News / Wrangell


Sorted by date  Results 1578 - 1602 of 6213

Page Up

  • Lifelong resident finds healing through Facebook history page

    Marc Lutz, Wrangell Sentinel|Jun 22, 2022

    August Schultz Jr. was born June 23, 1960, in a hospital that's now an apartment building in Wrangell. He grew up in a house up behind that hospital, surrounded by family. Schultz, known to friends as Augie, still lives in the same house, though alone, being the last living member of his immediate family. Though it's been hard, he has found healing through the town's history in the form of a Facebook page. At his therapist's suggestion, Schultz created "Wrangell yesterday - place where old...

  • Borough buys new garbage truck; delivery could take a year

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|Jun 22, 2022

    Garbage trucks are no different than all the other things consumers order but have to wait an extra-long time to arrive. The borough is spending almost $300,000 on a new garbage can and dumpster picker-upper and trash-hauling truck. The company told the borough it could be a year before arrival. “They can’t even get the chassis from the manufacturer to make the truck,” Borough Public Works Director Tom Wetor said last week. A 16-cubic-yard, automated side-loader will be installed on a Freightliner chassis. It’s basically the same as the bor...

  • Eric Halstead leads salmon derby at 43.4 pounds

    Sentinel staff|Jun 22, 2022

    Eric Halstead was at the top of the Wrangell King Salmon Derby scoreboard with a 43.4-pound catch as of Sunday evening, five days into the competition. The derby runs through July 3, with $7,900 in cash prizes. As of Sunday evening, 27 salmon had been entered, according to the chamber of commerce, which sponsors the event. Halstead hooked his salmon last Friday, near Blake Island. Stanley Johnson, of Wyoming, was in second place, with a 41.8-pound king that he caught near Found Island on Sunday. He won $500 for catching the largest fish on...

  • Casting about for family fun

    Jun 22, 2022

    Gavia Delabrue, and her mom, Corree Delabrue, fish at Pats Lake during Family Fishing Day last Saturday. The day started in 2010 as part of a Boy Scouts event. This year's fishing landed about 16 fish, according to event organizer Shirley Wimberley. There were 27 children and about 28 adults signed up, with 11 staff and volunteers overseeing activities such as making lures and painting T-shirts. Claire Froehlech, an intern with the U.S. Forest Service, guides Wyatt Thomassen, 7, as he fishes at...

  • COVID testing company will shut down its last sites in Alaska

    The Wrangell Sentinel and The Associated Press|Jun 22, 2022

    One of Alaska’s largest private COVID-19 testing providers plans to close its public testing sites in the state by the end of June. The decision by the private company will not affect SEARHC’s continuation of testing services in Wrangell. The decision by Capstone Clinic is mainly driven by financial considerations, said Matt Jones, Capstone’s director of non-clinical operations. Jones said it began with an abrupt move by the federal government earlier this year to no longer cover the costs of COVID-19 tests or treatments for those without healt...

  • Wrangell dancers lead the way at Celebration

    Lisa Phu, Alaska Beacon|Jun 15, 2022

    Wrangell's 10-year-old Quinn Davies was "super nervous" to dance for the first time at Celebration - a biennial dance-and-culture festival of Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian cultures, held in Juneau last week. "I'm using my dad's regalia that he used when he was in Celebration, and I'm using his hat that he also used," Davies said June 8, opening day of the four-day event. His sister Madelyn Davies, 12, said being at Celebration is "kind of mind-blowing." "It's a lot of people. We're all together....

  • Portland museum returns Tlingit artifacts to Wrangell clan

    Bob Hicks, Oregon ArtsWatch|Jun 15, 2022

    Culturally significant objects formerly in collections of the Portland Art Museum arrived in Juneau on June 8 on their way back to Wrangell, whose Tlingit artisans had fashioned them. After years of negotiations following a claim originally filed in 2002 and accepted by the museum in 2019, the objects, including a Killerwhale Hat, have been repatriated to the Naanya.aayí clan in Wrangell, where they had originated. COVID-19 complications delayed the transfer until now, according to a museum...

  • Borough considers $1 million in pool, rec center work

    Elwood Brehmer, Wrangell Sentinel|Jun 15, 2022

    The borough is proposing almost $1 million worth of repair, rehab and upgrades to the community pool and recreation center building in next year’s budget. State grant funds would cover the costs. The projects include upgrading the heating and ventilation, or HVAC, system in the building as well as the digital temperature controls for the pool, new cedar siding on the building, repairing the brick-clad exterior columns and replacing the brick with cedar, and repairing and rebuilding the gutters and downspout system. The work is estimated at n...

  • Beach Explorers program turns outdoors into summer classroom

    Marc Lutz, Wrangell Sentinel|Jun 15, 2022

    A group of 6-, 7- and 8-year-old kids poured over the rocky beach near City Park on June 8 like a bunch of young Indiana Joneses, looking for artifacts. But this group, unlike Dr. Jones, was looking for shells as part of a Beach Explorers program to use in a science experiment. During last week's exploration, children were given a cup, guided to the beach, and instructed to find two intact seashells. "It's fun," said Bo Ritchie, 6. "We find stuff like glass. That's what my sister does. She...

  • Talent show to combine with wearable art in showcase of creativity

    Marc Lutz, Wrangell Sentinel|Jun 15, 2022

    Imagine clothes made of plastic bags, playing cards or crab shells. Now imagine pulling a rabbit out of a tinfoil hat or yodeling while wearing a shirt of decoupage or any of the materials mentioned. Such whimsy is the basis for Express Yourself! a talent show combined with wearable art planned for 6 p.m. on July 3 at the Nolan Center. Organizers Cyni Crary and Bonnie Ritchie said it's been five years since they held the first combo event, and they feel it's time to bring it back, reintroducing...

  • Endurance races run through Wrangell at start and end of July

    Marc Lutz, Wrangell Sentinel|Jun 15, 2022

    Fitness buffs looking to challenge themselves in Wrangell don't have far to go to go far. Two different events in July will test the mettle of endurance athletes seeking to swim, bike, run and run some more. The Tongass Toughman Triathlon on July 2 pits people against sea, pavement and dirt in a combined 1.2-mile swim, a 56-mile bike ride and a 15-mile run. The Bearfest marathon on July 31 gives racers the option of running a full marathon (26.2 miles), a half (13.1 miles) or a 5k (3.1 miles)....

  • Chamber needs volunteers for July 4th events

    The Wrangell Sentinel|Jun 15, 2022

    From log rolling to similarly shaped but much smaller and lighter wiener tossing — and everything in between, whether moving or not — the events over the long July 4th weekend are going to be plentiful. However, the chamber of commerce needs help. At least 15 volunteers are needed to help pull apart raffle tickets for the annual prize drawing, set up and take down booths, direct people and generally help out wherever needed over the several days of community festivities. Brittani Robbins, the chamber’s executive director, said there are about...

  • Hospital conducts casualty drill to test itself and learn

    Marc Lutz, Wrangell Sentinel|Jun 15, 2022

    A mass casualty exercise June 7 was the first one held at the Wrangell Medical Center in its 16-month-old facility. The drill, which simulated a plane crash, was used to see where improvements could be made in the emergency operations plan. It involved about 70 staff members from the hospital, EMTs and volunteer firefighters. Eleven community volunteers of various ages were made up to resemble victims with head wounds, lacerations and other traumas requiring stabilization, medevac or blood...

  • Wrangell may need to add disinfection to sewage treatment

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|Jun 8, 2022

    Wrangell is one of nine Alaska communities operating under old federal permit waivers from costly secondary treatment for its sewage water discharge, and officials expect the upcoming permit reissuance will require the community to disinfect its wastewater before piping it into Zimovia Strait. “Everyone says the same thing … disinfection is coming,” Tom Wetor, the borough’s Public Works director, said last Friday. “It’s been reiterated to us multiple times.” Construction and installation of a disinfection system could cost around $2 million, s...

  • Malaspina will have new life as museum, employee housing and classroom

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|Jun 8, 2022

    After 56 years of service in the Alaska Marine Highway System fleet and almost three years tied up at a Ketchikan dock, unused and in need of costly repairs, the Malaspina is headed to another career as a privately owned floating museum and employee housing. Plans also call for using the ship as a classroom for maritime industry jobs. The state last week accepted $128,250 for the 408-foot-long passenger and vehicle ferry from the recently formed Ketchikan company M/V Malaspina. The company is a...

  • Borough lists old hospital for auction

    Sarah Aslam, Wrangell Sentinel|Jun 8, 2022

    The borough has listed the former Wrangell Medical Center for sale to the highest bidder until June 30, at a minimum bid of $830,000, the value assigned by an April appraisal. The hospital has been vacant since health care provider SouthEast Alaska Regional Health Consortium moved into its new building in February 2021. The borough has been spending close to $100,000 a year to heat and insure the empty structure, and the assembly has decided to sell the surplus property. The lot is 1.95 acres, o...

  • Teen uses royalty competition to help community one last time

    Marc Lutz, Wrangell Sentinel|Jun 8, 2022

    It was the fundraiser that almost wasn't until one ambitious teen decide to set another goal. Each year, the chamber of commerce uses the Fourth of July royalty contest to raise money to pay for the following year's events. Nobody had entered this year's competition until Tyson Messmer stepped up mid-May to help. Messmer, who graduated high school this year, will attend the University of Miami in Florida. Though the school awarded him a scholarship, he still needs to raise money for his schoolin...

  • Borough purchase of old mill property delayed by lien against owner

    Sarah Aslam, Wrangell Sentinel|Jun 8, 2022

    Closing on the borough’s $2.6 million purchase of the 39-acre former sawmill property at 6 Mile has been delayed until June 20, Borough Manager Jeff Good said June 1, the day the sale was supposed to close. The sale is delayed until the seller can resolve a contractor lien on the property. William “Shorty” Tonsgard Jr., owner of Channel Construction, a scrap metal collection company that runs a barge south for disposal or recycling, on March 18 filed a $701,654 lien against Kelso, Washington-based DB AK Enterprises, owned by Betty Buhle...

  • Wrangell fishing derby casts off next week

    Marc Lutz, Wrangell Sentinel|Jun 8, 2022

    Don’t let this be the one that got away. The Wrangell King Salmon Derby gets underway on June 15 and runs through July 3. At stake is $7,900 in cash prizes. The heaviest king salmon will get the biggest prize, as first place in the derby wins $3,000; second place wins $2,000; and third place wins $1,000. If two people land fish that weigh the same, the person who gets it weighed first will win. There will also be a $500 prize for the biggest fish caught on opening day, a $500 prize for the biggest caught on Father’s Day, two $250 random wei...

  • Fish and Game releases mobile app into wilds

    Marc Lutz, Wrangell Sentinel|Jun 8, 2022

    Hunters no longer need to hunt the web or search for printed copies and anglers no longer need to fish for necessary information, especially when they're in the field. The Alaska Department of Fish and Game recently launched an app for mobile phones running on Apple or Android operating systems. It gives users instant access to their licenses, permits, tags and information like regulations and boundaries. Since launching the app in late May, there have been 14,000 downloads of the app on the...

  • Forest Service Chief Shakes hot tub project delayed to next year

    Sarah Aslam, Wrangell Sentinel|Jun 8, 2022

    Work on an outdoor deck at Chief Shakes Hot Springs up the Stikine River has been delayed until next spring, after federal funds the Forest Service expected for the project have yet to arrive. The site, which consists of two hot tubs — one indoor and one outdoor — was supposed to get a facelift this month, favoring a higher river and tide levels for easier access at this time of the year. The project, which had been estimated at $190,000, received $81,200 from the Great American Outdoors Act — or so the Forest Service had been told, Distr...

  • Author's book characters are composites of real people in Southeast

    Sarah Aslam, Wrangell Sentinel|Jun 8, 2022

    When Christi Slaven's kids were tiny, she set her typewriter down on the breakfast bar in her parents' house and wrote a novel. She burned all 300 pages when she was done. "It was terrible," Slaven said. But she felt better afterward, because she was "going nuts" taking care of her two young daughters. Writing gave her a creative outlet. Her daughter, Kelly Ellis, who lives and works in Wrangell, remembers that time. "I was little, 2, 3, 4?" Ellis recalled. "She had a typewriter, and she had a k...

  • Borough will charge credit card fee on tax payments

    Sentinel staff|Jun 8, 2022

    In a May 31 budget work session to consider borough finances for the fiscal year that starts July 1, Finance Director Mason Villarma advised the assembly that the borough is working toward accepting credit card payments for property and sales taxes but will charge a fee to accept the cards. “We are still finalizing our process and we may establish fees at a certain dollar threshold,” Villarma said last Friday. “We will be sure to give folks ample notice,” he added. “This will not apply to utility or moorage credit card payments,” Villarma wr...

  • Candidate filings show large turnover in Legislature

    The Associated Press and Sentinel staff|Jun 8, 2022

    About one-third of Alaska’s legislators could be new to their job next year as multiple incumbents have decided to retire or seek higher office. The candidate filing deadline for the Aug. 16 statewide primary election was June 1. In addition to the state Senate president, Soldotna Republican Peter Micciche, and Senate Democratic minority leader Tom Begich, of Anchorage, eight other legislative incumbents have decided it is time to retire or take a break from elected office. In addition to those 10 who decided not to seek reelection, eight m...

  • The bigger the better

    Marc Lutz|Jun 8, 2022

    Devyn Johnson watches as her son, Nolan, 5, steps down from the cab of a Hitachi backhoe during the Touch a Truck event at Volunteer Park last Saturday. Johnson began the event a few years ago, getting the idea from her sister, who takes her children to a similar event in eastern Washington state. "I figured, my husband is on the fire department and does construction, so my kids have the opportunity to check those vehicles out all the time," she said. "We know kids in town who don't have that...

Page Down

Rendered 05/05/2025 20:22