• On first day back, Trump lashes out at ‘fake news media’

    On first day back, Trump lashes out at ‘fake news media’
    WASHINGTON — Hours after returning from his first trip abroad as president, President Trump tweeted Sunday morning about “fake news media” and White House leaks.
    “It is my opinion that many of the leaks coming out of the White House are fabricated lies made up by the #FakeNews media,” Mr. Trump said in a series of tweets.
    “Whenever you see the words ‘sources say’ in the fake news media, and they don’t mention names… it is very possible
  • Alaska House passes trans sports ban after extended filibuster by opponents

    Alaska House passes trans sports ban after extended filibuster by opponents
    Speaker of the House Cathy Tilton, R-Wasilla, talks to fellow lawmakers about rules for debate on House Bill 183 on Saturday, May 11, 2024. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)
    The Alaska House of Representatives voted 22-18 late Sunday to ban transgender girls from girls’ school sports teams by limiting access to girls whose original birth certificates identify them as girls.
    The decision followed hours of filibustering by a coalition of opponents, but supporters mustered enough votes to
  • Southeast Alaska not ready for a hatchery-only king fishery, study finds

    Southeast Alaska not ready for a hatchery-only king fishery, study finds
    King salmon landed in the commercial troll fishery in the summer of 2019. (Photo courtesy of Matt Lichtenstein)
    Should Southeast Alaska have a hatchery-only king salmon sports fishery? Researchers recently tried to answer that question as a possible solution to a declining number of wild kings.
    Chinook or king salmon are the largest and most valuable salmon species. They’re sought-after by sport, commercial, and subsistence fishermen alike. But in recent decades, their harvest has become m
  • New report questions business model of British Columbia gold mines


    A view of the Stikine River near Wrangell and Petersburg. The river is downstream of many Canadian mines in the Alaska transboundary watershed. (Photo courtesy of Cindi Lagoudakis)
    Gold mines near the British Columbia border are controversial in Alaska because of the potential for negative impacts to the environment and fisheries downstream. A nonprofit group called the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) released a report in January that found that these gold mines operate somewh
  • Advertisement

  • Alaska lawmakers support push to investigate, document forced assimilation in boarding schools 

    Alaska lawmakers support push to investigate, document forced assimilation in boarding schools 
    Jan Bronson of Anchorage and Cathy Walling of Fairbanks, representing the Alaska Friends Conference, apologize to Alaska Native communities for the boarding schools it ran in Alaska and the United States. The apology took place at Sayéik Gastineau elementary school, the former site of a Quaker mission school in Juneau, during Orange Shirt Day, Sept. 30, 2022. (Photo by Lisa Phu/Alaska Beacon)
    Alaska lawmakers overwhelmingly voted to support a federal proposal that would investigate and do
  • Newscast – Friday, May 10, 2024

    Newscast – Friday, May 10, 2024
    https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/20240510-News-Update.mp3
    In this newscast:A new study reveals that snow slides are a leading cause of death for mountain goats,
    Should Southeast Alaska have a hatchery-only king salmon sports fishery? Researchers recently tried to answer that question as a possible solution to a declining number of wild kings,
    Active aurora is forecast this weekend due to intense solar flares in recent days
  • Dunleavy declares disaster amid historic breakup flooding on the Kuskokwim River

    Dunleavy declares disaster amid historic breakup flooding on the Kuskokwim River
    A truck drives through floodwater on Sixth Avenue in Bethel on May 9, 2024. (MaryCait Dolan/KYUK)
    Amid historic breakup flooding on the Kuskokwim River, Gov. Mike Dunleavy on Friday issued a disaster declaration for lower Kuskokwim and Yukon River communities. The declaration allows eligible communities and individuals to access state funds for emergency-related costs and provide assistance.
    The declaration comes as icy water continues to flood multiple communities on the Lower Kuskokwim.
    The Ku
  • Sudden ANTHC leadership change: Valerie Davidson no longer at the helm

    Sudden ANTHC leadership change: Valerie Davidson no longer at the helm
    Valerie Nurr’araaluk Davidson, former president of the Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium, speaks at a press conference on June 14, 2021. (Jeff Chen/Alaska Public Media)
    Valerie Nurr’araaluk Davidson was not only head of one of the largest tribal health organizations in the nation, but also recognized as a trailblazer in Native health care. But Davidson is no longer president and CEO of the Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium.
    In a statement on its website, ANTHC ann
  • Advertisement

  • Brinksmanship and compromise emerge in Alaska’s Capitol as legislative session nears an end

    Brinksmanship and compromise emerge in Alaska’s Capitol as legislative session nears an end
    Budding trees and bushes are seen in front of the Alaska State Capitol on Wednesday, May 1, 2024. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)
    Members of the Alaska Senate have killed, at least temporarily, a plan to end a tax policy worth more than $100 million for one of the state’s largest oil companies.
    The move came after Hilcorp Alaska and members of the state House of Representatives warned that there would be consequences if the Senate moved forward with plans to end a tax policy that ben
  • Alaskans suing state over food assistance delays ask judge to order faster application processing

    Alaskans suing state over food assistance delays ask judge to order faster application processing
    Packaged food sits on shelves at Sitka’s Salvation Army food pantry in 2018. (Photo by Emily Kwong/KCAW)https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/09SNAP.mp3
    Alaskans who sued the state last year over long wait times for food assistance are asking a federal judge to order the state to speed up processing.
    The state’s Division of Public Assistance has struggled in recent years to keep up with pending applications for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, better known a
  • Avalanches are a leading cause of death for Southeast Alaska’s mountain goats

    Avalanches are a leading cause of death for Southeast Alaska’s mountain goats
    Close up view of an adult male mountain goat in late-winter, near Juneau Icefield, Alaska. In the background, steep avalanche prone slopes are visible. (Photo courtesy of Kevin White)
    The mountain goat is one of nature’s most skilled mountaineers. The hooved herds make their way through harsh Alpine terrain with relative ease. And they’ve been living with mountain snow since the Ice Age.
    According to wildlife ecologist Kevin White, that also means that they live amid avalanche paths.
  • Newscast – Thursday, May 9, 2024


    https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/20240509-News-Update.mp3
    In this newscast:Alaskans who sued the state last year over long wait times for food assistance are asking a federal judge to order the state to speed up processing, but the state says the situation has improved dramatically,
    Transboundary gold mines are controversial because of their environmental impact, but a nonprofit group released a report that found that these mines operate somewhat like a Ponzi scheme
  • Widespread high water and flooding continues for lower Kuskokwim communities

    Widespread high water and flooding continues for lower Kuskokwim communities
    Floodwaters rise in Bethel’s Alligator Acres neighborhood on May 9, 2024. (Photo by MaryCait Dolan/KYUK)
    Kwethluk remains on flood warning, while Bethel and lower Kuskokwim communities are on flood advisory as the river swells over its banks.
    National Weather Service Hydrologist Johnse Ostman said on KYUK morning show Coffee at KYUK on Thursday that high water is widespread throughout the lower Kuskokwim region.
    “We’ve seen high water all the way from below lower Kalskag down t
  • Could Alaska be the final destination for Japan’s carbon pollution?

    Could Alaska be the final destination for Japan’s carbon pollution?
    Officials from Japanese energy companies listen to a presentation from U.S. Department of Energy officials at a carbon workshop Tuesday in Anchorage. (Photo by Nathaniel Herz/Northern Journal)
    For decades, Alaska shipped liquefied natural gas to Japan, which burned the fuel to generate power — and also generated ample climate-warming carbon emissions.
    Now, the Biden administration wants to study whether those Japanese emissions could be captured, liquefied and shipped back to Ala
  • “Welcome to Deishú”? A mysterious sign change sparks discussion of Haines Borough’s name

    “Welcome to Deishú”? A mysterious sign change sparks discussion of Haines Borough’s name
    A sign welcoming people to town as been changed from saying “Welcome to Haines” to “Welcome to Deishu” on Saturday, April 27, 2024. (Rashah McChesney/Chilkat Valley News)
    If you drove into town from the ferry terminal two weeks ago or from up the Chilkat Valley, you may have noticed something odd about the cedar signs welcoming you to Haines.
    In fact, the signs wouldn’t have welcomed you to Haines. Instead, they said “Welcome to Deishú.” That&rsqu
  • Alaska Native corporation ending involvement in controversial Ambler road project

    Alaska Native corporation ending involvement in controversial Ambler road project
    The NANA Regional Corp. office in downtown Anchorage is seen on Wednesday. The Native corporation, citing dissatisfaction with management by the Alaska Industrial Development and Export Authority, is ending its involvement with the Ambler Access Project. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
    The regional corporation owned by the Iñupiat people of Northwest Alaska said Wednesday it is severing its ties to the Ambler Access Project, the controversial road that a state agency proposes to bui
  • Alaska Legislature heads into session’s homestretch with energy-related bills still on the table

    Alaska Legislature heads into session’s homestretch with energy-related bills still on the table
    Hilcorp’s Dillon platform in Cook Inlet (foreground) photographed last year. (Nathaniel Herz for Alaska Public Media)
    Leaders in both the state House and Senate have listed energy legislation as a primary focus of this session. That’s as gas producers warn that Cook Inlet natural gas supplies are dwindling, threatening higher prices.
    But there’s only about a week left for lawmakers to pass bills that address a number of energy issues. So it’s a good time to check in with
  • Newscast – Wednesday, May 8, 2024

    Newscast – Wednesday, May 8, 2024
    https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/20240508-News-Update.mp3
    In this newscast:The Juneau Assembly wants the city to ask community organizations if they’d be interested in continuing to care for graveyards on Douglas — with potential funding,
    An audio postcard from this years MMIP Awareness Day in Bethel
  • 10-mile Lower Kuskokwim ice jam causes flooding, high water

    10-mile Lower Kuskokwim ice jam causes flooding, high water
    Ice jammed outside of Akiak, May 7, 2024. (From National Weather Service)
    Early Wednesday morning, Akiak residents reported slowly rising water and the sound of moving ice. Tuluksak is experiencing what residents describe as some of its “worst flooding” in 10-15 years. A 10-mile-long ice jam had been wedged below Akiak, which is under flood advisory on Wednesday.
    Bethel Search and Rescue member Mark Leary joined the RiverWatch team on their Tuesday aerial survey of the Kusk
  • Volunteers want the city to manage Douglas Island’s cemeteries. Instead, the Assembly is asking for help.

    Volunteers want the city to manage Douglas Island’s cemeteries. Instead, the Assembly is asking for help.
    Ed Schoenfeld looks at a headstone at the old Douglas city cemetery on Tuesday, May 7, 2024. (Clarise Larson/KTOO)https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/gravesMP3.mp3
    Trudging through the bumpy, brush-covered grounds at the old Douglas city cemetery, Ed Schoenfeld squints at a headstone. It’s half protruding out of the ground, with fiddleheads popping up around it. 
    “It’s a headstone for Fred Schuler. It says he was born in Germany in 1859 and died November 11,
  • Legislature rejects Dunleavy appointees to state school board and commercial fishing agency

    Legislature rejects Dunleavy appointees to state school board and commercial fishing agency
    Members of the Alaska House and Senate vote on the confirmation of state Board of Education and Early Development member Bob Griffin on May 5, 2024. (Eric Stone/Alaska Public Media)
    The Alaska Legislature shot down one of Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s nominees to the state Board of Education and Early Development on Tuesday. Members of the House and Senate objected to what they said were ethics violations by Bob Griffin, who has sat on the state board for five years.
    The 21-39 bipartisan vote came
  • The U.S. was supposed to get keys to a new heavy icebreaker this year. Instead, construction is years late as costs soar.

    The U.S. was supposed to get keys to a new heavy icebreaker this year. Instead, construction is years late as costs soar.
    Artist rendering of the Polar Security Cutter design. (VT Halter Marine/Technology Associates, Inc.)
    The Coast Guard’s plan to build three heavy icebreakers is five years behind schedule and the price has ballooned to $5.1 billion from an initial estimate of less than $2 billion, according to projections from Congressional Budget Office and other watchdogs.
    “The Coast Guard originally aimed to have the first PSC (polar security cutter) delivered in 2024, but the ship’s estimate
  • FBI arrests man in Juneau after stabbing multiple people on cruise ship

    FBI arrests man in Juneau after stabbing multiple people on cruise ship
    The Norwegian Encore berths in Juneau in Oct. 2022. (Clarise Larson/ for the Juneau Empire)
    The FBI arrested a cruise ship employee in Juneau on Tuesday afternoon, the day after he allegedly stabbed multiple people with scissors aboard the Norwegian Encore. 
    Ntando Sogoni, 35, of South Africa was charged with assault with a dangerous weapon. He faces a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison.
    In an interview, FBI Public Affairs Officer Chloe Martin said the agency continues to investigate the
  • FBI arrests cruise ship crew member in Juneau after allegedly stabbing multiple people on board

    FBI arrests cruise ship crew member in Juneau after allegedly stabbing multiple people on board
    The Norwegian Encore berths in Juneau in Oct. 2022. (Clarise Larson/ for the Juneau Empire)
    The FBI arrested a cruise ship employee in Juneau on Tuesday afternoon, the day after he allegedly stabbed multiple people with scissors aboard the Norwegian Encore. 
    Ntando Sogoni, 35, of South Africa was charged with assault with a dangerous weapon. He faces a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison.
    In an interview, FBI Public Affairs Officer Chloe Martin said the agency continues to investigate the
  • Newscast – Tuesday, May 7, 2024

    Newscast – Tuesday, May 7, 2024
    https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/20240507-News-Update.mp3
    In this newscast:Juneau’s annual workshop on How to Run for Local Office is this Saturday, and October’s municipal election is already shaping up to be an interesting one,
    A proposal headed to the Alaska Board of Fisheries next year would change how a popular run of king salmon is managed near Petersburg,
    Tongass Voices: Haa Tooch Lichéesh Coalition members find inner strength through ocean dipping
  • How to Run for Local Office workshop preps candidates for Juneau’s October election on Saturday

    How to Run for Local Office workshop preps candidates for Juneau’s October election on Saturday
    Michael Beasley drops a ballot into a drop box at the City Hall Assembly Chambers on Election Day on Tuesday, Oct. 3, 2023. (Clarise Larson / for the Juneau Empire)
    Juneau’s annual How to Run for Local Office workshop is happening on Saturday. It gives anyone a chance to ask questions and learn about what it takes to campaign for the Juneau Assembly or School Board. 
    Current and former members will offer advice to prospective candidates for this October’s municipal election.
    Peg
  • Alaska House nears vote on big increase for public school maintenance statewide

    Alaska House nears vote on big increase for public school maintenance statewide
    Members of the Alaska House Finance Committee discuss their first-draft budget on Tuesday, March 12, 2024. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)
    A key Alaska House committee has approved funding for the most school maintenance projects in several years — from new roofs to copper pipe and electrical replacements.
    The finance committee advanced a $552 million construction and renovation spending plan that includes a huge increase for school maintenance. If adopted, the $63 million earmarked
  • Tongass Voices: Haa Tooch Lichéesh Coalition members find inner strength through ocean dipping

    Tongass Voices: Haa Tooch Lichéesh Coalition members find inner strength through ocean dipping
    People dipping with Haa Tooch Lichéesh Coalition at Auke Recreation Area on March 24, 2024. (Photo by Yvonne Krumrey/KTOO)
    This is Tongass Voices, a series from KTOO sharing weekly perspectives from the homelands of the Áak’w Kwáan and beyond.
    Haa Tooch Lichéesh Coalition is a nonprofit that offers Indigenous-based healing practices and reconciliation with the violent history of colonization and its impacts on Juneau’s community today.
    One of these tra
  • Alaska officials announce ‘One Pill Can Kill’ campaign to address fentanyl crisis

    Alaska officials announce ‘One Pill Can Kill’ campaign to address fentanyl crisis
    Gov. Mike Dunleavy on Monday announced a new state awareness campaign called “One Pill Can Kill,” aimed at addressing the fentanyl crisis in Alaska. (Wesley Early/Alaska Public Media)
    Alaska officials have announced a new awareness campaign aimed at highlighting and combating the growing danger of the synthetic opioid fentanyl.
    Gov. Mike Dunleavy and U.S. Sen. Dan Sullivan announced the “One Pill Can Kill” campaign at an Anchorage news conference Monday. Sullivan said tha
  • Alaska House committee kills state-owned corporation’s plan to borrow up to $300 million

    Alaska House committee kills state-owned corporation’s plan to borrow up to $300 million
    Members of the Alaska House Finance Committee, at left, listen to budget aide Remond Henderson during a break in amendment discussions on Monday, March 27, 2023. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)
    Members of the Alaska House have refused a request by the Alaska Industrial Development and Export Authority for permission to borrow up to $300 million for unspecified mining-related projects.
    On Friday night, the House Finance Committee removed the requested bonding authority from House Bill 122,

Follow @AnchorageNewsUS on Twitter!