Articles from the May 14, 2025 edition


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  • High school graduation ceremony Friday evening

    Sentinel staff|May 14, 2025

    It happens every year, but that doesn't make it any less special. This year's graduation ceremony will start at 7 p.m. Friday, May 16, at the high school gym. Though seating on the gym floor is reserved for graduates and their special guests, there should be plenty of bleacher seating available for anyone who wants to attend, said Kaelene Harrison, one of the organizers with the parents committee. The 15 high school seniors selected Jennifer Ludwigsen, the mom of graduating senior Trevyn...

  • Borough ready to bid out total rebuild of St. Michaels Street

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|May 14, 2025

    It’s just a short block but it’s long been a challenge for drivers and the borough public works crew. Relief is in sight, with new underground water and sewage pipes, a new crushed-rock subbase and, most noticeably, new concrete pavement coming for the one-block stretch of St. Michaels Street from Church to Front streets. Borough staff expect to receive 100% complete drawings from the engineers by the end of this week, the last step to bidding out the project, Capital Projects Director Amber Al-Haddad reported to the assembly for its mee...

  • Church turns over ownership of Garnet Ledge to Wrangell tribe

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|May 14, 2025

    The Presbyterian Church, which has had an interest in the Garnet Ledge on the mainland across from Wrangell for 63 years, has turned over ownership to the Wrangell Cooperative Association. The rules will not change, only the owner. The 39-acre property has been reserved since 1962 for “the children of Wrangell” to collect garnets, which they sell to tourists and at shops around town. “If anyone goes up there to get garnets, they have to have kids,” said Sandy Churchill, a member of the WCA tribal council. The church, which managed the propert...

  • Trump budget would cut in half long-standing air service subsidy

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|May 14, 2025

    President Donald Trump’s budget proposal would cut funding by more than half for the Essential Air Service program, which has ensured daily jet service to Wrangell, Petersburg, Yakutat and Cordova for almost 50 years. The program covers 65 small communities in Alaska — which includes 11 in Southeast — and 112 communities in the Lower 48, Hawaii and Puerto Rico as of late last year. Congress created the Essential Air Service subsidy in 1978 to ensure a minimum level of service for communities that otherwise might receive no regularly scheduled f...

  • The Way We Were

    Amber Armstrong, Wrangell Sentinel|May 14, 2025

    May 14, 1925 The Baranoff Packing Co., Lee H. Wakefield proprietor, operating at Red Bluff Bay, is preparing to turn out the largest pack of fish products of any plant on the Pacific coast. A large crew of men has been on the scene for some time getting the plant ready for summer operations. The entire resources of the plant will be used to make herring products. Larger herring will be Scotch cured, and the smaller ones made into oil and meal for chicken and stock feed. A new and complete water system has been installed at the plant, and new...

  • Community Calendar

    May 14, 2025

    MUSKEG MEADOWS Wrangell IGA nine-hole, best-ball golf tournament Saturday and Sunday, May 17-18. Tournament play starts at 10 a.m., register by 9:30 a.m. NOLAN CENTER THEATER presents “Minecraft,” rated PG, at 6 p.m. Friday, May 16, 3 p.m. Saturday, May 17, and 6 p.m. Sunday, May 18 at the Nolan Center. Tickets are $7 for adults, $5 for children under age 12. The action adventure comedy runs one hour and 41 minutes. Children under 12 must be accompanied by an adult. COMMUNITY MARKET from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, May 17, at the Nolan Cen...

  • WCA tribal administrator leaving for job at Tlingit-Haida Housing Authority

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|May 14, 2025

    After 13 years with the Wrangell Cooperative Association, the past seven as tribal administrator, Esther Aaltséen Reese will leave in June to start her new job as chief operating officer for the Tlingit-Haida Regional Housing Authority. "Housing is the No. 1 need" across Southeast Alaska, Reese said in an interview on May 8. The nonprofit tribal agency's mission "is to connect Southeast Alaskans with sustainable housing opportunities and innovative financial solutions," particularly aimed at...

  • Federal funding cut puts Tlingit & Haida seafood distribution on hold

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|May 14, 2025

    After losing more than $500,000 in federal funding, the Central Council of the Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska has put on hold this year’s community food distribution of herring roe and salmon. The Southeast tribal nonprofit’s Traditional Foods Security Department had planned to use the money to continue the program, which over the past three years has distributed more than 52,000 pounds of herring roe on kelp, 120,000 pounds of salmon and 31,000 pounds of black cod to the tribe’s 21 recognized communities. Wrangell is among the commu...

  • School board selects 3 finalists for superintendent job

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|May 14, 2025

    The school board has narrowed down its search for a replacement for outgoing Superintendent Bill Burr to three finalists. The board scheduled a special meeting for Monday, May 12, “to act on the superintendent finalists and discuss interview dates,” according to the meeting announcement. The board approved the list of three finalists after a five-hour, closed-door session Wednesday, May 7: Joshua Garrett, Mark Lee and Frank Oakes. As of Monday afternoon, May 12, the board had not released any information on the finalists — such as the appli...

  • The name says it all; it is essential to the town

    Wrangell Sentinel|May 14, 2025

    The president’s budget proposal for the federal fiscal year that starts Oct. 1 is full of bold moves, big changes and controversy. That was expected. But one proposed spending cut stands out as closer to home than others. The budget office proposes to reduce federal funding for the nationwide Essential Air Service program by 52%. Among 177 small communities in the 50 states and Puerto Rico, the program covers daily air service to Wrangell, Petersburg, Yakutat and Cordova. What is particularly aggravating is the budget office’s explanation of...

  • Legislature could go one Canadian step further

    Larry Persily Publisher|May 14, 2025

    The Alaska Legislature last week approved a resolution supporting Canada’s independence, a body check on President Donald Trump’s unsportsmanlike conduct toward our neighbor. The resolution says the Legislature opposes “restrictive trade measures or tolls” between the U.S. and Canada, playing defense against the president’s slap-shot attacks on our friends. Legislative resolutions have no force of law. They are merely a way for lawmakers to express frustration, or support, without spending money, changing state law or risking too much poli...

  • Legislation would overrule voter-approved sick leave for workers

    Ed Flanagan|May 14, 2025

    One of the most cynical things Alaska legislators ever did (and that’s saying something) was voting to gut the 2002 minimum wage increase less than one year after lawmakers passed it. After trying to supplant a voter initiative approved for the 2002 statewide election with weaker measures, Republican majorities finally took the advice of their own attorneys that they could only moot the initiative with a bill virtually identical to the ballot measure. So, they passed such a bill, which included an annual cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) and a...

  • Hip-hop artist brings more than just a musical message to town

    Sue Bahleda, Wrangell Sentinel|May 14, 2025

    Krizz Kaliko is bringing his unique brand of hip-hop/country music - and some mental health talk - to town as part of the Wrangell Cooperative Association's Bouncing Back program. He will give two free concerts on Tuesday, May 20: a student-only performance at 2:30 p.m. at the high school, and a community show at 6:30 p.m., also at the high school. He will then participate in a roundtable mental health discussion with community elders, moderated by Peter Adams of the WCA, at the Nolan Center at...

  • New WCA program intended to help community deal with grief

    Sue Bahleda, Wrangell Sentinel|May 14, 2025

    There are no timelines to process grief and trauma, and the impacts of the deadly 2023 landslide in Wrangell continue to affect the community. To help, the Wrangell Cooperative Association received a federal grant and is making resources available through its new Bouncing Back program to address this reality, led by Peter Adams, director of crisis counseling. Adams, based in Kansas City, Missouri, was familiar with Wrangell through visits with the Team Hollywood sports presentations. When he...

  • First of the season

    May 14, 2025

  • Governor will veto some school money if he doesn't get the policies he wants

    Mark Sabbatini, Juneau Empire|May 14, 2025

    Gov. Mike Dunleavy ramped up his threats to school districts on May 8 by declaring he will use his line-item power to reduce per-student funding in next year’s budget unless the Legislature passes his education policy priorities. The Republican governor issued his ultimatum during a Zoom call with school district superintendents. It comes after the Legislature passed House Bill 57 a week earlier, increasing the per-pupil base student allocation by more than 11%. The increase, if it survives, would generate more than $400,000 in additional s...

  • State Senate passes tight budget, says next year could be worse

    James Brooks, Alaska Beacon|May 14, 2025

    State senators issued warnings on May 7 as they approved a draft operating budget for the upcoming fiscal year. The Senate version of the spending bill, which includes an estimated $1,000 Permanent Fund dividend for eligible Alaskans and an increase for K-12 education, also cuts into state money for several services. The proposal would trim back proposed funding increases for early education programs, reduce funding for state prisons, eliminate the state’s office of citizenship assistance, mostly defund the state militia, reduce road maintenanc...

  • Students see Capitol close up; New York City from 1,131 feet up

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|May 14, 2025

    Every year is different for Wrangell High School students in the nationwide Close Up program, and this year had a couple of new high-tech highlights. Since the 1970s, the program has provided an opportunity for students to visit the nation's capital to learn about history, government, people and places. New York City was added to the itinerary for Wrangell students in 2008. Five high schoolers the last week of April toured Washington, D.C., including The People's House, which uses interactive...

  • Alaska Legislature rejects Trump's call to make Canada the 51st state

    James Brooks, Alaska Beacon|May 14, 2025

    Both chambers of the Alaska Legislature have approved a resolution stating its support for Canadian independence and opposing “restrictive trade measures or tolls” that would affect commerce between Alaska and Canada. House Joint Resolution 11, which will be sent to President Donald Trump, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney and other top officials in both countries, rejects Trump’s call to make Canada the 51st state in the United States. “Alaska recognizes the importance of a strong and sovereign nation of Canada and firmly supports Canada’s r...

  • Class of 2025 answers questions and gives advice

    Sentinel staff|May 14, 2025

    The 15 seniors graduating this week are Johnny Allen, Adeline Andrews, Vanessa Barnes, Della Churchill, Ander Edens, Keaton Gadd, Trevyn Gillen, Daniel Harrison, Anika Herman, Max Lloyd, Lucas Schneider, Kyan Stead, Clara Waddington, Aubrey Wynne and Kayla Young. Fourteen took time from their already busy days to answer questions about what lies ahead for each. Here are their responses. Johnny Allen What's your favorite thing about going to school in Wrangell? "Going home." What's your advice...

  • Practicing for the real thing

    May 14, 2025

  • Tlingit and Haida rejoins Alaska Federation of Natives in show of unity

    Mark Sabbatini, Juneau Empire|May 14, 2025

    Alaska’s largest tribal government marked its return after two years to the biggest statewide Alaska Native organization on May 6, with the tribal president declaring “unity is our greatest strength” during uncertain political times. The Central Council of the Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska participated in an Alaska Federation of Natives board meeting, which occurred about two months after Interior Alaska’s major tribal consortium — the Tanana Chiefs Conference — also voted to rejoin AFN after a two-year absence. “Two years ago, th...

  • State House passes limits on donations to political campaigns

    James Brooks, Alaska Beacon|May 14, 2025

    Four years after a federal appeals court eliminated Alaska’s limits on political campaign contributions, the Alaska House of Representatives has taken a step toward reimposing them. The House voted 22-18 on April 28 to approve House Bill 16, which mirrors the language of a ballot measure slated to go before voters in 2026. The bill moves next to the Senate, with the Legislature facing a May 21 adjournment deadline. Bills that don’t pass both chambers this session will still be alive for consideration next year. Alaskans are expected to approve...

  • Conservation group wants action on proposal to protect Gulf of Alaska king salmon

    Nathaniel Herz, Northern Journal|May 14, 2025

    A Washington state-based conservation group filed a lawsuit last week in an effort to speed up the federal government’s review of a proposal to list king salmon as threatened or endangered across the Gulf of Alaska. The Wild Fish Conservancy filed its lawsuit May 8 in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., saying that the National Marine Fisheries Service had missed a 12-month deadline under the Endangered Species Act to decide on the conservancy’s proposal to list Gulf of Alaska king salmon. The conservancy, in its 17-page complaint, said it...

  • State has no timeline for new operator to take over Ketchikan Shipyard

    Scott Bowlen, Ketchikan Daily News|May 14, 2025

    The state agency that owns the Ketchikan Shipyard wants to find a new operator quickly, hoping to avoid a work gap after deciding that the current contractor needs to vacate the facility this fall. But few specifics about the process for selecting a new operator, the transition timeline and prospects for current shipyard workers if there is a gap between operators were available May 4 during a nearly two-hour public meeting in Ketchikan hosted by the shipyard owner, the Alaska Industrial...

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