APOC complaint levied against Edgmon

Monday, January 17 2011

Unalaska, AK – Last week, the Alaska Public Offices Commission filed a complaint against Rep. Bryce Edgmon, of District 37. The APOC staff determined that the Dillingham Democrat went over the $5,000 limit that candidates are able to transfer from one campaign to the next. Edgmon, who ran unopposed in 2010, transferred $11,010 - or $6,010 over the maximum - from his 2008 campaign to 2010.

Edgmon says that the transfer was unintentional, and that it was result of being unclear on the rules.


Legislative Information Office opens in Unalaska

Monday, January 17 2011

Unalaska, AK – Tomorrow, the state legislature opens its session in Juneau -- and now, Unalaskans will able to keep up with the action at the new Legislative Information Office that opened to the public today.

Legislative Information Offices, or LIOs, serve to increase communication between the capital and the state's far-flung communities. The Unalaska LIO will be Alaska's 23rd office, and it will be the first one to open in over a decade. The location was selected because of its distance from other LIOs and the lack of an office in the Aleutian region. Prior to its opening, the nearest LIOs to Unalaska were in Dillingham and Kodiak.


Akutan's Russian Orthodox Maskers bring in the New Year with an old custom

Monday, January 17 2011

Akutan, AK – Every year from January 7th through 9th many Russian Orthodox believers go staring for Russian Christmas. They follow a star from house to house just as the Three Wise Men followed the star to Bethlehem. But in some parts of rural Alaska, the tradition of bringing blessings to each house is followed for eight days by a much darker custom. KUCB's Anne Hillman went to the village of Akutan to find out more.


F&W considers plans to shoot wolves on Unimak, asks for public comments

Monday, January 17 2011

Unalaska, AK – The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service is looking for public comments on plans to help increase the caribou population on Unimak Island through predation control. The Unimak caribou herd has fallen from 1,261 animals in 2002 to only 400 in 2009. Biologists attribute the drop to low calf recruitment - too few animals are making it to adulthood. The problem is twofold. The ratio of adult females to adult males is about 100 to 1. There are too few males to keep the population going. The other problem, according to that Alaska Department of Fish & Game, is calf predation by wolves.


Search continues for missing fisherman

Monday, January 17 2011

Unalaska, AK – The search for John F. Courage continues into its third week. The 56-year-old fisherman went missing on December 29, and the Unalaska Department of Public Safety, the Coast Guard, and the Alaska State Troopers have been working to determine his whereabouts.

At the time of his disappearance, Courage had been working aboard the F/V Alaska Trojan. The vessel had been moored at the Crowley Dock in December, and Courage was tasked with conducting boat watch until the crew arrived in Unalaska. When the crew returned on December 30, they could not locate Courage, whose personal belongings - including his wallet and identification -- were found left in a stateroom. Courage was last seen at the Alaska Ship Supply liquor store.


City council tackles comp plan, taxis

Wednesday, January 12 2011

Unalaska, AK – Majority of Tuesday night's four-hour-long city council meeting focused on the details of the City's new comprehensive plan. The comp plan is a document designed to guide the development of the community for the next 10 years and looks at issues such as land use, housing, transportation, and public facilities. Unalaska's comprehensive plan has not been updated since 1993. This new version is based on the Community Vision statement developed in conjunction with HyettPalma Consulting.


Coast Guard releases new report on Alaska Ranger

Wednesday, January 12 2011

Unalaska, AK – The Coast Guard's new report on the 2008 sinking of the Alaska Ranger says that the ship went down because of flooding in the rudder room likely caused by the vessel's poor material condition. According to the Coast Guard, an analysis showed that problem likely stemmed from the Kort nozzle struts. The report says that the struts at the stern of the vessel created excessive local stresses where they were attached to a corroded area of the hull.


Steller sea lion rule comment period extended

Tuesday, January 11 2011

Unalaska, AK – The National Marine Fisheries Service has extended the comment period on the interim final rule on Steller sea lion protection by 45 days. Members of the public now have until February 28 to comment on the new regulation that severely curtails fishing for Atka mackerel and Pacific cod in Area 543. NMFS public information officer Julie Speegle said they extended the period because most of the original comment period fell during the holiday season, which limited the public's ability to respond. She says the comments will be used to develop a final rule, which may or may not differ from the current interim rule.


Board of Fish to consider opening state waters near Adak to cod fishing

Tuesday, January 11 2011

Unalaska, AK – The city of Adak is requesting the state to issue an emergency order that will allow boats to fish for Pacific cod in the far western Aleutians in spite of a new federal regulation put into place to protect the endangered western Steller sea lions.

State of Alaska waters were included in the National Marine Fisheries Service's Biological Opinion on the status of the marine mammal. That meant that the interim final action they issued in December, which closed Area 543 to fishing for cod and mackerel, also closed the state's parallel and guideline harvest level fisheries. Alaska Department of Fish & Game special assistant to the commissioner Doug Vincent-Lang says the state disagrees with the new regulation.



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