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Monday
April 29, 2013
First Cruise Ship of 2013
Ketchikan's first cruise ship of 2013, the Crystal Symphony, as she arrived Saturday morning.
Front Page Photo by Steve Speights ©2013
(Please respect the rights of photographers, never republish or copy
without permission and/or payment of required fees.)
Fish Factor: Crafting of Bycatch Reduction Plan for Trawl Groundfish Fisheries By LAINE WELCH - Fishing industry stakeholders and federal managers in June will begin crafting a bycatch reduction plan for trawl groundfish fisheries in the Gulf. It will include some form of catch share plan, and as the main delivery port for more than $100 million worth of pollock, cod, flats and other fishes, Kodiak is closely guarding any giveaways.
It’s similar to a chess game, said Duncan Fields, a lifelong Kodiak fisherman and a member of the North Pacific Fishery Management Council charged with designing the new plan.
“You have multiple moving pieces and every time you move a piece, it impacts all other pieces on the board,” Fields explained at a recent panel discussion in Kodiak. “You have your queen and your king– those might be your primary policy goals – but if you can get that pawn to the other end of the board, that becomes a queen. Sometimes the little components of a catch share or rationalization program can become equally as important as the big parts.”
“The big question is how you win, collectively, as a community, “he added. “That revolves around defining the goals and objectives early on. At the cusp of developing a program for the Gulf of Alaska, we have to appreciate the long term nature of the decisions we may make.”
Fields said he believes mirroring catch share modes being used so far in Alaska (halibut, sablefish and Bering Sea crab fisheries “will not bring a good result to the Gulf.”
Any new plan must be very inclusive, said Nicole Kimball, the State’s federal fisheries advisor.
“We need to recognize the interests and investments and the dependence of all sectors, so there shouldn’t just be a vessel based program or one just focused on processor interests or the community. It needs to be all three,” Kimball said.
In addition to bycatch reduction, the State wants the new plan to limit consolidation.
“It’s understood that can have a very negative effect on community stability and employment opportunities in fishing, processing and all the support industries,” she added.
Kimball said she is “constantly hearing” that the groundfish program needs to have improved monitoring and reporting, and it should also keep tabs on social and economic impacts of the management shift.
“The Council has embarked on a collection project to get baseline data on those kinds of questions that don’t get asked on fish tickets, or from eLandings, ”she said.
The loudest and clearest message Kodiak had for Kimball was that any new program should not include permanent groundfish giveaways. She said the Council will explore many kinds of limited duration and allocative quotas, some never tried before.
“We are looking at the ability to allocate quotas for a limited duration, and and reallocate it after some period of time based on a vessel’s performance in achieving the objective, which is reducing bycatch. No one has ever done this, it is uncharted territory, but everyone has talked about it. And so now we are going to take a serious look at it.” - More...
Monday PM - April 29, 2013
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Southeast Alaska: Mt. Edgecumbe team takes first in Alaska KidWind competition By JULIE ESTEY - Wind Gang, a team of four high school students from Mt. Edgecumbe High School in Sitka recently won first place for highest power output in the 2013 Alaska KidWind Design Challenge.
Mt. Edgecumbe High School in Sitka won first place for highest power output in the 2013 Alaska KidWind Design Challenge
Photo courtesy University of Alaska Fairbanks’ Alaska Center for Energy and Power
The challenge is an Alaska-specific statewide competition that challenges students to use innovation, teamwork and creativity to design a wind turbine to produce electricity. The team produced 19,052 milliwatts of electricity, topping other competitors from throughout the state.
Team Turbine, four students from Angoon High School in southeast Alaska, was awarded an honorable mention for “Best Application for Rural Alaska.” While the competition is geared toward high power output, this special category was added by judges who were impressed with Team Turbine’s consistent output of 781 milliwatts, which remained stable for the 60-second duration of the test, a notable difference from the variable power output more commonly seen in the competition. - More...
Monday PM - April 29, 2013
Alaska: New Series "Life Below Zero" Explores the Incredible Lives of Six Alaskans Living Off the Land and Off the Grid in the Country's Most Vicious Climate - Isolated. Dark. Cold. Combating minus 60-degree days. Your only neighbors are bears, wolves and foxes. For many, living in these conditions would be a nightmare, but for some residents of the remote corners of Alaska, it's a preferred way of life. The new weekly series Life Below Zero, premiering Sunday, May 19, at 10 p.m. ET/PT, takes viewers inside the daily challenges of people who have chosen to live in one of America's harshest climates, Alaska.
From winter preparations through the thaw, Life Below Zero, produced by Adjacent Productions, follows six people as they battle for the most basic necessities in the state with the lowest population density in the United States. Living at the ends of the world's loneliest roads and subsisting off the rugged Alaskan bush, they battle whiteout snow storms, man-eating carnivores, questionable frozen terrain and limited resources through a long and bitter winter. Some of them are lone wolves; others have their families beside them. All must overcome despairing odds to brave the wild and survive through to the spring. - More...
Monday PM - April 29, 2013
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Alaska Science: Big booms over the northland By NED ROZELL - Near a small village in Russia, Marina Ivanova stepped into cross-country skis and kicked toward a hole in the snow. The meteorite specialist with the Smithsonian Institution National Museum of Natural History and Vernadsky Institute in Moscow was hunting for fragments of the great Chelyabinsk Meteorite that exploded three days earlier
A photo from the Leonid Kulik expedition to the Tunguska region of Russia in 1929. A meteorite or comet knocked down millions of trees in one of the largest space-object-meets-Earth events in recorded history. Image from the Leonid Kulik Expedition, St. Petersburg Museum.
This search was different from others. Ivanova has looked for metallic stones on the world’s great deserts and in Antarctica, places where heavenly rocks stand out because of their contrast with the surface. When the Chelyabinsk Meteorite in mid-February rained out fragments over the Ural Mountains, pieces marked their fall with little vole holes in the snow.
“I’ve never seen anything like this before,” Ivanova said during a recent lecture at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. “This event was amazing.” - More...
Monday PM - April 29, 2013
Columns - Commentary
DAVE KIFFER: Out With the Old and In With The ??? -
We've clearly been due a little spring cleaning around Our Fair Salmon City.
And no, that does not extend to my hoarder's home office! Maybe next year!
The biggest spring cleaning took place a few months ago when the old hospital - AKA Bawden Street apartments finally gave way to a rocky park.
Recently, US Senator Lisa Murkowski and I commiserated that the place where we were both born no longer exists! There won't be any of those famous personages were born here plaques like they have on just about every old building in Europe. Oh well.
Anyway, the old hospital is gone and now we have an empty spot in the Downtown geography. Several folks have asked me what will go in its place.
Well, it's too late to say a new library or a new downtown fire station. - More...
Monday PM - April 29, 2013
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OF GUN NUTS AND MUSEUM PIECES By David G. Hanger -
I have no idea what political calculus Senator Mark Begich has come up with to justify his recent performance with the question of background checks for gun purchases; the idea that it is too emotional a time, his words, is pathetic. - More...
Tuesday AM - April 30, 2013
RE: The Truth about the Herring By Sam Bergeron -
Terri Wenger Anderson thinks if you call someone names their argument will be moot. Turns out the guy your bad mouthing has been sounding the clarion call to action on the commercial harvest of herring for quite some time. His points are fact based, well researched and absent of vitriol and name-calling; we should all strive to write as well. - More...
Tuesday AM - April 30, 2013
To Be Fed By Ravens By Judith Green -
Our community has so much talent and strength to share - it is wonderful. Many groups of school age children in the arts and sports - we applaud their efforts and enjoy watching and listening as they perform. - More...
Tuesday AM - April 30, 2013
Ketchikan's water is more contaminated than you think! By Ed Plute -
When consumed in drinking water HAA are easily absorbed into the bloodstream. Links have been made between exposure to HAA concentrations above the maximum contaminent level and injury to the liver, kidney, eyes, nerves and the reproductive system. There is not a significant risk of HAAs in drinking water to be absorbed through skin. - More...
Tuesday AM - April 30, 2013
Post Office buildings for sale! By A. M. Johnson -
Following is a letter submitted to Senator Murkowski regarding hanky panky going on within her Senate and nobody is asking questions. So I have. - More...
Tuesday AM - April 30, 2013
Thanks!!! By Doreen Caffrey - Thank you very much to the high school young people who were picking up trash along Ketchikan's Stedman Street on Tuesday, April 23rd, in the morning. - More...
Thursday AM - April 25, 2013
GSACC unequivocally opposes S.340, the “Southeast Alaska Native Lands Finalization and Jobs Protection Act By David Beebe -
The Greater Southeast Alaska Conservation Community (GSACC) is a regional grassroots conservation organization dedicated to the protection of healthy, fully functioning forests, lands and waters of Southeast Alaska. As such, GSACC unequivocally opposes S.340, the “Southeast Alaska Native Lands Finalization and Jobs Protection Act.” Our opposition is based in that S. 340, (1) sets an unnecessary and far reaching precedent throughout our State; (2) was never vetted through an open public process; (3) results in further sacrifice of vulnerable but productive fragmented watersheds; and, (4) yields little socioeconomic benefit beyond Sealaska Corporation’s coffers. - More...
Thursday AM - April 25, 2013
Pinwheels for Prevention By Diane Gubatayao -
Perhaps you are curious about the silver and blue pinwheels spinning around at various locations around Ketchikan. Pinwheels, always a favorite toy with children, have become the new national symbol for child abuse prevention. April is National Child Abuse Prevention Month. Pinwheels reflect the innocence and playfulness of childhood, and yet they represent the fragility and vulnerability of children. Just as you hold a pinwheel in your hands, you hold the protection of children in your hands. - More...
Monday PM - April 22, 2013
Major Environmental Groups Support Tongass Jewel as Wilderness; S.340 - The Sealaska Bill Destroys it By Davey Lubin -
The Sealaska lands bill has been re-introduced in Congress as S. 340, and alarmingly, this misguided, highly controversial bill is scheduled for a hearing in Senate Natural Resources on April 25th. - More...
Monday PM - April 22, 2013
Transition to 2nd Growth Reality or Folly By Joe Mehrkens -
Back in the heydays taxpayers paid a subsidy of $12,000-$36,000 per Tongass timber job. Based on more recent Forest Service accounting information, this subsidy has grown during the last decade to a staggering $224,000-$510,000/job a nearly 1,400% increase. How can this be? Simply, the Forest Service kept spending like the industry was in its heyday while the industry was in a persistent long-term decline. - More...
Monday PM - April 22, 2013
Herring a Forage Fish By Lawrence Snapper Carson -
Spring brings the end of the winter doldrums and the interaction of the blooms of the ocean and the land. Mankind has survived and taken part in Southeast Alaska’s bounty for millenniums of time. The survival and the use of these resources has changed as mankind has moved from a subsistence life style to a greedy, politically managed, and commercially based utilization of herring. - More...
Monday PM - April 22, 2013
Sitka’s Herring Population is Stronger than Ever by Jake Ingman -
Last week, Andy Rauwolf sent a letter to Sitnews full of panic and misinformation. The first of many things that need to be corrected is his assumption that the closure of the herring fishery was because of a lack of herring in the area. That is false; we didn’t catch our quota because of our responsible and sensible approach to this fishery, but first, let’s talk about herring spawn. 58 nm of spawn has been recorded for 2013. Compare that to the first recorded year, 1964 and 19 nm, then ten years later, 1974 and 10 nm, and 1984 had 65 nm, and then 1994 and 58.1 nm of spawn. The amount of spawn in the area is much stronger than 40 years ago when the sac roe fishery started. All the locals who think that the herring run was so much stronger in their childhood because of what they remember seeing from their house window; the data proves that notion wrong. It is stronger now, but the amount of sea traffic in Sitka is a factor, the population growth, sewage, and pollution has made other shorelines more attractive to the herring than the Sitka beaches. Herring don’t spawn on the same spot, they aren’t like salmon returning to the same stream. Mr. Rauwolf goes on to claim that the state management has failed to maintain the population since the sac roe fishery began in 1976. Let’s check actual facts and numbers, instead of baseless fear tactics and see what the truth is…. - More...
Monday PM - April 22, 2013
The QUESTION IS WHY? By Bobbie McCreary -
Thanks Marvin Hill, for coming out to take away the TWO vandalized Port-A-Potties out at the paintball field on Revilla Road. WHY? when a well-meaning non-profit like Ketchikan Youth Initiatives places port-a-potties at the paintball field for ANYONE to use that comes to the paintball field or drives on to other beautiful recreational areas, DOES SOMEONE BREAK THEM APART SO THEY ARE UNUSABLE? - More...
Thursday PM - April 18, 2013
RE: Warning! Is your money really going to the septic system or is it going downhill? By Mike Carney -
First of all I would like to say I normally would not respond but this is so far off base I felt it needed a response. Mr. Plute needs to do his homework. The 6.2 to 7.2 is the City tax not the Borough. As for the $35,000 I dont know where he gets his information, but I run a department that sends people for travel and training every year and you could take my department and two others and never total $35,000 let alone for one person. - More...
Thursday PM - April 18, 2013
The Sealaska Bill Should Die By Rebecca Knight -
Most SE Alaskans are united in opposition to S. 340 (formerly S. 881 & S. 730), the Southeast Alaska Native Land Entitlement Finalization and Jobs Protection Act. These are real folks whose lives will be directly impacted including sport, commercial and subsistence fishermen as well as hunters, recreationists and the hundreds of residents of nine communities that will suffer the direct hit of this horrible, forest high-grading bill. - More...
Thursday PM - April 18, 2013
The Truth About the Herring By Terri Wenger Anderson -
Please disregard the propaganda about the herring. I believe the gentleman that wrote this letter to get every environmentalist's panties in an uproar must be related to Al Gore. Maybe he is trying to get a federally funded grant to study herring, well being in Ketchikan is not going to help him. - More...
Thursday PM - April 18, 2013
China Hacking Into U.S. Computers* By Donald A. Moskowitz - Based on the activities of Chinese Army Unit 61398 Communist China continues to wage cyber warfare against the U.S. by hacking into the computers of U.S. corporations. - More...
Thursday PM - April 18, 2013
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