Articles from the September 4, 2024 edition


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  • Powell and Gilbert in contested election for borough mayor

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|Sep 4, 2024

    Assembly Member David Powell has filed to run for mayor, taking on incumbent Patty Gilbert in the Oct. 1 municipal election. Gilbert is running for a second two-year term as mayor. Powell is in his ninth year on the assembly. In another contested race on the ballot, Chris Buness is seeking a second three-year term on the port commission, with Tony Guggenbickler, Eric Yancey and Antonio Silva also on the ballot. The top two vote-getters will each win a three-year term. Guggenbickler has never held elected office in Wrangell, though he served...

  • Assembly approves two issues for Oct. 1 ballot

    Sam Pausman, Wrangell Sentinel|Sep 4, 2024

    Voters will decide Oct. 1 whether the borough should borrow $3 million to repair the Public Safety Building, and also whether to amend the municipal charter so that assembly members could eventually receive compensation. The charter currently prohibits compensation for the mayor and assembly members; the Oct. 1 vote could change that. The assembly voted Aug. 27 to place both questions on the municipal election ballot. The bond proposition passed unanimously, while the compensation ordinance passed 6-1. Assembly Member Bob Dalrymple was the...

  • Ketchikan continues cleanup from deadly landslide

    Ketchikan Daily News|Sep 4, 2024

    Private contractors, state and municipal crews worked long days last week to restore power, remove downed trees and clear truckloads of mud and debris that flowed down the hillside above Ketchikan. Crews focused on reopening streets and drains in case more heavy rain falls on the community. "We want to approach it methodically and make sure we do it safely ... there is a phasing-in of people moving back to their homes," City of Ketchikan Public Works Director Seth Brakke said Aug. 30. "There's...

  • New school counselor has to wait for state ferry before getting to town

    Sam Pausman, Wrangell Sentinel|Sep 4, 2024

    Ann Hegney will be the school district's new counselor this year, but not until she can catch a state ferry to town. The school board approved her hire on Aug. 19, but due to a lack of car deck space on the weekly ferry from Bellingham, Washington, she will not arrive in Wrangell until Sept. 15. From there, she will have a quick turnaround: Her first day of work is the very next morning. She is driving cross country from upstate New York and plans to stop in Wyoming and Montana for some...

  • The Way We Were

    Amber Armstrong, Wrangell Sentinel|Sep 4, 2024

    Aug. 28, 1924 The Wrangell schools opened Tuesday morning with a good sized enrollment. A total of 95 were enrolled in the grade school and 20 in the high school. Both school buildings are still somewhat torn up by the workmen engaged in the alteration program, which had not reached completion before the opening of school. The objectionable, unsanitary toilets will soon be eliminated from the main floor and adequate, sanitary facilities provided in concrete rooms in the basement, accessible from the main hall. The chimney at the high school...

  • Community calendar

    Sep 4, 2024

    BASKETBALL SKILLS CLINIC 5 to 8 p.m. Friday, Sept 6; 9 a.m. to noon and 1 to 4 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 7; 9 a.m. to noon Sunday, Sept. 8. Coach Mark Cascio will teach shooting with confidence, effectiveness on ball defense, quick and clever transition, essential actions to score. At the high school gym. For eighth through 12th graders. Walk-in registration, $50. Scholarships available. Call Coach Good 707-779-9505 or Coach Allen 907-305-0910 with any questions. Sponsored by the AAU Sports team. MUSKEG MEADOWS championship 18-hole, individual...

  • Borough hopes military training program will help clear sunken vessels

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|Sep 4, 2024

    The borough is asking a military training program to help assess and clear out a sunken barge and tug offshore the former sawmill property near 6-Mile. It’s unclear how long the vessels have been stuck on the bottom but it’s likely been 25 or 30 years, according to current and past borough officials. Though the vessels do not impede access by the scrap metal salvage barge operator that has a five-year lease on the borough-owned property, the sunken vessels could become a problem if Wrangell is able to attract a long-term user or buyer for the...

  • Meet Jackson Pool, Wrangell's new finance director

    Sam Pausman, Wrangell Sentinel|Sep 4, 2024

    Jackson Pool loves solving problems. As Wrangell's new finance director, he is excited to do just that. He joined the borough last week after working as an accountant for the Ketchikan Gateway Borough for just over a year. His hire ends a run of nine months without a finance director for Wrangell. Borough Manager Mason Villarma has been doing both jobs since last November. Pool's hire is a relief for Villarma; not only will the borough manager now be able to direct all his attention toward his...

  • City Park will get a second pavilion next year

    Sam Pausman, Wrangell Sentinel|Sep 4, 2024

    If you’ve enjoyed City Park’s newly refurbished pavilion this summer, you might be twice as happy now. The borough recently approved a construction contract for a new pavilion in City Park, and the best part: Wrangell hardly has to pay anything for it. The new pavilion replaces the structure that was destroyed in a November 2021 windstorm. It will be built exactly where the old one stood, a couple hundred feet south of the pavilion upgraded this summer. Following the storm, the Alaska Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management all...

  • Oct. 1 municipal election an opportunity to learn

    Wrangell Sentinel|Sep 4, 2024

    In less than four weeks, Wrangell voters will cast their ballots in the Oct. 1 municipal election. Voting is easy — cast an early ballot at City Hall any weekday starting Sept. 16, or vote at the Nolan Center on election day. The harder part is deciding how to vote. The decisions include contested races for mayor, the school board and port commission, and two ballot propositions: One question asks voters whether the borough should borrow $3 million to start repairs to the 40-year-old Public Safety Building, and the other asks if voters want t...

  • Alaska's attorney general flunks math test

    Larry Persily Publisher|Sep 4, 2024

    Remember those perplexing math problems in school? Not the easy ones that required only simple subtraction, addition, multiplication or division. I’m talking about those word problems that told what seemed like a purposefully confusing story about trains moving in opposite directions at different speeds and you had to calculate how far apart they would be in an hour. I figured the purpose was to teach us problem solving. Though in my early school years, the biggest math problem I wanted to solve was how to buy 25 cents worth of candy when I h...

  • Damaged sewage pipe leaves waste outfall on beach

    Sam Pausman, Wrangell Sentinel|Sep 4, 2024

    Damage to the outfall line, a plastic pipe that moves Wrangell’s treated sewage 1,200 feet out to sea, caused a temporary backup in the wastewater treatment plant on Aug. 30. To prevent wastewater overflow at the plant, borough workers dug up and cut the line on the beach. The short-term solution resulted in treated sewage deposited directly on the beach between City Park and the Mariners’ Memorial at Heritage Harbor. Wrangell’s primary treatment plant removes all solid waste before it is discharged. The borough on Sept. 3 announced the immed...

  • Borough wants to engage community more in economic development efforts

    Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel|Sep 4, 2024

    The borough has started a newsletter, the first in a series of initiatives to provide more information for the public, particularly focused on promoting economic growth. The second initiative will be monthly informal discussions titled “Our Town, Our Future.” The “economic coffee chats” will be held the third Friday every month, starting Oct. 18, said Kate Thomas, the borough’s economic development director. The meetings will be held at a different location each month, she said, with the first location undecided as of last week. The series will...

  • High school elevator will finally be replaced

    Sam Pausman, Wrangell Sentinel|Sep 4, 2024

    After five years, Wrangell High School will have a new elevator, at last. The new elevator will be installed next summer after the borough assembly approved a construction contract last week. Demolition will begin toward the end of the current school year, and Capital Projects Director Amber Al-Haddad hopes construction will be completed by the time students walk in on the first day of school in August 2025. After an oil leak was discovered at the bottom of the existing elevator’s hydraulic ram in March 2020, the school shut down the e...

  • On the big screen: 'Deadpool & Wolverine is a fun time, but not much more

    Sam Pausman, Wrangell Sentinel|Sep 4, 2024

    “Deadpool & Wolverine” isn’t a great movie: Many of the jokes went on a little too long; the story was all over the place; the ubiquitous cameos felt forced and often unnecessary. But you know what? I had such a blast! I giggled pretty much the entire movie, and I’m proud to say I liked “Deadpool & Wolverine” — even if it’s not winning any awards any time soon. The movie screened at the Nolan Center over the weekend, giving Wrangell an option of indoor entertainment amid an otherwise rainy weekend. Ryan Reynolds and Hugh Jackman headlin...

  • Wrangell's sole home cross-country meet canceled over weather

    Sentinel staff|Sep 4, 2024

    Wrangell’s only home cross-country meet of the season, scheduled for Saturday, Aug. 31, was canceled the night before due to forecasts for heavy rain. Earlier on Friday, a tentative plan to run a boys 5K and a girls 5K at the same time as cross country was put in place, but eventually it was decided that even this would have been untenable in the weather. Head Coach Mason Villarma hopes to reschedule the cross-country meet later this season. The cross-country team will race next at the Craig Invitational on Saturday, Sept. 7...

  • Undersea cable break cuts GCI phone and internet service to Sitka

    Shannon Haugland, Sitka Sentinel|Sep 4, 2024

    GCI said Saturday that a ship is coming from Seattle to make repairs to a damaged section of undersea fiber optic cable that has caused the loss of GCI cell phone and internet service in Sitka. Service, which was cut Thursday, Aug. 29, is not expected to be back up until next week. GCI said the repair ship is expected to be at the site of the undersea cable break, about 30 miles from Sitka, by Friday, Sept. 6, and that repairs could take three to seven days. In the meantime, the public is getting help from Starlink satellite communication...

  • Ketchikan firefighters rescue dogs after week in collapsed home

    Sentinel staff|Sep 4, 2024

    A state geologist walking the landslide area on Sunday morning heard whimpering noises from a collapsed home. He called Ketchikan firefighters, who responded and pulled out two dogs from the debris, reuniting them with their owners. "After an emotional week of recovering from the aftermath of the Third Avenue landslide, Ketchikan - and most specifically, James and Bill Montiver - got some very good news," the city's emergency operations center announced on Sunday. "During the landslide the Monti...

  • Alaska conference focuses on transboundary mining concerns

    Mark Sabbatini, Juneau Empire|Sep 4, 2024

    Participants in a transboundary mining conference in Juneau last week said recent natural and industrial disasters show why their heightened concerns are justified. “I think that people are realizing that more and more this is an emergency situation,” Wrangell’s Esther Aaltséen Reese, president of the Southeast Alaska Indigenous Transboundary Commission, said in an interview Aug. 28. “We can’t just keep coming to these meetings and saying the same thing.” The third annual Transboundary Mining Conference began two days after a major landsl...

  • Petersburg will spend $240,000 to scrap large derelict vessels

    Olivia Rose, Petersburg Pilot|Sep 4, 2024

    Disposing of large, derelict vessels abandoned in Petersburg’s harbors comes at a cost. The borough assembly has authorized the transfer of $240,000 from the harbor department reserves to the derelict boat disposal budget category to pay for disposal of two large derelict boats. The assembly also amended the code to make clear that boat owners are responsible for disposal costs. “It’s incredibly expensive,” Borough Manager Steve Giesbrecht said at the Aug. 19 assembly meeting. “Literally, to take two boats apart and scrap them and handle an...

  • Alaska primary election turnout 3rd lowest in past 50 years

    James Brooks, Alaska Beacon|Sep 4, 2024

    Turnout in this year’s state primary election is on pace to be the third lowest in the past 50 years, according to preliminary figures published Aug. 27 by the Alaska Division of Elections. Through that evening, 106,208 votes had been counted from just over 17.5% of all registered voters. The turnout rate in Wrangell was similar. Four years ago, Alaskans approved a new elections system that includes an open primary election in which candidates from all parties compete in the same race for each statewide office. The top four vote-getters a...

  • Police report

    Sep 4, 2024

    Monday, Aug. 26 Traffic stop. Deer complaint. Found property. Found dog. Citizen contact. Tuesday, Aug. 27 Arrest: Assault. Dog at large. Agency assist: Transportation Security Administration. Fraud. Driving complaint. Citizen assist. Driving complaint. Wednesday, Aug. 28 Drug information. Traffic stop: Citation issued for blocking roadway. Agency assist: State housing. Vacation check. Subpoena service. Subpoena service. Thursday, Aug. 29 Dead deer. Friday, Aug. 30 Found property. Traffic stop: Verbal warning for no license plate. Traffic...

  • Loss of sea stars allows sea urchin count to grow, threatening kelp forests

    Ariadne Will, Sitka Sentinel|Sep 4, 2024

    A decade after sea star wasting disease arrived in Sitka Sound, researchers are investigating the relationship between sea urchins, kelp forests and sunflower stars. Scientists still don’t know much about the disease, which causes several species of sea stars, such as sunflower stars, to lose their limbs before dissolving. “Sea star” is the name marine scientists now use with reference to the five-limbed marine invertebrate instead of the common term “starfish,” because it is not actually a fish. Around Sitka, sea star wasting disease i...

  • Classified ads

    Sep 4, 2024

    FOR SALE 2009 Ford E-350 bus with 86,341 miles. Runs well and has had all scheduled maintenance. Call Catholic Community Service at 907-874-2006 for more information. $15,000 OBO. 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...

  • Thank you for auction items

    Sep 4, 2024

    WMC Foundation thanks Brenda Schwartz-Yeager for the Rally for Cancer Care silent auction donation of an Alaska maritime scene watercolor print and Nancy Delpero for donating a whale-on-canvas print. Your generous donations raised a great deal of money for our Cancer Care program. Thank you! -- WMC Foundation...

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