News / State Of Alaska


Sorted by date  Results 1 - 25 of 873

  • Petersburg's Stedman Elementary to get new accessible playground equipment over the summer

    Taylor Heckart, KFSK Radio|Mar 26, 2026

    Petersburg’s elementary school will be getting new accessible playground equipment next school year as part of a $173,000 grant from the Hurst Wood Education Foundation, a nonprofit that supports special education projects in schools. The current playground at the Rae C. Stedman Elementary School has swings, slides, monkey bars, and a variety of climbing equipment. For students in wheelchairs or with limited mobility, playing on that equipment can be challenging. Special Education Director Cyndy Fry said having a playground that’s ina... Full story

  • Alaska Senate pushes for increase in oil tax revenue, amid war-driven oil boom

    Corinne Smith|Mar 26, 2026

    The Alaska Senate approved a measure to boost state taxes on oil and gas production on Wednesday. Lawmakers tacked it on to what would have been a routine renewal of a state oil royalty agreement. Sen. Forrest Dunbar, D-Anchorage, sponsored the amendment to House Bill 194, saying it would close a corporate income tax loophole and potentially capture more than $100 million in new state revenues each year — at a time when Alaska is in dire need of revenue to pay for state services. “Can we afford this loophole while we close schools? Can we aff... Full story

  • Alaska House backs resolution urging waiver for $100k visa fee for international teachers

    Corinne Smith, Alaska Beacon|Mar 26, 2026

    The Alaska House of Representatives approved a resolution urging the Trump administration to waive a steep visa fee for international teachers. The vote comes amid a growing teacher shortage throughout the state. Lawmakers are calling for the Trump administration to waive the fee for teachers hired through the H-1B visa program, which allows employers to recruit highly-skilled workers from overseas. The federal government raised the fee from $5,000 to $100,000 for each new applicant to the H-1B visa program in September. The House passed the... Full story

  • Federal law doesn't mandate minimum amounts of logging in Alaska's Tongass rainforest, judge says

    James Brooks, Alaska Beacon|Mar 26, 2026

    A federal judge in Alaska has rejected a lawsuit that sought to reinstate a management plan that would allow heavier logging in the world’s largest temperate old-growth rainforest. The result leaves an Obama-era management plan in place, but it could be short-lived: The administration of President Donald Trump is already at work on a new plan that could allow more logging in Alaska’s Tongass National Forest. In an order published Friday, Judge Sharon Gleason dismissed the lawsuit filed by Viking Lumber, Alcan Timber and the Alaska Forest Ass... Full story

  • Forest Service staffing in Southeast down 30% from a year ago

    ANNA LAFFREY, Daily Sitka Sentinel|Mar 19, 2026

    U.S. Forest Service leadership is in flux as the agency takes sweeping actions in managing the 17-million-acre Tongass National Forest and making regulatory and administrative changes at all levels, Alaska-based officials reported last week. At the beginning of a four-day federal subsistence Regional Advisory Council meeting in Juneau on March 10, Tongass Supervisor Monique Nelson spoke about shifts in the agency since President Donald Trump took office in January 2025. Nelson said staffing on the Tongass is down 30% from this time last year....

  • Alaska officials stonewall state legislators on justification for handing voter data to feds

    James Brooks, Alaska Beacon|Mar 12, 2026

    The head of the Alaska Division of Elections will not share legal advice that led to the state’s decision to send an extended voter list to the U.S. Department of Justice. Director Carol Beecher told state senators last Wednesday that she will not waive attorney-client privilege as state lawmakers examine last year’s decision to give the Trump administration a detailed list of Alaska voters. Alaska is one of 12 states that have either turned over their voter lists or have said they plan to comply with a nationwide request, according to rec... Full story

  • State lawmakers introduce bills to fight water pollution from cruise ships

    Avery Ellfeldt|Mar 5, 2026

    Two state lawmakers introduced legislation this month that aims to crack down on a major source of water pollution from cruise ships in Alaska waters. Sen. Jesse Kiehl and Rep. Sara Hannan, both Democrats from Juneau, each introduced bills that revolve around the type of fuel ships use. The bills vary slightly, but they do essentially the same thing: require ships to use fuel with lower levels of contaminants, including sulfur. “There is a growing trend around the world toward requiring cleaner fuels that don’t have as much sulfur and met... Full story

  • Public comment opens on new Tongass plan

    ANNA LAFFREY|Feb 26, 2026

    The U.S. Forest Service announced in the Federal Register Wednesday, Feb 18, that it is preparing to update the Tongass National Forest Land and Resource Management Plan to align with executive orders that President Trump issued when he took office last year. Also on Feb. 18, the Forest Service opened a 30-day public comment period on the planned update. The current Tongass plan has been in place since 1979, and the last major revision of the management plan for the 16.7-million acre national forest was in 1997. Amendments to the plan in 2016...

  • Ferry system crew shortage continues into its eighth year

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|Feb 26, 2026

    The Alaska Marine Highway System has been struggling with less than full staffing since 2019, with last month’s numbers showing the state ferries were short 59 workers to fill jobs as masters, mates, engineers, seaman and stewards. The shortage grows by about three dozen crew when measured against what would be needed to cover for workers out on personal leave, or due to injury or illness, according to a presentation by the Marine Highway System Director. “Attention to employee recruitment and retention strategies is core to this sta...

  • Haines man recovering after collision with semi near Beaver Creek

    Rashah McChesney, Chilkat Valley News|Feb 26, 2026

    A 25-year-old Haines man has been hospitalized in Fairbanks since a Feb. 13 collision with an 18-wheeler that left him with several broken bones and extensive internal injuries. Seth Waldo was headed to Anchorage for a new job, his Toyota pickup crammed with his belongings, when he collided with a Lynden Transport truck about 15 minutes from the Beaver Creek border crossing. Troopers got a report of the collision just after 1:20 p.m. His truck was demolished and, at first, it was assumed that...

  • Reps. seek rule change for fishermen on Boards of Fish, Game

    ANNA LAFFREY, Sitka Sentinel Staff Writer|Feb 19, 2026

    During his 20 years as a member of the Alaska Board of Fisheries, Petersburg commercial fisherman John Jensen relied on a lifetime of experience harvesting salmon, crab and other shellfish as he voted on statewide fishery regulations. But he couldn’t always weigh in with his wisdom, and a Kodiak legislator is looking to change that this year. When the Board of Fisheries held its 2018 Southeast regulatory meeting in Sitka, Jensen had to sit on the sidelines for about a third of the meeting. He couldn’t participate in the board's deliberations on...

  • Jonathan Kreiss-Tomkins enters the race to replace incumbent Governor Mike Dunleavy

    James Brooks, Alaska Beacon|Feb 5, 2026

    Jonathan Kreiss-Tomkins - former state legislator who represented Petersburg and much of Southeast for a decade - is running for governor, he said Tuesday. Kreiss-Tomkins, frequently known as "JKT," served in the Alaska House of Representatives between 2013 and 2023. He becomes the 16th candidate and third Democrat to enter this year's gubernatorial election. Incumbent Gov. Mike Dunleavy is term-limited and unable to run for a third term. In Alaska, the top four vote-getters, regardless of... Full story

  • Alaska's ferry system could run out of funding this summer due to 'federal chaos problem'

    James Brooks, Alaska Beacon|Feb 5, 2026

    Alaska’s state ferry system is at risk of a partial or total shutdown this summer due to the failure of the federal government to issue a key annual grant. “Currently right now, we have a shortfall in our budget,” said Dom Pannone, director of program administration and management for the Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities, to members of the Senate Finance Committee during a Monday morning hearing. Money from the Federal Transit Administration’s rural ferry program pays for almost half of the Alaska Marine Highway... Full story

  • SE trollers question award of legal fees to WFC from Chinook case

    ANNA LAFFREY, Daily Sitka Sentinel|Jan 29, 2026
    1

    The Wild Fish Conservancy’s use of the Equal Access to Justice Act is alarming the small-boat fishermen who fought the conservancy’s lawsuit that sought to close the Southeast Alaska Chinook troll fishery to preserve migratory Chinook as prey for the endangered Southern Resident Killer Whales that feed in waters near Puget Sound. WFC, a membership-based nonprofit with offices in Duvall, Washington, filed that lawsuit against the National Marine Fisheries Service in U.S. District Court in Washington in 2020. For months in 2023, a District Cou...

  • Alaska Board of Game holds line on deer bag limit in Wrangell last weekend

    ANNA LAFFREY, Daily Sitka Sentinel|Jan 29, 2026

    Meeting in Wrangell’s Nolan Center over the weekend, the seven-member Alaska Board of Game heard testimony from Southeast Alaska hunters and trappers, and made decisions on proposed changes to state regulations that govern the harvest of deer, bears, mountain goats, birds and other animals in Southeast Alaska. On Monday, the seven-member board voted 5-2 to reject Proposal 23, which would have increased the bag limit for non-Alaska residents hunting deer in the greater Sitka-area Game Management Unit 4, which includes Baranof, Admiralty and C...

  • Alaska legislators convene session, with budget issues and a veto override vote awaiting

    James Brooks, Alaska Beacon|Jan 22, 2026

    Alaska lawmakers opened the second year of their regular legislative session on Tuesday with an ambitious agenda but low expectations amid a tight budget that appears likely to draw the lion’s share of legislators’ attention. “It’s one big log jam,” said Sen. Bert Stedman, R-Sitka. The Alaska Legislature operates on a two-year cycle between elections; bills are carried over from the first year to the second, but if they don’t pass the Legislature by the end of the second year, they expire and must start all over again. Speaking Tuesday, me... Full story

  • Safari Club petition seeks removal of all public seats on Federal Subsistence Board

    Orin Pierson, Pilot writer|Jan 15, 2026

    A comment period is open until Feb. 13 as part of a program review that could change the way subsistence hunting and fishing is managed on federal lands in Alaska. On May 5, 2025, Safari Club International filed a petition with the U.S. Department of the Interior (DOI) asking for significant changes to the Federal Subsistence Management Program — including the removal of all six public members from the Federal Subsistence Board, changes to how members of the Regional Advisory Councils are selected, and elimination of the board’s authority to ta... Full story

  • US Supreme Court declines to hear case that could have upended Alaska subsistence fishing

    James Brooks, Alaska Beacon|Jan 15, 2026

    The U.S. Supreme Court has rejected the state of Alaska’s latest attempt to alter Alaska’s decades-old system of subsistence fishing management. In a one-sentence order Monday, the court said it will not review a decision by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which ruled in August that Alaska cannot manage fishing on a stretch of the Kuskokwim River that flows through the Yukon Delta National Wildlife Refuge. If the Supreme Court had taken up the case, it could have redefined Alaska’s unique system of hunting and fishing management, which... Full story

  • Mary Peltola announces run for Alaska U.S. Senate, challenging incumbent Dan Sullivan

    Corinne Smith and James Brooks, Alaska Beacon|Jan 15, 2026

    Former U.S. House Rep. Mary Peltola, a Democrat, has announced her candidacy for the U.S. Senate, challenging Republican incumbent Dan Sullivan. Republicans control the U.S. Senate by a 53-47 margin, including two independents who caucus with Democrats. If Peltola were to defeat Sullivan, it would contribute to Democrats' efforts to retake the chamber. While Alaska voted for President Donald Trump by a 13-point margin, an indication Sullivan is favored, public opinion polling has shown Peltola i... Full story

  • Lack of crew will keep state ferry tied up again this summer

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|Jan 8, 2026

    Though the state will have two ferries that could operate next summer on the popular route between Bellingham, Washington, and Alaska, it will park the Kennicott at the dock in Ketchikan, keeping it out of service for the fourth summer in a row due to a persistent crew shortage. The Alaska Marine Highway System has suffered from chronic crew vacancies ever since it tried to resume full service in 2022 after deep cuts to its schedule — and staffing — in 2021-2022 when the COVID-19 pandemic shut down travel. Crew layoffs, resignations and ret...

  • Juneau tries to dig out from record snowfall, but it keeps coming

    Reporters of the Juneau Independent|Jan 8, 2026

    As if a record 82 inches of snow in December wasn't enough to bury Juneau, more snow arrived this week. The National Weather Service forecast up to an additional foot of snow possible for Juneau early this week, turning to a mix of rain and snow before turning to all rain for the weekend. The prediction of even more snow is heaping more misery upon a weary community. Residents have been shoveling, plowing, snowblowing and hauling, trying to clear their streets and driveways, parking lots,...

  • Southeast's red king crab fishery breaks value records

    Orin Pierson, Pilot writer|Dec 18, 2025

    Southeast Alaska’s red king crab fishery delivered its most economically successful season on record this fall, with 205,607 pounds harvested worth more than $5.3 million in ex-vessel value through early December. The fishery, which opened November 1 across multiple management areas in northern Southeast, marked the region’s first opening since 2017 and saw 52 permit holders participate. “I think overall, it went well,” said Adam Messmer, ADF&G’s Region I shellfish biologist, following last week’s Southeast King and Tanner Task Force meeti...

  • Congress restores funding for rural schools, roads; $1.2 million 'backpay' anticipated for Petersburg

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|Dec 18, 2025

    Almost six months after the U.S. Senate voted unanimously to pay out the money, the U.S. House last week finally got around to saying yes and restoring the Secure Rural Schools program, which had paid about $120 million a year to communities hurt by cutbacks in the timber industry. The legislation authorizes funding to cover the past two years of missed payments. The program had ended when the House failed to take any action on a Senate bill a year ago. Petersburg will receive about $1.2 million for the two years of lost funding, essentially...

  • Alaskans targeted by scammers posing as government officials, FBI warns

    Corinne Smith, Alaska Beacon|Dec 18, 2025

    The Federal Bureau of Investigations’ office in Anchorage issued an alert warning Alaskans of scams impersonating law enforcement or government officials demanding payment. Alaskans lost an estimated $1.3 million due to this type of government impersonation scam in 2024 — more than five times the previous year’s losses. Officials say Alaskans should not respond to calls claiming they have missed jury duty or have warrants out for their arrest. Officials say anyone targeted by such calls should not provide personal information or payment to th... Full story

  • Columbia back at work until Dec. 17 to cover for Kennicott

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|Dec 11, 2025

    The Alaska Marine Highway System has put the Columbia back to work through Dec. 17 to cover for the Kennicott, which is delayed leaving a Puget Sound shipyard. The Kennicott was scheduled to start running the first week of December between Bellingham, Washington, and Southeast Alaska, but the state reported last month that the ship would be delayed two weeks coming out of the shipyard where it has been for a new generator and other repairs. The Kennicott is now scheduled to leave Ketchikan on...

Page Down