Categories
Alaska News Featured Juneau News juneau Juneau Local Juneau Local Ketchikan Local News Feeds Sitka Local

City, Tribal and Federal leaders united to boost flood preparedness at community open house

Flood Preparedness open house at Thunder Mountain Middle School on June 9. Photo by News of the North.

NOTN- Juneau residents had the opportunity to learn more about preparing for this year’s glacial lake outburst flood at a community open house last night. 

The City and Borough of Juneau, along with emergency response partners, hosted the event at Thunder Mountain Middle School. Representatives from local, state and federal agencies were on hand to answer questions about flood preparedness, response efforts, volunteer opportunities and available resources.

“We’re grateful for our partners and everyone who came out.” Said CBJ Emergency Programs Manager Ryan O’Shaughnessy, “I think the message that I’d like to share with everyone is that it’s never too early to start preparing for these kinds of events. Suicide Basin, the last several years has become totally full before its release. It’s important to remember that we can go from ready to go and totally skip a step at any point, so we’d like to encourage folks to have a plan, have a go bag, and know what their emergency response plan looks like for themselves.”

Participating organizations included Tlingit and Haida, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the National Weather Service, the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation, the American Red Cross and the University of Alaska Southeast. 

“We’ll have more events on July 11th over at the Diamond Park Field House, that’ll be from 11 to 3, and we’ll be doing community training on how to fill sandbags, how to stack your sandbags, and we’ll also be working with some community partners to distribute and pass out filled sandbags for folks that might need that level of assistance.” O’Shaughnessy said, “We’ll have more sandbag filling opportunities on the 18th and 25th, but we’re really looking forward to that July 11th meeting where people can hear from more experts, and also get those sandbag resources.”

Residents who could not attend can find more information online, by email, or through the city’s ongoing flood preparedness updates found at #ReportfromtheRiver.

Categories
Alaska News

Federal appeals judges reject lawsuit against Alaska Airlines by former state senator

Sen. Lora Reinbold, R-Eagle River, speaks Tuesday, May 10, 2022, on the floor of the Alaska Senate at the Alaska State Capitol in Juneau, Alaska. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)

Sen. Lora Reinbold, R-Eagle River, speaks Tuesday, May 10, 2022, on the floor of the Alaska Senate at the Alaska State Capitol in Juneau, Alaska. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)

A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit has upheld the dismissal of a lawsuit by former Alaska state Sen. Lora Reinbold, R-Eagle River, against Alaska Airlines.

Alaska Airlines banned Reinbold in 2021 for refusing to follow its masking policies during the COVID-19 pandemic emergency. She sued the airline in 2023, after leaving office.

By email, Reinbold said she was dissatisfied with the court’s decision.

“Alaska Airlines is the sole carrier to Juneau, which puts it in a position to control access to government, courts, medical care, and family for every Alaskan — and the same dynamic plays out in Hawaii and other places where a single carrier holds the keys,” she wrote. “A monopoly carrier with that kind of power needs accountability — including to the federal disability law it tried to ignore. The Ninth Circuit did not appear to grasp how serious that question is. This case deserved a thorough review and an assessment of the broad future impacts.”

Reinbold delivered oral arguments in April, the panel issued its order May 20, and Reinbold on June 3 filed a motion on June 3 asking the full court to hear the case. That motion is pending.

Reinbold, who represented herself in the suit, noted that Alaska Airlines was the sole commercial air carrier between Anchorage and Juneau during the 2021 legislative session, and her ban effectively denied her the ability to travel to Anchorage by commercial air flight. 

She ultimately drove across Canada and took a state ferry to reach Juneau.

Alaska Airlines’ monopoly, combined with its implementation of federal rules, made it a state actor and thus subject to constitutional claims, Reinbold argued.

Furthermore, the airline gave her no opportunity to appeal the ban, she said.

An Alaska District Court judge dismissed the case in 2024, and the judge rejected Reinbold’s attempt to amend her complaint and keep the case a live issue. 

“When corporations enforce government policy, hand-in-hand with the state, constitutional protections such as fair notice and due process must still apply,” she said by email.

During court arguments, Alaska Airlines raised a variety of procedural issues with Reinbold’s complaint and argued that it was not a government agency and thus not liable for alleged violations of the U.S. Constitution.

“Plaintiff was entitled to her personal views about COVID-19,” the airline’s attorneys wrote in 2023. “She was not, however, empowered to invoke her personal notions to evade or disregard federally mandated requirements for air travel that applied to all other Alaska Airlines guests during a worldwide pandemic.”

The airline was represented in court by attorney Richard Grotch, who said Reinbold did have a doctor’s note indicating that she did not need to wear a mask, but she never indicated that during booking, as the airline required.

“There’s no constitutionally guaranteed right to fly. There’s certainly no constitutionally guaranteed right to fly Alaska,” he said. 

SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE