• Tlingit and Haida tribal assembly votes to limit number of delegates from outside Southeast Alaska

    Tlingit and Haida tribal assembly votes to limit number of delegates from outside Southeast Alaska
    The Central Council of the Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska’s 90th tribal assembly meets in Juneau on April 18, 2025. (Photo by Yvonne Krumrey/KTOO)
    Southeast Alaska’s largest tribal government approved a rule change Friday that greatly reduces the number of representatives from communities outside the region.
    Delegates from places like Seattle and Anchorage say the amendment limits the voices from some of the largest communities of tribal members, but delegates from Southea
  • Newscast – Tuesday, Dec. 23, 2025

    https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/20251223-News-Update.mp3
    In this newscast:This week marks six months since 42-year-old Juneau resident Benjamin Stepetin was last seen in downtown Juneau.
    The Alaska Department of Education and Early Development found that the Juneau School District did not provide occupational therapy services to some students that were supposed to receive them last school year.
    The next legislative session is less than a month away, and lawmakers are preparing
  • DEED investigation finds some Juneau students did not receive required occupational therapy

    The Harborview Elementary School playground on July 9, 2025. (Photo by Jamie Diep/KTOO)
    The Alaska Department of Education and Early Development, or DEED, found that the Juneau School District did not provide occupational therapy services to some students that were supposed to receive them last school year.
    According to a report from the department, the district lost an occupational therapist last year and did not follow the correct procedure to ensure students would continue to receive services
  • KTOO and KUAC collaborate to bring WORLD, CREATE, and FNX to a wide audience

    Juneau/Fairbanks, Alaska — KUAC and KTOO are collaborating to bring CREATE and WORLD back to viewers around the state via local transmission and the Alaska Rural Communication System (ARCS). Beginning January 1st at 12:01 a.m., viewers throughout Alaska will be able to enjoy significantly more programming that informs, educates, and inspires.
    “During a very challenging period in public broadcasting’s history, it’s a thrill to collaborate with KTOO to make this happen
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  • Six months after Juneau man’s disappearance, his family continues to search for answers

    A candles burns near a missing person’s poster of Benjamin Stepetin at his brother’s apartment on Thursday, July 3, 2025. (Photo by Clarise Larson/KTOO)
    This week marks six months since 42-year-old Juneau resident Benjamin “Benny” Stepetin was last seen in downtown Juneau. 
    His brother, Martin Stepetin Sr., said his family and friends haven’t stopped looking for him even during the holidays.
    “We just don’t want his memory to fade, or anybody to thin
  • A year before Alaska’s U.S. House election, two candidates are emerging as frontrunners

    “I voted” stickers are seen on display at a polling station in Juneau’s Mendenhall Valley on Tuesday, Aug. 16, 2022. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)
    One of Rep. Nick Begich III’s uncles is endorsing his main Democratic opponent, Matt Schultz, in next year’s election. Tom Begich’s name was atop a list released to the Alaska Beacon by Schultz’s campaign this month.
    Begich’s endorsement of his nephew’s opponent won’t s
  • State to overhaul Southeast’s 20-year transportation plan

    The Alaska Marine Highway System’s mainliner, the Columbia, during its weekly sailing from Washington state to Skagway in early 2025. (Avery Ellfeldt/KHNS)
    The state is in the early stages of crafting a new plan to guide decisions about Southeast Alaska transit for the next two decades.
    The Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities aims to draft a plan for Southeast by the end of summer 2026 and finalize it by this time next year. The document will cover all communities fro
  • Juneau musician ends local organ career with farewell Christmas concert

    T.J. Duffy takes in the audience’s applause during an organ concert at the State Office Building in Juneau on Dec. 19, 2025. (Photo by Yvonne Krumrey/KTOO)
    Listen here:
    https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/22ByeTJ.wav
    After more than 16 years as a staple at Juneau’s State Office Building, a local musician has played his last theater organ concert. In a holiday-themed show on Friday, T.J. Duffy said goodbye to a packed audience filled with longtime listeners and soon-to-b
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  • Juneau Afternoon 2025 Holiday Special


    Audio PodcastVideo Livestream
    The Juneau Afternoon 2025 Holiday Special – originally aired on Friday, December 19 at 3:00 p.m.House Band: Luke & Heather (Heather Mountcastle & Luke Weld)Featured Performances:Vox Borealis (Sara Radke-Brown, Tanya Green, David Monroe, Aria Moore, Kristina Paulick, & Jake Soboleff)Theater Alaska’s “A Christmas Carol” (Tom Robenolt as Scrooge, Bryan Crowder as Marley, Flordelino Lagundino)SpruceConversations:Reason for the SeasonR
  • Newscast – Monday, Dec. 22, 2025


    https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/20251222-News-Update.mp3
    In this newscast:Juneau saw two destructive residential fires in a mobile home park in the course of just three days, and one fire resulted in a fatality.
    A federal grand jury has indicted two Alaska State Troopers shown on body-camera video beating, tasing and pepper-spraying a Kenai man in a case of mistaken identity.
    Juneau residents celebrated the winter solstice with a “light the night” Nordic ski club ga
  • Juneau Nordic skiers celebrate Winter Solstice at ‘light the night’ event

    Mary Ann Parke sets off on a ski trail toward Mendenhall Campground as the sun sets on Dec. 21, 2025. (Photo by Alix Soliman/KTOO)
    The darkest day of the year has officially passed. Now, the days are growing brighter. Dozens of Juneau residents marked the occasion at Mendenhall Campground with a ‘light the night’ winter solstice event on Sunday, hosted by the Juneau Nordic Ski Club.
    The sun set just after 3 p.m., casting a stripe of pink and gold alpenglow on the sheer peaks that tow
  • Juneau sees back-to-back house fires in same neighborhood as negative temperatures persist

    Firefighters exit a residential fire at the Switzer Village Mobile Home Park in Lemon Creek on Monday, Dec. 22, 2025. (Photo by Clarise Larson/KTOO)
    Juneau saw two destructive residential fires in a mobile home park in the course of just three days. One fire resulted in a fatality. 
    The first fire was reported on Saturday evening at about 7:30 p.m. at the Switzer Village Mobile Home Park in Lemon Creek. Family members reported that 38-year-old Juneau resident Calvin Olsen died in the fire.
  • Author with Y-K Delta roots looks to creativity to support Halong-impacted families

    “Aanaq? Am I Your Sunset?” by Lani Hulse was written to support Typhoon Halong-impacted families in partnership with the Western Alaska Disaster Relief Fund. (Lani Hulse)
    When writer Lani Hulse heard the news about Typhoon Halong, she was across the country in Hawaii, where she lives.
    “I just, I couldn’t help with each video that I watched online — people posting about the disaster, and afterwards — I just could not just sit there,” Hulse recalled. &ldqu
  • What goes into keeping Juneau’s streets clear of snow all winter long?

    CBJ Streets & Fleet Superintendent Scott Gray. (Courtesy of CBJ)
    When it snows, crews fan out with plows, graders, blowers and more to clear the streets in Juneau. Morning Edition Host Mike Lane recently sat down with CBJ Streets & Fleet Superintendent Scott Gray to learn more about local snow removal operations.
    Listen:
    https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/21ScottGray-CBJ-Streets-n-Fleet.wav
    This transcript has been lightly edited for length and clarity. 
    Mike Lan
  • Alaska Air Cargo delays could mean later Christmas packages for many rural communities

    An Alaska Air Cargo freighter arrives in Nome on Dec. 18, 2025. (Ben Townsend/KNOM)
    Christmas presents may be arriving later than expected for many rural communities in Alaska. That’s after Alaska Air Cargo, Alaska Airlines’ cargo-specific carrier, placed an embargo on freight shipments for several hubs across the state.
    According to Alaska Airlines, the embargo began on Dec. 16 and will end on Dec. 21.
    The embargo excludes Alaska Air Cargo’s GoldStreak shipping service, desig
  • Haines writer nabs Rasmuson award for book about hope amid environmental collapse

    Caroline Van Hemert, pictured above sailing in Canada’s Northwest Territories as part of a larger trip with her family through the Northwest Passage. The journey will be featured in her upcoming book. (Patrick Farrell)
    Three Haines artists were recently recognized by the Rasmuson Foundation, which announced its Individual Artist awardees earlier this month.
    Shannon Kelly Donahue took home one of the $10,000 awards, which will help fund her work on a personal memoir that involves travel to
  • A Kodiak couple faces possible deportation due to a voter registration error by the state

    The ferry terminal at Pier 1 in Kodiak is seen on July 14, 2021. (James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)
    A years-old mistake by the Alaska Department of Motor Vehicles voter registration program has endangered the citizenship of two prominent Kodiak residents and could cause them to be deported, according to a newly filed lawsuit in Alaska’s federal court.
    The suit, filed Thursday by Eva Benedelova and Pavel Benedela in the U.S. District Court for the District of Alaska, says U.S. Citizenship and Imm
  • Eaglecrest Ski Area closed Friday and Saturday due to water line break

    Skiers walk back from the mountain at Eaglecrest Ski Area on Sunday, Dec. 10, 2023. (Photo by Clarise Larson/KTOO)
    Following a partial opening last week, Eaglecrest Ski Area is experiencing some issues going into this weekend, including a broken water line, a delayed opening of the Ptarmigan lift and a pause in snowmaking efforts.The ski area unexpectedly closed on Friday and will remain closed Saturday due to a large break in its main water line that supplies its lodges. 
    The ski area&rsq
  • Alaska federal employee unions want their rights back. The U.S. House passed a bill to do that.

    Moonrise over the U.S. Capitol on Oct. 18, 2021. (Brett Davis)
    WASHINGTON — It’s been a rough year for Alaska’s 15,000 federal employees. Along with job losses and funding uncertainty, in March President Trump signed an executive order to take away union protections from a large swath of the federal workforce.
    But the U.S. House gave public employee unions a ray of hope last week.
    The Republican-led House delivered a rare rebuke of Trump and passed a bill to restore union right
  • Alaska Department of Corrections reports record-tying 18 deaths in custody this year

    Goose Creek Correctional Center is seen in fall. (Photo courtesy of Alaska Department of Corrections)
    The Alaska Department of Corrections has reported 18 people have died in custody of the state’s prisons and jails so far this year – on par with the state’s highest death count in 2022. Advocates and lawmakers say the number is “devastating” and “preventable,” and are calling for the reinstatement of an independent oversight body to investigate.
    The coun
  • Alaska Gov. Dunleavy says he’ll propose a property tax break for planned gas pipeline

    Gov. Mike Dunleavy speaks to reporters during a news conference on Feb. 7, 2024. (Eric Stone/Alaska Public Media)
    Gov. Mike Dunleavy is eyeing a property tax break for the long-planned Alaska LNG project. The Republican governor said he plans to propose a two-mill property tax for the 800-mile natural gas pipeline and associated infrastructure, a 90% lower rate than the state typically charges in property tax for oil and gas infrastructure.
    Dunleavy described his plans in an interview with the A
  • A preview of ‘The Way It Was: The Best of the Bluescast’ with Ed Schoenfeld


    Juneau Afternoon aired on Thursday, December 18, 2025:
    Over the last year, Ed Schoenfeld, with the help of Mike Sikarias, has put together a one-hour special, “The Way It Was: The Best of the Bluescast,” which will air on January 1, 2026, on KTOO at 3:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. The Bluecast was an Alaska news comedy group from 1979 to 2012. For over 30 years, it was a send-up and commentary on the news and issues of the day. One of the Bluecast’s founders was KTOO Jeff Brown, and o
  • Newscast – Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025

    https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/20251218-News-Update.mp3
    In this newscast:A civil lawsuit aimed at preserving a historic neighborhood in Juneau is set for trial next summer. Juneau’s city government, meanwhile, plans to demolish the neighborhood before then,
    KTOO spoke with Juneau Fire Chief Rich Etheridge about a recent incident of someone falling through the ice, what to do if it happens, and other safety precautions when venturing out on frozen bodies of water,
    Over a
  • City plans to demolish Telephone Hill neighborhood before a lawsuit to save it goes to trial

    Snow covers the Telephone Hill neighborhood in downtown Juneau on Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025. (Photo by Clarise Larson/KTOO)
    A civil lawsuit aimed at preserving a historic neighborhood in the capital city is set for trial next summer. Juneau’s city government, meanwhile, plans to demolish the neighborhood before then.
    At a hearing on Wednesday, Superior Court Judge Amanda Browning set the trial date for August 2026. Three longtime tenants of the city-owned Telephone Hill neighborhood filed th
  • Departing fire chief shares ice-safety tips, wisdom ahead of retirement

    Tess Hostetter ice skating near Mendenhall Glacier during record low temperatures in Juneau Alaksa, December 19th 2022. (Photo by Paige Sparks/KTOO)With Juneau expecting to see temperatures in the single digits and even below zero this week, residents may be tempted to recreate on frozen lakes around town. 
    KTOO spoke with Juneau Fire Chief Rich Etheridge about a recent incident of someone falling through the ice, what to do if it happens, and other safety precautions when venturing out on
  • Former state medical board member dies in house fire after arrest for child sexual abuse images

    Flashing lights atop a law enforcement vehicle. (Valerie Lake/Alaska Public Media)
    Alaska State Troopers said in a bulletin Monday that Dr. Ryan McDonough died in a weekend fire at his home in Wasilla.
    At the time of the fire, McDonough — a cardiologist formerly with Mat-Su Regional Medical Center — was on $50,000 bail after being arrested on Dec. 11 and accused of owning child sexual abuse images.
    The alleged crimes, and the bail posted by McDonough’s wife,
  • Bitter cold and Taku winds are in the forecast for Juneau. Here’s how to stay safe.

    Harris Monsef plays hockey on a frozen Twin Lakes in the late afternoon on Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2025. (Photo by Clarise Larson/KTOO)
    Officials say to be prepared as Juneau is expected to see frigid temperatures starting this weekend and stretching into the next couple of weeks.
    The National Weather Service issued a cold weather advisory and a high wind warning starting Thursday evening.  
    The forecast shows that a Taku wind event could start as early as Thursday evening. The strongest g
  • Feds charge Soldotna troopers with civil rights violations over violent Kenai arrest

    From left, Jason Woodruff, Clint Campion, Joseph Miller and Matthew Widmer participate in an arraignment hearing on Thursday, Nov. 14, 2024 in Kenai, Alaska. (Ashlyn O’Hara/KDLL)
    A federal grand jury has indicted two Alaska State Troopers shown on body-camera video beating, tasing and pepper-spraying a Kenai man in a case of mistaken identity.
    Former Trooper Sgt. Joseph Miller and Jason Woodruff are each charged with violating the man’s civil rights. Neither were arrested following t
  • Buprenorphine program rollout, St. Vincent de Paul’s Adopt-A-Family Christmas Gift Program


    Juneau Afternoon aired on Wednesday, December 17, 2025:
    Capital City Fire & Rescue will roll out the first buprenorphine program through its Mobile Integrated Health unit, in collaboration with SEARHC and Front Street Clinic addiction experts.
    St. Vincent de Paul is looking for additional sponsors for its Adopt-A-Family Christmas Gift ProgramHoliday Jazz & Classics is a concert featuring national talents Kyle Athade and Eddie Barbash, along with featured local artists, in a holiday fund
  • Newscast – Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2025

    https://media.ktoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/20251217-News-Updates.mp3
    In this newscast:Juneau’s homeless shelter is once again offering daytime meals and other services after stopping them in August due to safety concerns,
    Officials say to be prepared as Juneau is expected to see frigid temperatures starting this weekend and stretching into the next couple of weeks,
    A U.S. Forest Service plan to revamp the Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center to accommodate more tourists could be upende

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