Old Glory tour to visit Unalaska on Monday

Friday, December 14 2007

Unalaska, AK – An American flag traveling to battlefields and cemeteries across the country as part of a national memorial tour will be in Unalaska Monday morning.

The tour, called Old Glory's Journey of Remembrance, is sponsored by the White House Commission on Remembrance and the National Park Service. Unalaska is the second stop for the flag, which will be flown over the U.S. Capitol on Memorial Day after ceremonies at memorial sites around the United States.


FCA trawler catches on fire at OSI dock

Wednesday, December 12 2007

Unalaska, AK – Unalaska firefighters spent Wednesday evening fighting a fire on a large fishing trawler tied up at a local fuel dock. KIAL's Charles Homans reports.


Jamie Sunderland named new Public Safety Director

Wednesday, December 12 2007

Unalaska, AK – Lt. Jamie Sunderland has been named the new director of Unalaska's Department of Public Safety, the city announced today.

Sunderland has been the acting director since Bob Beasley left in July. He said he doesn't see things being all that different now that he's in the position permanently.

"Hopefully we make good progress," he said. "I don't foresee any big changes coming down the pike in the near future, since I've been a member of the department, and acting [director] for a few months--I shouldn't be a surprise to anyone."


Unalaska wrestlers deliver solid performance in Bethel

Wednesday, December 12 2007

Unalaska, AK – Unalaska's wrestling team had its best regionals finish in a decade this weekend at the Great Alaska Conference Regional Wrestling Tournament in Bethel.

Unalaska sophomore Cameron Lynch walked away the champion in his weight class, qualifying for state. Senior co-captain Brian Magpantay also qualified for state, finishing third in his class, and senior co-captain Donald Peterson placed fourth.


North Pacific council: no pollock for Adak

Wednesday, December 12 2007

Unalaska, AK – An attempt by Adak fish processors to snag a piece of the Bering Sea pollock fishery fizzled on Tuesday, the last day of the North Pacific Fishery Management Council's meeting in Anchorage. Representatives of Adak Fisheries, a local processing company on the island, say that federal fisheries regulations have routinely hamstrung Adak's attempts to develop its only available industry, and now the town has few options. KIAL's Charles Homans reports.


North Pacific council doubles yellowfin sole quota for Bering Sea

Monday, December 10 2007

Anchorage, AK – The North Pacific Fishery Management Council voted on Monday to nearly double the size of the Bering Sea yellowfin sole fishery, setting the catch limit for the species at 225,000 tons for 2008.

The move was intended to offset the shrinking quota for the Bering Sea pollock fishery, for which a total allowable catch (TAC) of 1 million tons was approved by the council on Monday. But the decision was opposed by an unusual alliance of environmental groups and the so-called "head and gut" fleet, the bottom-trawling boats that fish for sole and other flatfish. The two groups don't have much common ground, but both argue that the council is risking long-term consequences in order to bail out the pollock fleet in the short term.


Canadian fishermen say pollock bycatch violates salmon treaty

Friday, December 07 2007

Anchorage, AK – In recent months, salmon fishermen in western Alaska have complained that the astronomical levels of chinook salmon caught by Bering Sea pollock fishermen have hurt their ability to make a living and keep their freezers full of fish. But what was an Alaskan dispute is becoming an international one. KIAL's Charles Homans reports.


North Pacific council looks likely to pass lower pollock quota

Thursday, December 06 2007

Anchorage, AK – Federal regulators are poised to approve a large drop in the catch limit for Bering Sea pollock, Alaska's largest fishery. That was the recommendation made Wednesday by the scientists advising the North Pacific Fishery Management Council, the panel that regulates the fishing industry in Alaska, which is holding its annual meeting in Anchorage this week and next. KIAL's Charles Homans reports from Anchorage.


Dead whale causes trouble for the airport

Tuesday, December 04 2007

Unalaska, AK – Dead whales don't fall on most airports' lists of air traffic hazards, but one that washed up near Dutch Harbor on Monday was an exception.

This afternoon, local harbor officers pulled a dead whale loose from the shore at the north end of the Unalaska Airport's runway. The rotting marine mammal had been attracting upwards of a hundred seabirds to the end of the runway, which was making it difficult for planes to take off.



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