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Thursday
July 08, 2010
POW: Fawn Twins
Front Page Photo By
JACY PIERSON
Contact the photographer ugotgod[AT]gmail.com
Southeast Alaska: Sitka-based
crew of downed MH-60 helicopter identified; In honor and memory
of the victims, Governor ordered state flags lowered to half-staff
Friday - Four Coast Guard Air Station Sitka members crashed
in an MH-60 Jayhawk helicopter from Air Station Sitka in the
waters near James Island, Wash., Wednesday morning flying from
Astoria, Ore., to Sitka with one survivor and three deceased
recovered.
The Coast Guard has identified
the one survivor and three crew members who lost their lives,
Wednesday, after their MH-60 Jayhawkhelicopter crashed in the
waters off of James Island, near La Push, Wash.
Governor Sean Parnell today
expressed his sorrow over the lost lives and injuries sustained
in Wednesday's helicopter crash. The incident claimed the lives
of three Sitka-based Coast Guardsmen. One crewmember survived
the crash and is hospitalized in Seattle.
In a prepared statement Governor Parnell said, "On behalf
of all Alaskans, Sandy and I extend our heartfelt condolences
to the families, friends, and colleagues of the Coast Guardsmen
from Air Station Sitka who were lost in the crash near James
Island, Washington," Governor Parnell said. "These
men were devoted to their jobs, and we are grateful for their
dedicated service to our state and country."
In honor and memory of the victims, Governor Parnell has ordered
state flags to be lowered to half-staff on Friday, July 9. Flags
will be raised to full-staff the following morning.
Lt. Lance D. Leone, 29, of
Ventura, Calif., survived the crash and is being treated at a
Seattle hospital with non-life threatening injuries. He is married.
Deceased are:
Lt. Sean D. Krueger, 33, of
Seymour, Conn. The aircraft commander is married with three children.
His awards and accolades include: Air Medal, Coast Guard Commendation
Medal, Coast Guard Achievement Medal, four Coast Guard Meritorious
Unit Service Medal, Coast Guard Unit Commendation Medal, three
Coast Guard Meritorious Team Commendation, Commandant's Letter
of Commendation, Armed Forces Service Medal, Global War Terror
Service Medal, Coast Guard "E" Ribbon, two National
Defense Service Medal, two Humanitarian Service Medal, Coast
Guard Overseas Service Medal, Coast Guard Pistol Expert Medal,
Coast Guard Presidential Unit Citation, Transportation 9-11 Medal,
DOT Outstanding Unit Award.
Aviation Maintenance Technician
1st Class Adam C. Hoke, 40, of Great Falls, Mont. The aircrewman
is single with one child. His awards and accolades include: Aircrew
Insignia, Coast Guard Commendation Medal, two Coast Guard Unit
Commendation Medal, three Coast Guard Meritorious Unit Commendations,
Global War Terror Service Medal, two Commandant's Letter of Commendations,
Coast Guard Meritorious Team Commendation, two Coast Guard "E"
Ribbons, two National Defense Medals, Humanitarian Service Medal,
Coast Guard Presidential Unit Citation, five Coast Guard Good
Conduct Medals, DOT Outstanding Unit Award, Coast Guard Rifle
Marksman Ribbon, Coast Guard Rifle Expert Ribbon, Coast Guard
Pistol Sharpshooter Ribbon. - More...
Thursday PM - July 08, 2010
|
Ketchikan: NORTH
CASCADE CARDIOLOGY WILL VISIT KETCHIKAN, CRAIG AND WRANGELL
- Ketchikan General Hospital PeaceHealth partner North Cascade
Cardiology from Bellingham, WA, will send physicians to Ketchikan,
Craig, and Wrangell.
John MacGregor, MD, Board-certified
in Clinical Cardiac Electrophysiology, Cardiovascular Disease
& Internal Medicine, will see patients at Ketchikan General
Hospital Visiting Clinic on Monday, July 12.
Partnering with KGH, the Prince
of Wales Health Network will host Peter Beglin, MD, Medical Director,
Cardiovascular Services, at PeaceHealth St. Joseph Medical Center.
He will see patients at the new PeaceHealth Medical Group-Prince
of Wales in Craig on Tuesday, July 13, from 10 am to 5 pm. Dr.
Beglin's visit to Craig is believed to be the first time a Cardiologist
has met with patients on Prince of Wales Island. Dr. Beglin will
also visit the Wrangell Medical Center on Wednesday, July 14.
- More....
Thursday PM - July 08, 2010
Alaska: Cold
Case Prosecutor Gullufsen Retires After 29 Years with Law -
Patrick Gullufsen, the Alaska Department of Law's cold case prosecutor
for the past three years, will retire next week after 29 years'
service for the State of Alaska.
Gullufsen conducted five cold
case murder jury trials, all lasting one month or longer. He
won guilty verdicts each time, although the conviction of Mechele
Linehan was reversed on appeal and the case is headed toward
re-trial.
Gullufsen also served as district
attorney in Juneau (1979-1984 and 2006-2007), deputy attorney
general and head of the Criminal Division (2005-2006), assistant
attorney general in the government affairs section of the Civil
Division (1992-2005), special statewide prosecutor (1977-1979)
and assistant district attorney in Fairbanks (1974-1977).
While serving in the Criminal
Division, Gullufsen conducted jury trials all over the state,
from the proverbial Ketchikan to Barrow, including in Sitka,
Kake, Haines, Yakutat, Delta Junction, Tok, Glennallen, Kenai
and Kodiak.
"Pat is a superb attorney
and a great public servant who has been dedicated to advancing
justice for Alaska's citizens for nearly three full decades,"
said Attorney General Dan Sullivan. "All of us wish him
an enjoyable retirement." - More...
Thursday PM - July 08, 2010
|
Alaska Science: Burned
Alaska may cause more burned Alaska By NED ROZELL - The blackened
scars that Alaska fires leave on the landscape may result in
more lightning, more rain in some areas just downwind of the
scars, and less rain farther away, according to two scientists.
A fire scar in the
making near Venetie, Alaska on June 24, 2004.
Image courtesy U.S. Geological Survey and Geographic Information
Network of Alaska.
Nicole Mölders and Gerhard
Kramm, both of the Geophysical Institute at the University of
Alaska Fairbanks, study how changes in landscapes affect the
weather. After Alaska's fire season in 2004, when smoke befouled
much of the air Alaskans breathed and a collective area the size
of Vermont burned, the scientists wondered how all that charred
country would affect local weather patterns.
The researchers used MM5, a
computer model based at Penn State University and the National
Center for Atmospheric Research, to simulate conditions on the
ground and in the air above it. They compared the surface of
Alaska before and after Alaska's record fire season, in which
6.72 million acres burned. The model told them that fire scars
larger than 250,000 acres-about the space taken up by the five
boroughs of New York City-have an impact on weather close to
the fire scar. - More...
Thursday PM - July 08, 2010
Science: Global
warming by humans not new says study - Even before the dawn
of agriculture, people may have caused the planet to warm up,
a new study suggests.
Mammoths used to roam modern-day
Russia and North America, but are now extinct-and there's evidence
that around 15,000 years ago, early hunters had a hand in wiping
them out. A new study, accepted for publication in Geophysical
Research Letters, a journal of the American Geophysical Union
(AGU), argues that this die-off had the side effect of heating
up the planet.
"A lot of people still
think that people are unable to affect the climate even now,
even when there are more than 6 billion people," says the
lead author of the study, Chris Doughty of the Carnegie Institution
for Science in Stanford, California. The new results, however,
"show that even when we had populations orders of magnitude
smaller than we do now, we still had a big impact." - More...
Thursday PM - July 08, 2010
|
Viewpoints
Opinions/Letters
Basic
Rules
Questions, please contact
the editor at editor@sitnews.us
or call 617-9696.
Library
Tax By Ed Marksheffel - For those outside of the City of
Ketchikan please note on your Property Tax Statement, and I quote,
"Nonareawide (Library)" and an amount you pay for it.
I seem to recall a history lesson about a war and the statement
'Taxation without representation" was one of the causes.
- More...
Thursday PM - July 08, 2010
S
881 Bill Still Misses Mark; Ignores Community and Small Business
Concerns By Johnnie Laird - After many months of participation
in the S 881 process, I continue to be disappointed in Senator's
Murkowski's legislation that will go up before the Senate Natural
Resources Committee by the end of this month. - More...
Thursday PM - July 08, 2010
MORE
FUN AND GAMES AT UAS KETCHIKAN CAMPUS By Robert D. Warner
- A recent announcement that the position of UAS Ketchikan Campus
Director will be filled for the next year by a temporary troika
of people is yet another blunder by the UAS Juneau based administration.
This administration has dictated Ketchikan campus policy since
1987 when Ketchikan Community College was eliminated. When the
local Campus Director announced her departure in early May, a
search for a replacement could have promptly started. Such a
search could be conducted efficiently and fairly in about three
to four months. This schedule would have allowed one month for
advertising, one month for screening applications, and a third
month for interviews and hiring. Now we have a needless delay
that will drag this process out for another year, perhaps longer!
When the long overdue retirement of a UAS provost was finally
announced in 2003, pending a replacement being hired, it took
7 years for UAS to hire that replacement. - More...
Thursday PM - July 08, 2010
Tongass
Tribe Land - Ketchikan By Aan Kadax Tseen aka Don Hoff Jr.
- We are the lineal descendants of the Taan ta Kwaan means Sealion
People or known as Tongass Tribe (hereinafter the "Tongass
Tribe" or "Tribe"), a traditional and historical
Alaskan Native Tribe in Ketchikan indisputably recognized by
all Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian tribes in Southeast Alaska.
- More...
Tuesday PM - July 06, 2010
Ketchikan's
Rock Pit Library By Robert D. Warner - Some of us are rather
tired of hearing about "Ketchikan's harassed public librarians."
The last time I checked, many of them have been feeding quite
heartily at the public trough. We are also tired of the continuing
effort to hide our public library in an unsightly rock pit removed
from the center of Ketchikan. This is both frustrating and discouraging.
Why doesn't Ketchikan Public Library have professional leadership
and courage to stop this misguided effort? It is fortunate that
several folks like Mr. Bergeron are willing to speak out on this
important issue. Shouldn't we be pleased that the public library
would remain at the hub of a city center as it has for over 100
years? Why would we want to hide it at a unsightly rock pit?
- More...
Tuesday PM - July 06, 2010
The
Ten Top Reasons to Put the Library in the Rock Pit at Copper
Ridge By Patrick Jirschele - Number Ten: The librarians won't
have to waste time waking up the bums because the drilling and
blasting will make it impossible to sleep. That's right, it is
an active rock pit! Look out for flying rocks. - More...
Tuesday PM - July 06, 2010
Library
By Tom LeCompte - As much as I would've liked to see a gorgeous
new library sitting on top of the hill downtown, it has been
explained to me by KJ Harris that one of the main reasons to
not have it there is the limited access and maneuvering room
for fire trucks and other emergency vehicles. That is the best
explanation for not using that spot. - More...
Tuesday PM - July 06, 2010
Rotary
Beach By MJ Cadle - I was at Rotary Beach yesterday and noticed
what I believe is Japanese knotweed beginning to take hold. For
those of you who know knotweed, you know what a terrible thing
this will be. For those of you who don t, think plants with large
leaves that grow 15 feet high in one year and are so densely
packed even grass finds it hard to grow between. There is an
excellent example of what they are capable of doing as you go
north around the sharp corner just before the first Sunset Drive
turnoff. That dense growth on the right side is knotweed and
only knotweed. - More...
Tuesday PM - July 06, 2010
I
Oughta Be In Pictures By Daylene Currier - I just finished
Dave Kiffer's article. Thanks! I really needed that laugh! I
think I need to go back through my pictures now to see how many
have been graced by your presence! - More...
Tuesday PM - July 06, 2010
Library
Location By Suzan Thompson - An inaccessible rock pit? Would
that be the one with the broad paved two-lane road sweeping past
it? As opposed to an inaccessible cliff top requiring construction
of an extremely expensive elevator, the realigning of two steep,
narrow streets, and the elimination of the parking which local
jurors depend on to keep from being loaded with overtime parking
tickets as they do their civic duty down at the bottom of the
hill? And that so that we can provide tourists with access to
our library? - More...
Wednesday - June 30, 2010
Place
it here, or place it there! By Joseph T. Craig - Everyone
has their idea of where the new library, fire station, museum
, or other buildings should be placed. I would like to inject
my thoughts as well. - More...
Wednesday - June 30, 2010
Borough
loans By Angelo L. Martin - No , No , No. Have you not learned
from past history? I was a Borough Assembly member when the mill
closed and when we got the 25 million dollars as the economic
disaster fund. I voted to give loans to the bowel factory, Veneer
plant, etc. Only one word describes it -- DISASTER!! - More...
Wednesday - June 30, 2010
Thank
You By Ben Hastings - I am the father of a handicapped young
lady that every one in Ketchikan knows - Lizzy. We just came
from the dedication of Opportunity House on Caralina and I was
totally impressed. - More...
Wednesday - June 30, 2010
No
Friend of the Taxpayers By Sam Bergeron - The City Council
is no friend of Ketchikan's taxpayers. - More...
Monday PM - jUne 28, 2010
Bill
Walker for Governor By Andy Rauwolf - Bill Walker is the
only candidate with a plan and the know how to bring low cost
energy to every corner of the state. This is the crucial element
that will allow our businesses to grow and develop. With a thriving
economy and continued revenues from an in-state gas pipeline
flowing into the state coffers Alaska will be a model for the
rest of the nation, and our children will finally have a future
right here instead of being forced to seek jobs elsewhere. -
More...
Monday PM - June 28, 2010
S.
881: Sealaska Bill By Bob Claus - Last week, the U.S. Senate
Energy Committee passed 26 bills out of the committee. Senate
Bill 881, the Sealaska Bill, was not in this big group of lands
bills. - More...
Monday PM - JUne 28, 2010
Oil
Spill Compensation Act of 2010 By U.S. Senator Lisa Murkowski
- We're entering the third month of the Deepwater Horizon oil
spill and the 22nd year since the Exxon Valdez hit Bligh Reef.
In the Gulf of Mexico, as much as 3 million barrels of crude
have already spilled from the blown-out well, and in Prince William
Sound there is still oil hiding under rocky beaches. - More...
Thursday - June 24, 2010
Ketchikan
Gateway Borough economic loan proposal. By A.M.Johnson -
After reading the economic loan proposal on an Economical Development
Loan program on the borough website, I am convinced that the
concept of the borough staff and Assembly being in a decision
position to loan money is not a healthy concept. - More...
Thursday - JUne 24, 2010
The
Case for Burying S 881 By Alan Stein - Two of America's most
open and transparent Senators are on a campaign to keep legislation
they wrote and cosponsered behind closed doors. - More...
Thursday - June 24, 2010
Bill
Walker has the plan By Ann Graham Radford - We recently attended
the funeral of Governor Wally Hickel. It was a wonderful tribute
to a great Alaskan. Wally loved Ketchikan and we returned the
affection - we were the only District in Alaska where Wally won
every election he ever entered, even the write-in! - More...
Thursday - June 24, 2010
Proposal
to purchase property for Fire Station 7 By Ed Fry - In response
to both Chief Hull and Mr. Dial, the questions that were asked
were on target and appropriate; thank you Mr. Dial for calling
the questions. - More...
Monday - June 21, 2010
Bill
Walker has an Alaskan Plan! By Barb Lander - Bill Walker,
Republican gubernatorial candidate deserves your consideration.
He is a lifelong Alaskan that like most real Alaskans has a broad
and varied background. Most recently he has worked as a lawyer
focusing primarily on oil and gas issues, but he has also done
construction, worked as a laborer building the pipeline and had
a stint commercial fishing. - More...
Monday - June 21, 2010
City
improvements By Casey Eberle - First of all let me say, that
yes I am a new resident of Ketchikan. It seems that many in this
town feel that unless you have been here for an extended period
of time you aren't a "local", but I am here for the
long haul, and there are several things about this town that
I have noticed. - More...
Monday - June 21, 2010
S
881 By Judy Magnuson - We are still waiting to see the new
revised S 881 bill, hopefully we will have enough time to adequately
assess the new impacts of this legislation on the communities
of Southeast. From what we have heard so far I feel that the
new bill will not be any different than the last one, places
will have been moved around effecting different communities more
and others less, but the main objections to this bill will remain
the same. Sealaska will still be given millions of dollars of
infrastructure paid for at the taxpayers expense, in essence
a bail -out of a private corporation by the taxpayers because
of their own failure to properly utilize the land they were originally
given. The second growth alone cost the taxpayers $10 million
in thinning on the 20,721 acres of young growth, plus costs of
roads, log transfer facilities, bridges, decades of maintenance,
costs of planning, studies, loss of 184 acres with established
long term research plots, and loss of 7,359 Geological Special
Areas. - More...
Monday - June 21, 2010
Proposal
to purchase property for Fire Station 7 By Dave Hull - In
reference to Mr. Rodney Dial's questions regarding the proposal
to purchase property for Fire Station 7, he asks that I answer
questions he poses in his letter to the editor. For the record,
these are excellent questions that I am sure are being asked
by many. I encourage others to call, write or stop by and talk.
- More...
Thursday PM - June 17, 2010
Let
Everyone Vote By Penny Hamlin Connelly - I have been a townie
pretty much my whole life, taking for granted being able to vote
on all issues concerning the city and the borough. Imagine my
surprise when I moved out North a few years ago, went to vote,
and discovered part of my election ballot was missing. I went
into total Ketchikan Culture Shock. "What do you
mean I don't get to vote on city issues?" Took me awhile
to get over it, but I did. - More...
Thursday PM - June 17, 2010
Library
By Mark Johnson - The Library has served us very well since it
started way back when in 1901 now it's time for us to serve it
well and build the new building. Now we'll get much of it paid
for with matching funds that we will lose at the rate we are
going and that is not going to get us anything. The current building
is too small so moving to a new site is the only real option.
The downtown site that was the main street school has been rejected
twice already. There are problems with all the sites we could
have a library on, not one of them is perfect and no place we
choose to build can be, but we have a site picked and money in
the bank as well as plans in the works. - More...
Thursday PM - June 17, 2010
S.881:
Same Pig, Different Sunglasses and Wig By Sandy Powers -
The proposed revisions of the rehashed Sealaska bill S.881 reflect
but little difference from previous versions. Some of the selections
of the high-value roaded timber got switched with other selections
of high-value roaded timber. Parts of north POW were spared immediate
impact but Edna Bay, Hollis, Thorne Bay and other areas were
hit as hard or harder in return. Some brand new areas were added,
such as two tidal energy sites and two geothermal sites. A hydroelectric
site is still proposed for Josephine Lake. 190,000 acres of additional
LUD-II style lockups on Kuiu, Prince of Wales, Kosciusko, Kupreanof
and a couple other islands recommended by staffers, and no doubt
SEACC are thrown in for good measure. How ironic - the very groups
and politicians who call for transparency and public involvement
now eagerly override those guiding principles when it serves
their own personal interests. The revision claims new protection
for karst, but the Forest Plan already identifies and protects
karst. This politically motivated bill hatched up behind closed
doors only panders to the special interests of a private corporation
and foundation-funded green groups. - More...
Thursday PM - June 17, 2010
Re:
Tax Payers Revelation By Peggy Green - I think Don Borders
makes perfect sense in his article regarding the Library, and
other Government offices. I too think that the Borough offices
should utilize the Ward Cove property. - More...
Thursday PM - June 17, 2010
Federal
Government Unprepared for Disasters By Donald A. Moskowitz
- Our federal government under two administrations has dropped
the ball with a major regional problem and unfortunately the
Gulf oil spill debacle succeeded the hurricane Katrina debacle
in the same region of the country. Where are FEMA and other government
agencies when these problems occur? - More...
Thursday PM - June 17, 2010
Re:
A letter to North Tongass residents By Daylene Currier -
I applaud Rodney Dial's ambition and his open-mindedness to this
issue. So many people argue about what is right and wrong, and
of course, theirs is the only opinion that ever matters. - More...
Thursday PM - June 17, 2010
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