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Juneau Assembly retreat focuses on budget strategy as city faces shortfall

NOTN- The Juneau Assembly spent its Saturday retreat examining an estimated $11 million budget shortfall, Mayor Beth Weldon said it will take one to two years to fully understand as the city assesses the effects of recent voter-approved ballot measures.

“This is just an estimate because it will take us a year or two to figure out exactly what the ramifications of the ballot measures are, good or bad.” Weldon Said.

According to Weldon, about $4.4 million of the projected deficit is considered one-time cost.

The Assembly directed the manager to split reductions between delaying capital projects, including a planned waterfront museum, and pushing back one year of planned street work funded through the 1% temporary sales tax.

The remaining $6.6 million is tied to recurring costs. Weldon noted that additional financial pressures remain, including school district funding questions and outstanding police and fire labor contracts.

“To give people an idea of how big that is, when we did our priority list budgeting, all of our recreational facilities, everything together was $6 million. So we’re looking at some definitely cuts in service.” She said, “And on top of that, we also have to keep in mind that we have to have funding for glacial lake outburst floods and we have to have contracts out there for police and fire.”

To address the recurring shortfall, the city said it will tighten budget assumptions, such as eliminating long-vacant positions and delaying the launch of new programs, increase revenue, primarily through higher dockage fees and begin service reduction.

“We’re looking for community input on this, because this is where the community is going to feel it.” Weldon said.

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Juneau Dance Theatre marked 20th Nutcracker over the weekend

Photo courtesy of Juneau Dance Theater

NOTN- Juneau Dance Theatre celebrated its 20th production of The Nutcracker over the weekend.

The annual holiday tradition has become a cornerstone of the city’s festive season.

The four performances, held Dec. 5-7, featured guest artists Nanako Yamamoto and Aldeir Monteiro of the American Repertory Ballet, who returned for a second year in the roles of the Sugar Plum Fairy and her Cavalier. They joined a cast of about 85 dancers ranging in age from 4 to adult volunteers.

“We have families that come back year after year,” said Juneau Dance Theatre Executive Director Bridget Lujan “We have little ones that are in the audience one year and then on the stage with us the next year. There are all kinds of aspiring Ballerinas born the weekend of Nutcracker.”

JDT, which celebrated its 50th anniversary last year, has staged The Nutcracker nearly every season since the early 2000s.

Rehearsals for the cast, which includes dancers from age 8 through high-school seniors, were held on weekends through the fall, with dancers putting in extra hours of practice to prepare.

“We spend most of the weekend at the studio, we want to be efficient with the time, but we generally work about four hours on Saturdays, another four hours on Sundays, and that’s on top of all of their class time.” said Lujan.

As in past years, Juneau Dance Theatre offered a free outreach performance, giving nearly 1,200 elementary school students the chance to experience live ballet.

Juneau Dance Theatre will next host auditions for its variety showcase, Juneau’s Got Talent, on Dec. 13–14, followed by a winter showcase performance in mid-January.

More information about JDT programs and upcoming events is available at juneaudance.org.

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Trump signs law that revokes some limits on drilling in Alaska’s National Petroleum Reserve

By: James Brooks, Alaska Beacon

An exploration site at ConocoPhillips’ Willow prospect is seen from the air in the 2019 winter season. Willow is located in the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska. (Photo by Judy Patrick/provided by ConocoPhillips Alaska Inc.)

President Donald Trump has signed a resolution backed by members of Alaska’s Congressional delegation to revoke restrictions on drilling in the National Petroleum Reserve on the North Slope.

The White House announced Friday evening that Trump had signed Senate Joint Resolution 80 into law. 

SJR 80 uses the Congressional Review Act to reverse restrictions enacted during the administration of President Joe Biden. Those restrictions, imposed as part of a 2022 activity plan for the reserve, were intended to protect environmentally sensitive areas against harm from oil and gas drilling.

Developers and drilling advocates opposed the restrictions, saying they could deter work that would provide revenue for local residents and Alaskans at large. Trump has also been interested in developing Alaska’s oil reserves as part of a broader effort to increase American energy production and reduce imports.

ConocoPhillips’ Willow project is in the northeast corner of the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska. (Map by USGS, Department of Interior)
ConocoPhillips’ Willow project is in the northeast corner of the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska. (Map by USGS, Department of Interior)

The National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska is approximately 23.5 million acres. Located to the west of Alaska’s vast Prudhoe Bay oil fields it — unlike the Arctic National Wildlife Reserve to the east — has been the subject of interest from oil companies.

ConocoPhillips’ Willow Project, approved during the Biden administration, was the first major project to take place in the reserve, and others are planned.

Friday’s signing was one of several Trump administration actions taking place simultaneously to reduce regulatory obstacles for developers interested in drilling within the reserve.

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Winter Snow Removal Tips and Guidelines from CBJ Streets & Fleets

CBJ-With snow coming to Juneau, CBJ Streets & Fleet Maintenance would like to share information about winter snow removal in Juneau.  

CBJ Streets crews clear snow from the streets in order of the following priorities: 

  1. Clear access for emergency vehicles, public transit, commercial routes, and high-traffic streets. 
  2. Residential areas. 
  3. Low-traffic areas, including dead-end streets and cul-de-sacs. 

Snow berms: Operators make every effort to minimize snow accumulation on private property. However, berms and windrows are unavoidable. Crews do not clear snow—including berms—from driveways.  

Sidewalks and driveways: Property owners, landlords, and tenants are responsible for clearing snow and ice from sidewalks and driveways. Snow or ice may not be placed on any sidewalk, street, roadway, or parking area per CBJ 72.24.075

Garbage cans: Please place garbage cans at least five feet from the edge of the street to prevent them from being damaged during snow removal. 

Heavy snowfall brings challenges to both snow removal crews and property owners alike. CBJ Streets crews appreciate the work that you are doing to keep your home accessible, as well as your understanding of what our crews are able to accomplish. 

For more detailed information about snow removal on CBJ-owned streets, please visit juneau.org/engineering-public-works/streets/winter-maintenance-information.  

For information about snow removal priorities on DOT highways, please visit dot.alaska.gov/stwdmno/wintermap

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Child support comes first when considering debts owed in foreclosure, Alaska Supreme Court rules

By: James Brooks, Alaska Beacon

 Students swing on a playground at Meadow Lakes Head Start in Wasilla, Alaska. It closed in 2024 due to funding and staffing challenges. (Image by Lela Seiler, courtesy of CCS Early Learning)

The Alaska Supreme Court has ruled that the state’s child support system has first priority when a foreclosed property is sold to pay multiple debts.

The court issued its opinion on Nov. 28, resolving a long-running lawsuit brought by Global Federal Credit Union (formerly Alaska USA) against the state and several other defendants.

“This is a pretty important case from my client’s perspective,” said Jonathan Clement, a senior assistant attorney general who represented Alaska’s child support system.

“This is the first time that a court has actually decided that child support gets priority over all other judgment lien holders, even liens recorded earlier, when there’s surplus funds at issue,” he said.

The case decided by the court involved property in Eagle River that was mortgaged by Wells Fargo. In 2017, Global levied a lien against the property for unpaid debt. Shortly afterward, the state’s child support division recorded another lien against the property for unpaid debt.

Typically, liens are repaid in chronological order: First filed, first paid.

In 2018, a law firm sold the property through foreclosure and paid off the remaining Wells Fargo mortgage. There was money left over, but not enough to pay both Global and the state.

The state protested the law firm’s plans to pay Global first, and the firm complied with a state order that required it to pay the state first. 

Global sued in state court, but a district court judge and a superior court judge each ruled against the credit union before it appealed to the supreme court.

Writing on behalf of the court, Justice Jude Pate concluded, “Our interpretation of (state law) provides an effective priority for CSSD liens over competing judgment liens.”

Alaska’s Child Support Services Division (CSSD) is now known as the Child Support Enforcement Division (CSCD).

That priority doesn’t put the state above a bank holding a mortgage or “deed of trust” but it does give the state priority over other liens on the property.

 “The important thing for this case is that it gives CSCD another tool where they can try to collect money that’s owed by the obligors,” Clement said.

“I would say of all the cases I’ve worked on, this is the one that will have the most impact in my career going forward,” he said.

An attorney representing Global declined comment on behalf of the credit union. 

In a footnote attached to the case, Pate wrote that the court’s ruling could cause people to behave differently during foreclosure auctions.

He suggested that if the Legislature disagrees with the court’s interpretation, it might want to pass a law clarifying two conflicting statutes interpreted by the court.

“If our interpretation is contrary to the legislature’s intent,” he wrote, “amendments to the relevant child support statutes could clarify the interaction between child support liens, other liens, and mortgages.”

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Entertainment

Janelle Brown to Kody: I Don’t Know Who You Are Anymore

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Janelle Brown has no reason to hold back any longer.

On the December 7 episode of Sister Wives, Kody will decide to sit down with his former spouses and attempt to repair his relationships with them.

And he’ll start with Janelle.

(TLC)

“I just wanted to come and say that I apologize,” Kody says in a clip from the installment posted by People Magazine, adding that he has a list of apologies.

“I just love to apologize for, the first thing is, I want to kind of go backwards. I want to apologize for just being so angry and so bitter over the family breakup, and just nobody deserved to have me be that angry.”

Janelle replies by saying that she didn’t recognize Kody toward the end of their marriage.

“I kept thinking I don’t know who this guy is,” she explains. “I used to always tell everybody, I’m like, ‘This is not the guy that I was married to forever.’ You know what I mean.”

(TLC)

In a confessional, Janelle spells things out even more explicitly.

“The person I would see speaking all these things publicly, I’m like, ‘I don’t know who that guy is.’ I still don’t recognize him,” she tells the camera.

“It’s like somebody I’ve seen that I used to know a long time ago, lots of pieces that I recognize, lots of common things that we can remember together, but I don’t, I don’t recognize [him].

“He lives a completely different life; it feels like now. So do I.”

The footage then cuts back to the exes talking to each other… and Janelle recalling the dream she had for her marriage and their family, saying on air:

“I never saw this coming in a million years.”

Janelle Brown should be so very happy she’s done with Kody. (TLC)

Janelle appears to be moving on quite well since leaving Kody about three years ago.

But that doesn’t mean things aren’t always easy.

“When the family fell apart, I mourned more the loss of the ideal of what we were trying to do, right?” she adds on the episode.

“We had that ideal… We all got together and we were gonna raise the kids. Thank goodness the kids are all still pretty much they’re siblings, really, you know, that was one of the biggest things that we did accomplish. We had this whole ideal of how it was going to be.”

In her confessional, Janelle goes on:

“I think when I finally left Kody, I thought about the family so much more than our relationship for many, many, many years.

“I think maybe I lost track of our relationship and it might have been detrimental. I probably should have been focused a little bit more on our relationship and not so much the family.”

(TLC)

Kody revealed on last Sunday’s episode his reasoning for wanting to apologize to each of his ex wives.

“I kind of got just prayerfully tuned in, trying to go, ‘Okay God, what should I do about this mess that I’m in and how I feel?’ I just started getting this vibe that I need to go apologize,” he said in front of the camera.

“What I need to own about the breakups, about how things happened with the family. I don’t know how to say this just straight as I can: I want to set them free, just get them to stop thinking, talking, being about me.”

Sounds nice and narcissistic as always.

No wonder these women don’t want to reconcile with Kody.

Janelle Brown to Kody: I Don’t Know Who You Are Anymore was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Politics

Indiana Republicans threaten to thwart Trump’s redistricting onslaught

President Donald Trump’s maximalist, command-and-control approach to the GOP faces one of its most significant tests yet, as a band of stubborn Indiana state Senate Republicans threatens his mid-cycle redistricting scheme when it is expected to come to a vote this week.

The Hoosier Republicans will gavel in Monday to decide on a map, passed Friday by the Indiana House, that supporters say would all but guarantee a 9-0 Republican congressional delegation and would be in effect for next year’s pivotal midterm elections. Present maps give the GOP a 7-2 advantage.

Senate President Pro Tempore Rodric Bray, who — along with roughly half his 40-member Republican majority — has resisted a four-month White House pressure campaign to redraw the congressional lines. Indiana Conservation Voters, Club for Growth and Building a Better Economy are among the groups that have spent nearly half-a-million dollars in ads trying to sway public opinion — the first group against redistricting and the second two for — in recent weeks, according to AdImpact. Trump campaign veterans like Chris LaCivita have joined the dark money group Fair Maps Indiana to advance the cause, too.

Speaker Mike Johnson has been calling reluctant Republican state senators in recent days — reported here for the first time, based on accounts from two people granted anonymity to freely discuss sensitive private conversations. One Indiana Republican elected official briefed on the calls said Johnson’s “soft touch” with lawmakers may be moving the needle.

“Anybody who tells you they know how this is going to play out doesn’t know,” this person said.

A Johnson spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment.

House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) speaks with reporters as he departs a vote at the U.S. Capitol Dec. 3, 2025.

The matter is top of mind for the president, who brought up Indiana redistricting to visitors at a White House Christmas party Sunday attended by Gov. Mike Braun, according to a person present and granted anonymity to disclose the conversation. Trump asked Braun in front of other guests if redistricting would pass, and Braun responded it would.

The White House did not respond to a request for comment. Trump “thinks we should fight democrats every legal way we can to win the majority and keep accomplishing things for the people,” according to a Republican close to the White House granted anonymity to discuss the president’s motivations.

And on Friday, Turning Point Action announced that it was partnering with several Trump-aligned super PACs to target Indiana Republicans who are blocking the president’s redistricting effort, including threatening to spend millions of dollars to primary resistant members of the Indiana GOP.

Trump needs the backup: The state Senate’s reservations threaten to derail his plans to push new maps across the country to shore up his party’s slim House majority, which Democrats would seize by netting just three seats in an election that is expected to be a repudiation of the party in power.

“These guys and ladies are under intense, 24-hour-a-day pressure and I don’t know if they can withstand it, ultimately — we will see,” said Mike Murphy, a former Republican member of the Indiana House of Representatives. “I feel badly for them and their families, primarily. They came to be public servants, and instead they are pawns in really what I consider to be Trump’s strategy to avoid a third impeachment and potentially set himself up a third term.”

The Trump-backed pressure campaign in Indiana has included two visits from Vice President JD Vance to Indianapolis on Air Force Two, and repeated calls and invitations to Oval Office meetings — including with Trump, Bray and Speaker of the House Todd Huston in August.

Now, lawmakers will convene amid threats of violence following Trump’s series of social media posts ramping up pressure. At least a dozen elected Indiana Republicans have faced swattings — false reports of danger that bring an aggressive law enforcement response designed to intimidate the target — and pipe bomb threats. Few though have publicly reversed their positions against redistricting since they stalemated 19-19last month on a vote that was a close proxy for gerrymandering. That means Trump and the White House would need to flip at least half a dozen GOP senators to secure a simple majority to pass the new maps.

President Donald Trump speaks at a Kennedy Center Honors reception for recipients Sylvester Stallone, George Strait, Kiss, Gloria Gaynor and Michael Crawford at the State Department, Saturday, Dec. 6, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson)

“How does (Trump) have the time to mess with a nobody like me with all of the important matters that are to take his attention as the leader of the executive branch in this nation?” Republican state Sen. Greg Walker told a local newspaper in November.

Three Indiana Republicans close to the process — and granted anonymity to appraise support — said they do not believe there are currently enough votes in the Senate for the map to pass.

Asked whether he felt pressured by the White House to redistrict, Huston would only say, “We had conversations. There was no secret.”

Trump posted twice on Truth Social this weekend about his demand for redistricting in Indiana, the barn-red state he once called “Importantville” and that helped him clinch the GOP nomination in its May 2016 primary, saying, “this new Map would give the incredible people of Indiana the opportunity to elect TWO additional Republicans in the 2026 Midterm Elections.” He also posted the names of nine senators who “need encouragement to make the right decision” as they have not yet declared their position on the new map.

Turning Point last week deployed members of their “strike force” to meet with and whip many of those same senators, but the results of that effort remain unclear. “It’s so hard to judge at this point, because it’s such a fluid situation,” said Brett Galaszewski, Turning Point Action’s national enterprise director.

Meanwhile the Supreme Court reinstated Texas’ newly drawn congressional map last week, staving off a major setback to Trump’s redistricting campaign. Now, the GOP has nine more favorable seats across four states — Texas, Ohio, Missouri and North Carolina. Those will likely be offset by the five Democratic seats California Gov. Gavin Newsom scored in his counterpunch last month.

Redistricting battles are brewing around the country, with Democrat-led Virginia and Maryland headed in opposite directions of one another.

Virginia Democrats expanded their grip on power in the General Assembly by picking up 13 House seats while flipping three Republican-held statewide offices, including governor, in last month’s elections. Top Democrats in the state legislature appear unfazed by Indiana’s push to redraw its maps. The state’s top Democrat said it was “full steam ahead” – a reference to the state lawmakers clearing a procedural hurdle in October to put a constitutional amendment before voters to allow the Democratic-led legislature to redraw its maps ahead of the 2026 midterms.

“We have a plan and process in place that will facilitate delivery of our maps on time,” state Sen. L. Louise Lucas said via text Saturday. “Virginia is a good place to be.” Don Scott, the Virginia House speaker, opined that a new map could drastically change the delegation makeup in Virginia, which is near parity with six Democrats and five Republicans.

Scott said “10-1 is not out of the realm to be able to draw the maps in a succinct and community-based way,” at a public forum last week.

And in Maryland, Gov. Wes Moore continues to pressure his state lawmakers to take up new maps, but has run into opposition from state Senate President Bill Ferguson, who has refused to entertain bringing up a vote on the matter.

Maryland’s lower chamber appears poised to take up the issue, but House Speaker Adrienne Jones, who earlier this year publicly supported the governor’s redistricting push, stunned many in Annapolis by announcing Thursday she was immediately stepping down.It’s unclear what impact this will have on negotiations to redraw the state’s lines.

Moore’s Redistricting Advisory Commission, set up last month to solicit residents’ feedback on whether to craft new maps, is slated to hold its final public meeting Friday before it issues recommendations to the governor and Maryland General Assembly.

Trump set the latest redistricting arms race in motion when he leaned on Texas to redraw its maps earlier this summer.

“We don’t operate in a vacuum and states are doing this all across the country, red and blue states,” Huston told reporters Friday. “We felt like it was important for us to be a part of that, and to make sure that we used every tool we could to support a strong Republican majority.”

Asked whether he felt “proud” of the maps, Huston, who said in 2021 that he would “defend these maps all day long, six days to Sunday,” did not use that word, saying he felt “very blessed to lead the Indiana House of Representative.”

“I support this, and I support what we’re doing,” he said.

The state Senate committee on elections will meet in the Senate chamber to hear the congressional map Monday afternoon, with a final vote from the whole chamber expected Thursday.

Trump’s demands on Indiana lawmakers though have exposed some of the limits of his power.

“The MAGA movement hasn’t permeated down to the state legislative level,” said an Indiana Republican allied with Trump’s redistricting cause.

But this person, granted anonymity to discuss the tense debate, referenced primaries of resistant Indiana Republicans, saying, “we’re either going to get new maps, or we’re going to get a new Senate.”

“Some people think Trumpworld is bluffing or doesn’t have any juice left and this will just go away if the state Senate rejects the maps,” this person said. “The reality is that will only be the start of a long and brutal campaign to purge the state of anyone who opposed Trump on this issue. And there will likely be collateral damage that hurts even those who supported Trump.”

​Politics

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Health

Bill Clinton’s History Of Health Issues, Explained

While Donald Trump and Joe Biden’s presidencies have been dominated by news of their health, Bill Clinton only faced health issues after leaving office.

​Health Digest – Health News, Wellness, Expert Insights

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Entertainment

Add More Flavor To Your Beef Stew By Making It The Filipino Way

Is that beef stew recipe you’ve been making forever getting a little tired? Switch things up by drawing inspiration from how it’s made in the Philippines.

​Mashed – Fast Food, Celebrity Chefs, Grocery, Reviews

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Entertainment

Chain Restaurant Fried Fish Baskets Ranked From Worst To Best, According To Customers

Crispy wins and mushy losses separate the best chain fried fish from worst. Ratings and social buzz reveal which basket deserve your order and which fall short.

​Mashed – Fast Food, Celebrity Chefs, Grocery, Reviews