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Lawmakers consider an only-in-Alaska flood insurance program

By: Yereth Rosen, Alaska Beacon

Sen. Bert Stedman, R-Sitka, stands in the Senate Finance Committee room on April 24, 2025. Stedman is sponsoring a bill that would create an Alaska flood insurance system that would be an alternate to the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s national insurance program. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

As the Trump administration shrinks and even considers eliminating the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the Alaska Legislature is considering a substitute for one of the agency’s key functions.

bill introduced by Sen. Bert Stedman, a Republican from the Southeast city of Sitka, would establish an Alaska flood authority and an Alaska flood insurance fund. As far as he knows, it would make Alaska the only state with its own flood insurance, Stedman said.

The veteran state lawmaker said his measure, Senate Bill 11, stems from his dissatisfaction with FEMA and its flood policies, feelings that predated the agency’s possible demise in the Trump era.

The federal agency is, for now, the only source of flood insurance in Alaska, as private carriers that offer policies elsewhere in the country do not operate in the state’s small market, Stedman said.

But Alaskans overall pay much more into the FEMA insurance pool that they receive, he said.

“There’s a cost factor involved here, with Alaska residents subsidizing the Mississippi Delta and the Gulf Coast and East Coast and all that compared to our losses,” Stedman said.

FEMA’s rules about insurance and assistance, which are aimed at flood-prone flat Lower 48 areas, are another source of irritation for Stedman. In Lower 48 areas, FEMA encourages communities to avoid building along coastlines, but in Southeast Alaska, where steep mountains rise from the water’s edge, there are few options for moving inland, he said. An only-in-Alaska flood program could consider local conditions and local governments’ zoning rules rather than FEMA national guidelines, he said.

The Trump administration’s antipathy toward FEMA and its mission has given his bill more urgency, he said.

“It’s reasonably likely that there’ll be significant changes to FEMA coming out of Washington, from restructuring to possibly elimination, so the timing of this bill might be, by happenstance, timely,” he said.

The bill moved through committees this year and is due for more work next year’s session, including an examination of funding options. If a system is established, Stedman said, it could potentially be expanded to another type of disaster that is occurring with increasing frequency in warming Alaska: landslides. There is no specific landslide insurance available in Alaska, Stedman noted.

That may be of interest to Jason Amundson and Eran Hood, University of Alaska Southeast scientists who are focused on glacial outburst flood risks. Though immersed in their project at Mendenhall Glacier, they do not live in the path of the meltwater. Rather, both live in the city’s downtown area, which clings to the lower slopes of steep mountains. There, avalanches and landslides pose the most serious risks.

“There’s hazards everywhere in Juneau,” Hood said.

This story has been supported by the Solutions Journalism Network, a nonprofit organization dedicated to rigorous and compelling reporting about responses to social problems, http://solutionsjournalism.org.

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Featured Juneau News Juneau Local Ketchikan Local News Feeds Sitka Local

Lawmakers override Dunleavy’s vetoes on school funding, oil tax transparency

The joint session voted 45-14 in favor of overriding Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s veto of public school funding. (Image courtesy Gavel Alaska)

Meeting in special session, Alaska lawmakers have overridden Governor Mike Dunleavy’s veto of more than $50 million in public school funding.

The 45–14 vote hit the exact threshold needed to override a budget veto, restoring what would have been a 5.6% cut to school districts and providing a modest funding boost.

In Juneau, the veto would have had the effect of a $1.4 million loss.

Lawmakers also overrode Dunleavy’s veto of Senate Bill 183, a measure requiring the Department of Revenue to share details of oil tax settlements with legislative auditors. 

The special session was originally called by the governor to press for education reform and create a statewide Department of Agriculture, two ideas lawmakers have already rejected.

Instead, legislative leaders focused solely on the veto overrides and adjourned until August 19.

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Entertainment

Tom Hanks Divorced: His Marriage to Rita Wilson, Explained

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Tom Hanks has been married and divorced over the course of his long, legendary career.

Often bearing the “America’s dad” title for his wholesome demeanor and famous good works, his love life has had ups and downs.

Despite his famous, long-term romance, not even the beloved actor is immune to divorce.

Here is a look at his relationship history:

Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson in 2024.
Rita Wilson and Tom Hanks attend the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures 4th Annual Gala in Partnership with Rolex at Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on October 19, 2024. (Photo Credit: Emma McIntyre/Getty Images for Academy Museum of Motion Pictures)

Tom Hanks married Samantha Lewes in 1978

In 1978, Tom Hanks married fellow actor Samantha Lewes.

Their son, Colin Hanks, was a newborn at the time, having been born in 1977.

Four years after marrying, they welcomed Elizabeth in 1982. Professionally, she goes by E.A. Hanks.

In 1985, they separated. In 1987, Tom Hanks and Samantha Lewes divorced.

Tom Hanks in 2010.
Executive Producer Tom Hanks, winner of the Outstanding Miniseries Award for “The Pacific” poses in the press room at the 62nd Annual Primetime Emmy Awards held at the JW Marriott Los Angeles at L.A. Live on August 29, 2010. (Photo Credit: Jason Merritt/Getty Images)

E.A. Hanks has alleged horrible abuse and general torment at the hands of her mother, who first had primary custody following the split.

When she moved in with her father, she began to experience a normal, healthy childhood — one with routine, safety, and with food stocked at all times.

In 2002, Lewes passed away at the age of 49 after a battle with bone cancer.

Tom Hanks in October 2024.
Tom Hanks attends AFI FEST 2024 Presented By Canva Spotlight: Robert Zemeckis And Tom Hanks In Conversation at TCL Chinese 6 Theatres on October 24, 2024. (Photo Credit: Wilbert Roberts/Getty Images for AFI)

In 1988, Tom Hanks married Rita Wilson

In 1981, Tom Hanks met fellow actor Rita Wilson. The two struck up a friendship when she appeared on a single episode of the comedy series, Bosom Buddies.

Years later, in ’85, they ended up working together again.

This time, it was on the set of Volunteers, where they played lovers.

In 1986, they made their red carpet debut. Their on-screen chemistry, Tom would later explain, had very much translated into real life.

Tom Hanks and his Hollywood star in 1992 alongside wife Rita Wilson.
Actor Tom Hanks shows off his star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame 30 June 1992. (Photo Credit: VINCE BUCCI/AFP via Getty Images)

Tom and Rita married in 1988.

This was the year of one of his biggest breaks as an actor, with an Academy Award nomination cementing his status as a household name.

In 1990, they welcomed Chester “Chet” Hanks. Then, in 1995, Tom and Rita welcomed their second son, Truman.

In between those births, in 1993, Tom and Rita were co-stars in one of the early ’90s most memorable films, Sleepless In Seattle. This time, however, they portrayed siblings.

Tom Hanks and wife Rita Wilson in June of 2025.
Rita Wilson (L) and Tom Hanks attend the “Too Much” UK Special Screening at The Barbican on June 23, 2025. (Photo Credit: Ben Montgomery/Getty Images)

Did he and Rita Wilson split?

As of 2025, no, Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson have not divorced. They also have not separated.

In fact, they have supported each other in sickness and in health through the decades — including for Rita’s double-mastectomy over a decade ago.

Tom has said that their connection was borne of, among other things, maturity and compatibility. It looks like he was right.

They’re coming up on 40 years together.

Tom Hanks Divorced: His Marriage to Rita Wilson, Explained was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Entertainment

Savannah Chrisley BLASTS Lindsie Chrisley as a Traitor: We’re No Longer Family!

Reading Time: 3 minutes

As you very likely know at this point, Todd and Julie Chrisley have been pardoned by President Donald Trump and have been reunited with their family members.

But this doesn’t mean everything is calm and loving under the roof of reality TV’s most awful and spoiled family.

Late this week, for example, Lifetime released the trailer for Chrisleys: Back to Reality, giving viewers a look at the aforementioned convicts seeing each other for first time after more than two years behind bars.

Todd Chrisley, Lindsie Chrisley Campbell, Savannah Chrisley and Julie Chrisley attend The Concert For Love And Acceptance at City Winery Nashville on June 12, 2015 in Nashville, Tennessee. (Photo by Rick Diamond/Getty Images for Concert For Love And Acceptance)

They seemed pretty happy.

But elsewhere in this same preview, Savannah Chrisley made it clear she has absolutely no plans to reconcile with Lindsie Chrisley anytime soon. Likely not ever, it seems.

“The prosecutors read the letter Lindsie wrote to the FBI,” Savannah explained in the video before taking aim at the 35-year-old. “We’re no longer family. Lose our last name.”

Lindsie, it should be noted, has quite the history with her dad.

Back in 2019, it was basically confirmed that Todd blackmailed his child… threatening to release her sex tape unless she helped him avoid the charges that eventually landed him in jail.

(Photo Credit: Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images)

Also presumably trashing his sibling, 19-year old Grayson says in a confessional: “We’ve had own family members betray us.”

Alongside these damning quotes, headlines pulled from tabloid news outlets alleging Lindsie’s participation in her parents’ legal case flash across the screen, as well as one that cites Todd’s “scorned gay lover.”

Savannah’s older brother Chase Chrisley, also comments on how Todd and Julie’s legal battle tore their lives apart.

“If your blood will screw you over,” Chase says in his own confessional. “Then a stranger definitely will.”

(Photo Credit: David Becker/Getty Images)

Call us crazy, but it’s conceivable Todd and Julie screwed themselves by lying to the government and forging documents and committing all kinds of financial fraud.

That’s what a jury of Todd and Julie’s peers determined in 2022, sending the spouses to federal prison as a result.

They were then set free by President Trump because, well, they’re rich and white and have showered him with public support.

Lindsie, meanwhile, has said in the past there’s “no hate” amid her estrangement from her family back.

“My sister has never privately reached out to me to discuss her apparent issues with me and has publicly said several times that we have no relationship at all,” Lindsie said in an episode of her The Southern Tea podcast last February. “It’s nothing.”

All this said, Lindsie did share a subtle response to her parents’ pardon in May, writing on her Instagram Story at the time, “With God all things are possible.”

Savannah Chrisley BLASTS Lindsie Chrisley as a Traitor: We’re No Longer Family! was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Politics

McBride calls for responding to ‘Trumpism’ with bipartisanship | The Conversation

McBride calls for responding to ‘Trumpism’ with bipartisanship | The Conversation

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New filings reveal how top Dems are preparing possible 2028 runs

Several Democrats are already laying the groundwork for potential 2028 presidential runs, new campaign finance filings show, recruiting donors and running online ads that build their national profiles.

Former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg led the way among Democrats talked about as presidential contenders with $1.6 million raised for his leadership PAC in the first half of the year, and a few Democratic governors raising hundreds of thousands of dollars each.

Together, they have already raised and spent millions of dollars this year, according to disclosures filed Thursday with the Federal Election Commission. The bulk of the money was spent on fundraising activities, including acquiring donor lists and running digital ads, that would facilitate a presidential run.

“If you’re thinking about running for president in 2028, job number one is being seen doing everything you can to help Democrats win in 2026, which raising money for your leadership PAC allows you to do — to travel, to test out messages, to make contributions to other candidates, to build your online following,” said Pete Giangreco, a longtime Democratic consultant who worked on Barack Obama’s presidential campaigns. “Investing in your leadership PAC money now is critical because you have to build your fundraising operation now.”

Former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg led among the Democrats talked about as presidential contender, with $1.6 million raised for his leadership PAC.

While official campaign launches are likely to come after the 2026 midterms, several rumored White House contenders have leadership PACs, which allow them to raise and spend money not tied to a particular election. The PACs linked to these potential candidates largely focused on growing their digital presences over the first half of the year, the filings show, with governors who have less of a national profile running ads online nationally and spending money to build fundraising infrastructure.

Buttigieg and Govs. Andy Beshear of Kentucky and Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan spent to acquire donor lists — a top expense for their leadership PACs. Beshear recently stumped in the early voting state of South Carolina; Whitmer appears less likely to mount a presidential bid.

List-building signals candidates’ ambitions for higher office, particularly with online fundraising a key pillar of successful Democratic campaigns over the past decade. By purchasing or renting Democratic donors’ contact information, candidates can more effectively target potential supporters, introduce themselves to a national audience and convert some of those donors into their own.

“You want to build up a strong email and text list for a few reasons — it’ll increase your name ID, you can raise money for other candidates, and then raise money for yourself,” said Mike Nellis, a Democratic digital consultant. “If you’re not spending money on growing the biggest possible audience for yourself right now, then you’re being foolish. Frankly, all of them could be spending more money on it.”

Leadership PACs also allow political figures in blue states to steer money to competitive races, including by directly donating to vulnerable candidates or state parties, or by fundraising on their behalf. California Gov. Gavin Newsom, for example, has long tapped his extensive email and text lists to raise money for other candidates. Such efforts help blue-state Democrats build relationships across the country and engender goodwill within the party.

The PACs also run ads aimed at recruiting online backers. Newsom’s leadership PAC, Campaign for Democracy, invested another $1.5 million in digital ads in late June, according to its filing. The PAC, which launched in 2023 with a major transfer from Newsom’s gubernatorial campaign, reported $4.4 million cash on hand at the end of June.

Digital advertising helps candidates expand their name recognition and recruit donors outside their home states.

“It’s the small donations from folks like you that have the greatest impact,” read one ad that Beshear’s PAC, In This Together, ran on Facebook in June. “Your support helps us do what matters most: elect decent, compassionate leaders in Kentucky and nationwide.”

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear ran digital ads this year that focused on his home state but also reached a national audience.

Beshear’s group, which has $496,000 cash on hand, spent $30,000 on digital advertising through the end of June, according to its FEC report.

While Beshear’s PAC has run Facebook ads that predominantly target his home state of Kentucky , it has also reached an audience across the country, according to data from Meta’s digital ad library. Similarly, Facebook ads from Whitmer’s group, Fight Like Hell PAC, have predominantly targeted Michigan users — but with some national promotion, too. Hers has $2.6 million cash on hand.

Both their PAC filings reflected their home-state advantage. Among itemized donors, those giving at least $200, each got more funds from their home states than any other — despite neither Kentucky nor Michigan being hotbeds of Democratic giving.

Buttigieg’s Win the Era PAC, which was largely dormant while he served in former President Joe Biden’s cabinet, also began spending on Facebook ads in July, according to the platform. It was the first time Buttigieg had run ads on his personal page since the former South Bend mayor ended his presidential campaign in 2020.

“While my name won’t be on a ballot in 2026, I am committed to doing the work that must be done to rebuild trust in our system: supporting emerging leaders, showing up in communities we too often ignore, and helping win more elections,” read one recent ad from Buttigieg on the platform.

A person close to Buttigieg said the former secretary will continue traveling to support Democrats in 2026 and host more of his own town halls , as he did in Iowa this spring. Buttigieg, who is not in elected office, employs a small staff through his PAC, which has $2.4 million on hand.

Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s leadership PAC also ran digital ads that targeted her home state while also reaching a national audience.

Amanda Stitt, who led Whitmer’s 2022 campaign, said in a statement that the governor “is hard at work serving her constituents, helping to lower their costs, grow jobs, and protect their freedoms. She’s proud to support candidates throughout the country with the same goals, especially in the toughest districts like the ones she won in Michigan.”

Representatives for Beshear and Newsom declined to comment.

Leadership PACs have also covered travel and other expenses to help candidates set up 2028 bids. Beshear’s group, for example, spent $18,000 on polling in March and April.

Not all potential 2028 candidates are raising money federally right now — Govs. Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania and Wes Moore of Maryland, both of whom are seeking reelection next year, do not have federal leadership PACs. And billionaire Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker is funding an advocacy group set up as a 501(c)(4) nonprofit that does not face stringent campaign finance reporting requirements.

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Politics

Rep. Sarah McBride won’t be baited by GOP ‘provocateurs’ | The Conversation

Rep. Sarah McBride won’t be baited by GOP ‘provocateurs’ | The Conversation

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Rep. Sarah McBride Won’t Be Baited by GOP ‘Provocateurs’

Rep. Sarah McBride (D-Del.) is the first out transgender member of Congress. Within days of her election this past November, she faced backlash from certain members of the Republican Party. Nevertheless, McBride has continued to find ways to forge ties across the aisle.

In a conversation with POLITICO’s Dasha Burns, Rep. McBride discusses her hope to bring “a sense of kindness and grace” to Congress despite the “reality TV show nature” of today’s politics. The two also discuss the ongoing humanitarian crisis in Gaza, how the Democratic Party can rebuild its coalition without “reinforcing right-wing framing” over culture war issues and why her pursuit of bipartisan legislation is in part a direct response to President Trump.

“If we can’t figure out how to solve problems across our political divide,” she tells Burns, “then I believe Trumpism only grows and worsens in this country.”

Plus, White House reporter Myah Ward on Trump’s trip to Scotland and what it revealed about the working relationship between the president and European leaders.

Listen and subscribe to The Conversation with Dasha Burns on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.

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Health

An Underrated Fruit High In Vitamin C May Prevent Diabetes, Heart Disease, And Cancer

A decent source of vitamin C, potassium, and iron, this tasty but not-so-popular fruit has potential in lowering a person’s risk of diabetes and cancer.

​Health Digest – Health News, Wellness, Expert Insights

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Health

A Common Drug Prescribed For Chronic Back Pain May Lead To Higher Risk Of Dementia

If you’re suffering from chronic back pain, chances are you’re familiar with this common medication. But using it may put your future brain health at risk.

​Health Digest – Health News, Wellness, Expert Insights