• Newscast – Monday, June 5, 2023

    Newscast – Monday, June 5, 2023
    https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/1648-vt-1.mp3
    In this newscast:Nearly 70 passengers were evacuated from a small cruise ship in Glacier Bay National  Park this morning,
    The Alaska State Commission for Human Rights has scheduled a public hearing for a human rights complaint regarding the use of tribal IDs at Fred Meyer in Juneau,
    A four-year voyage across the world starts in Juneau this month, and KTOO spoke with Nainoa Thompson, president of the Polynesian Voyaging Society
  • How well does Juneau recycle, and where does it all end up?

    How well does Juneau recycle, and where does it all end up?
    Signs tell Juneau residents where to deposit their recyclables at the city Recycling Center in Lemon Creek. (Photo by Adelyn Baxter/KTOO)https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/05CJRecycling.mp3
    Editor’s Note: After we finished this story, a power outage forced the city’s recycling center to close for repairs. The city’s public works department says the recycling facility is full right now and won’t be able to receive any new materials for at least a few days.
    I
  • Newscast – Thursday, April 18, 2024

    Newscast – Thursday, April 18, 2024
    https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/20240418.mp3
    In this newscast:Scientists and Alaska Native leaders released a report this week that claims plastic waste in the Arctic is contaminating essential resources of Indigenous communities
    Kahlil English shares his research on the silverweed, a seemingly inconspicuous plant with deep roots in Pacific Northwest history
  • Many baby boomers own homes that are too big. Can they be enticed to sell them?

    Many baby boomers own homes that are too big. Can they be enticed to sell them?
    Some baby boomers would like to downsize from their large homes, but say it doesn’t make financial sense. Single-family homes in Dumfries, Va., are seen here last year. (Amanda Andrade-Rhoades/The Washington Post via Getty Images)
    Among the many hard truths for those trying to enter America’s brutal housing market, here’s one: Baby boomers continue to own many of the country’s large houses, even after their households have shrunk to one or two people.
    Baby boomer empty ne
  • Advertisement

  • Alaska Senate rolls out operating budget with roughly $1,300 PFD plus energy relief check

    Alaska Senate rolls out operating budget with roughly $1,300 PFD plus energy relief check
    Senate Finance Committee Co-Chair Sen. Bert Stedman, R-Sitka, listens to testimony from Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities Commissioner Ryan Anderson on Feb. 28, 2024. (Eric Stone/Alaska Public Media)
    The Alaska Senate rolled out its first draft of the state’s operating budget Wednesday. The budget includes a roughly $1,300 Permanent Fund dividend for residents, plus about $175 in an energy relief check. The Senate’s PFD proposal earmarks 25% of this year&rsquo
  • Peter Pan Seafoods announces it will cease operations

    Peter Pan Seafoods announces it will cease operations
    Fishing vessels in King Cove (Theo Greenly/KUCB)
    Peter Pan Seafood Co., the state-backed processing company that has faced dire financial troubles recently, announced Friday it was ceasing operations.
    “We’re saddened to share that Peter Pan Seafoods will be halting operations at its processing plants, leading to the discontinuation of both summer and winter production cycles for the foreseeable future,” the company said in a Facebook post Friday night.
    The company has faced mou
  • Conservation groups add land to the Kootznoowoo Wilderness

    Conservation groups add land to the Kootznoowoo Wilderness
    Two brown bears on July 10, 2012 in the Kootznoowoo Wilderness on Admiralty Island in the Tongass National Forest. (Photo courtesy (Don MacDougall/U.S. Forest Service)
    The vast Tongass National Forest just grew a little bit larger, with the addition of five acres to the Kootznoowoo Wilderness on Admiralty Island. 
    The property, known as Wheeler Creek, was privately owned until the Southeast Alaska Land Trust and the Wilderness Land Trust teamed up to buy it. Then they transferred ownership
  • Newscast – Wednesday, April 17, 2024


    https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/20230417-News-Update.mp3
    In this newscast:Wrangell’s Nolan Center hosted a screening of Blue Ticket on Monday. It’s a film of a play that KTOO documented back in 2019. The play’s author, Maureen Longworth, documented how gay men in Juneau were exiled from the city in the 1960s.
    The Alaska Native Birthworkers Community is a collective of Indigenous midwives and doulas who work with Indigenous mothers during pregnancy, birth and
  • Advertisement

  • Army Corps of Engineers affirms denial of permit for Pebble Mine

    Army Corps of Engineers affirms denial of permit for Pebble Mine
    The proposed Pebble Mine site, pictured in 2014. (Photo by Jason Sear/KDLG)
    The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has upheld its denial of a permit for the proposed Pebble Mine, upstream from Bristol Bay.
    The decision issued Monday is the latest in a long string of legal and administrative rulings against the project.
    But opponents of the gold mine say their fight isn’t over.
    “Pebble will not be over until we have federal legislation, basically saying Bristol Bay is protected fo
  • Dunleavy argues homeschool allotments are an ‘indirect benefit’ to private schools. Lawmakers disagree.

    Dunleavy argues homeschool allotments are an ‘indirect benefit’ to private schools. Lawmakers disagree.
    Governor Mike Dunleavy discussed his priorities for education and other state issues on Talk of Alaska on Tuesday, April 16, 2024. (Matt Faubion/Alaska Public Media)
    Gov. Mike Dunleavy is defending the state’s correspondence school program after a Superior Court judge declared cash payments to Alaska homeschool parents for educational expenses unconstitutional.
    The judge found that the state’s allotment program, which reimburses parents up to $4,500 per year for books, supplies, acti
  • Scientists, Alaska Native leaders say the Arctic faces a growing crisis from plastic waste

    Scientists, Alaska Native leaders say the Arctic faces a growing crisis from plastic waste
    A walrus is seen in Alaska’s Chukchi Sea in June of 2010. Research by a University of Alaska Fairbanks student found microplastics, mostly tiny fibers, were lodged in muscle tissue, blubber and livers of walruses harvested by hunters from St. Lawrence Island and Wainwright. (Sarah Sonsthagen/U.S. Geological Survey)
    Vi Waghiyi grew up in the village of Savoonga on St. Lawrence Island, where meat from walrus, seal and bowhead whale sustained her family through long winters. 
    “My
  • Newscast – Tuesday, April 16, 2024


    https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/20240416-NewsUpdate.mp3
    In this newscast:The Juneau planning commission agreed to let an outdoor food court expand into the empty lot that once housed the demolished Elks Hall building,
    The National Native Boarding School Healing Coalition will conduct interviews to document abuse at boarding schools,
    Alaska Public Media reporter Eric Stone on the Superior Court ruling that found a key benefit to families who choose certain types of homeschoolin
  • Alaska House committee advances, expands proposal to bar trans girls from girls sports

    Alaska House committee advances, expands proposal to bar trans girls from girls sports
    An outdoor basketball hoop is seen in Bethel in October 2022. Alaskans will be able to play only on sports teams that match their gender at birth through college if a new bill becomes law. (Photo by Claire Stremple)
    Republican members of the House Judiciary Committee expanded and advanced a bill that would limit Alaska students’ sports participation to teams that match their sex at birth. Twenty-four states have passed similar laws.
    House Bill 183 was amended in the committe
  • Suicides make up majority of gun deaths, but remain overlooked in gun violence debate

    Suicides make up majority of gun deaths, but remain overlooked in gun violence debate
    Maura Condon Umble and her son, Alex Patrick Umble. (Maura Umble)https://play.podtrac.com/npr-191676894/ondemand.npr.org/anon.npr-mp3/npr/me/2024/04/20240416_me_suicides_make_up_majority_of_gun_deaths_but_remain_overlooked_in_gun_violence_debate.mp3?orgId=1&topicId=1003&aggIds=1241382501&d=436&p=3&story=1243924108&ft=nprml&f=1243924108
    It was an early summer morning in 2018, and Alex Patrick Umble’s family hadn’t heard from him. His mother, Maura Condon Um
  • Alaskans will have a chance to see a total solar eclipse… in 9 years

    During a solar eclipse, Baily’s Beads and solar prominences are seen just after totality in Dallas on Monday, April 8, 2024. (Keegan Barber/NASA)
    If you’re bummed out about missing the total solar eclipse in the Lower 48 this month, start planning now. The next total solar eclipse in North America will happen in 2033, in Alaska.
    University of Alaska Anchorage physics and astronomy professor Travis Rector said the world sees about one to two solar eclipses a year, but the next one in
  • A judge has thrown out a key part of Alaska’s homeschool system. Here’s what to know.

    A judge has thrown out a key part of Alaska’s homeschool system. Here’s what to know.
    The Alaska State Capitol on March 25, 2024. (Eric Stone/Alaska Public Media)
    A Superior Court judge in Anchorage has found a key benefit to families who choose certain types of homeschool violates the state Constitution. The ruling has to do with correspondence school allotments. Those are cash payments to families of homeschooled children meant to reimburse the cost of things like textbooks, services and even private school classes.
    Here’s what to know.
    What does this ruling say?
    The ruli
  • Downtown Juneau’s outdoor food court is expanding, with more restaurants and longer seasons

    Downtown Juneau’s outdoor food court is expanding, with more restaurants and longer seasons
    Workers construct a retaining wall at the outdoor food court location on Franklin Street on Monday, April 15, 2024. (Clarise Larson/KTOO)
    An empty lot that once housed the now-demolished Elks Hall building in downtown Juneau will be getting a new life this summer. 
    Last week, the Juneau planning commission unanimously agreed to allow David McCasland of Deckhand Dave’s, a fish taco stand, to use the site to expand his seasonal outdoor food court on Franklin Street. 
    McCasland said
  • Newscast – Monday, April 15, 2024


    https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/20240415-News-Update.mp3
    In this newscast:Peter Pan Seafood announced Friday that it was ceasing operations,
    A partisan brawl is about to erupt in Congress over the impeachment of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas and Alaska’s US senators are seemingly split over it,
    Tongass Voices: Jeremy Kane on the philosophy of bowl-making
  • Capital Transit temporarily suspends 2 routes amid worker shortage

    Capital Transit temporarily suspends 2 routes amid worker shortage
    A Capital Transit bus bound for the Mendenhall Valley parks at the downtown transit center on Monday, April 15, 2024. (Clarise Larson/KTOO)
    Juneau residents who ride Capital Transit buses to the airport, the University of Alaska Southeast and social service providers on Teal Street will need to find other means of transportation beginning Monday, April 22. 
    Last week, the city announced it would temporarily suspend routes 5 and 6, citing a shortage of drivers and maintenance workers. 
  • Tongass Voices: Jeremy Kane on the philosophy of bowl-making


    University of Alaska Southeast ceramics professor Jeremy Kane demonstrating bowl-making for his intermediate class. (Tasha Elizarde/KTOO)
    This is Tongass Voices, a series from KTOO sharing weekly perspectives from the homelands of the Áak’w Kwáan and beyond. 
    The University of Alaska Southeast’s ceramics classes in Juneau are hard to get into — because so many people want to take them. 
    Jeremy Kane has been teaching ceramics for 20 years. Each year, the
  • Lawmakers weigh whether to reduce or acknowledge rights of growing Alaska homeless population

    Lawmakers weigh whether to reduce or acknowledge rights of growing Alaska homeless population
    TJ Beers holds a sign to advocate for the rights of people experiencing homelessness outside the state Capitol on April 9, 2024. Beers was homeless for four years and in three states. “I don’t know how I survived,” he said. (Claire Stremple/Alaska Beacon)
    TJ Beers stood across the street from the Capitol in a navy suit and held a sign that caught the late afternoon sun on Tuesday. It was printed on a large piece of cardboard, reminiscent of what an unhoused person may sleep on,
  • Sitka’s housing crunch hits tribal citizens hardest, study says

    Baranof Island Housing Authority, which constructed this four-plex in the Kaasda He’en Shanaa’x, is hoping to solicit ideas and input from community members on how to expand affordable housing in Sitka. (Robert Woolsey/KCAW)
    Tribal citizens in Sitka are being squeezed out of Sitka’s housing market, and some are leaving town, according to a new study commissioned by Baranof Island Housing Authority, with support from Sitka Tribe of Alaska. Now, they are hoping the data – a
  • Alaska judge strikes down state’s cash payments to families using correspondence school programs

    Alaska judge strikes down state’s cash payments to families using correspondence school programs
    The Boney Courthouse in downtown Anchorage, across the street from the larger Nesbett Courthouse, holds the Alaska Supreme Court chambers. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
    An Anchorage Superior Court judge on Friday struck down an Alaska law that allows the state to distribute cash payments to the parents of homeschooled students on the grounds that it violates constitutional prohibitions against spending state money on private education.
    “This court finds that there is no w
  • What biologists see from the shores of the drying Great Salt Lake

    What biologists see from the shores of the drying Great Salt Lake
    Scientists Carly Biedul, Bonnie Baxter and Heidi Hoven look for migratory birds on the eerily dry south shore of the Great Salt Lake in Utah. (Lindsay D’Addato for NPR)https://play.podtrac.com/npr-191676894/ondemand.npr.org/anon.npr-mp3/npr/wesat/2024/04/20240413_wesat_what_biologists_see_from_the_shores_of_the_drying_great_salt_lake.mp3?orgId=1&topicId=1167&d=298&p=7&story=1244169234&ft=nprml&f=1244169234
    SALT LAKE CITY, Utah — Drive west of this sprawling hi
  • Alaska House rejects constitutional amendment guaranteeing formula-based PFD

    Alaska House rejects constitutional amendment guaranteeing formula-based PFD
    Rep. Ben Carpenter, R-Nikiski, speaks on the House floor on Feb. 28, 2024 during debate on House Joint Resolution 7. (Eric Stone/Alaska Public Media)
    The Alaska House on Thursday rejected a proposed amendment to the state constitution that would guarantee Permanent Fund dividends paid out according to a formula in state law. House lawmakers had been waiting for more than a month to take a final vote on the measure, one of several elements of a long-term fiscal plan for the state p
  • Juneau Afternoon: The Daquiri Queens, Misner & Smith, and Shonti & Will live from the Red Carpet Stage

    Juneau Afternoon: The Daquiri Queens, Misner & Smith, and Shonti & Will live from the Red Carpet Stage
    Misner & Smith on the Red Carpet Stage in Studio 2K at KTOO. (Bostin Christopher/KTOO)Friday, April 12, 2024 — Full EpisodeOn today’s program:The Daiquiri Queens from Lafayette, Louisiana, are the featured dance band at the 49th Alaska Folk Festival. They will play dance sets at the Juneau Arts and Culture Center on Friday night, April 12, at 8:30 p.m. and Saturday, April 13, at 9:20 p.m. Before the Friday show, they will give a short primer on Cajun dance
    Misner & Smith are
  • Newscast – Friday, March 12, 2024


    https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/20240412-News-Update.mp3
    In this newscast:Cancer patients in Juneau who need gynecological surgery no longer have to leave town to get it,
    The Alaska House of Representatives passed its $6 billion operating budget today
  • Washington man sentenced to 99 years for murder of Ketchikan surgeon

    Washington man sentenced to 99 years for murder of Ketchikan surgeon
    Jordan Joplin is escorted out of a Ketchikan courtroom following sentencing on April 9, 2024 (Jack Darrell/KRBD)
    A Superior Court judge sentenced a Washington man Tuesday to 99 years in prison for murdering a prominent Ketchikan surgeon.
    Judge Michael Wolverton handed down the maximum possible sentence to 39-year-old Jordan Joplin for the murder, saying it was one of the most “brazen and craven” acts he’d seen in his 40 years on the bench.
    The front row of the courtroom was pac
  • Alaska delegation nominates longtime Native leader to be co-chair of the Denali Commission

    Alaska delegation nominates longtime Native leader to be co-chair of the Denali Commission
    Julie Kitka, president of the Alaska Federation of Natives, at a June 28, 2022, news conference held by Gov. Mike Dunleavy. Members of Alaska’s congressional delegation have nominated her to be the next federal co-chair of the Denali Commission. (Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
    Julie Kitka, the longtime president of the Alaska Federation of Natives, has been nominated by Alaska’s congressional delegation to be a new co-chair of the Denali Commission, which oversees a variety of fede
  • Garden Talk: Why silverweed is ‘a beloved plant all throughout the Pacific Northwest’


    Silverweed in bloom. (Courtesy of Khalil English)
    For this week’s Garden Talk, KTOO’s Chloe Pleznac spoke with Khalil English about his research on silverweed, a seemingly inconspicuous plant with deep roots in Pacific Northwest history. English spoke about silverweed’s importance as a food source across the North — and where you can find it in Juneau.Listen:https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/GT-2-FINAL-EDIT.mp3
    This transcript has been lightly edited for c

Follow @AnchorageNewsUS on Twitter!