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  • Marina Backman dies at 62 after battle with cancer

    Dec 31, 2024

    "With deep sadness, we share the passing of Marina Chauvaud Backman on Nov. 4, 2024, at just 62 years old," her family wrote. After a hard-fought battle with cancer, she passed away peacefully at home, surrounded by family. Friends are invited to honor Marina's life at 1 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 12, 2025, at the Sourdough Lodge. This will be a potluck event. Feel free to bring a snack or appetizer to share. She was born Jan. 5, 1962, in Kodiak. Marina's life was one defined by resilience,...

  • Shorthanded girls basketball team gets off to rough start at home

    Sam Pausman, Wrangell Sentinel|Dec 31, 2024

    The Wrangell high school girls basketball team opened their season with back-to-back home losses against Metlakatla. In the Dec. 20 game, Wrangell lost 64-22. The next day, the Wolves fell 62-24. Though neither game was much of a contest, head coach Christy Good understands that at this point in the season generating results comes second to building positive habits. She also noted that the Wolves were without four of their 11 rostered players, including star sophomore Alana Harrison. “We have a lot of things to work on,” Good said. “We neede...

  • Boys basketball team falls to Metlakatla in home opener

    Sam Pausman, Wrangell Sentinel|Dec 31, 2024

    The Wrangell boys basketball team lost both home games to Metlakatla in their first competition of the season on Dec. 20 and 21 but playing in Metlakatla this weekend will give the high school squad an opportunity to get even with their southern rivals after an early bye week. The two-game series (one game Friday and one game Saturday) started off with a bit of a rude awakening for Wrangell. Metlakatla won the Friday game 49-26 in a triumphant display in the Wolves’ home gym. On Saturday, Wrangell was far more competitive, though the Chiefs s...

  • Carney a state champion; 3 other Wrangell wrestlers place in top 4

    Sam Pausman, Wrangell Sentinel|Dec 31, 2024

    Wrangell's Jackson Carney is a state wrestling champion. The sophomore finished atop the podium in the boys 140-pound bracket after beating Glennallen's Jake Stockhausen in a 7-1 decision. Carney was not the only Wolf with a strong showing at the high school state Division II championship in Anchorage on Dec. 20-21. Della Churchill finished fourth in the girls 120-pound division and Cody Barnes finished fourth in the boys 215-pound bracket. Everett Meissner finished sixth in the 152-pound...

  • Army will issue January apology for 1869 bombardment of Wrangell

    Sam Pausman, Wrangell Sentinel|Dec 18, 2024

    It was 1869 and smoke filled the winter air. Cannon balls ripped through Tlingit homes while U.S. Army shells shrieked across the sky. The same type of artillery used against the Confederates just four years prior was now turned on the Tlingit people of Wrangell, in their homeland which they called Ḵaachx̱aana.áakʼw. One hundred and fifty-five years later, the U.S. Army is apologizing. The apology is scheduled to take place in Wrangell on Jan. 11, 2025. Sen. Lisa Murkowski and Army repr...

  • Wrestling team takes second in Southeast; sending at least 7 to state

    Sam Pausman, Wrangell Sentinel|Dec 18, 2024

    Jack Carney's maniacs on the mat aren't slowing down. At the Southeast wrestling championship in Haines on Dec. 13-14, Wrangell boasted three champions, four runners-up and five bronze medalists. Seven wrestlers qualified for the state tournament in Anchorage on Friday and Saturday, Dec. 20-21, but head coach Jack Carney hopes many more will receive an at-large bid. Wrangell's triad of top-step finishers were Della Churchill, Jackson Carney and Everett Meissner. Hailey Cook, Ian Nelson, Vanessa...

  • Governor proposes budget with hefty $1.5 billion deficit

    Mark Sabbatini, Juneau Empire|Dec 18, 2024

    The governor has proposed a state budget for next year that does not repeat this year’s education funding increase and pays out a $3,838 Permanent Fund dividend — and runs up a $1.5 billion deficit. The cost of the dividend, estimated at more than $2.5 billion, consumes 40% of total available state general fund revenues. Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s spending plan, unveiled Dec. 12, would wipe out more than half of the state’s budget reserve account. The broad aspects of the Republican governor’s spending plan are similar to those that encounter...

  • Community Calendar

    Dec 18, 2024

    WRANGELL MARINERS’ MEMORIAL board members will be available to assist in completing applications to add names to the commemorative plaques from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 19, and Jan. 2, 13, 22 and 31 at the Nolan Center. Applications are available online at wrangellmarinersmemorial.com. Donations and memberships are also accepted online. CHRISTMAS TREE LANE decorated trees are up for bid through 1 p.m. Thursday, Dec 19, at the Nolan Center lobby. Half the proceeds go to the treemaker and half to Hospice of Wrangell. For more information,...

  • Santa makes early stop for Legion Auxiliary Christmas party

    Dec 18, 2024

  • The Way We Were

    Amber Armstrong, Wrangell Sentinel|Dec 18, 2024

    Dec. 18, 1924 On last Friday evening the Wrangell schools two basketball teams played their first public game of the season. The attendance at the game was small due to the fact that the evening was so cold. The evening opened with a curtain raiser by two teams of smaller boys from the grade school. The featured event of the evening was a game between the regular high school and grade school teams. The teams are about as evenly matched as any two teams could be, the grade team having the advantage in weight and high school boys the advantage...

  • State forecasts continued decline in Wrangell population

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|Dec 18, 2024

    Southeast Alaska’s population is expected to drop 17% between 2023 and 2050, far more than any other region of the state, according to the latest projections, with Wrangell showing the steepest decline at 33%, from 2,039 residents in 2023 to 1,988 in July 2025, 1,845 in 2030 and down to 1,349 in 2050. Wrangell’s population has been in a steady decline since the timber industry started cutting back in the 1990s and the mill closed down permanently in 2008, and with deaths outnumbering births. The state’s latest projections are not based on an...

  • Auditions Jan. 6-7 for spring musical 'Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat'

    Sue Bahleda, Wrangell Sentinel|Dec 18, 2024

    The community theater team is gearing up for their spring production, the musical “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat.” Auditions will be held from 5 to 7 p.m. on Jan. 6 and 7 at the Nolan Center. Everyone who tries out for the cast is encouraged to come prepared with a song to sing and to read lines for the auditions. First performed on Broadway in 1982, the musical tells the biblical story of Joseph, whose dreams of destiny and his father’s favoritism inspires jealousy among his 11 brothers. Set in Canaan and Egypt, it follo...

  • Governor fails at leadership in his proposed budget

    Wrangell Sentinel|Dec 18, 2024

    Gov. Mike Dunleavy has a choice for his final two years on the job: He can continue talking about how state law requires him to include an outrageously large Permanent Fund dividend in the budget — even though it would dig a deep budget hole which, thankfully, legislators will never approve — or he can help solve the problem. It looks like he is sticking with the irresponsible approach. He proposed a budget last week that is politically popular with his supporters but which he knows the state cannot afford without drawing down its rem...

  • Extreme weather disasters becoming more common in Alaska

    Alena Naiden, Anchorage Daily News|Dec 18, 2024

    Landslides, heavy snowfall, flooding and wildfires aren’t uncommon in Alaska. But as the oceans and atmosphere grow warmer, such extreme events and disasters are becoming more frequent across the state, a new report says. The Alaska Center for Climate Assessment and Policy at the University of Alaska Fairbanks International Arctic Research Center this month released the report, “Alaska’s Changing Environment 2.0.” The report contains contributions from dozens of scientists and Indigenous experts and dives into long-term climate trends, focusin...

  • Tree crushes Zarembo Island causeway; out of service until next year

    Sam Pausman, Wrangell Sentinel|Dec 18, 2024

    Heavy winds earlier this month caused several trees to fall near Zarembo Island’s popular public access point. One tree tore through the causeway that connects the dock to the island. Another barricaded a dirt ramp often used to load and offload vehicles at the beach landing. The nearby island is a hot spot for hunters and outdoor enthusiasts. U.S. Forest Service Wrangell District Ranger Tory Houser hopes to have the causeway repaired ahead of the 2025 deer hunting season, which begins Aug. 1. She said the Forest Service is actively working to...

  • Some Marine Service Center rates may increase to help cover replacement costs

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|Dec 18, 2024

    The 18-year-old Marine Service Center, a mainstay of Wrangell’s waterfront economy, collects enough money in fees to cover its expenses — but there is nothing set aside to replace equipment, such as the boatlifts and hydraulic trailer that are essential to the operation. A 2022 economic analysis pointed out that if equipment replacement and other capital expenses were included in the math, the borough loses money on the service center. The port commission has started discussing possible rate increases to ensure there is sufficient money in a r...

  • Port commission considers discount rate for short-term winter moorage

    Sentinel staff|Dec 18, 2024

    The port commission is considering whether it can attract more boat owners to keep their vessels in the water during the winter if the monthly moorage rates were discounted. The idea is to generate revenue from unused moorage spaces. Even with a discount, the monthly short-term moorage rates would still be more expensive per month than the rate for boat owners who reserve a space for a full year. A seasonal discount to entice more owners to keep their boats in the water in the winter might work, said Winston J. Davies, port commission chair....

  • New Southeast state representative stays with Republican caucus

    Alex Abbeduto, Ketchikan Daily News|Dec 18, 2024

    Ketchikan Rep.-elect Jeremy Bynum has decided to join the House Republican minority caucus. A narrow 21-member coalition of Democrats, independents and two Republicans are set to govern the 40-member House when lawmakers convene next month in Juneau. The majority coalition has been hoping to entice a couple more Republicans, including Bynum, to join their ranks. Bynum opted to stay with the Republicans, according to last week’s announcement by the minority caucus. The freshman legislator, who also will represent Wrangell, Metlakatla and C...

  • Showtime: Boys basketball looks to capitalize on athleticism and experience

    Sam Pausman, Wrangell Sentinel|Dec 18, 2024

    What do you get when you mix a cross-country superstar, a couple of wrestling studs, one of the best basketball players in Southeast and a coach who believes in his system and his players? My guess? A damn good basketball team - but at the very least a really, really, really, really fun team to watch. And if you aren't quite convinced, add to the mix the following: a feisty freshman vying for a spot in the rotation and a high basketball-IQ senior leader unwilling to accept anything other than...

  • Cheer practice underway as squad surges to a dozen

    Sam Pausman, Wrangell Sentinel|Dec 18, 2024

    Last season, just two high schoolers signed up for cheerleading. This year, that figure exploded to 12. Head coach Tyla Nelson is thrilled, and you can expect to see Wrangell's cheer squad at every home basketball game this season. The cheerleaders began practices on Dec. 4, and their season will wrap on the same day as basketball regionals on March 5-8 in Ketchikan, where they will compete against other Southeast cheer teams. The top two teams will go on to state the following week. Nelson...

  • They're all wearing smiles

    Dec 18, 2024

  • Classified ads

    Dec 18, 2024

    HELP WANTED Johnson’s Building Supply is accepting applications for the following position: Customer Service. Duties include counter sales, freight handling, customer deliveries, stocking and inventory. Full-time position; will require working Saturdays. Valid Alaska driver’s license, must be able to lift 50 lbs., forklift experience a plus, starting pay is DOE. Stop by Johnson’s for an application. FREE Free 4-drawer metal filing cabinet in fair condition. 28” deep, 15” wide and 52” tall. Stop by the Sentinel to pick up. FREE ADS Do you have s...

  • Christmas lights on the water

    Dec 18, 2024

  • Waste-to-energy developer interested in 6-Mile mill property

    Sam Pausman, Wrangell Sentinel|Dec 11, 2024

    A Washington state-based bioenergy company is exploring potential development of the borough’s 6-Mile mill property. Next week, Dale Borgford and other members of Borgford BioEnergy will fly to Wrangell ahead of a Wednesday, Dec. 18, public workshop with borough officials. The workshop will explore whether Borgford is a good fit for the property and vice versa. The meeting is scheduled for 5:30 p.m. at City Hall. Since purchasing the mill site for $2.5 million in 2022, the borough has wanted to cater the property toward economic development. Bo...

  • Wrangell a big part of U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree lighting

    Sam Pausman, Wrangell Sentinel|Dec 11, 2024

    Five, four, three, two, one - wooooooooooo. And just like that, the U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree was alit. Adorned with 10,000 Alaskan-made ornaments and glistening with the power of 5,000 LED bulbs, the 80-foot-tall spruce will remain lit from dusk to 11 p.m. through Jan. 1. While the tree obviously headlined its own lighting ceremony, the Dec. 3 event was equally a celebration of Wrangell and the state. Members of Alaska's congressional delegation, Rep. Mary Peltola and Sens. Lisa Murkowski...

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