Articles from the April 30, 2025 edition


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  • Wasilla developer wants to build 16 rental units in Wrangell

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|Apr 30, 2025

    A Wasilla-based rental property owner wants to build 16 units on 1.3 acres of borough-owned land behind the old hospital building. The developer, Jiaying Lu, has applied to purchase the six vacant lots, which were last appraised at $316,000. The assembly will hold a public hearing on the land sale during its May 13 meeting at City Hall. The planning and zoning commission on April 10 unanimously recommended approval of the sale. Lu proposes to build four fourplexes on the property. She said she does not yet have a construction estimate for the...

  • Borough decides on auction, not lottery for Alder Top lots

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|Apr 30, 2025

    As recommended by the borough manager, the assembly voted on April 22 to sell the first 20 lots of the Alder Top Village (Keishangita.’aan) subdivision by auction to the highest bidder, dropping plans of the past 18 months to sell half of the parcels by lottery. The intent of an auction is to raise more money than in a fixed-price lottery to help cover a larger share of the development costs for the borough-owned land just past Shoemaker Bay. “It would be imprudent of us to use public dollars to subsidize a lottery,” Borough Manager Mason...

  • Milk Run lands in Wrangell for two-day music festival

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|Apr 30, 2025

    Alaska Airlines has been flying the “milk run” for decades, serving the string of Southeast communities between Ketchikan and Juneau, but this weekend will be the first flight for the Milk Run Music Festival in Wrangell. Two days of music, food booths, corn hole competition, kids events and more are planned for Friday and Saturday, May 2-3, in front of the City Dock. The Nolan Center is the backup plan if the rain gets to be too much. “We’re hoping for great weather,” said Reme Privett, one of the organizers. “We’re doing a sun dance.” The e...

  • Senate approves more state aid for schools; House action expected

    Mark Sabbatini, Juneau Empire|Apr 30, 2025

    The Legislature appears to have reached a deal on an education bill. The Senate passed the measure with a $700 increase in per-student funding, almost a 12% boost, on a 19-1 vote at midday Monday, April 28. The House was expected to take up the bill on Wednesday. House approval would send the bill to Gov. Mike Dunleavy for his approval or veto, though the wide margin of legislative approval indicates lawmakers could have enough votes to override a veto. House Bill 57 started three months ago as a measure to place limits on student cellphone...

  • Reaching new heights

    Apr 30, 2025

  • The Way We Were

    Amber Armstrong, Wrangell Sentinel|Apr 30, 2025

    April 30, 1925 Gold seekers have been arriving on every boat during the past few days and are impatiently awaiting the opening of navigation on the Stikine River when they will leave for the new diggings in the Cassiar. The first fleet of boats will leave Wrangell for Telegraph Creek, B.C., as soon after the first of May as river conditions permit. Every year in the past there have been a few people in Wrangell who were anxious for the early opening of navigation on the Stikine, but this year there is intense impatience on the part of the many...

  • Community calendar

    Apr 30, 2025

    MILK RUN MUSIC FESTIVAL Friday and Saturday, May 2-3, in front of City Dock (or the Nolan Center, if the weather is lousy). Music, vendor booths, corn hole competition, open mic, standup comedy. Followed by more music both nights at Rayme’s Bar. Check out the full schedule on the Milk Run Music Festival Facebook page or milkrunmusicfest.org/schedule. FAMILY RESILIENCE FAIR 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, May 3, at the Nolan Center. Learn how multiple community services can help your family. Prizes, games and resources to learn about. Contact B... Full story

  • Borough holds tourism meeting week before first cruise ship

    Sentinel staff|Apr 30, 2025

    The 459-foot-long, 530-passenger Roald Amundsen is scheduled to start Wrangell's cruise ship season on May 8. To discuss plans for the season and share information, the borough's Economic Development Department has called a tourism stakeholder meeting for 9 a.m. Thursday, May 1, at the Nolan Center. "This meeting is intended for businesses that operate within or provide services to the tourism industry. This includes tribal partners, agency partners, tour operators, accommodation providers,...

  • Plant swap and seed potato sale grows in its third year

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|Apr 30, 2025

    The third annual plant swap and seed potato sale will sprout from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, May 3, in a yard on St. Michaels Street, near the bottom of the hill. “It’s kind of been building each year,” said Mya DeLong, one of the organizers. Sponsored by the Wrangell Community Garden and Wrangell Cooperative Association, the event provides gardeners with an opportunity to swap out their excess plants and starters for something they may want to add to their greenery. “You can swap your Brussels sprouts for celery,” DeLong said, or any other...

  • Assembly approves major repairs cost-sharing with schools

    Sentinel staff|Apr 30, 2025

    To clarify the school district’s and borough’s responsibilities for maintenance and repairs at the school buildings, the assembly has approved an agreement that says the borough will pay for major repair and rehab projects that cost more than $25,000. The district is responsible for “routine maintenance,” as specified in the three-page agreement adopted by the assembly in a unanimous vote on April 22. In addition to removing any doubt as to who pays for what at the schools — the borough owns the buildings and the school district covers op...

  • There's no inexpensive solution for new or repaired barge ramp

    Wrangell Sentinel|Apr 30, 2025

    It’s been seven weeks since the borough manager ordered a closure of the town’s nearly 50-year-old barge ramp over structural and safety concerns. Any answer to the community’s needs for a dependable facility for the essential weekly freight barges is a long way off — at a cost of millions of dollars. Possible options include repairing the existing 140-foot-long steel ramp that floats with the tides; scrapping it and getting a new one built for the same downtown location; creating an expanded fill area next to the Marine Service Center and buil...

  • No matter how you dress it up, news needs to be honest

    Larry Persily Publisher|Apr 30, 2025

    I didn’t like the freshmen dress code for the dining room at college. We had to wear these stupid beanies on our heads at the start of the first semester if we wanted dinner. No blue jeans were allowed. Shirts with collars were mandatory. Socks, too. And this was at a public university. But it was 1968 in Indiana, which seemed more like living in the 1950s. I also remember something about having to sing the school song to gain admission to the dining room in the dorm. I was 16 years old and the only songs I knew were not ones that would get m...

  • Wrangell can help bring back timber industry

    Apr 30, 2025

    When our family resided in Wrangell from 1963-66, the community had two major payrolls: the Wrangell Mill located in town, and six miles south a mill owned by Alaska Lumber and Pulp Corp., which later acquired the downtown mill. In addition to the sawmill jobs, there were longshore jobs, numerous tugboats and, of course, loggers in the woods harvesting the timber. The recent release by the Trump administration’s report outlining “Unleashing Alaska’s Extraordinary Resource Potential” included development of the timber resources of Southea...

  • Tax-free day Saturday; assembly approves second day for Oct. 6

    Sentinel staff|Apr 30, 2025

    This year’s first tax-free shopping day in Wrangell is Saturday, May 3. Continuing a yearslong tradition, the borough assembly has approved a second tax-free day, accepting the chamber of commerce request for Oct. 6. The assembly vote on April 22 was unanimous. “These events have historically stimulated the local economy by encouraging increased consumer spending and supporting Wrangell's small businesses,” Borough Finance Director Jackson Pool reported to the assembly. “By temporarily removing the barrier of sales tax, these days help drive r...

  • Assembly approves chamber move into Nolan Center

    Sentinel staff|Apr 30, 2025

    The borough assembly voted 7-0 on April 22 to approve the chamber of commerce moving into the Nolan Center — in the interest of closer collaboration between the borough and the chamber. The move provides a more heavily trafficked site for visitor information than the chamber’s current offices in the Stikine Inn. Although the vote was unanimous, a couple of assembly members raised questions. “I’ve seen it go up and down too many times,” Assembly Member David Powell said of the chamber’s finances, adding that while chamber and Nolan Center staf...

  • School counselor resigns after 1 year

    Sentinel staff|Apr 30, 2025

    Ann Hegney, who started work last September as the only counselor at Wrangell schools, has resigned and will leave after the end of the school year. Hegney is the school district’s third counselor since 2021. “The staff and students are great. I am leaving because my father is in decline and needs help caring for my sister, who has Down Syndrome,” Hegney said in a text last week. “It’s actually the best job I ever had,” she said of her work in Wrangell. Hegney came to Alaska from New York state with 36 years of experience as a teacher and...

  • New taxi service starts up in town

    Sentinel staff|Apr 30, 2025

    Maylee Martin is shifting into gear for her new business, called Lady Driver Taxi. Though she started taking fares last week, she expects it could be early May before she goes to work full time giving rides around town. Martin will be the only driver, providing rides in her Subaru Outback. Lady Driver Taxi will operate noon to 10 p.m. Monday through Friday, and 3 p.m. to bar closings on Friday and Saturday, Martin said. Any other time, text her at 907-660-7102 in advance to schedule a ride, she said. Martin had been working since February to...

  • Artfest comes to town

    Apr 30, 2025

  • Lining up for batter-up

    Apr 30, 2025

  • Senate budget writers cut back state spending to match revenues

    James Brooks, Alaska Beacon|Apr 30, 2025

    The Senate Finance Committee is considering a draft of Alaska’s state operating budget that would cut more than $200 million from a version adopted earlier this month by the state House. The committee unveiled the first draft of its operating budget proposal at an April 24 meeting in the Capitol in Juneau. The committee’s version of the budget would send less state money to school districts than the House had proposed, though it appears a compromise has been reached on that number — less than the House and school districts wanted but more than... Full story

  • Stikine subsistence king fishery closed for 9th year in a row

    Sentinel staff|Apr 30, 2025

    The U.S. Forest Service, under authority delegated by the Federal Subsistence Board, has closed the Stikine River to subsistence fishing for king salmon from May 15 to June 20. The preseason returns forecast for the Stikine River is 10,000 large king salmon (greater than 28 inches in length), which is far below the spawning escapement goal of 14,000 to 28,000. This is the ninth year in a row for the federal closure, intended to protect weak returns of the highly prized fish. State and federal fisheries managers are trying to rebuild the run....

  • Tlingit and Haida allocates more tribal assembly seats to smaller communities

    Mark Sabbatini, Juneau Empire|Apr 30, 2025

    The Central Council of the Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska’s 90th annual tribal assembly voted on April 18 to give Southeast Alaska communities more representation by reducing the number allocated for larger cities such as Anchorage and Seattle. The change in representation on the tribal assembly was approved after an emotional five-hour debate at the gathering in Juneau. The change, part of Tlingit and Haida’s first constitutional convention at its assembly since 2018, makes significant shifts to a tribal delegation where Juneau and...

  • State House votes to restrict cellphone use by students during school hours

    James Brooks, Alaska Beacon|Apr 30, 2025

    Legislation passed April 16 by the Alaska House of Representatives would require school districts to adopt policies that restrict the use of cellphones by students during school hours. House Bill 57, which advanced to the Senate after a 34-6 vote, does not require districts to ban students’ cellphones but does require them to regulate students’ use of phones during regular school hours, including during lunch and the time between classes. Wrangell’s middle school already bans cellphones on the premises during school hours. The high schoo... Full story

  • State Senate passes bill to limit interest rate on payday loans

    Corinne Smith, Alaska Beacon|Apr 30, 2025

    The Alaska Senate passed legislation on April 17 that would significantly cap the interest rates and fees payday lenders can charge for loans of $25,000 or less. Senate Bill 39 would remove payday lenders from an exemption in the state’s lending laws, and require payday loan companies to cap interest rates and fees at an annual percentage rate of 36% for loans of $25,000 or less. An estimated 15,000 Alaskans take out a payday loan each year, according to research by the Alaska Public Interest Research Group, a nonprofit consumer advocacy group.... Full story

  • House passes bill to keep dividend applicant names confidential

    Alaska Beacon|Apr 30, 2025

    Members of the federal government’s ocean-mapping corps and Alaskans training for the merchant marine would continue to receive Permanent Fund dividends while away from the state, under a bill approved by the Alaska House of Representatives. House Bill 75, from Rep. Jeremy Bynum, is the first piece of legislation from a freshman lawmaker to pass either the House or Senate this year. Bynum, who was elected last year, represents Ketchikan and Wrangell. The legislation also would change state law to make the names of dividend applicants c... Full story

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