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Thursday
May 18, 2006
Good
Fish'n
Ivan & Rita Leighton &
granddaughter Jacinda
Front Page Photo by Misty Pattison
Ketchikan: Comments
Sought On Proposed Gas Pipeline Contract By DICK KAUFFMAN
- Dr. Chuck Logsdon, Gas Pipeline Advisor to Alaska Governor
Frank H. Murkowski, is in Ketchikan this week as part of an advance
team that will be holding public hearings on the proposed gas
pipeline contract negotiated by the Governor. The first in the
series of public hearings that will be held around the state
will take place at the Ted Ferry Civic Center in Ketchikan Friday
from 11:00 am until 8:00 pm. Governor Murkowski will kick off
Friday's public review at 11:00 am.
Dr. Chuck Logsdon,
Gas Pipeline Advisor
to Governor Frank H. Murkowski
Front Page Photo by Dick Kauffman
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Dr. Logsdon graduated from
Palmer High School in 1967 and from Washington State University
in 1980 with a PhD. in Agricultural Economics. Dr. Logsdon was
employed by the State of Alaska for twenty-five years and retired
from his position as Alaska's chief petroleum economist in November
of 2004. He has been working since July 2005 with the Governor's
office as an advisor for the gas pipeline negotiations.
Speaking at the Ketchikan Greater
Chamber of Commerce luncheon Wednesday, Logsdon presented a brief
overview of the proposed gas pipeline contract and its importance
to Alaskans.
Logsdon said the construction
costs of the Alaska gas pipeline, which has been in discussion
for three decades, will make the Alaska pipeline one of the largest
projects going on in the world that is privately financed and
will require a huge capital investment.
The pipeline will take 5.3
million pounds of steel and will run from Prudhoe Bay to Fairbanks
said Logsdon. The pipeline will then follow the Alaska Highway
to Delta Junction then on to Tok. The pipeline will cross the
border to Alberta, Canada. Dr. Logsdon said along the route there
would be preplanned off-take points where the sponsors of the
project will be required by the proposed contract to engineer
and construct off-take capabilities at four different places
along the mainline. These off-take points have been identified
as Fairbanks, the Delta Junction area, the Yukon River area,
and at one other yet to be identified point to provide for a
spur line to Southcentral Alaska.
"Why build the pipeline
now?" Dr. Logsdon said there are things now in place that
are going to facilitate the construction of the pipeline. First,
natural gas prices are very high and the demand for gas is high
in the lower forty-eight. "Secondly, from our own perspective
our oil production is in decline and as you know, oil has been
paying the bills up here. Eighty to ninety percent of the state's
money comes from oil," said Logsdon. With that resource
on the downslide we're going to need something to replace it
he said. "Well, I'm here to tell you that massive reserve
of gases up on the North Slope represent our next Prudhoe Bay."
- More...
Thursday AM - May 18, 2006
|
National: U.S.
opens assault on wiretap suit By BOB EGELKO - The Bush administration
has launched a multi-pronged attack on a lawsuit that accuses
AT&T of collaborating with the U.S. government in illegal
electronic surveillance, arguing that customers can't prove their
phones were tapped or that the company or the government broke
the law - and that, in any event, the entire case endangers national
security.
Those assertions in a move
for dismissal were based on arguments and evidence that the government
submitted to a federal judge under seal, keeping them secret
from the public and from the privacy-rights group that filed
the suit on behalf of AT&T customers.
The sealed documents and a
heavily edited public version were submitted in federal court
in San Francisco early Saturday along with declarations from
John Negroponte, the director of national intelligence, and Lt.
Gen. Keith Alexander, director of the National Security Agency.
Both officials attest to the need for secrecy as a reason to
keep the lawsuit, filed by the Electronic Frontier Foundation,
from going forward. - More...
Wednesday - May 17, 2006
National: Senate
rejects 'enforcement-only' immigration bill By MICHAEL DOYLE
and MARGARET TALEV - The Senate showed its cards on immigration
Tuesday, aligning itself with President Bush's Monday night call
for comprehensive reform that goes beyond simple border security.
In the first, symbolically
significant vote since resuming the immigration debate, conservatives
and a handful of populist Democrats failed by a 40-55 margin
to postpone guest-worker and legalization proposals. The result
foreshadows Senate approval of a complete immigration package
next week, and thereby sets up a certain run-in with the House.
"It was a huge test vote;
I was nervous as a cat," acknowledged Sen. Mel Martinez,
R-Fla. "I thought that was the toughest vote for most people;
I think (our support) will grow from here." - More...
Wednesday - May 17, 2006
National: How
Bush sidesteps intent of Congress By BOB EGELKO President
Bush signed a military spending bill in December that included
a hard-fought amendment banning the cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment of foreign prisoners. Then he put a statement in the
Federal Register asserting his right to ignore the ban when necessary,
in his judgment, to protect Americans from terrorism.
In March, Bush signed a renewal
of search and surveillance provisions of the USA Patriot Act
and said at a public ceremony that civil liberties would be protected
by a series of new amendments. Then he quietly inserted another
statement in the Federal Register that virtually nullified one
of those amendments, a requirement that the administration report
to Congress on the FBI's use of its powers under the Patriot
Act to seize library, bookstore and business records. - More...
Wednesday - May 17, 2006
Health - Fitness: A
plague of worry over medical-device recalls By JANET MOORE
- Webster's defines a recall as asking "purchasers to return
an imperfect or dangerous product so that a manufacturing defect
can be corrected."
It seems simple enough, but
this two-syllable word packs a powerful punch - especially when
attached to a medical device, such as a pacemaker or a defibrillator,
that is surgically implanted. The prospects might seem downright
scary to patients who have the recalled device inside their bodies.
Now medical device manufacturers
and a group representing doctors who implant pacemakers and defibrillators
have advocated eliminating using the word "recall"
when advising the public about a product malfunction. Their request
comes after a year of pacemaker and defibrillator recalls that
shook the industry and spooked patients. - More...
Wednesday - May 17, 2006
|
Ketchikan: New
Ferry Stikine Links Southeast Islands - Alaska's latest ferry
route will be inaugurated Thursday, when the new $17 million
passenger/vehicle ferry M/V Stikine sails round-trip from Coffman
Cove on the northern end of Prince of Wales Island, to Wrangell
and S.Mitkof, located 25 miles south of Petersburg by road. The
new service is being implemented by the Inter-Island Ferry Authority,
a public corporation formed by the municipalities of Petersburg,
Wrangell, and the Prince of Wales Island communities of Coffman
Cove, Thorne Bay, Klawock and Craig. The IFA is a non-subsidized
operation organized under Alaska's Municipal Port Authority Act.
It also owns a sister ship to the Stikine, the M/V Prince of
Wales, that has provided daily year-round service between Ketchikan
and Hollis (on the southeast coast of Prince of Wales Island)
since 2002.
Launching ceremony
of the Stikine on January 21, 2006
at Dakota Creek Industries shipyard in Anacortes, Washington.
Photograph by Dave McNary ©
The new ferry service will
connect "Alaska's Rainforest Islands", according to
IFA general manager Tom Briggs. Prince of Wales is the third
largest island in the U.S., after Kodiak Island and the big island
of Hawaii, according to Briggs. There are over 1,100 miles of
maintained roads, more than in all the other communities in Southeast
Alaska combined. Blacktop highways connect the island communities
of Hollis, Hydaburg, Craig, Klawock, Thorne Bay and reach to
within 23 miles of Coffman Cove. Other islands that will be served
by the IFA starting this week are Wrangell and Mitkof. The Coffman
Cove - Wrangell - Petersburg service will operate every Thursday,
Friday, Saturday and Sunday from May 18 through September 17,
said Briggs. Based on advance bookings, both IFA routes are going
to be popular with RVer's. A number of Alaskans and visitors
are planning to take advantage of Prince of Wales Island's vast
recreational opportunities by taking the Ketchikan-Hollis route,
exploring the island, then continuing on a second IFA ferry from
Coffman Cove to Wrangell and/or Petersburg, stated Briggs. Connections
can be made with Alaska Marine Highway vessels at Ketchikan,
Wrangell or Petersburg. - More...
Wednesday - May 17, 2006
Ketchikan: The
Arts This Week - The Monthly Grind is scheduled for
Saturday, May 20th, 7pm at the Saxman Tribal house. The last
show of the season will feature many local bands, as well as
other live local talent, dessert and coffee, all for just $5
per adult, and $1 for kids. Buy a ticket, bring a homemade dessert
and get a refund.
On Sale Now! Inside Passages
Ketchikan's literary publication is on sale now at the Arts Council.
Just $7 dollars, stop by or call to reserve your copy today,
225-2211. - More...
Wednesday - May 17, 2006
|
Columns - Commentary
Dale
McFeatters: Anonymous
earmark still with us - The momentum is fast going out of
Congress' high-minded commitment to lobbying reform.
One worthwhile reform would
be to identify the individual sponsors of earmarks, lawmakers'
pet projects that are inserted, often anonymously, in bills without
the normal legislative scrutiny.
And earlier this month the
House passed a lobbying bill requiring just that, but final passage
depends on slow-moving talks with the Senate. Meanwhile, the
lawmakers have reverted to their bad old ways. - More...
Wednesday - May 17, 2006
John
M. Crisp: Another look at Ahmadinejad's letter - It's hard
to blame President Bush for not paying much attention to the
letter sent to him on May 8 by Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the president
of Iran. I don't know how the letter sounds in Farsi, but in
the awkward English on Ahmadinejad's official presidential Web
site (www.president.ir), it makes for tedious reading. Parts
of the very long text are disjointed and rambling, and near the
end it lapses into a scripture-quoting enthusiasm that's vaguely
creepy.
On the other hand, Ahmadinejad
asks Bush several interesting questions that could make the president
a little uncomfortable, if he took them seriously. For example,
paraphrasing, can one be a follower of Jesus Christ and, at the
same time, relying on the pretext of non-existent WMDs, occupy
another country, kill 100,000 people, and destroy water sources,
agriculture and industry, as well as the sanctity of private
homes, all at the cost of hundreds of billions of dollars and
tens of thousands of innocent young men and women put in harm's
way? Good question. - More...
Wednesday - May 17, 2006
Preston
McDougall: Chemical
Eye on Motherly Love - Mothers galore awaited a visit, flowers,
a telephone call, or maybe even a public radio commentary from
their children this weekend. You should know that she loves you,
right down to the molecular level.
For starters, she put a snug
little cap on the end of your lagging strand to prevent you from
catching your death of oldness too soon. She did this before
you were born, before you were even conceived. She did this even
before you were a twinkle in your father's eye. Let me explain.
As you probably know, all forms
of life that we know about use DNA to encode the instructions
for the molecular tool-kits that are responsible for both our
innate outward appearance and inward personal chemistry. For
humans, DNA comes in pairs. Twinned right-handed helices to be
exact. - More...
Wednesday - May 17, 2006
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