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  • Tyee hydro power maxed out and needs to add third generator

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|Feb 12, 2025

    It’s time to expand the generating capacity at the Tyee Lake hydroelectric station to handle growing demand — particularly from heat pumps — the plant’s operator said of its plans to line up $20 million in funding and a federal permit to add a third turbine to the facility. The Tyee Lake station started supplying Wrangell and Petersburg in 1984. It was built with two turbines rated at 10 megawatts each, with an empty bay at the Bradfield Canal facility to add a third turbine when needed. That time is now, said Robert Siedman, chief executi...

  • Board of Fisheries moves more of king salmon allocation to sport harvest

    Anna Laffrey, Ketchikan Daily News|Feb 12, 2025

    Some of the Southeast commercial troll fishery’s allocation of migratory king salmon will be shifted to the nonresident/resident sport fishery following a 5-2 vote by the Alaska Board of Fisheries on the 10th day of its 13-day meeting in Ketchikan. Board members voted on Thursday, Feb. 6, to adopt state regulatory language shifting the allocation from the 80%/20% troll/sport split that’s been in place since 1996 to a new 77%/23% split for the troll and sport fisheries, respectively. Reducing the troll allocation is an acknowledgment by the boa...

  • Parks and Rec surveys residents about future playground upgrades

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|Feb 12, 2025

    Wrangell’s playgrounds are old and need more than short-term patching and patchwork repairs. As it looks toward fundraising for substantial upgrades, the Parks and Recreation Department wants to hear what the community wants. The department is conducting an online survey — just half-a-dozen questions — to learn what features and equipment are important to people at Shoemaker Park Playground and the Kyle Angerman Playground near the library downtown. “We’re just trying to get a basic idea of which playground people use” and what they want t...

  • Legislation would help collect more PFDs for child support

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|Feb 12, 2025

    The Alaska Senate is considering a bill that would allow parents who are owed child support to apply for the Permanent Fund dividend of the parent who is delinquent in their payments, providing a work-around to collect from parents who do not bother to apply for their annual PFD. “The reality is that in some cases,” said Anchorage Sen. Forrest Dunbar, the bill’s sponsor, the owing parent either forgets to apply or decides not to apply out of spite to deny the money to the other parent. Under state law, garnishment of the dividend for child...

  • Bearfest brings Japanese folk drumming group to town as fundraiser

    Sentinel staff|Feb 12, 2025

    Wrangell's Bearfest doesn't start until the end of July but organizers have come up with a unique musical event to help drum up support for the annual all-things-bears weeklong celebration. Unit Souzou, a Japanese folk drumming group, is coming to town as the first stop on their Alaska tour next month. The group also is scheduled to perform in Petersburg, Anchorage and Bethel, said Sylvia Ettefagh, a volunteer organizer for Bearfest. The statewide tour is funded by grants. "I look for...

  • New Nolan Center exhibit explores climate solutions

    Sam Pausman, Wrangell Sentinel|Feb 12, 2025

    Wondering how changing global temperatures will affect Wrangell? The Nolan Center has you covered. A new exhibit sits just inside the Nolan Center lobby. The display is free to the public and will remain up through the end of the month. It was put together by the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research’s (UCAR) Center for Science Education in 2019, though it only began traveling again in 2022 after sitting dormant during the pandemic. Wrangell is the first stop of the exhibit’s Alaska leg. Next up it will travel to Fairbanks, Anchorage,...

  • Sauna season: Parks and Rec introduces new poolside feature

    Sam Pausman, Wrangell Sentinel|Feb 12, 2025

    The inside of the new sauna is 150 degrees warmer than the outside air this week. Parks and Rec opened a new poolside sauna on Feb. 3. No reservation is required to use the facility, though you will need to have access to either a Parks and Rec membership or a single-day pass. The freestanding sauna seats four people (though it more comfortably seats three), and availability is based on first-come, first-served. Sauna time is limited to 20 minutes, and it is recommended that 15 to 20 minutes is the sweet spot for sauna use. The wooden structure...

  • Trevyn Gillen, Lucas Schneider and teaching what's unteachable

    Sam Pausman, Wrangell Sentinel|Feb 12, 2025

    You'll struggle to find anyone who works harder on the basketball court than Trevyn Gillen and Lucas Schneider. Ever competitive and armed with an uncompromising desire to win, the two seniors constantly galvanize the Wrangell High School boys basketball team on both sides of the ball. For their senior project, Gillen and Schneider imparted this same passion on the next generation of Wrangell's basketball players. The two served as assistant coaches for the middle school basketball team, an...

  • Supply of new health care workers falls far short of demand in Alaska

    Alaska Beacon and Wrangell Sentinel|Feb 12, 2025

    Facing steep growth in demand, constant turnover and employee retirements, Alaska’s health care industry has a staggering need for workers, a new report says. “To meet those variables, we have to find over 9,400 new health care workers every single year,” Jared Kosin, executive director of the Alaska Hospital and Healthcare Association, said last month. The numbers Kosin presented at the Anchorage Chamber of Commerce meeting on Jan. 27 were from his association’s newly released analysis of Alaska’s health care workforce. The report, by Juneau-b...

  • State headed to budget deficit as revenues come up short

    James Brooks, Alaska Beacon|Feb 12, 2025

    The state is bringing in less money than it is spending and is on pace to finish the current fiscal year with a deficit of $171 million, according to figures presented Feb. 4. Lacey Sanders, Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s top budget official, told the Senate Finance Committee that spending from the Constitutional Budget Reserve Fund likely will be needed to close the gap before the Legislature’s scheduled adjournment in May. That would require support from three-quarters of the House and three-quarters of the Senate — usually a politically fraught negot...

  • SEARHC works to set up Healthy Families Early Start program

    Sue Bahleda, Wrangell Sentinel|Feb 12, 2025

    Input from the community today has the potential to shape the services that can help, support and connect families with newborns and toddlers to a broader range of local resources starting in 2026. SEARHC is engaging in an assessment, survey and planning period to broaden services for families, particularly those with newborns and toddlers, through a grant to establish a Healthy Families Early Start program for communities in Southeast. Kari Johnson, the community wellness manager for SEARHC, is encouraging anyone with children, planning to...

  • Hospice seeks volunteers for Friends and Neighbors program

    Sentinel staff|Feb 12, 2025

    Almost one-third of Wrangell’s population is at least 65 years old, and many could use some help, which is the idea behind Hospice of Wrangell restarting its Friends and Neighbors program. “We are recruiting volunteers to visit assigned neighbors to provide them with conversation, help with reading or writing, play games, prepare some food, help tidy up or escort them to an errand or appointment,” said the program announcement from hospice. “Visitors will not provide personal care, handle finances or do any heavy chores. Visitors will mostly...

  • Dead seals in Haines the work of either orcas or hunters

    Rashah McChesney, Chilkat Valley News|Feb 12, 2025

    On a windswept beach near Haines, Tim Ackerman walks down a hill with a pair of gloves, a knife and a bottle of Dawn dish soap to kneel beside the carcass of a harbor seal. It's one of a handful that have washed ashore in Haines since late November. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's regional stranding coordinator said they've not figured out what's killing the seals but it's not an uncommon scene for Ackerman, a Tlingít hunter and maritime expert who has spent decades...

  • State Senate rejects automatic legislator pay raises tied to inflation

    Mark Sabbatini, Juneau Empire|Feb 12, 2025

    The Alaska Senate rejected giving themselves and other state leaders automatic pay raises linked to inflation with the unanimous passage of a bill Friday, Feb. 7, declining a commission’s recommendation to implement such raises. Senate Bill 87 rejects recommendations made Jan. 29 by the three-member State Officers Compensation Commission that would adjust salaries every two years for the Legislature, Gov. Mike Dunleavy and top officials at state agencies to match the Consumer Price Index — up or down — after the 2026 state election. The recom...

  • Marine Exchange of Alaska maps out and tracks safety at sea

    Laurie Craig, Juneau Empire|Feb 12, 2025

    The shipshape third-floor conference room inside the Marine Exchange of Alaska's Juneau waterfront building is as efficient and functional as the vessel tracking operations center one floor lower. Executive Director Steve White and founder Ed Page look comfortable and relaxed seated at the deck-plank style conference table. The room is surrounded by nautical artifacts, maritime photos on the walls, and a huge video screen rotating images of ships, ports and lighthouses. The captains' relaxed...

  • Three charged after police seize 'pharmacy of drugs' in bust

    Sam Pausman, Wrangell Sentinel|Feb 5, 2025

    The Wrangell Police Department successfully executed a dual search warrant on Jan. 28 after a month-long investigation into a local drug ring. Cooper Seimears, 39, Jacob Marshall, 29, and McKenna Harding, 29, were charged and arrested following the 8 a.m. search warrant execution. Seimears and Marshall face eight drug-related felony charges and one misdemeanor. Harding faces drug-related charges of one felony and one misdemeanor, though she and Marshall, her fiancée, each face two additional...

  • Wrangell loses seven cruise ship visits to Klawock this summer

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|Feb 5, 2025

    Wrangell’s potential summer cruise ship passenger count has dropped by about 5,000 with the loss of two mid-size ships to Klawock. The Prince of Wales Island community opened up a cruise ship port last summer to attract more visitors — and economic activity — to the town of about 700 residents which is on the island’s extensive road system that links 10 communities. The 728-berth Sea Nova canceled six Wrangell stops May through August, switching to Klawock, and the 750-berth Silver Seas Explorer moved an August visit to Klawock while retaini...

  • Borough maps out solution to street address problem

    Sam Pausman, Wrangell Sentinel|Feb 5, 2025

    “It’s the red house down a ways a bit, yeah the one that Ben used to live in.” That’s a great way to tell someone new in town where your house is, but when it comes to emergency services, it’s far from helpful. City Hall is partnering with DATAMARK, a business solutions company, to update addresses on the houses and buildings in Wrangell. Borough officials hope the changes will increase the community’s emergency and disaster preparedness. The first step in the process will be to update the online maps of the borough’s GIS (geographic informatio...

  • Murkowski shows she is willing to speak and vote against Trump's actions

    Becky Bohrer, Associated Press|Feb 5, 2025

    In the early days of President Donald Trump's second term, Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski has openly challenged or rebuked him at least three times - stunning for a congressional Republican who has faced his wrath before and yet remains unbowed by pressure to embrace his agenda. Murkowski is a moderate with a history of bucking her party and Trump when she has felt it was the right thing to do. She was the first GOP senator to publicly break ranks with Trump on his nomination of Pete Hegseth as...

  • The next tax-free shopping day is May 3

    Sam Pausman, Wrangell Sentinel|Feb 5, 2025

    Start saving today. Wrangell’s first sales tax-free day of 2025 will be on Saturday, May 3. The borough assembly approved the chamber of commerce’s date request unanimously at its Jan. 28 meeting. There may be a second tax-free day in 2025, which the chamber has traditionally scheduled for October. This year, the assembly will consider the chamber’s request for a second tax-free day with a public hearing at its April 22 meeting. Last December the assembly altered municipal code so that the number of tax-free days every fiscal year can be anywhe...

  • Applications for assembly, port commission due Feb. 11

    Sentinel staff|Feb 5, 2025

    The borough is accepting letters of interest to fill one vacancy each on the assembly and port commission. To submit a letter, either email Borough Clerk Kim Lane — municipal clerk of the year in Alaska for 2024 — at clerk@wrangell.com or drop it off at her office in City Hall. As of Jan. 31, Lane said she had received three letters of interest. Phillip Mach and Scott McAuliffe submitted for the assembly seat, while Antonio Silva submitted for the port commission. “More would be great!” Lane said. Silva ran for port commission last fall an...

  • Borough settles insurance claim for damages to sewage outfall pipeline

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|Feb 5, 2025

    The borough has negotiated a $50,000 insurance settlement to help pay for repairs after a boat owner pulled up their anchor and hooked and crimped the sewage treatment plant’s deep outfall pipeline in the waters off City Park last September. The Public Works Department quickly found a temporary solution to keep the treated discharge flowing out of the plant. Bids on a permanent fix were due at City Hall on Tuesday, Feb. 4. The total cost of the temporary work, underwater video to locate the problem and permanent repairs to the pipeline is estim...

  • Assembly moves toward eliminating voter approval of property sales

    Sentinel staff|Feb 5, 2025

    The borough assembly has passed the first reading of an ordinance to eliminate the requirement of a public vote to sell or lease borough-owned property worth more than $1 million, scheduling the ordinance for a public hearing and possible approval Feb. 11. Lawyers had advised the borough that the public consent requirement in the municipal charter contradicts the state constitution. The assembly unanimously approved the first reading of the ordinance Jan. 28. The approval process was used as...

  • Tight budget will make it harder to increase state funding for schools

    James Brooks, Alaska Beacon|Feb 5, 2025

    In a series of hearings last week in the Alaska Capitol, advocates from across the state presented hours of impassioned and often emotional testimony in favor of a bill to sharply increase state funding for public schools. The state funding formula has increased just 2% over the past decade, but a pair of cold-blooded financial hearings by legislative committees showed that the education request may have to compete with the Permanent Fund dividend and aid for aging state buildings in the next budget. In December, Gov. Mike Dunleavy offered a st...

  • Governor introduces education bill without boost in state per-pupil funding number

    Jasz Garrett and Mark Sabbatini, Juneau Empire|Feb 5, 2025

    A wide-ranging education package with provisions that include allowing students to attend any public school in the state was introduced Friday, Jan. 31, by Gov. Mike Dunleavy at the State Capitol. The legislation also revives numerous policy goals by the Republican governor such as more state money for homeschooling and state authorization of new charter schools instead of leaving that decision up to school districts. The governor’s package contains no increase to the state's per-pupil funding number for school districts, the Base Student A...

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