still lower than the tax rate from the four preceding years:...

  • Borough budget accounts for potential cruise dock project

    Olivia Rose, KFSK Radio|Jun 5, 2025

    Petersburg's borough assembly passed its overall budget for the next fiscal year on June 2. But the option to allocate a million dollars from the harbor reserves for a potential cruise dock project caused friction for the final vote. The Petersburg Borough's general fund was nearly $400,000 in the red for the last fiscal year, but that's not the case this time. The borough's next budget is in the black, despite state and federal funding reductions and inflationary costs in all departments....

  • Petersburg Mayor Mark Jensen says he won't seek reelection this fall

    Orin Pierson, Pilot writer|Jun 5, 2025

    Petersburg Mayor Mark Jensen announced during Monday's borough assembly meeting that he will not run for reelection in October, ending what will be an 18-year tenure as an elected official in Petersburg. "I thought it was time to announce that I don't intend to run for mayor in October," Jensen said during the meeting. "That's four months from now. That gives people that are interested in the mayor's position [time] to put their name in." Jensen was first elected to the Petersburg City Council...

  • May brought record-breaking rain to Petersburg

    Taylor Heckart, KFSK Radio|Jun 5, 2025

    Petersburg, Ketchikan, Haines, and Skagway all received record amounts of rainfall in May. Across the panhandle, many communities saw double or triple the amount of rainfall they normally get during the month. Most communities also experienced colder-than-average temperatures. National Weather Service Meteorologist Zoe Kaplan said that this kind of weather is unusual in spring. "This whole event is pretty anomalous, because these are totals that we would normally see in the fall. But I guess...

  • Petersburg Assembly urges Alaska Delegation to push for cleanup of abandoned Canadian mine

    Orin Pierson, Pilot writer|Jun 5, 2025

    The Petersburg Borough Assembly unanimously approved a letter to Alaska’s congressional delegation urging cleanup of an abandoned mine that has been polluting a major salmon river for nearly seven decades. The Tulsequah Chief mine in British Columbia has discharged toxic wastewater into the headwaters of the Taku River since its abandonment in 1957, according to the letter signed by Mayor Mark Jensen on behalf of the assembly. “The Taku is a crucial ecological and economic resource for Southeast Alaska, not to mention its importance to loc...

  • Petersburg's Quilts of Valor: Nearly 140 handmade quilts have been gifted to local veterans since 2016

    Orin Pierson, Pilot writer|May 29, 2025

    The tables were decorated with the red, white and blue bouquets, the eggs Benedict were perfect, the hollandaise sauce homemade, and the mimosas were flowing at Kito's Kave last Sunday, as members of American Legion Edward Locken Post 14 served a special thank you brunch to their 16 specials guests – the local quilters responsible for the Quilts of Valor program who have spent nearly a decade making quilts for Petersburg's veterans. Since 2016, these volunteers have created nearly 140 h...

  • Assembly advances ordinance to limit senior sales tax exemption to low-income residents

    Orin Pierson, Pilot writer|May 29, 2025

    The Petersburg Borough Assembly unanimously approved the first reading of an ordinance last week that would limit Petersburg's sales tax exemption for seniors to only those with low incomes. Currently, all Petersburg residents aged 65 and older who have lived in the borough for at least one year qualify for sales tax exemption, regardless of income. According to the borough, there are 477 senior exemption cards currently issued. In 2024, senior tax exemptions applied to more than $7.4 million...

  • Honoring civil rights pioneer Amy Hallingstad: Petersburg Mayor Mark Jensen declares June 28 as Amy Hallingstad Day

    Orin Pierson, Pilot writer|May 22, 2025

    Community members and visiting dignitaries attended the Petersburg Borough Assembly meeting on Monday, May 19 to witness Mayor Mark Jensen proclaim June 28th as Amy Hallingstad Day, honoring the Tlingit civil rights pioneer whose work transformed education and social justice for Alaska Natives. The mayor's proclamation drew representatives from the Alaska Native Brotherhood (ANB) and Alaska Native Sisterhood (ANS), including several who offered emotional testimony about Hallingstad's lasting...

  • Local foundation awards over $37,000 in community grants

    Orin Pierson, Pilot writer|May 22, 2025

    On Saturday, the Petersburg Community Foundation awarded $37,125 in grants to seven local organizations during its annual awards ceremony and honored one community volunteer with its prestigious Volunteer of the Year recognition. The foundation, which began 17 years ago with support from the Alaska Community Foundation and the Rasmuson Foundation, has seen accelerated growth in recent years. It took the organization around a decade to award $100,000 in local grants, but it has matched that...

  • Rate study urges increases to local wastewater, water, electrical utility rates

    Orin Pierson|May 15, 2025

    At the Petersburg Borough Assembly meeting on May 5, the results of recently completed five-year utility rate study were presented, and borough residents can expect utility rate increases in the coming fiscal year as officials adjust for rising operating expenses and debt service for capital projects across water, wastewater, and electric departments. The suggestions based on the rate study include: Water: 3% annual increases from FY2026 through FY2030 Wastewater: 25% increase for FY2026, then...

  • NAPA Auto shop rolls open its doors in Petersburg

    Orin Pierson|May 15, 2025

    Outside the brand-new facility on South Nordic Drive, the scent of grilling burgers and hotdogs lingers in the air as community members stream through the 16-foot bay doors of High Tide Auto. Close to two hundred people dropped by to congratulate Wes and Angie Davis and have a look inside their brand-new NAPA auto service center, according to Kimberly Simbahon who was dropping visitors' names into a blue bucket for the door prize drawings. "It's been a little stressful," Angie admitted,... Full story

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