Articles from the November 4, 2021 edition


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  • Hawaii welcomes back tourists as COVID cases decline

    The Associated Press|Nov 4, 2021

    HONOLULU (AP) — Hawaii’s COVID-19 case counts and hospitalizations have declined to the point where the islands are welcoming travelers once again. Gov. David Ige said vacationers and business travelers were welcome to return to the islands starting Monday. His Oct. 19 announcement came nearly two months after he asked travelers on Aug. 23 to avoid Hawaii because case counts were surging with the spread of the highly transmissible Delta variant and hospitals were becoming overwhelmed. The state didn’t impose any new travel quarantine restr...

  • Federal COVID rules will be voluntary for cruise lines next year

    The Associated Press|Nov 4, 2021

    WASHINGTON (AP) — Federal health officials have extended for nearly three more months its rules that cruise ships must follow to sail during the pandemic, adding that the government will move to a voluntary program next year. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the extension makes only “minor modifications” to rules already in effect. The agency said that after Jan. 15 it plans to move to a voluntary program for cruise companies to detect and control the spread of COVID-19 on their ships. The current regulations, calle...

  • Alaska Railroad rescinds vaccination requirement

    The Associated Press|Nov 4, 2021

    ANCHORAGE (AP) — The board of the Alaska Railroad has voted unanimously to rescind a requirement for all of its employees to be vaccinated against COVID-19. Initially, railroad employees were supposed to be vaccinated by Dec. 8 to comply with vaccine requirements ordered by President Joe Biden that, in part, required vaccination for employees of contractors doing business with the federal government. The railroad is a federal contractor. An email sent to railroad employees on Oct. 22 said the railroad must meet the standard. But the board decis...

  • Police report

    Nov 4, 2021

    Monday, Oct. 25 Noise complaint. Agency assist: Airport. Tuesday, Oct. 26 Suspicious vehicle. Agency assist: Endangered adult and ambulance requested. Disabled vehicle. Traffic stop: Verbal warning for defective trailer lights and up-to-date registration. Domestic violence. Wednesday, Oct. 27 Fraud. Civil standby. Agency assist: Ambulance. Narcotics information. Traffic hazzard. Thursday, Oct. 28 Welfare check. Domestic violence order violation: Unfounded. Agency assist: Ambulance. Domestic disturbance. Friday, Oct. 29 Theft. Agency assist:...

  • Both sides pause lawsuit to negotiate settlement over Columbia River salmon

    The Associated Press|Nov 4, 2021

    SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) — A federal judge on Tuesday granted a stay in litigation seeking to save endangered salmon runs on the Columbia and Snake rivers. U.S. District Judge Michael Simon in Portland granted a request by both sides in the lawsuit seeking the stay until July 31, 2022, so they can try to negotiate a settlement in the lawsuit. Fishing and conservation groups joined with the state of Oregon, the Nez Perce Tribe and the Biden administration to seek the pause in litigation challenging the latest federal plan for hydropower operations o...

  • 'Garbage problem' leads to a dozen bears killed in Sitka

    The Associated Press|Nov 4, 2021

    SITKA (AP) — A dozen bears have been killed in Sitka this year, including four last week, that were deemed dangers to life and property, the Daily Sitka Sentinel reported. The city “has a garbage problem,” Stephen Bethune, a wildlife biologist with the state Department of Fish and Game, told the borough assembly recently. “Neither I or any of my agency colleagues like killing bears or the labor that ensues but will continue to do so as necessary,” he said. “However, removing bears from the population only serves to treat the symptom and fails t...

  • State troopers solve identity of 1980s' murder victim

    The Associated Press|Nov 4, 2021

    ANCHORAGE (AP) — A woman known for 37 years only as Horseshoe Harriet, one of dozen or so victims of a notorious Alaska serial killer, has been identified through genetic genealogy and a DNA match, authorities said Oct. 22. The victim was identified as Robin Pelkey, who was 19 and living on the streets of Anchorage when she was killed by Robert Hansen in the early 1980s, the Alaska Bureau of Investigation’s Cold Case Investigation Unit said. Hansen, who owned a bakery, gained the nickname “Butcher Baker” for abducting and hunting down women ...

  • Air Force selects Fairbanks base for nuclear microreactor

    The Associated Press|Nov 4, 2021

    FAIRBANKS (AP) — The U.S. Air Force has selected a Fairbanks base to receive the nation’s first nuclear microreactor at an Air Force installation. Eielson Air Force Base, about 20 miles southeast of downtown Fairbanks, was selected in a project that began in 2019, when federal legislation required the military to identify potential sites for development and operation of a microreactor by 2027. “This technology has the potential to provide true energy assurance, and the existing energy infrastructure and compatible climate at Eielson make for t...

  • Lawsuit targets dams in Maine to protect salmon

    The Associated Press|Nov 4, 2021

    AUGUSTA, Maine (AP) — A group of environmental organizations filed court papers Oct. 21 to try to halt operations at Maine dams to protect salmon. Atlantic salmon are listed as endangered by the federal government. They used to swim upstream and spawn in almost every river north of the Hudson River, but now only return to Maine. The conservation groups want a judge to stop or curtail the operations at four dams on the lower Kennebec River to help the fish. Brookfield Renewable owns the dams. The company is a subsidiary of a larger Canadian c...

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