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Labour MPs hit out at ‘definite manifesto breach’

The Labour government is facing accusations of two manifesto breaches in as many days after turning its back on a promise to protect workers from unfair dismissal from day one in a job.The Latest News from the UK and Around the World | Sky News

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‘Landmark tower’ double the size of The Shard could be built in London

Plans have been announced for a new “landmark tower” in London with double the floor space of Britain’s tallest building, The Shard.The Latest News from the UK and Around the World | Sky News

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National Guard member shot in Washington DC ambush dies

One of the National Guard members shot in Washington DC on Wednesday has died from her injuries, Donald Trump has said.The Latest News from the UK and Around the World | Sky News

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Israeli forces kill Palestinians after they appear to surrender

Israeli forces killed two Palestinian men in the West Bank after they appeared to be surrendering.The Latest News from the UK and Around the World | Sky News

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British passenger missing after falling from cruise ship off Tenerife coast

A British passenger is missing after falling overboard from a cruise ship off the coast of Tenerife.The Latest News from the UK and Around the World | Sky News

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Reeves told she must ‘make the case’ for controversial tax move

Rachel Reeves needs to “make the case” to voters that extending the freeze on personal income thresholds was the “fairest” way to increase taxes, Baroness Harriet Harman has said.The Latest News from the UK and Around the World | Sky News

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The man who could become France’s next president – and his wish for the UK

Jordan Bardella has had a makeover.The Latest News from the UK and Around the World | Sky News

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Trail Mix raises over $67,000 at annual fundraiser

Photo Courtesy of Trail Mix

NOTN- Trail Mix, the nonprofit held its annual dinner and auction Nov. 22.

The fundraiser raised over $67,000 to aid in maintaining more than 250 miles of trails in the Juneau area.

The event, featured menu options from Breeze-In and a live auction hosted by Taylor Vidic, who also performed during the event.

Taylor Vidic preforms “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” Photo courtesy of Trail Mix

“We wrapped up another really incredible season on October 2. We employed over 23 people throughout the season to work on Juneau’s trails. We created an entirely new trail this summer, the Jumbo Reroute. So now you can head up Jumbo Mountain, all starting from Sandy Beach Park.” Said Meghan Tabacek, executive director of Trail Mix in an interview last month, “We were all over the place this summer. There was a lot of stuff to do on the trails, and we had a wonderful season with our crew, and also around 3000 volunteer hours. So really, really great community effort to keep our trails in shape.”

Trail Mix finished other major projects including repairs and upgrades near the Eagle Valley Center in preparation for a cabin installation next summer, and work on popular routes such as Amalga and Montana Creek.

As winter approaches, Trail Mix staff have been racing to finish trail assessments and preparations for next year’s season. While the bulk of their workforce is seasonal, two trail coordinators operate year-round, handling repairs and planning.

This year’s auction focused on expanding tools and equipment for the nonprofit’s volunteer program.

“Our big pitch this year at our auction is that our volunteer program has grown so much. We did 3000 volunteer hours, so we are fundraising to purchase a trailer and a set of tools that goes specifically out to our volunteer program.” Tabacek said.

Trail Mix’s work and volunteer sign-ups can be found at trailmixinc.org.

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Alaska timber industry says it needs more supply to survive

By: Larry Persily, Wrangell Sentinel

U.S. Forest Service workers clear a fallen tree from a trail in the Tongass National Forest. (U.S. Forest Service photo)

It was no surprise that everyone on the timber panel at this month’s Alaska Resource Development Council conference had the same message: The industry needs a larger supply of trees to cut.

And a steady, bankable supply, said Joe Young, of Tok, who started Young’s Timber in Alaska’s Interior more than 30 years ago.

Without long-term timber sales to supply a mill, “bankers will laugh you out of the room” when a mill owner asks for a business loan, Young said.

The Nov. 13 industry panel at the annual conference held in Anchorage also talked about demand for their product and the challenges in meeting that demand.

Juneau attorney Jim Clark, who has spent much of his life representing timber and wood pulp companies, said the Trump administration’s move to rescind the Roadless Rule, which has been around since 2001, could help open areas of the Tongass National Forest to logging.

The ban on road building has bounced between presidential administrations, like a ping pong ball, Clark said. “We’ll see if we can get this over with,” he said of the U.S. Department of Agriculture effort to rescind the rule, which will require an environmental impact statement.

In addition to the Tongass, the Roadless Rules affects tens of millions of acres of national forest lands in western states.

The lack of timber sales, financial pressures and opposition from conservation groups have knocked down Alaska timber industry jobs from almost 4,000 in 1990 to about 700 in 2015 and just 360 in 2024, according to Alaska Department of Labor statistics.

The timber industry in Southeast is getting only one-third of the log supply it needs, said Sarah Dahlstrom, public relations manager for Viking Lumber, which has operated a sawmill in Klawock for about 30 years.

Viking, the second-largest employer on Prince of Wales Island, needs more timber sales on federal, state and municipal lands, she said, contending that the U.S. Forest Service has failed to meet its commitment under a 2016 land management plan.

The mill cuts Sitka spruce, hemlock, red and yellow cedar, Dahlstrom said, and is a leading supplier of wood for piano soundboards and guitars.

“Steinway pianos would not exist if not for old-growth timber from the Tongass,” she said.

In addition to supplying the prized, tight-grain wood to Steinway & Sons’ factory in New York City, Viking supplies piano makers Kawai and Yamaha, and guitar manufacturers Gibson and Martin.

Steinway is worried enough about its wood supply that the company has written Alaska elected officials to advocate for the mill. “We use the top 1% of the top 1% of spruce,” company Chief Executive Ben Steiner told The Wall Street Journal this summer.

Dahlstrom said there are other small operators on Prince of Wales Island, cutting wood for pianos and musical instruments. And they all have the same problem of insufficient and unpredictable supply.

Viking also supplies manufacturers of doors, trim, fences, staircases, railing and window trim nationwide.

She complimented efforts by Wrangell Borough Manager Mason Villarma, who has been working to coordinate timber sales on the island between the state Department of Natural Resources, Alaska Mental Health Trust land office and the borough.

“I was born into a timber family,” she said of her dad and uncle, who built a mill in Hoquiam, Washington, more than 40 years ago, milling timber from the Olympic National Forest. She said she was not happy when her family moved to Klawock in 1994 and her dad and uncle took over the bankrupt mill.

In addition to lumber and boards, Viking sends wood chips south to be used in making corrugated boxes and supplies chips to the Craig School District which burns the wood waste to generate electricity and heat the swimming pool.

“Growing up, I didn’t know how cool it was,” she said of the industry she now calls home after resisting it when she was younger.

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Dunleavy appoints Rauscher and Tilton to Alaska Senate, opening two House vacancies

By: James Brooks, Alaska Beacon

Speaker of the House Cathy Tilton, R-Wasilla, talks to fellow lawmakers about rules for debate on House Bill 183 on Saturday, May 11, 2024. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)

Gov. Mike Dunleavy has appointed state Reps. George Rauscher, R-Sutton, and Cathy Tilton, R-Wasilla, to two vacancies in the Alaska Senate.

Each nomination will become effective if at least five of the Senate’s nine other Republicans approve them. Senate President Gary Stevens, R-Kodiak, said the votes will take place by secret ballot at 10 a.m. Saturday in Anchorage.

“Honestly, I think both of them are excellent candidates,” Stevens said on Wednesday, adding that he expects both to be confirmed.

If Rauscher and Tilton are confirmed, their House seats would become vacant, and Dunleavy would be required to appoint replacements within 30 days of their resignations. 

The two Senate seats became vacant after Sen. Mike Shower, R-Wasilla, resigned to run for lieutenant governor and Sen. Shelley Hughes, R-Palmer, resigned to run for governor.

The office of former Sen. Mike Shower, R-Wasilla, is seen in the Alaska state Capitol on Tuesday, Nov. 25, 2025. Shower's nameplate has been removed from beside the door, but a sticker commemorating Shower's time as an F-22 fighter pilot remains on the door. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)
The office of former Sen. Mike Shower, R-Wasilla, is seen in the Alaska state Capitol on Tuesday, Nov. 25, 2025. Shower’s nameplate has been removed from beside the door, but a sticker commemorating Shower’s time as an F-22 fighter pilot remains on the door. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)

Dunleavy’s picks were due no more than 30 days after their resignations, but he acted earlier, which will allow the replacement legislators to take office before the regular legislative session convenes in January.

“I can’t think of two Alaskans more qualified and committed to public service to serve in the Alaska Senate than Representatives Rauscher and Tilton,” Dunleavy said in a statement announcing the selections. “I have known and worked with both for as long as I have been in public office and I look forward to working collaboratively with them as senators. I also want to thank the local Republican district committees for taking the time to meet, deliberate, and send forward names for these seats. This process works best when the people closest to the communities are involved.”

Tilton, first elected to the House in 2014, was Speaker of the House from 2023 through 2024. Reached by phone on Wednesday in the middle of Thanksgiving shopping, she referred to a statement on her Facebook page.

“I look forward to collaborating with my Senate colleagues to advance sensible policy solutions, foster an energy renaissance, and usher in an era of renewed prosperity for all Alaskans,” the statement said in part. 

Rep. George Rauscher, R-Sutton, speaks in favor of the creation of an Alaska Department of Agriculture by executive order on Wednesday, March 19, 2025. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)
Rep. George Rauscher, R-Sutton, speaks in favor of the creation of an Alaska Department of Agriculture by executive order on Wednesday, March 19, 2025. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)

Rauscher said he’s already at work on a letter thanking Dunleavy for his appointment, but he declined to say what he thinks his confirmation chances are.

“It’s an honor,” Rauscher said of the appointment, “and I feel like it was quite the undertaking — the process — and to have it this close to seeing what the final outcome is, is always a relief in some ways, but it’s also very exciting that I am this close. So I appreciate the fact that the governor did consider me and thought highly enough of me to appoint me.”

Several senators said they expect Rauscher and Tilton to be confirmed, but each declined to say how he or she will vote, citing the need to work with them regardless.

Of the nine Republican senators who will be voting on this weekend’s confirmations, five are members of the Senate’s bipartisan majority caucus, and four are members of the Senate’s all-Republican minority.

Shower and Hughes were members of the House minority, and their replacements are expected to be as well.

Stevens said he’s conducting the confirmation vote by secret ballot in order to avoid the possibility of hurt feelings.

“I don’t want to have anybody have bad feelings when we start working together in January,” he said.

Stevens said he wants to give the House’s replacement process as much time as possible, since that will involve the appointment of two people new to the Legislature who will need to hire staff and uproot their lives in order to arrive in Juneau in January and be ready to work.

“I just want to make sure the House has all the time they need,” he said.