• Newscast – Thursday, May 16, 2024


    https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/20230516-News-Update.mp3
    In this newscast:An affordable housing project built specifically for people in recovery from substance misuse received funding support from the Juneau Assembly this week.
    KTOO reporter Anna Canny sought out where ravens roost in Juneau in this week’s Curious Juneau episode.
    A 91-year-old cruise tourist is suing the Ketchikan Borough for negligence after his mobility scooter tipped over on a public bus.
  • Newscast – Friday, June 14, 2024


    https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/20240614-News-Update.mp3
    In this newscast:Cultural ambassadors are now at the Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center to teach Lingit culture and history to tourists,
    Representative Mary Peltola recently introduced two bills aimed at addressing bycatch in federal trawl fisheries
  • Juneau Afternoon: ‘Pretendians’ podcast, SHI Multilingual Audio Dictionary, ‘Mom’s Unhinged’


    Screenshot of the Multilingual Audio Dictionary from Sealaska Heritage InstituteFriday, June 14, 2024 — Full EpisodeOn today’s program:“Pretendians” is Canadaland’s newest podcast: What do some of the most prominent and successful Indigenous artists, leaders and professors have in common? They aren’t IndigenousThe newly launched “Multilingual Audio Dictionary” from Sealaska Heritage Institute“Moms Unhinged” comedy show at Centennial Hal
  • New cultural ambassadors deepen tourists’ experience of Juneau’s Mendenhall Glacier


    Jinkasee.ee Rose Willard explains a náxw, or halibut hook to visitors. She is one of 10 cultural ambassadors at the Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center on June 13, 2024. (Photo by Yvonne Krumrey/KTOO)https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/14ambassadors.mp3
    When tourists come to Juneau, the Mendenhall Glacier is usually near the top of their sightseeing list. It gets hundreds of thousands of visitors each summer.
    And now, those visitors will have the chance to learn more about Indi
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  • An Alaska energy blogger breaks down the looming, much-nuanced Cook Inlet gas shortfall

    An Alaska energy blogger breaks down the looming, much-nuanced Cook Inlet gas shortfall
    A specialized unit called a jackup rig, at left, drilled a natural gas well last year at Hilcorp’s Tyonek platform, right, in Cook Inlet. (Nathaniel Herz for Alaska Public Media)
    Alaskans who depend on natural gas for heat or electricity are confronting a looming shortfall in Cook Inlet, and many of them have questions about how soon utilities might need to start more expensive gas imports.
    There are a few proposals to lessen the blow to ratepayers’ pocketbooks, but some are wonderin
  • Garden Talk: Companion planting in Southeast Alaska, with zucchinis


    Companion planting at Tidal Wood Food and Forage in Juneau. (Joel Bos)
    Companion planting is a technique gardeners can use to increase their yield, boost soil fertility, and reduce weeds and pests. For this week’s Garden Talk, Joel Bos of Tidal Wood Food and Forage shared his companion planting techniques.
    Listen:https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/14GT_Zuccs.mp3
    This transcript has been lightly edited for clarity and length.
    Chloe Pleznac: Let’s talk about companion pl
  • Gov. Dunleavy picks second ex-talk radio host for lucrative fish job after first rejected

    Gov. Dunleavy picks second ex-talk radio host for lucrative fish job after first rejected
    Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy speaks to reporters during a news conference Wednesday, Feb. 7, 2024. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)
    In May, the Alaska Legislature narrowly rejected a conservative talk radio host’s appointment to a highly paid position regulating the state’s commercial fisheries.
    Now, after the failure of that pick, Republican Gov. Mike Dunleavy has chosen a new appointee with a similar — though not identical — background for the six-figure job at the Co
  • Murkowski votes with Democrats on IVF bill, as Sullivan joins most GOP senators to block it

    Murkowski votes with Democrats on IVF bill, as Sullivan joins most GOP senators to block it
    The U.S. Capitol, as seen from the East Plaza. (Liz Ruskin/Alaska Public Media)
    Alaska’s U.S. senators split their votes earlier today over a bill to protect in vitro fertilization. Sens. Lisa Murkowski and Susan Collins of Maine were the only Republicans to vote in favor of advancing the Democratic bill.
    Sen. Dan Sullivan joined all other Republicans in voting to block the bill. He signed onto a Republican letter accusing Democrats of “false fear-mongering” about reproductive
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  • Pennsylvania craftsman restores stonework at Sitka church


    Randy Bollinger works on one of the sidewalls at the front of the Church, resetting stones. (Jeb Sharp)https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/11MASON.mp3
    If you stop by St. Peter’s by the Sea Episcopal Church on Lincoln Street this month you might catch stonemason Randy Bollinger working outside. He is restoring some of the stonework on the exterior of the 125-year-old building.
    “I identify as a craftsman,” Bollinger said on a recent morning as he reset stones on one
  • Anchorage sisters tap readers’ rapture for romance with new bookstore

    Anchorage sisters tap readers’ rapture for romance with new bookstore
    Ally Hartman, co-owner of Beauty and the Book Alaska, welcomes in customers for the store’s grand opening in Anchorage on Saturday, June 8, 2024. (Matt Faubion/Alaska Public Media)
    Ally Hartman and Baylee Loyd’s bookstore is an experience. Each of the three rooms has a distinct vibe and different subgenres sorted by colors on the shelves. One room is green and white, another pink, and the third is black.
    “The dark room isn’t going to be all romance. It’s going to be
  • Newscast – Thursday, June 13, 2024

    Newscast – Thursday, June 13, 2024
    https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/newscast.mp3
    In this newscast:A drag story time in Seward faced a bomb threat on Saturday, but the event persisted,
    Curious Juneau: What will happen to Juneau’s City Hall mural if the city moves out?
  • Juneau Afternoon: Dirty Cello, ‘Pride & Prejudice,’ and Juneau-Douglas City Museum


    Dirty Cello, pictured in Studio 2K at KTOO, will play the Gold Town Theater on Thursday, June 13. (Bostin Christopher/KTOO)On today’s program:Dirty Cello, international touring band, to play the Gold Town Theater, June 13 at 7:00 p.m.Theater Alaska’s production of “Pride & Prejudice” to play Juneau June 19 through July 14Juneau Douglas City Museum’s summer walking tours and exhibitions
    Bostin Christopher hosts the conversation. Juneau Afternoon airs at 3:00 p.m.
  • Alaska Wildlife Troopers take lead on last week’s mountain lion death on Wrangell Island

    A mountain lion. (Photo by Justin Shoemaker/USFWS, Public Domain)
    Mountain lions aren’t known to live in Wrangell, but that doesn’t mean the Southeast Alaska island hasn’t served as stomping grounds for the apex predator.
    In fact, a mountain lion was shot and killed on the south end of Wrangell Island recently.
    Alaska Wildlife Troopers and the Alaska Department of Fish & Game were notified of the death on June 3 and took possession of the carcass. Troopers are leading the i
  • Juneau man dies in Seattle hospital after a city-owned truck struck him

    Juneau man dies in Seattle hospital after a city-owned truck struck him
    Juneau Police Department vehicles in downtown Juneau on June 13, 2024. (Clarise Larson/KTOO)
    A Juneau man died in a Seattle hospital after a City and Borough of Juneau employee driving a city-owned truck struck him as he was lying in the drive-through lane of a bank in the Mendenhall Valley, police and city officials said.
    Police identified the man who died as 38-year-old Armando Sanchez. The incident happened early in the morning of June 1 at True North Federal Credit Union on Postal Way.
    Junea
  • What will happen to Juneau’s City Hall mural if the city moves out?


    Gary Waid points to the man depicted on the “Raven discovering mankind in a clamshell” mural at City Hall on Monday, June 11, 2024. The man is modeled off of Waid in the ’80s. (Clarise Larson/KTOO)https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/CJmuralMP3.mp3
    Spanning an outside wall of City Hall in downtown Juneau, there’s a 10-and-a-half by 61-foot mural called “Raven discovering mankind in a clamshell.” 
    It shows Raven opening a clam and releasing a
  • Royalty-free terms draw only three oil and gas lease bids in Alaska’s Cook Inlet

    Royalty-free terms draw only three oil and gas lease bids in Alaska’s Cook Inlet
    A view from Skilak Lake Road across Cook Inlet to Mount Redoubt, an active stratovolcano in the Aleutian Range. (Credit: Lisa Hupp/USFWS)
    A state oil and gas auction that offered royalty-free leases in the Cook Inlet basin as an incentive for new exploration drew only three bids, according to results released Wednesday by the Alaska Division of Oil and Gas.
    The annual areawide Cook Inlet sale featured special terms for the 725 tracts covering 3 million offshore and onshore acres in the basin: A
  • As Alaska’s boreal forest warms, land managers face tough questions about how, or whether, to respond


    A glimpse of the boreal forest between Cantwell and Fairbanks, Alaska. (Lois Parshley)
    Northern ecosystems are seeing some of the planet’s most sweeping changes from climate warming. For some animals and plants, that has posed a threat to their very existence and, for humans, a couple complicated questions: Can we — and should we — do anything to save them?
    In Alaska, one area where land managers and ecologists are wrestling with those questions is the boreal forest, home to sp
  • Environmental groups ask feds to reconsider the trans-Alaska pipeline and plan for its removal

    Environmental groups ask feds to reconsider the trans-Alaska pipeline and plan for its removal
    A stretch of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline System near the Toolik Field Station in the North Slope Borough. (Rashah McChesney/Alaska’s Energy Desk)
    A coalition of environmental groups has filed a legal petition with the federal government to reconsider how the Trans-Alaska Pipeline System contributes to climate change and to begin phasing the 800-mile line out of existence.
    The government first authorized the pipeline right-of-way across federal land in the 1970s, sparking an economic boom tha
  • Juneau Afternoon: Juneau TOPS Chapter, The Getting Strangers, USDA Forest Service, and Wearable Art information


    On today’s program:Juneau TOPS (taking off pounds sensibly) chapter is a support group for helping overweight people be more healthy in all aspects of lifeThe Getting Strangers – live country music at The Crystal Saloon, Friday, June 14Juneau Arts and Humanities Council with updates on Wearable Art, Fresh Air Markets, and moreUSDA Forest Service with updates on the Forest Plan Revision
    Bostin Christopher hosts the conversation. Juneau Afternoon airs at 3:00 p.m. on KTOO and KAUK with
  • Juneau Animal Rescue seeks foster homes after removing 50 cats from single residence


    Kittens cuddle together at Juneau Animal Rescue on Wednesday, June 12, 2024. (Clarise Larson/KTOO)https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/12catoverload.mp3
    Animal Control Officer Karen Wood opens the door to a small room swimming with tiny kittens. 
    “So this is probably our biggest room,” Wood said. “We’ve got 16 kittens and 13 moms, so it’s going to stink in here.”  
    That’s just one room that is housing an influx of cats. 
  • Newscast – Wednesday, June 12, 2024


    https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/20240612-News-Update.mp3
    In this newscast:A Superior Court judge in Anchorage has dismissed a significant portion of a lawsuit filed by supporters of Alaska’s ranked choice voting,
    A search is underway for a missing Ketchikan woman,
    Museum curators, chemists and Alaska Native weavers have worked to solve the mystery  of what dye techniques were used to produce the colors in Chilkat weaving,
    Juneau Animal Rescue removed over 50 cats and
  • Chemists, curators and Chilkat weavers present findings on historic dye techniques

    Chemists, curators and Chilkat weavers present findings on historic dye techniques
    A detail of Lily Hope’s first full size Chilkat Robe. (Photo by Annie Bartholomew/KTOO)
    The Chilkat robes in the Alaska State Museum collections feature formline faces woven with yarn. The historic ceremonial garments combines once-vibrant yellows that have softened with age with warm black-browns and striking blues and greens.
    Museum curator Ellen Carrlee and her collaborators wanted to figure out where those classic pigments came from. The color curiosity evolved into Chilkat Dye Workin
  • Alaska Gov. Dunleavy will be asked to pick fourth state Supreme Court justice

    Alaska Gov. Dunleavy will be asked to pick fourth state Supreme Court justice
    Alaska Supreme Court Justice Peter Maassen receives applause from his fellow justices and members of the Alaska Legislature during the annual State of the Judiciary address on Wednesday, Feb. 1, 2023, at the Alaska State Capitol. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)
    A wave of retirements on the Alaska Supreme Court is nearing its end.
    On Friday, the Alaska Judicial Council announced that it is accepting applications from attorneys and judges interested in replacing Justice Peter Maassen, who wi
  • A petition to put king salmon on the endangered species list is raising alarm across Alaska

    A petition to put king salmon on the endangered species list is raising alarm across Alaska
    Petersburg troller Mark Roberts working on his fishing vessel, the Cape Cross, on May 24, 2024. (Photo by Shelby Herbert/KFSK)https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/10KINGLIST-L.mp3
    The federal government is considering a request that would grant Gulf of Alaska king salmon Endangered Species Act protections. The National Marine Fisheries Service recently found that the petition by the Washington-based conservation group Wild Fish Conservancy, which said that the sp
  • Alaska’s Little Norway keeps old culinary traditions alive

    Sharon Wikan and her daughter, Katrina Miller, make waffler for Petersburg’s Little Norway Festival on May 13, 2024.
    (Shelby Herbert/KFSK)
    Alaska’s Little Norway celebrated Norwegian Constitution Day in mid-May with a week-long festival. For some families in the community, that meant many hours spent cooking heaps of treats from the Old Country, often using recipes that have been passed down for generations.
    The air inside Petersburg’s Sons of Norway Hall was thick with the sme
  • How a 12-year-old got an Anchorage street named after a Harry Potter location

    How a 12-year-old got an Anchorage street named after a Harry Potter location
    Twelve-year-old Janna Wilcox stands at the Anchorage Assembly chambers with a copy of Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, Wilcox was behind the effort to name an Anchorage street Grimmauld Place. (Wesley Early/Alaska Public Media)
    A street in Anchorage now shares the same name as one from the magical, fictional world of Harry Potter.
    The previously unnamed West Anchorage street sits between West 29th and 31st avenues and Doris Street and Lois Drive. The street serves 10 lots, and the city d
  • Creating a throw-away culture: How companies ingrained plastics in modern life

    A trash can overflows as people sit outside of the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial in Washington, D.C. (Jacquelyn Martin/AP)
    Just for a minute, think about how much of the plastic you use today will end up as trash. Drink bottles? Grocery bags? Food wrappers? If you live in the United States, it’ll probably add up to about a pound of stuff — just today.
    Most plastic is dumped in landfills or becomes pollution in places like rivers and oceans, according to the Organisation for Economi
  • Alaska ranked choice repeal measure wins first round of legal challenge, but trial awaits

    Alaska ranked choice repeal measure wins first round of legal challenge, but trial awaits
    Pins supporting the repeal of ranked choice voting are seen on April 20, 2024, at the Republican state convention in Anchorage. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)
    An Anchorage Superior Court judge has ruled in favor of a proposed ballot measure that seeks to roll back the state’s elections system to what it was before 2020.
    In an order published Friday, Judge Christina Rankin sided generally with the state and rollback supporters, saying elections officials acted appropriately by allowi
  • Newscast – Tuesday, June 11, 2024


    https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/20240611-News-Update.mp3
    In this newscast:Last week, SHI presented a film screening of Tlingit Macbeth. The production reimagines Shakespeare’s 400-year-old play by infusing elements of Lingit language and culture,
    The federal government is considering a request that would grant the Gulf of Alaska king salmon Endangered Species Act protections
  • New film documents local play reimagining MacBeth through Lingít lens

    New film documents local play reimagining MacBeth through Lingít lens
    Jake Waid as Macbeth and Richard Atoruk as Soldier in Perseverance Theatre’s “Macbeth.” (Photo by Katherine Fogden/Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian)
    Last Thursday’s show at Juneau’s Goldtown Nickelodeon began with a blood-splattered formline title card on the screen. It read: “Macbeth through Alaskan eyes.” 
    Beating drums marked the entrance of the three witches. They danced and slinked across the screen wearing masks that showed t

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