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Juneau Assembly considers new safety measures for homeless services

The city of Juneau, birds eye view.

NOTN- The Juneau Assembly is weighing new safety policies aimed at protecting homeless shelter clients and staff.

In June the Juneau Police Department cleared an unhoused encampment on Teal street, the city’s largest encampment.

City officials said they decided to clear the encampment due to safety concerns and have been actively searching for better solutions.

City officials are examining Anchorage’s model of restricting camping near trails, water bodies, and critical public areas.

Anchorage recently cleared its two largest camps in the Mountain View neighborhood, displacing up to 200 people from Davis Park and a nearby snow dump. The city has since removed more than 370 tons of trash from the sites.

Anchorage Mayor Suzanne LaFrance’s Anchorage Mayor Suzanne LaFrance’s homelessness strategy includes expanding shelter capacity, increasing access to crisis care, and adding transitional housing.

According to Alaska Public Media, the city plans to open 24 tiny homes by mid-October to support people transitioning out of homelessness.

Both Juneau and Anchorage officials acknowledge that clearing encampments, also known as abatements, are not long-term solutions by themselves.

The U.S. Supreme Court recently gave cities more power to clear camps, overturning a ruling that made such actions harder when no shelter space was available.

Deputy City Manager Robert Barr said local officials are considering establishing ‘shelter safety zones’ that could restrict camping near key facilities and enhance protections for shelter clients and staff.

“We had a very long conversation on the merits of a shelter safety zone. There’s definitely desire among the body to see what could be done.” Said Barr.

The city plans to operate a cold weather shelter this winter.

While specific ordinance details remain under development, assembly members expressed a strong desire to implement more robust protective measures around homeless service facilities.

The next assembly meeting is scheduled for August 18.

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Alaska Sen. Murkowski toys with bid for governor, defends vote supporting Trump’s tax breaks package

Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, right, listens as the Senate Appropriations Committee marks up the FY2026 spending bill for the Department of the Interior, the Environmental Protection Agency, Department of Transportation, and the Department of Housing and Urban Development, at the Capitol in Washington, Thursday, July 24, 2025. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

AP- Republican U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski, speaking with Alaska reporters Monday, toyed with the idea of running for governor and defended her recent high-profile decision to vote in support of President Donald Trump’s tax breaks and spending cuts bill.

Murkowski, speaking from Anchorage, said “sure” when asked if she has considered or is considering a run for governor. She later said her response was “a little bit flippant” because she gets asked that question so often.

“Would I love to come home? I have to tell you, of course I would love to come home,” she said. “I am not making any decisions about anything, because my responsibility to Alaskans is my job in the Senate right now.”

Several Republicans already have announced plans to run in next year’s governor’s race, including Lt. Gov. Nancy Dahlstrom. Republican Gov. Mike Dunleavy is not eligible to seek a third consecutive term. Alaska has an open primary system and ranked choice voting in general elections.

Murkowski is not up for reelection until 2028.

A centrist, Murkowski has become a closely watched figure in a sharply divided Congress. She has at times been at odds with her party in her criticism of Trump and blasted by some GOP voters as a “Republican in name only.” But her decision to support Trump’s signature bill last month also frustrated others in a state where independents comprise the largest number of registered voters. She previously described her decision-making process around the bill as “agonizing.”

On Monday, she said it was clear to her the bill was not only a priority of Trump’s but also that it was going to pass, so it became important to her to help make it as advantageous to the state as she could.

“So I did everything within my power — as one lawmaker from Alaska — to try to make sure that the most vulnerable in our state would not be negatively impacted,” she said. “And I had a hard choice to make, and I think I made the right choice for Alaskans.”

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Dunleavy administration eyes grants to NGOs for possible cuts in Alaska budget

By: James Brooks, Alaska Beacon

The State Office Building in Juneau is seen on Thursday, Feb. 20, 2025. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)

In a new administrative action, Gov. Mike Dunleavy is ordering “efficiency reviews” of state agencies and asking departments to use artificial intelligence software as part of an effort to identify budget cuts.

The reviews will take place annually, according to Dunleavy’s new administrative order, published Monday, and would become part of the state’s annual budget process.

The reviews will initially focus on “grants to non-State of Alaska entities” and “accounts payable,” according to a copy of the text available online.

The reviews are intended to “identify potential savings” and “improve efficiency of operations” but also will include recommendations for the state to contract out services rather than performing them in-house.

“Alaskans expect their government to deliver essential services in the most efficient and responsible way possible,” Dunleavy said in a written statement announcing the administrative order. “This order ensures we prioritize critical needs, eliminate waste, and safeguard the state’s financial stability.”

Some prior outsourcing efforts by the Dunleavy administration have seen state services assigned to call centers outside Alaska, drawing opposition from union officials and legislators. 

A second order, also released Monday, calls for the state to significantly reduce the number of regulations it has on the books.

Notably, the order says that the state should speed permitting for projects regulated by the Alaska Department of Natural Resources, Department of Environmental Conservation and Alaska Department of Fish and Game.

That could mean automatically approving projects even if their environmental review hasn’t been completed according to timelines required by the state, the order says.

Dunleavy leaves office on Dec. 6, 2026. The order says that the state should “reduce the number of regulatory requirements by 15% by Dec. 31, 2026, and 25% (cumulative) by Dec. 31, 2027.”

A liaison with each state department will be required to provide quarterly updates on that goal to the governor’s office.

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Alaskans work to analyze and reduce risks of glacial outburst flooding

By: Yereth Rosen, Alaska Beacon

The Mendenhall River, which flows out of Mendenhall Glacier, is seen on May 14, 2025. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

When water from melting glacier inundated her Juneau neighborhood last August, Danielle Lindoff made a hasty escape through a front window in her living room, her two unhappy cats in tow. She climbed onto a boat mobilized by her husband, and as he steered, she held a flashlight to scout in the dark for submerged mailboxes that they might bump on their way to safety.

Danille Lindoff, a resident of Juneau's Mendenhall Valley, points on March 13, 2025, to her front door to show the level that water reached during the record 2024 outburst flood from Mendenhall Glacier. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
 Danille Lindoff, a resident of Juneau’s Mendenhall Valley, points on March 13, 2025, to her front door to show the level that water reached during the record 2024 outburst flood from Mendenhall Glacier. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
Danielle Lindoff, standing in front of her Mendenhall Valley house on March 13, 2025, shows how high water rose during the record glacial outburst flood of August 2024. On that night, as her husband steered the boat they used to escape, Lindoff held out a flashlight to look for submerged mailboxes so they could avoid bumping into them. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
 Danielle Lindoff, standing in front of her Mendenhall Valley house on March 13, 2025, shows how high water rose during the record glacial outburst flood of August 2024. On that night, as her husband steered the boat they used to escape, Lindoff held out a flashlight to look for submerged mailboxes so they could avoid bumping into them. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

Though the Mendenhall River flowing by their backyard had been swollen with floodwaters in past years – and though the Lindoffs had taken precautions last summer like sealing doorways and stacking sandbags – the Aug. 5-6, 2024, event was the biggest Mendenhall Glacier outburst flood ever measured. The water that rushed out of a breached glacial ice dam brought the river to a record crest of 15.99 feet, inundating about 290 homes and stunning much of the community.

A drone image shows widespread flooding in the Mendenhall Valley in Juneau on Aug. 6, 2024. The flood was from an outburst at Suicide Basin, part of the Mendenhall Glacier complex. A similar glacial outburst flood struck the same area in 2023. (Image courtesy of Rich Ross)
 A drone image shows widespread flooding in the Mendenhall Valley in Juneau on Aug. 6, 2024. The flood was from an outburst at Suicide Basin, part of the Mendenhall Glacier complex. A similar glacial outburst flood struck the same area in 2023. (Image courtesy of Rich Ross)
The streamflow at Mendenhall Lake during two glacial outburst floods is shown. The previous record-high outburst flood, in 2023, is shown in blue. The new record flood, in2024, is slown in orange. (Graph provided by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, based on data from the U.S. Geological Survey)
 The streamflow at Mendenhall Lake during two glacial outburst floods is shown. The previous record-high outburst flood, in 2023, is shown in blue. The new record flood, in2024, is shown in orange. (Graph provided by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, based on data from the U.S. Geological Survey)

“No one expected it to be this big,” Lindoff said months later in an interview at her freshly repaired and refurbished house.

The community is no longer likely to be caught by surprise.

“It’s probably likely that the floods could get larger in the future,” said Eran Hood, an environmental science professor and glacier specialist at the University of Alaska Southeast.

Hood is part of a broad effort mounted by scientists, government agencies, the local Tribal government, nonprofit community groups and individuals to limit the damage that may result from future floods.

Residents of the Mendenhall Valley shovel and load sand at a sandbag distribution event held on July 26, 2025, by the City and Borough of Juneau and the Central Council of Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska. By 1 p.m. that day, more than 100 cars had checked in at the Dimond Park Field House, according to city officials. Each household was allowed to fill 75 sandbags. The event, one of several held by municipal and Tribe officials, was in anticipation of another glacial outburst flood. (Photo by Corrine Smith/Alaska Beacon)
 Residents of the Mendenhall Valley shovel and load sand at a sandbag distribution event held on July 26, 2025, by the City and Borough of Juneau and the Central Council of Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska. By 1 p.m. that day, more than 100 cars had checked in at the Dimond Park Field House, according to city officials. Each household was allowed to fill 75 sandbags. The event, one of several held by municipal and Tribe officials, was in anticipation of another glacial outburst flood. (Photo by Corrine Smith/Alaska Beacon)

A first step is ensuring that the public knows the risks. To that end, Hood and others at UAS and partner organizations have created an online resource, the Juneau Glacial Flood Dashboardlaunched in May.

Though the floods glaciers produce can happen quickly, there can be early warnings of water releases. The Juneau Glacial Flood Dashboard gives real-time information on water levels pooled above the ice dam that forms each year at one of the glacier’s basins. It has weather data, aerial images and other up-to-the-minute information. One of the most important features is a detailed flood-inundation map; users can type in their addresses and get predictions for flood impacts, depending on river-level scenarios and other conditions.

The dashboard idea came up as an answer to a basic question, Hood said: “What are the best ways to communicate hazards?”

Lawmakers consider an only-in-Alaska flood insurance programWork by Hood and his colleagues is supported by a National Science Foundation grant. The foundation funded a project to do detailed studies of Mendenhall Glacier and the flood risks it poses, hone systems for predictions and warnings and apply those tools to other flood-prone glaciers in Alaska and possibly beyond.

Outburst flooding is a natural phenomenon in glaciated areas, sometimes referred to by an Icelandic name: jökulhlaup. They occur from the Andes to the Arctic. Their suddenness can make them dangerous to people in certain parts of the world, like the Himalayas; overall, about 15 million people in the world are at risk of such floods, according to a 2023 study published in the journal Nature.

The risks are increasing with climate change and glacial melt, studies have shown. Globally, glacial lake volume increased by 48% between 1990 and 2018, according to a 2020 study by Canadian, U.S. and British scientists who used satellite imagery to make the calculations.

Alaska outburst floods

Glacial outburst floods are also natural in Alaska, though the trends are a bit different.

There were 1,150 of these outbursts released from 106 ice-dammed lakes between 1985 and 2020, according to a study published in 2023 by scientists from Colorado State University, the University of Alaska Fairbanks and other institutions. The frequency of such events was unchanged over that period, they found. But there was a big change in timing, with most of the sites flooding earlier in the year, likely the result of warming temperatures and faster melt, the study found. Rapid changes in glaciers’ structures also means that new water-filled dams — and new flood risks — are emerging at individual sites, the study said.

A chunk of ice that calved from Mendenhall Glacier floats in Mendenhall Lake on May 14, 202., (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
 A chunk of ice that calved from Mendenhall Glacier floats in Mendenhall Lake on May 14, 2025. Melt is causing ice chunks to drop from the glacier, including into Suicide Basin. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

Alaska’s glaciers are melting faster than those elsewhere in the world. The melt has varied and sometimes contradictory impacts on outburst floods, the 2023 study explains. Less ice overall has meant a reduced supply of meltwater. But accelerated melt can also increase the size of glaciers’ basins and weaken the ice dams that hold their meltwater. Rapid melt can also cause huge chunks of ice to calve away from higher elevations into the basins, boosting volume quickly.

The terminus of Exit Glacier, seen here on July 5, 2022, has slipped well uphill from where it was in 2010 -- and farther away from the end of the hiking trail. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon}
 The terminus of Exit Glacier, seen here on July 5, 2022, has slipped well uphill from where it was in 2010 — and farther away from the end of the hiking trail. The glacier, in Kenai Fjords National Park, is one of the most visited in the state and an example of Alaska’s rapid glacial melt. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon}

Most of Alaska’s outburst floods have occurred in remote areas where there are no immediate threats to communities, like parts of sprawling Wrangell St-Elias National Park.

The Mendenhall Valley, however, is not remote.

The broad valley was carved into the landscape over millennia by its namesake glacier. It is a major suburb of Alaska’s capital city, home to about 12,000 of Juneau’s 31,200 residents. It holds neat neighborhoods where houses are more spacious than in the city’s upscale but tightly packed downtown district. It also holds abundant parks and trails, scenic views of mountains, meadows and coastline; and conveniences like shopping malls and commuter bus service. And, within the Tongass National Forest that surrounds the city, the valley is known for the big glacier that looms over it and draws hundreds of thousands of tourists each year.

Mendenhall Glacier has ebbed and flowed over thousands of years, but it has been in retreat ever since the Little Ice Age ended in the mid-1700s. As the climate has warmed — a trend amplified in far-north latitudes — the retreat has accelerated. That is the case not just for Mendenhall but for the other glaciers connected to the vast Juneau Ice Field that caps the mountains spanning Southeast Alaska and adjacent parts of Canada. The Juneau Ice Field lost a tenth of its glacier area from 2005 to 2019, according to NASA.

This melt created a relatively new gap within Mendenhall’s ice called Suicide Basin, reportedly named after the drop that ice above the basin would experience. Retreat of the smaller Suicide Glacier, which had been connected to Mendenhall, created the gap.

As glacial ice melts over each summer, the basin fills with water. As the water within the basin rises, it breaks through the ice dam and rushes down into Mendenhall Lake, Mendenhall River and, sometimes, over the riverbanks. The process is repeated year-to-year as ice dams are formed and then breached, though water amounts and speed of releases can vary.

Had modern technology and alertness existed in the past, the risk to the Mendenhall Valley could have been identified many years ago, Hood said.

Ice, bedrock and surface debris at the Gilkey Glacier interact in 2017. The glacier is part of the Juneau Icefield. (Photo provided by the U.S. Geological Survey)
 Ice, bedrock and surface debris at the Gilkey Glacier interact in 2017. The glacier, like Mendenhall Glacier, is part of the Juneau Icefield. From 2005 to 2019, the icefield lost 10% of its glacier area, according to NASA. (Photo provided by the U.S. Geological Survey)

“Twenty years ago, someone could have looked at Mendenhall and looked at the side basins and said there could definitely be a problem in the future. Nobody did that,” he said.

The first Suicide Basin outburst flood was in 2011. “That pretty much caught people by surprise, although in hindsight, it shouldn’t have,” said Jason Amundson, a UAS geophysics professor and the principal investigator for the National Science Foundation-funded project.

Since then, floods have occurred almost annually, though at varying levels and intensities. Recent floods were big. A record 2023 flood, with a maximum crest of the Mendenhall River measured at 14.97 feet, was followed by the even-bigger 2024 flood.

Though it caused more damage, last year’s flood came and went quickly. “The whole thing lasted maybe 12 hours,” Amundson said..

Jason Amundson, a professor of geophysics at the University of Alaska Southeast, stands outside his office on March 11, 2025. He is leading a research project to better understand outburst floods at Mendenhall Glacier and elsehere. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
 Jason Amundson, a professor of geophysics at the University of Alaska Southeast, stands outside his office on March 11, 2025. He is leading a research project to better understand outburst floods at Mendenhall Glacier and elsehere. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
Jason Amundson, a professor of geophysics at the University of Alaska Southeast, pulls up the Juneau Glacial Flood Dashboard at his office on March 11, 2025. The dashboard, still in development at the time, shows how far floods waters would reach into neighborhoods, depending on different scenarios. The dashboard went online in May. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
 Jason Amundson, a professor of geophysics at the University of Alaska Southeast, pulls up the Juneau Glacial Flood Dashboard at his office on March 11, 2025. The dashboard, still in development at the time, shows how far floods waters would reach into neighborhoods, depending on different scenarios. The dashboard went online in May. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

There is not yet enough data to identify a clear pattern, making predictions difficult for now, Hood and Amundson said. But there is a good chance that Suicide Basin will continue emptying out huge amounts of water.

“If we keep having full drainage like we did last year, then I would expect that we would keep having big floods,” Amundson said.

Local officials, meanwhile, are looking beyond Suicide Basin as they consider future risks, said Robert Barr, Juneau’s assistant city manager.

“There very well could be other basins behind Suicide that will form as Mendenhall Glacier retreats,” he said.

Holding waters back

The municipal government, a partner in the flood dashboard, has embarked on another short-term response to the flood risk.

A military-grade barrier, seen May 14, 2025, lines the Mendenhall River in the neighborhood inundated by the record 2024 outburst flood from Mendenhall Glacier. The barrier, from a company called HESCO, was recommended by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers as a temporary protection for the Juneau suburb. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
 A military-grade barrier, seen May 14, 2025, lines the Mendenhall River in the neighborhood inundated by the record 2024 outburst flood from Mendenhall Glacier. The barrier, from a company called HESCO, was recommended by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers as a temporary protection for the Juneau suburb. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
A military-grade barrier, seen May 14, 2025, lines the Mendenhall River in the neighborhood inundated by the record 2024 outburst flood from Mendenhall Glacier. The barrier, from a company called HESCO, was recommended by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers as a temporary protection for the Juneau suburb. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
 A military-grade barrier, seen May 14, 2025, lines the Mendenhall River in the neighborhood inundated by the record 2024 outburst flood from Mendenhall Glacier. The barrier, from a company called HESCO, was recommended by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers as a temporary protection for the Juneau suburb. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

It spent nearly $8 million on a flood barrier erected this year along the Mendenhall River. The barrier, a stout sandbag structure originally designed for military use, was recommended by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers as a short-term fix. To recoup part of the cost, the local government is assessing a fee on the 466 property owners in the river area. The fee, about $6,300 per household, is to be paid over 10 years.

The Lindoff home is among those behind the new barrier, which bears the brand name HESCO. Danielle Lindoff, who has watched river waters rise and churn over the years, eroding the far bank and felling huge trees, said she is grateful for the protection. But her feelings are mixed.

“We bought this house because of the view,” she said. “Now we won’t even be able to see it.”

Barr, at the City and Borough of Juneau, concedes the barriers are not particularly pretty. But he said most homeowners accept their presence.

“I wouldn’t say the question was, ‘Do you find the HESCO barriers attractive or not?’” he said. “But they are our best effort, in consultation with the Army Corps and all the other experts that we’re talking with, to keep water in the river.”

Robert Barr, deputy city manager for City and Borough of Juneau, pulls up a screen on May 13,2025, to show plans for HESCO flood barrier in along the Mendenhall River to protect against glacial outburst flood.(Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
 Robert Barr, deputy city manager for City and Borough of Juneau, pulls up a screen on May 13,2025, to show plans for HESCO flood barrier in along the Mendenhall River to protect against glacial outburst flood. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

The barriers are temporary, Barr said.

For the longer term, the Army Corps of Engineers might design a bigger flood-control system, he said. That could be something as substantial as the diversion project installed in Fairbanks after a devastating 1967 flood. The Fairbanks system is large, subject to ongoing maintenance, and has cost $220 million to date. The Corps has already embarked on a technical study for the Mendenhall Valley, a project supported by $4.75 million in federal funds.

A sign at the Fairbanks North Star Borough office, seen on Feb. 5, 2025, shows how high water rose during that city's devastaing 1967 flood. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
 A sign at the Fairbanks North Star Borough office, seen on Feb. 5, 2025, shows how high water rose during that city’s devastating 1967 flood. In the aftermath, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers created a major project to protect the city from future Chena River floods. It is possible that the Corps will create something similar for Juneau’s Mendenhall Valley. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

Whatever is done will depend on scientific research.

The University of Alaska Southeast-led team, which also includes scientists from the University of Alaska Fairbanks and Carnegie Mellon University, is using field and remote-sensing data to better understand how the glacier has changed in the past and to create models for how it will change in the future. Technologies used include LiDAR, which measures elevations and features through light beams; radar, which employs soundwaves to measure the thickness of glacial ice over bedrock; and drones, which capture aerial images that can be compared over time.Weather and tide data is important, too. The record 2024 outburst flood came on a night after a gloriously sunny and warm summer day. Things could be much worse if an outburst flood happens during a rainstorm or when tides in the adjacent Gastineau Channel are exceptionally high, experts say.

Beyond Juneau

The Mendenhall work being led by Amundson is about more than Juneau’s famous glacier. The risk-analysis systems the team develops for Mendenhall are intended to be applied to other glaciers in Alaska.

Beyond Mendenhall, Hood said, the second-highest priority for risk analysis is probably Snow Glacier on the Kenai Peninsula south of Anchorage and just north of the coastal town of Seward.

The glacier-fed Snow River, seen on June 21, 2025, flows under a highway bridge north of Seward. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
 The glacier-fed Snow River, seen on June 21, 2025, flows under a highway bridge north of Seward. The Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities and the Alaska Railroad are making changes to protect the Seward Highway and the rail line against future Snow Glacier outburst floods. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

Though the Snow Glacier’s periodic floods have not reached communities beyond a popular campground and a smattering of nearby houses, they do threaten infrastructure. The Seward Highway, a major state thoroughfare, and the Alaska Railroad run right along that flood zone. The railroad is planning to raise the elevation of a bridge at the trouble site, and the Alaska Department of Transportation plans a related elevation rise to the highway. The estimated cost of the road project alone is $20 million.

A resident carrying groceries and wearing rubber rain boots wades through floodwaters covering the road to the Primrose Campground north of Seward on Aug. 24, 2019. A glacial outburst flood on the Snow Glacier innundated Kenai Lake and the Primrose campground in the Chugach National Forest. The annual Lost Lake Race, which starts at the Primrose campground, was to have been held that day but was canceled because of wildfire smoke and glacial flooding. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
 A resident carrying groceries and wearing rubber rain boots wades through floodwaters covering the road to the Primrose Campground north of Seward on Aug. 24, 2019. A glacial outburst flood on the Snow Glacier innundated Kenai Lake and the Primrose campground in the Chugach National Forest. The annual Lost Lake Race, which starts at the Primrose campground, was to have been held that day but was canceled because of wildfire smoke and glacial flooding. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

Hood and Amundson pointed out another spot where glacial outburst floods are threats: the Prince William Sound port town of Valdez, home to 3,900 people and site of the terminal where oil that passes through the Trans Alaska Pipeline System is shipped out.

In the mountains outside of town, the Valdez Glacier has been damming and releasing meltwater every year or two. Some years, releases are relatively slow and small; some years’ releases cause problems. An outburst flood in 2018 inundated part of Valdez.

Weakened federal partners?

Continued work to understand glacial outburst floods and the risks they pose to Alaskans depends on partnerships with academic institutions and agencies at various levels of government.

But federal agencies that are important partners have been weakened by deep budget cuts and abrupt firings that could hollow out scientific programs.

One partner is the U.S. Geological Survey, a branch of the Department of the Interior that has been doing both long-term monitoring of Mendenhall Glacier’s changes and collecting day-to-day data and imagery from Suicide Basin. The Trump administration is proposing slashing total USGS spending by nearly 40%, including an approximately 30% cut to the agency’s natural disaster programs.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which houses the National Weather Service, is another key partner that has already been targeted for deep cuts and likely faces more. The administration’s budget for the coming fiscal years proposes eliminating all funding for NOAA research.

The U.S. Forest Service is another partner. It manages the Tongass National Forest, which covers most of Southeast Alaska, and Southcentral Alaska’s Chugach National Forest. Both are heavily glaciated.

Tourists view Mendenhall Glacier from the U.S. Forest Service visitor center on May 14, 2025. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
 Tourists view Mendenhall Glacier from the U.S. Forest Service visitor center on May 14, 2025. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
Tourists take in the view at the Mendenhall Glacier visitor center on May 14, 2025. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
 Tourists take in the view at the Mendenhall Glacier visitor center on May 14, 2025. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

Among the Forest Service duties in Juneau is delivery of warnings and, at times, evacuation notices to tourists and campers at the Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center. Mass firings by the Trump administration left the visitor center nearly unmanned earlier in the year, with only two employees still on the payroll there in February. Several workers have been rehired since, but staffing levels remain uncertain.

Barr said Juneau officials worry about losses at the Federal Emergency Management Agency, an important partner even though its general definition of flood zones does not consider glacial outburst floods.

The agency in April canceled its Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities grant program, and halted work on all pending grant applications, even though the program has won praise for helping communities reduce costs of disaster emergencies.

Several states are pushing back against the program’s termination; 20 filed a lawsuit in mid-July challenging the administration’s decision.

“We are potentially concerned about hazard-mitigation grants and those going away,” Barr said. And along with loss of financial aid is the concern about “losing expertise” as veteran emergency and risk-assessment experts are pushed out of the agency, he said.

Uncertainty also affects the National Science Foundation, which is funding the Mendenhall research project. The Trump administration is proposing a 55 percent cut for the coming fiscal year.

The grant money was already paid, and so far, the project has remained intact, Amundson said. “As far as I know, everything is going forward,” he said.

Suicide Basin is seen on July 31, 2025, with rising meltwater and ice chunks. The image, provided by the U.S. Geological Survey, was among the real-time information provided by a new online dashboard that alerts residents to pending risks from Mendenhall Glacier outburst floods. (Image from Juneau Glacial Flood Dashboard)
 Suicide Basin is seen on July 31, 2025, with rising meltwater and ice chunks. The image, provided by the U.S. Geological Survey, was among the real-time information provided by a new online dashboard that alerts residents to pending risks from Mendenhall Glacier outburst floods. (Image from Juneau Glacial Flood Dashboard)

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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Politics

The case that saved the press – and why Trump wants it gone

Donald Trump wants to restrict journalists’ ability to publish or broadcast critical stories. Mesh cube, iStock/Getty Images Plus

President Donald Trump is again attacking the American press – this time not with fiery rally speeches or by calling the media “the enemy of the people,” but through the courts.

Since the heat of the November 2024 election, and continuing into July, Trump has filed defamation lawsuits against “60 Minutes” broadcaster CBS News and The Wall Street Journal. He has also sued the Des Moines Register for publishing a poll just before the 2024 election that Trump alleges exaggerated support for Democratic candidate Kamala Harris and thus constituted election interference and fraud.

These are in addition to other lawsuits Trump filed against the news media during his first term and during his years out of office between 2021 and 2025.

At the heart of Trump’s complaints is a familiar refrain: The media is not only biased, but dishonest, corrupt and dangerous.

The president isn’t just upset about reporting on him that he thinks is unfair. He wants to redefine what counts as libel and make it easier for public officials to sue for damages. A libel suit is a civil tort claim seeking damages when a person believes something false has been printed or broadcast about them and so harmed their reputation.

Redefining libel in this way would require overturning the Supreme Court’s 1964 ruling in New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, one of the most important First Amendment legal rulings in American constitutional history

Trump made overturning Sullivan a talking point during his first campaign for president; his lawsuits now put that threat into action. And they raise the question: What happened in Sullivan, and why does it still matter?

President Donald Trump discusses U.S. libel laws on Jan. 10, 2018, calling them a ‘sham’ and a ‘disgrace’ during comments to reporters at the White House.

What Sullivan was about

As chair of a public policy institute devoted to strengthening deliberative democracy, I have written two books about the media and the presidency, and another about media ethics. My research traces how news institutions shape civic life and why healthy democracies rely on free expression.

In 1960, The New York Times published a full-page advertisement titled “Heed Their Rising Voices”. The ad, which included an appeal for readers to send money in support of Martin Luther King Jr. and the movement against Jim Crow, described brutal and unjust treatment of Black students and protesters in Montgomery, Alabama. It also emphasized episodes of police violence against peaceful demonstrations.

The ad was not entirely accurate in its description of the behavior of either protesters or the police.

It claimed, for instance, that activists had sung “My Country ’Tis of Thee” on the steps of the state capitol during a rally, when they actually had sung the national anthem. It said that “truckloads of police armed with shotguns and tear-gas” had “ringed” a college campus, when the police had only been deployed nearby. And it asserted that King had been arrested seven times in Alabama, when the real number was four.

Though the ad did not identify any individual public officials by name, it disparaged the behavior of Montgomery police.

That’s where L.B. Sullivan came in.

As Montgomery’s police commissioner, he oversaw the police department. Sullivan claimed that because the ad maligned the conduct of law enforcement, it had implicitly defamed him. In 1960 in Alabama, a primary defense against libel was truth. But since there were mistakes in the ad, a truth defense could not be raised. Sullivan sued for damages, and an Alabama jury awarded him US$500,000, equivalent to $5,450,000 in 2025.

The message to the press was clear: criticize Southern officials and risk being sued out of existence.

In fact, the Sullivan lawsuit was not an isolated incident, but part of a broader strategy. In addition to Sullivan, four other Montgomery officials filed suits against the Times.

In Birmingham, public officials filed seven libel lawsuits over Times reporter Harrison Salisbury’s trenchant reporting about racism in that city. The lawsuits helped push the Times to the edge of bankruptcy. Salisbury was even indicted for seditious libel and faced up to 21 years in prison.

Alabama officials also sued CBS, The Associated Press, the Saturday Evening Post and Ladies’ Home Journal – all for reporting on civil rights and the South’s brutal response.

Four men in suits standing together and smiling.
Montgomery, Ala., Police Commissioner L.B. Sullivan, second left, and his attorneys celebrate his $500,000 libel suit victory in a county court on Nov. 3, 1960.
Bettman/Getty Images

The Supreme Court decision

The jury’s verdict in favor of Sullivan was unanimously overturned by the Supreme Court in 1964.

Writing for the court, Justice William Brennan held that public officials cannot prevail in defamation lawsuits merely by showing that statements are false. Instead, they must prove such statements are made with “actual malice”. Actual malice means a reporter or press outlet knew their story was false or else acted with reckless disregard for the truth.

The decision set a high bar.

Before the ruling, the First Amendment’s protections for speech and the press didn’t offer much help to the press in libel cases.

After it, public officials who wanted to sue the press would have to prove “actual malice” – real, purposeful untruths that caused harm. Honest mistakes weren’t enough to prevail in such lawsuits. The court held that errors are inevitable in public debate and that protecting those mistakes is essential to keeping debate open and free.

Nonviolent protest and the press

In essence, the court ruling blocked government officials from suing for libel with ulterior motives.

King and other civil rights leaders relied on a strategy of nonviolent protest to expose injustice through public, visible actions.

When protesters were arrested, beaten or hosed in the streets, their goal was not chaos – it was clarity. They wanted the nation to see what Southern oppression looked like. For that, they needed press coverage.

If Sullivan’s lawsuit had succeeded, it could have bullied the press away from covering civil rights altogether. The Supreme Court recognized this danger.

Public officials treated differently

Another key element of the court’s reasoning was its distinction between public officials and private citizens.

Elected leaders, the court said, can use mass media to defend themselves in ways ordinary people cannot.

“The public official certainly has equal if not greater access than most private citizens to media of communication,” Justice Brennan wrote in the Sullivan ruling.

Trump is a perfect example of this dynamic. He masterfully uses social media, rallies, televised interviews and impromptu remarks to push back. He doesn’t need the courts.

Giving public officials the power to sue over news stories they dislike could well create a chilling effect on the media that undermines government accountability and distorts public discourse.

“The theory of our Constitution is that every citizen may speak his mind and every newspaper express its view on matters of public concern and may not be barred from speaking or publishing because those in control of government think that what is said or written is unwise,” Brennan wrote.

“In a democratic society, one who assumes to act for the citizens in an executive, legislative, or judicial capacity must expect that his official acts will be commented upon and criticized.”

Why Sullivan still matters

The Sullivan ruling is more than a legal doctrine. It is a shared agreement about the kind of democracy Americans aspire to. It affirms a press duty to hold power to account, and a public right to hear facts and information that those in power want to suppress.

The ruling protects the right to criticize those in power and affirms that the press is not a nuisance, but an essential part of a functioning democracy. It ensures that political leaders cannot insulate themselves from scrutiny by silencing their critics through intimidation or litigation.

Trump’s lawsuits seek to undo these press protections. He presents himself as the victim of a dishonest press and hopes to use the legal system to punish those he perceives to be his detractors.

The decision in the Sullivan case reminds Americans that democracy doesn’t depend on leaders who feel comfortable. It depends on a public that is free to speak.

The Conversation

Stephanie A. (Sam) Martin does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

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Kelly Osbourne Pours Heart Out in Emotional New Tribute to Late Dad

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Kelly Osbourne has released a new statement in the wake of her famous father’s death last month.

Be warned, however:

You will likely need a box of Kleenex nearby as you read through it…

Kelly Osbourne greets fans as she arrives to view tributes to the late Ozzy Osbourne as his funeral cortege travels through his home city of Birmingham on July 30, 2025 in Birmingham, England. (Photo by Leon Neal/Getty Images)

In an Instagram Stories post shared August 4, Kelly reflected on Ozzy Osbourne passing away as follows:

I’ve sat down to write this a hundred times and still don’t know if the words will ever feel like enough.. but from the bottom of my heart, thank you.

The love, support, and beautiful messages I’ve received from so many of you have truly helped carry me through the hardest moment of my life. Every kind word, every shared memory, every bit of compassion has meant more than I can ever explain.

Ozzy Osbourne, one of the most famous and successful musicians of his area, died at age 76 on July 22.

Ozzy Osbourne speaks onstage during the 2024 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony streaming on Disney+ at Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse on October 19, 2024 in Cleveland, Ohio.
Ozzy Osbourne speaks onstage during the 2024 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony streaming on Disney+ at Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse on October 19, 2024 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images for The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame)

Kelly continued on Monday:

“Grief is a strange thing-it sneaks up on you in waves—I will not be ok for a while-but knowing my family are not alone in our pain makes a difference. I’m holding on tight to the love, the light, and the legacy left behind.”

The 40-year old concluded her post, which included Ozzy’s song “See You on the Other Side,” thanking fans for “being there.”

The Osbournes announced their patriarch’s passing, two weeks after he performed at the Black Sabbath farewell concert in Birmingham’s Villa Park in England.

“It is with more sadness than mere words can convey that we have to report that our beloved Ozzy Osbourne has passed away this morning,” the statement read at the time. “He was with his family and surrounded by love. We ask everyone to respect our family privacy at this time.”

Ozzy Osbourne and his daughter Kelly Osbourne arrive for the 62nd Annual Grammy Awards on January 26, 2020, in Los Angeles. (Photo by VALERIE MACON / AFP)

Ozzy was laid to rest just a few days ago.

Not long before that, Kelly relayed her first message in the wake of this tragedy.

“I feel unhappy I am so sad,” the reality star wrote via Instagram. “I lost the best friend I ever had.”

Ozzy Osbourne was honored in Birmingham on July 30 with a funeral procession leading up to the Black Sabbath bridge and bench… which had become a public memorial for the singer.

His wife Sharon and his children Louis, Aimee, Kelly and Jack all attended the emotional event.

Kelly Osbourne Pours Heart Out in Emotional New Tribute to Late Dad was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

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Denise Richards Accused of Attacking Ex’s Brother; Cops Called to Aaron …

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The divorce between Denise Richards and Aaron Phypers keeps getting uglier.

And the latest dust-up between the warring exes required intervention from law enforcement.

According to a new report from TMZ, cops were called to the home Aaron shares with his parents and siblings on Sunday after Denise showed up to the residence unannounced.

Denise Richards and Aaron Phypers arrive for the LA Premiere Of "7 Days To Vegas" at Laemmle Music Hall on September 21, 2019 in Beverly Hills, California.
Denise Richards and Aaron Phypers arrive for the LA Premiere Of “7 Days To Vegas” at Laemmle Music Hall on September 21, 2019 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Gabriel Olsen/Getty Images)

Sheriff deputies confront Denise Richards on Aaron Phypers’ property

Apparently, Denise was there to retrieve one of her dogs.

But it seems she showed up without warning, which is a problem, as she and Aaron have temporary restraining orders in place that require them to remain 100 yards apart at all times.

According to TMZ, Denise started banging on the backdoor of the house, and Aaron slipped out a different way so as not to violate the TRO.

The outlet reports that Denise was eventually allowed in the house — and that’s when things really got messy.

Aaron Phypers and Denise Richards attend American Humane's 2018 American Humane Hero Dog Awards at The Beverly Hilton Hotel on September 29, 2018 in Beverly Hills, California.
Aaron Phypers and Denise Richards attend American Humane’s 2018 American Humane Hero Dog Awards at The Beverly Hilton Hotel on September 29, 2018 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images)

Insiders tell TMZ that Denise started “screaming at [Aaron’s] parents” and demanding that they get out of the house.

Sources say Richards then turned on Aaron’s brother and began “swinging” at him and throwing items of mail in his direction.

It’s unclear who called police, but Denise was spotted standing in the driveway conversing with three deputies.

Witnesses say she explained that she only wanted to pick up her dog and was not looking for any trouble.

Denise Richards and Aaron Phypers attend Bravo's Premiere Party For "The Real Housewives Of Beverly Hills" Season 9 And "Mexican Dynasties"at Gracias Madre on February 12, 2019 in West Hollywood, California.
Denise Richards and Aaron Phypers attend Bravo’s Premiere Party For “The Real Housewives Of Beverly Hills” Season 9 And “Mexican Dynasties”at Gracias Madre on February 12, 2019 in West Hollywood, California. (Photo by Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images)

In the end, the cops concluded that no crimes had been committed, and thus, no arrests were made.

But sources tell TMZ that Aaron and his family were “terrified and very shaken up” by the incident, and the drama particularly took a toll on Phypers’ 83-year-old mother.

Aaron and Denise married in 2018, and their marriage appeared to be a happy one — but their split has been one of the nastiest in recent memory.

Allegations have been flying in every direction, with Denise accusing Aaron of abuse and Aaron claiming that Denise is an addict who carried on a lengthy affair during their marriage.

The matter has not yet headed to court, but the division of property is likely to get messy. Aaron and Denise do not have any children together.

We’ll have further updates on this developing story as new information becomes available.

Denise Richards Accused of Attacking Ex’s Brother; Cops Called to Aaron … was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

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June Shannon is Glad Lauryn Shannon & Josh Efird Are Divorcing: ‘It Was Very …

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Mama June Shannon is happy to be losing a son-in-law.

As the family’s bombshell divorce continues to play out on Mama June: Family Crisis, viewers are seeing the family react.

June, meanwhile, is watching Josh blame her for the end of his marriage to Lauryn.

Now, almost a year after these scenes filmed, June is publicly declaring that it’s not her fault. She’s happy that it’s over, though.

June Shannon in a pink blouse.
No one was happier to see her daughter get a divorce than Mama June Shannon was. (Image Credit: WEtv)

Josh blames Mama June for his divorce

On the Friday, August 1 episode of Mama June: Family Crisis, Josh Efird spoke bluntly about his and Lauryn “Pumpkin” Shannon’s marital issues.

As we already know, the couple quietly split one year ago, in August 2024.

While Josh did tell viewers that he accepts “full responsibility” for his role in the fallen marriage, he also blames mother-in-law Mama June Shannon for playing a “big role.”

Josh began to list “the issues she was causing” in his marriage through her own personal life. Many of these are no surprise to viewers. The list goes back to 2019.

“It started with her drug addiction, which made Alana scared to live with her,” he began. Notably, he is blaming June, here, not Alana.

“And then we basically had to flee from her drug dealers wanting her money, our money, whosever money,” Josh described.

“It just seems as if no matter what we done, June’s chaos managed to follow us everywhere we went.” 

Lauryn Shannon looks down at her phone.
Despite the celebration, Lauryn “Pumpkin” Shannon has some complex feelings about her divorce. (Image Credit: WEtv)

Mama June Shannon has something to say about that

Over the weekend, Mama June Shannon took to social media to share a public response to Josh blaming her for the downfall of his marriage.

“I still have so much I need to say to Josh,” she began her Instagram caption. “Stuff that is bothering me for years.” Divorces are often a time to express long-held opinions.

“And look,” June wrote, “I’m not the reason why you’re divorce failed.”

(Like everyone does from time to time, June was writing two thoughts at once and meant marriage failed)

“Yes did I go through drug addiction most certainly,” June acknowledged.

“But even that some people need to take responsibility for the actions that they done.”

She cited: “Like I told you before Pumpkin or Josh is no saint when it comes to the cheating.”

June claimed: “They were one of those type people that would cheat in somebody to get their leg back and they would get back together. It was just a very toxic relationship and I’m glad it’s over with.”

A close-up of Mama June Shannon
Whoa! Here’s a close-up of Mama June Shannon. (Image Credit: WEtv)

DID June cause their marriage to fall apart?

We have no doubt that Mama June Shannon blowing over $1 million on drugs — mostly crack — did not help their marriage.

Suddenly finding themselves as the legal guardians of a teenager would also have taken a toll.

But, ultimately, it would take more than a nightmare of a mother-in-law (and, entertaining or not, June is a nightmare of a human being whose mistakes have ravaged the lives of her loved ones) to end a marriage.

This was Lauryn and Josh’s marriage.

That means that this is their divorce, too. Maybe June just … helped things along, a little.

June Shannon is Glad Lauryn Shannon & Josh Efird Are Divorcing: ‘It Was Very … was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

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Nicki Minaj to Dez Bryant: I’ll Give You $10 Million to Fight My Husband!

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We certainly didn’t have “Nicki Minaj vs. Dez Bryant feud” on our 2025 bingo cards, but this unexpected beef is turning out to be one of the most entertaining celebrity spats in recent memory.

In fact, this situation might lead to a high-stakes boxing match between the NFL legend and Nicki’s controversial husband.

Here’s everything we know about how this mess started and where it’s going:

Nicki Minaj attends The 2019 Met Gala Celebrating Camp: Notes on Fashion at Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 06, 2019 in New York City.
Nicki Minaj attends The 2019 Met Gala Celebrating Camp: Notes on Fashion at Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 06, 2019 in New York City. (Photo by Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images)

Dez Bryant dives into Nicki Minaj’s feud with RocNation

As we’ve previously reported, Nicki has been lashing out at Jay Z, claiming, among other things, that the rapper owes her $200 million.

And what does that have to do with the NFL?

Well, Dallas Cowboys star linebacker Micah Parsons has requested a trade due to his frustration over stalled contract negotiations.

One of his complaints is that Cowboys owner Jerry Jones wants to negotiate with Parsons directly rather than meeting with his agent.

Jones cited a past incident in which Jay and Roc Nation allegedly mishandled messy contract talks during Bryant’s time with the Cowboys.

Former Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Dez Bryant walks on the field before the game between the New York Giants and the Dallas Cowboys at MetLife Stadium on September 26, 2022 in East Rutherford, New Jersey.
Former Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Dez Bryant walks on the field before the game between the New York Giants and the Dallas Cowboys at MetLife Stadium on September 26, 2022 in East Rutherford, New Jersey. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images)

Jones further alleged that Dez and Roc Nation stopped taking his calls in the middle of negotiations, leading Bryant to sound off on social media:

“I DON’T THINK ITS SMART TO MENTION MY NAME I KEPT QUIET ABOUT A LOT OF UNFAIR SH-T… WE CAN HAVE STORY TIME IF THATS WHAT WE ARE DOING,” the former NFL star wrote on X (formerly Twitter).

Still with us? Okay, here’s where Nicki gets involved:

Nicki wades into tense Dallas Cowboys discourse

“How about we play a game? Every time you do a ‘Jerry Jones’ or ‘NFL’ story time, I’ll do a ‘story time’ of my own,” Ms. Minaj replied to the tweet, clearly eager for the opportunity to lash out at Jay and Roc Nation.

After Bryant jokingly replied a GIF that read, “I want to play a game,” Nicki shot back:

“All my stories will be about ROC NATION, JAYZ & THE ALLEGED RACIST DESIREE PEREZ, ROC NATION CEO. I hope you fully understand the rules. It’s your turn.”

“Look Miss Nicki, leave me out of it, I don’t want no problems, I’m a huge fan. I hope you’re having a great day,” Dez said, upon realizing that Nicki was not in a joking mood.

Minaj responded by referencing Bryant’s 2012 arrest for domestic violence. Bryant explained that he “didn’t go to jail or touch my mama,” and pointed out that Nicki’s husband, Kenneth Petty, is a registered sex offender.

Nicki Minaj and Kenneth Petty attend the Marc Jacobs Fall 2020 runway show during New York Fashion Week on February 12, 2020 in New York City.
Nicki Minaj and Kenneth Petty attend the Marc Jacobs Fall 2020 runway show during New York Fashion Week on February 12, 2020 in New York City. (Photo by Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images for Marc Jacobs)

She then suggested that “since you BEAT UR OWN MOM,” Bryant might wish to fight Petty. She even said she would pay Bryant $10 million for doing so.

From there, things escalated even further, as Bryant promptly called Nicki’s bluff and urged her to get her cash ready.

He concluded by declaring his undying loyalty to ROC Nation:

“I’ve been lied on my whole career so I’m not trying to hear all of that sh-t…I thought we was speaking facts… I don’t play all of that funny shit… and it’s ROC for life …” he wrote.

Nicki has yet to reply, possibly having realized that her husband might not fare well in a fight with an NFL legend.

We’ll have further updates on this developing story as new information becomes available.

Nicki Minaj to Dez Bryant: I’ll Give You $10 Million to Fight My Husband! was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

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Josh Duggar: TLC Made Me Apologize for Cheating on My Wife!

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Josh Duggar would like the world to know that he isn’t really sorry for cheating on his wife about a decade ago.

As part of his latest legal motion for a new trial, the disgusting 37-year old took issue with a piece of evidence used against him in court a few years ago.

Many years ago, Duggar cheated on his wife Anna with women he met over the adultery website Ashley Madison.

Not long after this information was made public, Josh issued a lengthy apology and cited an addiction to pornography within it.

A mugshot of Josh Duggar on April 29, 2021.
In this handout photo provided by the Washington County Sheriff’s Office, former television personality on “19 Kids And Counting” Josh Duggar poses for a booking photo after his arrest April 29, 2021. (Photo Credit: Washington County Sheriff’s Office via Getty Images)

Here’s the thing, Josh now argues, though:

He had nothing to do with this mea culpa.

“In August 2015, a statement was published on the Duggar family’s Facebook page under (Josh’s) name, claiming he had secretly viewed pornography, led a double life, and been unfaithful to his wife,” Duggar explains in the aforementioned filing.

“(Josh) did not write or approve the creation of this statement, nor was he directly involved in the process leading up to its release.

“The statement was drafted and issued under immense pressure from representatives of TLC, Discovery Communications, and their legal and public relations teams.”

Now-disgraced criminal Josh Duggar sits beside wife Anna Duggar on 19 Kids and Counting.
Now-disgraced criminal Josh Duggar sits beside wife Anna Duggar on 19 Kids and Counting. (Image Credit: TLC)

Josh goes on to say this was a “corporate-driven” statement and it was issued because the Duggars faced “threats of television show cancellation and possible contractual penalties or punishment if a public confession-style statement was not released.”

Duggar said he was never even consulted about the contents or the wording of the message.

How is this relevant all this time later?

Because the statement was read in court during Duggar’s 2022 trial on charges of child pornography possession … and he claims that it was used to paint a “damaging picture of Josh’s character.

Duggar says it was “repeatedly cited to suggest a long-standing pattern of secret pornography use and moral failure.”

Josh and Anna Duggar on the now-defunct TLC reality show 19 Kids and Counting.
Josh and Anna Duggar on the now-defunct TLC reality show 19 Kids and Counting. (Image Credit: TLC)

Josh Duggar, it should be noted, admitted to having molested his own sisters when he was a teenager.

He also admitted to infidelity with partners he barely knew.

He was also found to have photos and videos of children under the age of 12 in sexually comprising positions on his work computer.

We’re pretty sure he has no character that can even be damaged, this is our point here.

Josh Duggar leaves an Arkansas courtroom alongside his wife, Anna.
Josh Duggar leaves an Arkansas courtroom alongside his wife, Anna. (Getty)

In his motion, however, Duggar aims to make it clear has “never been diagnosed with any pornography addiction” and alleges his Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights were violated during his trial and says “the government’s use of a false, externally pressure, and unapproved public statement severely prejudiced the jury’s perception of Joshua Duggar.”

Maybe.

Or maybe Duggar’s own actions did that.

Ashley Madison, which is owned by Avid Life Media, is designed to help married people cheat on their spouses. Its slogan is “Life is short. Have an affair.”

Josh Duggar's Post-Conviction Mug Shot
Josh Duggar will be stuck behind federal bars for a VERY long time. No one feels sorry for him. (Image Credit: NBC)

Duggar, who is due to be released in 2032, wrote the following in 2015:

I have been the biggest hypocrite ever. While espousing faith and family values, I have secretly over the last several years been viewing pornography on the internet and this became a secret addiction and I became unfaithful to my wife.

I am so ashamed of the double life that I have been living and am grieved for the hurt, pain and disgrace my sin has caused my wife and family, and most of all Jesus and all those who profess faith in Him.

As I am learning the hard way, we have the freedom to choose to our actions, but we do not get to choose our consequences. I deeply regret all hurt I have caused so many by being such a bad example.

Josh Duggar: TLC Made Me Apologize for Cheating on My Wife! was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

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