A legal review requested by lawmakers is questioning whether Alaska’s Division of Elections had authority to remove Dan J. Sullivan from the U.S. Senate ballot over filing concerns.
A legal review requested by lawmakers is questioning whether Alaska’s Division of Elections had authority to remove Dan J. Sullivan from the U.S. Senate ballot over filing concerns.
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A shoplifting call at an Anchorage Walmart that ended in a deadly officer-involved shooting has sparked discussion about retail theft across the city. Business owners told Your Alaska Link they face shoplifting in different ways and shared how they respond…
Following a shoplifting call that ended in a deadly officer-involved shooting, some Anchorage business owners say retail theft remains an ongoing concern.
Summerween time. Carved Halloween green jack-o’-lantern. Alternative Halloween pumpkin as a watermelon on yellow wall with space for text. Watermelon with a smiling face like a pumpkin for Halloween.
The post June, in photos appeared first on Chilkat Valley News.

Bering Sea snow crab, with two specimens seen in this undated photo, support an iconic Alaska seafood harvest. A crash in population triggered two consecutive years of closures, starting in late 2022. Federal officials are now providing $75.2 million in aid for the lost Bering Sea snow crab harvest in the winter of 2023-24, part of an aid package for recent fishery disasters in Alaska, Washington state, Oregon and California. (Photo provided by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration)
Alaska has been allocated about $99 million in new fishery disaster assistance, making up the majority of the $123.6 million in aid that federal officials on Wednesday said is headed to Alaska, Washington, Oregon and California.
In Alaska, the money is to address previously declared fishery disasters for Bering Sea snow crab and Chignik and Cook Inlet salmon harvests, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Fishery service said.
For the lost snow crab harvest of the 2023-24 winter, the second year that the usually lucrative fishery was canceled because of low stocks, NOAA Fisheries is allocating $75.2 million in aid. That follows a 2024 allocation of $39.5 million in aid for the lost harvest in the winter of 2022-23.
Snow crab harvests have now resumed, though at much lower levels than in past years.
For the Chignik salmon disaster that occurred in 2022, the agency is allocating $18.5 million in aid. For the declared disaster for the 2023 Upper Cook Inlet east side setnet salmon harvest, the agency said it is allocating $5.8 million in aid.
Other aid announced on Wednesday was for salmon disasters in 2023 and 2024 in California, Oregon and Washington state.
“Fishery resource disasters have devastating effects on local communities and our economy,” NOAA Administrator Neil Jacobs said in a statement. “This disaster funding provides much needed assistance to our fishing industry, and we will work with the affected communities to help them recover. This action demonstrates our continued commitment to hardworking American fishermen and to the president’s vision to uphold the United States as the world’s dominant seafood leader.”
Under federal law, NOAA Fisheries may provide aid to address disasters affecting commercial seafood harvests and losses to subsistence harvests. However, aid distribution depends on appropriations from Congress; there is no standing fund for NOAA to use for its disaster assistance program.
While aid amounts are now on their way for the three named 2022 and 2023 harvests, there are 13 pending disaster-assistance requests for various Alaska harvests that were plagued by problems in 2024 and 2025. Those fisheries are in multiple locations around the state, from Kotzebue in the northwest to the Yukon River in Interior Alaska to Prince William Sound in the eastern part of Southcentral Alaska.
In a joint statement, Alaska’s two U.S. senators said they were grateful for the assistance to harvesters and communities coping with multiple fishery disasters.
“Our fishing industry is part of the beating heart of coastal Alaska, but seemingly every fishery over the last decade has been hit hard by disasters beyond their control,” Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, said in the statement.
Sen. Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska, used similar wording: “Alaska’s subsistence harvesters, commercial fishermen, and fishing communities have endured a series of fishery disasters and stock collapses beyond their control, threatening livelihoods and entire coastal economies.”
Journalist Priska Neely from Birmingham, Alabama visited friends in Haines recently. This was Neely’s first visit to Alaska. She said the highlights of the trip were kayaking on Chilkoot Lake, operating a stick-shift vehicle for the first time in five years, whale-spotting, picnicking on Battery Point Trail, and having the best nap of her life. Neely took her legendary snooze on the fluffy grass in Fort Seward at the very same time Mayor Tom Morphet was also spotted enjoying a midday nap. Neely found herself volunteering at the Victory Garden later in the week. She learned an important lesson about personal growth and garlic with garden coordinator, Sarah Ammons, and shared it with followers on her social media where she posts regular “Life Lessons from Plants.”
Audrey Smith said the Alaska Arts Confluence recently installed two new artists’ work in the IGA windows for all to enjoy. Nancy Drake applies her love of portraiture to bears through the use of pastel, photography and woodburning. Justin Mitman’s ceramic rocks precariously balancing with a tiny gold nugget might suggest a balance that we try to achieve in our lives. These artists join Rhonda Degtoff, Helen Alten, Donna Catotti, Tom Ganner, Tresham Gregg and Denise Sherman-Stickler in the rotating window display.
Amelia Nash celebrated her birthday with much fanfare this weekend. Dave Thomas and Mollie Dwyer hosted a surprise petit parade of mini art floats, musical instruments, ribbon dancers, bubble blowers, kazoos and even a dinosaur, which burst in on Nash while she was enjoying a cocktail at the Port Chilkoot Distillery. From there, Nash was transported via wheelbarrow to the Big Gay Croquet bash underway at Fort Seward with help from Mike Swasey, Kelsey Lovig, Dirk Foss, Nick Schlosstein, Leah Wagner, Dustin Craney, and Rachel Saitzyk. The birthday parade joined roughly 40 croquet enthusiasts for a few rounds of tackle croquet, traditional croquet and killer ball croquet as well as hula-hooping and juggling. Prizes for Big Gay Croquet included hand-made rainbow wall hangings with devil’s club stalk, donated by Sue Clayton Folletti. Michelle Strohecker won Best Sportsmanship at the event. Nash’s half-century birthday bash went on to Dylan Morgan’s hostel in Officers Row for a taco bar, karaoke and a giant three-tiered lemon cake. The lemon cake was made by Andrea Nelson. It was nicely complimented by the bathtub full of prosecco, gifted by Nash’s sister Lenore Nash, who could not attend in person.
The Kluane Mountain Bluegrass Festival in Haines Junction, Yukon took place June 12-14 and was attended by a handful of faithful Haines bluegrass fans including Mardell Gunn, Nene Wolfe, Greg Podsiki, Judy Hall Jacobson, Terry Jacobson, Alison Adams, Tom Heywood, Marian and John Carlson, Chad Soiseth, Gina St. Clair, Dan Humphrey, Bill Finlay, Nancy McGrew, and Anna and Jim Jurgeleit. The festival has been drawing in Haines music fans since 2003 and includes bluegrass concerts, workshops, dancing, roving bands and plenty of camping options. This year four locals cycled to the festival, two cycled back. They reported strong headwinds and great music.
Ed Schmid, master glass blower and jack of all trades from Bellingham, Wa. was in Haines again recently. Schmid returned to visit his friend Bill Chetney and conduct some glass blowing lessons with locals and visitors at Viking Cove. Some of the highlights of this trip were flying over the glaciers and mountains with Drake Air, close encounters with migrating cetaceans, spout humps and flukes. One of Schmid’s pieces of art can be seen at the Hammer Museum, The Glass Claw Hammer with Handy Handle. Schmid made it in 2021 while teaching a local glass working class.
Lyndsey Marie DeFazio-Hura and her five year old son Jaxson Hura-Grant were both entered in the Haines sportsman’s associations Dolly Derby and on the prowl for Dolly Varden when they got a big surprise: a humpback whale, not two feet from them. Hura accidentally hit record and caught the short video of the whale bubble feeding right off the dock at Letnikof Cove about two feet from herself and Jaxson. He was standing at the side of the boat launch dock about to cast his line and she was about to get video of it. Right after the incident, she said that Jaxson marched up the dock and informed her that he was “done fishing for now, Mom!” She says that after a few minutes of negotiations he came back down and they watched the whale for a few more hours. Also noteworthy, Team Lyndsey Marie DeFazio-Hura and son won the final week of the Dolly Derby.
The Haines Animal Rescue Kennel board member Michelle Strohecker said a new “Tiny Library for dogs” came to fruition after the staff brought the creative idea to the board. The box, which looks like the Little Free Libraries seen around the world, is stocked with dog must-have’s for a good day in Haines. This includes, but is not limited to, balls, bandanas, squeaky toys, and a curated selection of the best fetching sticks in town. The library features pet waste bags for daily use, on the side. HARK staff say that dog lovers can replace items as needed, but ask that people not contribute food or treats, and clean toys only.
Local Haines artist Matilda Rogers has released her first album with the band Petty Thieves. The EP is five tracks called The Things We Stole, released June 4th. The album includes Maddox Rogers as producer, Aaron Davis, recording engineer and song writer Addison Myers. Myers and Matilda Rogers have been making music since they met while rafting in Wyoming.
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A lunch break on a gravel bar on the Klehini River wound to a close as Russ Lyman and Joe Ordóñez studied a massive log jam. The duo have guided raft trips in the Chilkat Valley for nearly 40 years.
The tangled pile of trees blocked one channel of the river and had the potential to flip one or both of the 16-foot rafts being used on this expedition.

The two stood on the riverbank, binoculars in hand, considering the group’s options.
In front of them, the logs were being squished together by the loud, strong current, with branches shaking. The white water below the logs pointed out just how much force was in front of this jam.
They devised a plan to avoid the jam entirely by crossing over two channels.
Ordóñez and Lyman took over the oars from guides in training and brought the boats across the first channel, where passengers hopped out to scoot the boat over a gravel bar. They then crossed the second channel, sticking to one side and watching the log jam’s immense force as the boat drifted by, unscathed. Lyman approached the situation with calm expertise, as the new guides looked on, learning from each paddle stroke. Passengers gripped the rope on the perimeter of the boat, keeping a steady eye on the jam they had just passed.
Once past the obstacle, Rainbow Glacier Adventures’ newest guides, Lydia Andriesen and Jack Kendall, took over the oars again. This is the duo’s first season as raft guides in the Chilkat Valley.
While looking out for obstacles downstream, Lyman began counting up roughly how many trips he had done on the Klehini and Chilkat rivers. He estimated that he would do roughly 200 rafting trips a year, which adds up to “a thousand” trips on the river. Lyman started guiding on daytrips but switched over to 10-12 day trips on the Alsek and Tatshenshini rivers. Ordóñez also guided these longer trips.
“We spent all summer on those rivers and that’s how you really get good,” Ordóñez told the new guides during their lunch break on a bank of the river around 30 mile of the Haines Highway.

This June 5 training run for the river guides is something of an annual tradition for raft companies in Haines, helping prepare new guides to manage hundreds of passengers who want to float down the river and see wildlife.
The upper Klehini River serves as a level-up for new guides, providing challenges that are not as common on the Chilkat River where they most often escort passengers.
The Klehini has a steeper gradient, more debris and a swifter current than the Chilkat River.
“I always believe that the guides need to be competent above their level,” said Rainbow Glacier Adventures owner Ordóñez . “They have to be able to perform in a situation beyond what the river is showing them right now.”
Ordóñez has been rafting in Haines since 1987. He and raft guide instructor Lyman took the company’s newest river guides down the Klehini as part of their preparation for the summer season.
As guides are giving their spiel, pointing out eagles, bears or other natural sights during rafting trips, they also have to navigate down the river and look ahead to avoid upcoming obstacles.
Guides also learn how to move with the river, not against it, while paddling.
“You are not stronger than this river,” Ordóñez said.
Rafting requires knowledge not only of the river but also of its surroundings. Lyman said one of the biggest challenges for guides is learning how to read the river’s ripples, which indicate where the deep water is to avoid unwantedly beaching the raft.
“With the fast pace of the Klehini, you really got to be making those quick choices and committing to a good line,” said Kendall.
The river changes day to day, week to week.
When Lyman started guiding in 1989, the Tsirku River was running in a completely different area through the forest. Lyman estimated that over the course of 15, maybe 20 years, “it worked its way… across the delta clear to the lower end.” Both the Klehini and Tsirku rivers join the Chilkat River.
“It shifts around like that real dramatically,” he said.
The Klehini is also changing, cutting further west toward the forest. Lyman said there is one section where this change is especially visible, in a bank cutting into the forest just after the Porcupine Bridge.
He estimates that “eventually that’s probably where most of the river will go.”
The river, according to Lyman, is eroding everywhere.
“Eventually, that little tiny flood channel we were seeing, years from now that could be the main channel cutting back through here,” he said.
Guides have to learn how to read the river and manage changes that happen daily.
At one point, passengers on one of the rafts got stuck on a gravel bar. They bounce on the inflated tubes to help push the boat off the bank and back into the current.
Gravel bars, submerged trees, constantly shifting channels and swift-moving water are some of the obstacles guides face.

“One of the biggest things is that the people who are training me have been doing it for 40 years, you don’t often get the experience,” Andriesen said while paddling the raft.
The Klehini is classified as Class II and sometimes Class III river when water levels are high. Rivers are classified from Class I to Class V, with V being the most difficult or technically challenging whitewater. Class II rivers are defined as straightforward rapids with Class III having more intense rapids.
Andriesen and Kendall were practicing their swiftwater stop with lines. To conduct this stop, guides line up the boat to be at a 45-degree angle from the river bank, and get a bag with rope attached to the boat. Holding this rope, the guides jump onto the dry banks, stopping the raft from continuing down the river. Lyman said that this is a technique that is unique to the rivers in the Chilkat Valley.
“We have to be able to stop where there’s not an eddy or anything, on our own.” Lyman has been rafting in Haines on and off for 37 years and has been instructing new guides on and off for the past 10 years.
All guides are required to have their wilderness first responder certificate and swiftwater rescue training. Swiftwater training teaches guides to be able to get a boat unstuck, utilize rope work and learn the current.
Every spring, Lyman helps instruct the new round of Chilkat Guides’ guides. This training lasts for nine days. For most of these guides, it’s their first time in Alaska and often their first time rowing.
Before guides get out on the river, they practice in an on-land raft and then head to Chilkoot Lake or the harbor to learn the basics of rowing. Lyman estimates that usually two-thirds have never rowed before. During training, guides learn how to row a raft, read the river, navigate the channels and perform a swiftwater stop with eight passengers.
This year, Chilkat Guides trained 27 new guides over the course of nine days and Rainbow Glacier Adventures trained two new guides, all of whom Lyman helped instruct.
The post Raft guides learn the sticks on an ever changing river appeared first on Chilkat Valley News.
The indefinite closure of Haines’ popular Chilkoot campground may be coming to an end.
The Alaska Division of State Parks, which administers the Chilkoot Lake campground, has kept the facility and its 32 camp sites closed this season due to what they say is understaffing.
Now, state parks has advertised a new park technician position, which, when filled, will allow the campground to reopen, regional superintendent Brad Garasky said this week. The position closes on June 30.
Even advertising the vacant position had been a major hurdle due to a state government hiring freeze put in place by Gov. Mike Dunleavy last spring. To bypass the hiring freeze, state agencies must get a waiver from the Governor’s office specific to each position they hope to hire for.
During an assembly meeting last month, mayor Tom Morphet said the community and borough officials would “have to raise our voices a little bit, stomp our feet,” to push the state for a new hire and campground reopening.
The foot stomping has come from multiple sources:
This winter, the regional State Parks Citizen Advisory Board sent a letter to Dunleavy and Department of Natural Resources commissioner John Crowther advocating for new hiring and campground reopening.
“Restoring these roles, especially the Parks Technician and associated seasonal support positions, would directly improve day-to-day operations, protect public safety, and strengthen the tourism infrastructure that so many Southeast communities rely on,” wrote board chair and Haines resident Nate Arrants.
State Parks officially submitted its request to hire for the park technician position on Feb. 27, but for months it went unapproved.
Earlier this month, borough manager Alekka Fullerton, along with the borough’s state government lobbyist met with Crowther and sent him an official letter earlier advocating the governor approve hiring for the vacant position.
Yet a third letter came from former Haines Borough manager Annette Kreitzer, who recently announced her candidacy for the state representative seat for the Chilkat Valley.
In her letter, Kreitzer referred to “a drastic need for a waiver for a park technician to re-open the Chilkoot State Park Campground.”
Kreitzer, a longtime legislative staffer and former commissioner of the Alaska Department of Administration, has pitched her experience and state government relationships as pluses of her candidacy.
“That’s not the way you engage with the state,” she said of Morphet’s feet-stomping analogy. “I don’t doubt others have attempted to call, but connections are important. I have lots of relationships (in state government) that I don’t try to pull on more than I need to or want to, but to me there was no movement on the issue.”
Meanwhile, her opponent, incumbent Andi Story, said she has been advocating to fill the vacant Chilkoot position for months.
“I have elevated this request to the last two Commissioners’ attention multiple times,” Story wrote in an email this week.
Story also said requests for hiring freeze waivers “have been a group effort for quite some time,” citing the advisory board’s letter and advocacy from Haines residents.
Department of Natural Resources spokesperson Lorraine Henry said this week the waiver had been approved by the governor as a “public safety exemption” to the hiring freeze.
Reopening the campground should increase both access to the popular state recreation site, as well as discussions of how to best manage the area.
Chilkoot Lake is particularly popular due to the proximity of bears to the campground and road. Bear viewing, however, has presented challenges, with reports last year of tourists dangerously close to bears, and citations for tour operators stopping in the road for bear viewing.
Diane Moore, who has worked seasonally in Haines out of her RV for the last four summers, said she’d ordinarily spend some time at the Chilkoot campground. Instead, she’s currently at the Haines Hitch-Up RV Park, which she also works for.
“It’s a special place. It’s just beautiful,” Moore said of the Chilkoot area. But, she added, she makes a habit of checking the cruise ship schedule anytime she goes out to the lake in the hopes of avoiding the crowds.
It was a similar message from Sue Rakes, who has worked as State Parks’ campground host for the last two summers. Rakes spoke to the value of bringing people to the Chilkoot area, but also the importance of safe interactions with bears.
“I think it’s natural that people want to be tied into nature, they just need the tools to do it,” she added. “When people have that knowledge they want to take on the responsibility of looking out for the welfare of the bears, and they can just be in wonder and enjoy nature.”
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