Newscasts

Newscast – Thursday, Sept. 26, 2019

In this newscast: The candidates for Juneau Assembly say what they’ll do about police and fire staffing shortages, the candidates for Juneau School Board give their position on early education, three Russian Old Believer schools on the Kenai Peninsula cancel their sports programs, the Chugach Electric utility says its customers should expect a 3% to 6% price hike because of wildfire damage to its power lines, moose hunting season gets underway around Petersburg, Wrangell and Kake, and Facebook says it won’t fact check politicians statements because they may be newsworthy. 

Newscast – Wednesday, Sept. 25, 2019

In this newscast: Members of Alaska’s congressional delegation gives their quick takes on impeachment inquiry in the House, candidates for Juneau Assembly answer a question on managing cruise ship visitors, candidates for Juneau School Board answer a question about preparing Juneau’s students for the future and give high schoolers advice, the ACLU accuse police in  Nome of “systematic and disastrous failure” to keep Native women safe from sexual assault, and the Anchorage School District receives a donation of high-end, electric guitars.

Newscast – Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2019

In this newscast: The state announces high education staff turnover statewide, the candidates for Juneau Assembly weigh in how Juneau can mitigate state budget cuts, the candidates for Juneau School Board describe what they think is the most pressing education issue, Athabascan elder Howard Luke dies at age 95, and a survey of British Columbians puts some wind in the sail of west coast advocates adopting year-round daylight saving time.

Newscast – Monday, Sept. 23, 2019

In this newscast: A federal judge freezes timber sales in the Tongass National Forest pending a decision in related litigation, the candidates for Juneau Assembly and Juneau School Board say why they’re running, an SUV smashes into an active construction zone and injures a construction worker, Southeast lawmakers sound off on the Dunleavy adminsitration’s budget cuts at Southeast Conference, the Alaska Mental Health Trust Authority’s annual land sale gets underway, and the Alaska Republican Party cancels its presidential primary. 

Newscast – Friday, Sept. 20, 2019

In this newscast: Sealaska Heritage Institute announces a federal grant to help build out its vision for an arts campus in downtown Juneau, rescuers reach a hiker who was stranded overnight on Mt. Roberts, state lawmakers look ahead at the budget process after the polarizing budget director Donna Arduin gets a diminshed role, ConocoPhillips says it intends to drill seven new exploratory wells in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska, Federal law enforcement agencies reveal a previously undocumented drug problem in Alaska with an opioid called Tramadol, and an unexploded aerial bomb is discovered in a home near Fort Wainwright. 

Newscast – Thursday, Sept. 19, 2019

In this newscast: State health officials recommend all Alaskans 6 months and older get a flu shot after flagging 18 deaths flu deaths last season, University of Alaska President Jim Johnsen says 13 teams are looking into restructuring options for the system, Senate Republicans shoot down Rep. Laddie Shaw’s appointment to their chamber, the Alaska Department of Revenue’s chief economist walks through how Alaska fits into global markets after the oil field attack in Saudi Arabia, the Petersburg Borough Assembly writes Secretary of State Mike Pompeo asking for salmon protections from Canadian mines, Alaska’s top transportation official and the mayor of Prince Rupert fail to reach a deal to keep ferry service going to small port city in British Columbia, someone firing off expired flares near Petersburg triggers unnecessary rescue responses, and Amazon vows to switch to track and report its greenhouse gas emissions and switch to 100 percent renewable energy.

Newscast – Wednesday, Sept. 18, 2019

In this newscast: The annual Southeast Conference begins in Sitka with headlines about the ferry system, cruise industry growth and timber contractions; the megaship Norwegian Joy ruffles Haines gillnetters and residents during its Chilkat Inlet visit last week; a family accuses an Anchorage funeral home of holding their loved one’s body hostage over unpaid bills; and the Kenai Peninsula Borough Assembly hosts another non-traditional invocation, this time with a member of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster. 

Newscast – Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2019

In this newscast: The state sues to try to stop the state’s largest public employee union from collecting dues without “clear and compelling evidence” that the workers consent, Gov. Mike Dunleavy names Alaska’s new Public Defender, scientists try to figure out what seabirds died off en mass again this summer, a permafrost tunnel north of Fairbanks serves as a lab for testing techniques for searching for ice on other planets, and a food researcher and author names Sitka in a list of seven cities changing the way Americans eat. 

Newscast – Monday, Sept. 16, 2019

In this newscast: Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s polarizing budget director Donna Arduin moves to a lower advisory role, emails from the end of the last administration suggests former Lt. Gov. Byron Mallott may have invited a woman into his room, Cordova braces for its last state ferry until the end of April, Southeast Alaska won’t have a commercial fishing season for red king crab again, Washington state health officials say two more residents have been treated for severe lung disease linked to vaping, Anchorage’s plastic bag ban takes effect, and the National Weather Service forecasts heavy rain with multiple days of multi-inch rain totals later this week. 

Newscast – Thursday, Sept. 12, 2019

In this newscast: The Trump administration takes one the last steps needed to let oil companies bid on oil and gas leases in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, the state files criminal charges against oil field services company Baker Hughes alleging workers were ignored and exposed to toxic chemicals, federal officials declare an unusual mortality event for three species of ice seals, police data in Nome show just 8% of calls about sexual assaults against adults resulted in an arrest over a 10 year period, Alaska delegates travel to Washington D.C. to reauthorize and make mandatory federal payments in lieu of property taxes to Tongass communities, Facebook expands its “Today In” service to 6,000 U.S. cities and towns to coax news deserts into bloom, and a vaping-related hospitalization is confirmed in King County, Washington. 

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