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Science writer Ned Rozell was joined by two friends on a 33-hour trek from Eagle Summit to the Chena Hot Springs Resort.
The city must open the Alaska Center for Treatment by October 2025 or it could lose up to $15 million under the Municipal Light & Power sale agreement with Chugach Electric Association.
Police received a call that he had suffered a medical emergency in a Naknek boatyard, authorities said.
A lawsuit filed by the state of Alaska accuses Alaska Motor Home Inc. of canceling this season’s reservations, with thousands of dollars in unpaid refunds.
This summer, volunteers are working to restore Eldred Rock Lighthouse, Alaska’s oldest original lighthouse building.
James Pearce, 40, walked into the courthouse Tuesday and said there was a bomb set on a timer inside the building, prompting immediate evacuations, federal prosecutors say.
Relaxing on a deck or patio is ideal on a sunny summer day, whether it’s the main event or you’re socializing after a hike or bike ride.
The long in-the-works effort is intended to reinvigorate the ministry and assure Indigenous communities that they don’t need to feel torn between their Native identity and their Catholic one.
The Citywide Celebration on Saturday and Sunday kick off a number of festivities.
The 18-member team will report to the LaFrance administration on three priorities — “good government,” “safe streets and trails” and “building our future.”
A law Dunleavy championed to improve reading outcomes in Alaska public schools has received mixed reviews from some Alaska teachers.
The woman was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence after officers conducted sobriety tests. The man was found lying in the street and is expected to survive his injuries, police said.
In May, lawmakers narrowly rejected a talk radio host’s appointment to a highly paid position regulating Alaska’s commercial fisheries. Now Republican Gov. Mike Dunleavy has chosen a new appointee with a similar — though not identical — background for the job.
Sergey Nefedov and a Washington state man were indicted Tuesday on federal charges they planned to ship 17 snowmachines in violation of U.S. export sanctions, prosecutors say.
Adam J. Trujillo, 23, died in the oil field accident early this month, his father said.
Despite being “disappointed” by the results, the Alaska Department of Natural Resources commissioner defended the idea of royalty reductions to encourage more inlet drilling.
The Anchorage Assembly on Tuesday voted unanimously to name a West Anchorage street Grimmauld Place, a name straight out of author J.K. Rowling’s popular Harry Potter fiction.
The titles were returned to school library shelves this month following votes from the school board and a review by district officials.
Some of the groups who filed the petition, including the Center for Biological Diversity and Sovereign Iñupiat for a Living Arctic, are among those who have asked an appeals court to overturn the approval of the Willow project.
A judge ordered Kaleb Bourdukofsky, 22, held on $750,000 bail during a hearing Tuesday. Bourdukofsky is charged with killing one man and wounding another.
Inupiaq writer Laureli Ivanoff of Unalakleet and Anchorage-based author-journalist Julia O’Malley were honored for their writing about Alaska food issues.
A wave of retirements on the Alaska Supreme Court is nearing its end.
Businesses can now begin serving alcohol at 8 a.m. instead of 10 a.m., and liquor stores can open at 10 a.m. on Sundays.