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  • American Cruise Lines lease approved by Petersburg Borough Assembly

    Olivia Rose, KFSK Radio|Apr 23, 2026

    Petersburg's Borough Assembly on Monday unanimously approved a highly anticipated lease agreement with American Cruise Lines, a small cruise ship company that frequently stops in Petersburg. It's increasing its summer visits to town, and wants to build a cruise ship dock for its small passenger ships in Petersburg. The Borough will lease part of its tidelands at the end of Dock Street next to the U.S. Coast Guard Dock to the company, which will build a mooring float and gangway there to support... Full story

  • New canoe Keet Yaakw to transport Petersburg tribal citizens to Celebration 2026 in Juneau

    Jake Clemens, Pilot writer|Apr 23, 2026

    The Keet Yaakw is the first Alaska Native-designed canoe to be launched out of Petersburg, at least since Petersburg was incorporated as a town in 1910. Petersburg Indian Association Tribal Council Vice President ShaaL'aanee Brandon Ware described the feeling of bringing the new canoe towards shore at Sandy Beach, where it was unveiled to the public. "Coming into the bay, I knew we were seeing the same thing our people have seen since time immemorial... when it was a seasonal fish camp for thous...

  • Library Friends honor historian Don Nelson and retiring staffer Chris Weiss

    Orin Pierson|Apr 23, 2026

    The Friends of Petersburg Libraries marked their 25th anniversary Tuesday with a celebration at the Petersburg Public Library that doubled as a community tribute to two figures who have shaped the library and the town's cultural life for decades: revered Petersburg historian Don Nelson and retiring library staff member Chris Weiss, who served the library for nearly 40 years. The event drew community members, library staff, borough officials and representatives from the Clausen Museum to share...

  • Petersburg invited to weigh in Thursday on Tongass Forest Plan revision

    Orin Pierson|Apr 23, 2026

    The U.S. Forest Service is bringing its Tongass National Forest Plan revision process to Petersburg this week, with an in-person community workshop scheduled for 5-7 p.m. Thursday, April 23, in the Borough Assembly Chambers. The event is part of a series of workshops running across 19 Southeast Alaska communities through early May — a rare opportunity for the public to provide direct input before the agency completes a draft plan. Revision coordinator Erin Mathews described it as “a bonus” engagement round not typically built into the feder...

  • Petersburg's power grid: what the utility director wants you to know

    Orin Pierson, Pilot writer|Apr 23, 2026

    Petersburg's new utility director, Steve Harbour took the podium at the March 16 borough assembly meeting to address what he recognized as a public information problem. "In the two years I've been at Power and Light, I've built up a lot of questions and heard a lot of misinformation," said Harbour, "Nobody's fault. I worked pretty close with Power and Light for years as an electrician, and I couldn't answer some of the stuff I'm going to talk about tonight." The 45-minute presentation that...

  • Local first responders conduct active threat drill at Stedman Elementary

    Orin Pierson|Apr 23, 2026

    Petersburg police, fire and EMS personnel conducted a multi-agency active threat training exercise at Stedman Elementary School after school hours on Wednesday, April 15. The Petersburg Police Department issued a public service announcement ahead of the exercise alerting residents that emergency vehicles and personnel would be visible in and around the school and asking the public to avoid the immediate area. The drill was organized by Petersburg Police Sgt. Drew Ayriss and EMS Coordinator Ryan...

  • Petersburg Borough Assembly will sell two parcels to local developer for rental properties

    Taylor Heckart, KFSK Radio|Apr 23, 2026

    The Petersburg Borough Assembly voted unanimously last week to sell two borough-owned parcels to local developer Dave Ohmer for $61,800. Ohmer plans to build a duplex on each property, which are on Haugen Drive near the hospital WERC building. Ohmer has not signed the deeds yet, but he told KFSK he was happy the contract specifically outlined that the property would be used to build housing rentals. “I hope this is a bit of a template for them to do this with a lot more people around town, and try to get lots into private hands,” Ohmer sai... Full story

  • Petersburg community continues fight against cancer with 27th Annual Beat the Odds

    Aiden Luhr|Apr 23, 2026

    This past Saturday, Petersburg celebrated their 27th Beat the Odds race, a fundraiser that supports local cancer related programs such as cancer treatment level, equipment training and more for patients and families. So many families came out in support and either ran or walked their way, starting at Sandy Beach. "It continues to impact people all over town. Either a member of their family or themselves, or a good friend. People want to help," committee member Marlene Cushing said. The money...

  • PHS's music program shines at Region V Music Fest in Ketchikan

    Aiden Luhr|Apr 23, 2026

    In early April, Region V Music Fest took place in Ketchikan, bringing southeast Alaska music together in one spot for a few days. Petersburg, which brought 40 students to the music fest, had been working tirelessly on various forms of music for this event, full of different languages. "Our jazz band has been working on a few different tunes that are big band swing, a funk and a Latin piece," music teacher Chelsea Corrao said. "Choir, we did a lot of foreign language, we had a Spanish piece and N...

  • Mitkof Dance Troupe spring recital brings the Circus to town

    Jake Clemens|Apr 23, 2026

    The Mitkof Dance Troupe (MDT) brought the circus to town, with elephants, clowns, acrobats, feats of strength, magicians, fire dancers, lion tamers, and even circus animal cookies. 125 dancers from pre-K to graduating seniors performed to a packed auditorium Monday night and a line down the block on Tuesday. Signs of a successful program, despite the challenges that MDT faces to purchase the studio building. As for opening night, "It went really smooth," said Olivia Reid, MDT executive director...

  • Petersburg's 2026 cruise season holds steady despite dip in ship count

    Orin Pierson|Apr 16, 2026

    The number of cruise ship stops in Petersburg is down again this year, continuing a trend that has seen the town’s port call count slip from around 110 in 2022 to 85 scheduled for 2026. But local travel agents say the picture on the ground is more stable than the numbers initially suggest. The drop in stops this year is due to the closure this winter of Sitka-based, Allen Marine-owned Alaskan Dream Cruises. Its fleet, the Alaskan Dream, Admiralty Dream, Baranof Dream and Chichagof Dream, carried between 40 and 80 passengers each and have b...

  • Petersburg Borough Assembly backs defined benefit pension bill, calls for rejection of amendment

    Orin Pierson|Apr 16, 2026

    The Petersburg Borough Assembly voted unanimously Monday to support House Bill 78, legislation that would restore a defined benefit retirement option for Alaska public employees and teachers — and added language calling on the Legislature to reject an amendment that critics say would burden local governments. Resolution 2026-10, passed at the April 13 regular assembly meeting, expresses the borough’s support for HB 78, which would allow employees in the Public Employees’ Retirement System Tier 4 and Teachers’ Retirement System Tier 3 to opt...

  • Wright Auditorium's newest lighting upgrades open new creative possibilities

    Apr 16, 2026

    A recent round of improvements to the Wright Auditorium has brought the Petersburg performance venue's technical capabilities to the next level - and a longtime volunteer behind the scenes says the upgrades are already changing how productions come together. Dave Berg, who has handled lighting and technical operations at the auditorium for decades, said the project took shape about a year ago when he convened the venue's primary user groups - the school drama club, the Mitkof Mummers and the...

  • Petersburg EMS volunteers sweep regional pediatric CPR competition

    Orin Pierson|Apr 16, 2026

    When Fire and EMS Director Aaron Hankins signed up a team of Petersburg Volunteer Fire Department volunteers for a pediatric CPR competition at the annual Southeast Regional EMS Council symposium in Juneau last month, he told them they would thank him later. Petersburg's EMS volunteers didn't just win the competition - they swept the field which included some far more experienced EMS professionals from bigger cities in Southeast. But for Hankins, EMS Coordinator Ryan Gilkey, and the volunteers...

  • Viking Travel named Petersburg's Business of the Year

    Orin Pierson|Apr 9, 2026

    When Dave and Nancy Berg sold Viking Travel at the start of 2023, they said they were handing the keys to the right people. Three years later, the Petersburg Chamber of Commerce resoundingly agreed. The chamber named Viking Travel the 2025 Business of the Year at its annual banquet Saturday, citing the business - co-owned by James and Madeleine Valentine - for their community involvement, their contribution to the Petersburg economy, and their commitment to keeping Petersburg a vibrant place to...

  • Silver Bay CEO brings message of resilience, renewal to Chamber banquet

    Orin Pierson|Apr 9, 2026

    Cora Campbell, president and CEO of Silver Bay Seafoods, returned to her hometown of Petersburg as guest speaker Saturday evening at the Petersburg Chamber of Commerce Annual Banquet. Over the course of about 20 minutes, she drew a through-line from the town's 1897 founding to the hard lessons of the 2023 salmon crisis - and outlined an optimistic slate of value-added products she said will soon be flowing through the Petersburg plant. "As pink salmon goes, so goes the economy," Campbell told...

  • Scow Bay tenants to vacate as boat yard nears construction

    Apr 9, 2026

    After more than three decades of planning, Petersburg’s Scow Bay marine facility project is approaching construction, and the borough has begun the process of clearing the site — notifying businesses leasing borough-owned parcels at the location that their leases will end this fall. Harbormaster Glo Wollen sent letters April 3 to tenants at the Scow Bay site outlining a schedule that calls for all leases on borough property there to end Sept. 30, 2026, at the earliest. Tenants then have 60 days under their lease terms to remove equipment and...

  • Public employees retirement crisis:

    Apr 9, 2026

    Molly Taiber recently returned from Juneau, where she spent several days this legislative session doing what she has done every year for the past six years: sitting across from state legislators making the case that Alaska’s public employees are heading toward a retirement they will not be able to live on. For most of Alaska’s history as a state, a career in public service came with one of the better retirement packages in the country — a guaranteed pension that rewarded workers for building careers in Alaska. That system was dismantled in 20...

  • Petersburg senior Canek Sosa selected to second All-State Jazz Band

    Aiden Luhr|Apr 9, 2026

    For the second time in his music career, Petersburg senior Canek Sosa was selected to the All-State Jazz Band. Sosa was also selected to the Juneau Honor Jazz Band. Only one drum set player is selected to the All-State Jazz Band and the Juneau Honor Jazz band, it's rare. "It's definitely exciting. I'm not someone that's pressured very easily so I would say I didn't feel as much pressure as people would think. I took it very well knowing I was the only drummer there," Sosa said. Sosa got to play...

  • Petersburg soprano bringing chamber music festival in May

    Apr 2, 2026

    Stephanie Pfundt has spent the better part of a decade building a career in classical music far from Petersburg - graduate school in Boston, performing across the East Coast, a produced opera in Massachusetts, a growing network of colleagues at some of the country's top music institutions. And now the award-winning Petersburg-born soprano is bringing a long-dreamed-of project to life and bringing chamber music home to Alaska. "This has been a project I've dreamt of for six years," Pfundt said....

  • Petersburg will go without ferry service 17 days starting April 15

    Larry Persily|Apr 2, 2026

    As the Alaska Marine Highway System moves around its limited fleet of operational vessels, Petersburg, Wrangell and the other communities served by the Southeast mainline route will see a gap in service from April 15 to May 3. The Kennicott, which has been serving Southeast this winter, is being pulled from the run mid-April to provide a couple of weeks of service on the cross-gulf route to Yakutat, Whittier, Kodiak and other communities that have been without any service while their usual ferry, the Tustumena, has been in winter overhaul since...

  • Petersburg man sentenced for felony possession of child sexual abuse material

    Olivia Rose, KFSK Radio|Apr 2, 2026

    A Petersburg man indicted in 2024 on felony charges related to child sexual abuse material will spend two years in prison. Alejandro “Alex” Melendez Aguilar, 46, pleaded guilty in January to one count of possession as part of a plea deal between state prosecutors and the defense that dismissed most of the charges. Aguilar was indicted on 10 felony counts for possession and distribution of the material, which he initially pleaded not guilty to over a year ago before changing his plea. He was sentenced at the Juneau Courthouse on March 27. Dur... Full story

  • May 1 fare increase on state ferries, first since 2022

    Larry Persily|Apr 2, 2026

    Tickets to ride the Alaska Marine Highway System will go up a little more than 2% effective May 1, the first fare increase since 2019. That 2019 increase instituted “dynamic pricing” of higher fares on popular routes, much like airlines and hotels price their rates to maximize revenues. But dynamic pricing was not popular among ferry riders and the state rescinded the fare structure in 2022, leaving tickets unchanged since then. Craig Tornga, marine director for the state ferry system, told legislators last month that it’s important for the m...

  • Begich brings gubernatorial bid to Petersburg, touts coalition-building

    Orin Pierson|Mar 26, 2026

    Democratic gubernatorial candidate Tom Begich visited Petersburg last week, holding a community meet and greet and sitting down afterward with the Pilot and the KFSK radio station. Begich, a former state senator from Anchorage, is running for governor on a platform centered on education funding, affordable energy, fiscal accountability, and a governing style he says is defined by dialogue rather than division. The meet and greet drew a roomful of Petersburg residents and discussion touched on...

  • Wastewater plant working toward meeting the new standards

    Jake Clemens|Mar 26, 2026

    Every day the Petersburg wastewater plant handles between 300,000 gallons to 1.8 million gallons during heavy rain, but there have been some changes in how they do that in an attempt to meet new EPA requirements. While the wastewater staff have been able to greatly improve the water quality discharged by the plant, it's going to take more equipment to fully meet the disinfection requirements. That's going to mean either chlorination and dechlorination equipment (as discharge of both bacteria...

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