30 September 2017

More Funding Available For Voc Ed Students

Courtesy of Ron Niebrugge
In Bethel Wednesday, Governor Bill Walker signed legislation to help build a Stronger Alaska through House Bill 141, which authorizes the Alaska Workforce Investment Board to continue making allocations to the Alaska Technical and Vocational Education Program through June 30, 2020.

In 2016, ten institutions serving over 10,000 Alaskans received TVEP funding. including Soldotna’s Amundsen Educational Center.  AEC offers three degree programs in administration, medical and construction fields – setting up workers for success as they attempt to gain entry in the local workforce.

AEC Program Director, Business Instructor Bridgit Gillis: “We developed relationships with a lot of the area businesses here, and we are able to speak with them about skills and qualities that  they deem necessary or would be successful for students, and so we are able to teach students those specific skills and abilities.”

Alaska Technical Vocational Education Program recipients receive non-competitive grant funds as part of a statewide vocational training system, working together with industry and state agencies to provide a comprehensive and unified response to Alaska’s training needs.

TVEP funds must be used for technical and vocational training programs that align with workforce regional demands and the Alaska Workforce Investment Board’s industry priorities as outlined in  Alaska’s Future Workforce Strategic Policies and Investment Blueprint.

According to their website, Alaska’s vocational and technical education and training system uses coordinated programs and service delivery to promote progressive, lifelong occupational learning, skill transferability, credential portability, and worker mobility.
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Picking Berries For Science


Courtesy of Ron Niebrugge
Scientists at the University of Alaska Fairbanks are hoping to be able to offer berry pickers better data on when berries are ripening and how long they last through winter — by compiling survey data direct from the berry pickers.
UAF’s the Winterberry citizen project needs help gather information about berries across the state.  They are trying to better predict how berries are being effected by climate change and want you to tell them when berries are ready for picking.  They are hoping to determine how many berries will survive winter and provide food for for the small animals.

Rose hips, high and low bush cranberries and crowberries are the focus of the study as those berries are important food sources for voles, fox, and ptarmigan. With early summers and later winters, researches are concerned  that the gap between berries getting ripe and freezing will make many of the fruits inedible, making a hard winter for those who depend on the superfoods nutrients.

According to the folks at Alaska Wildberry Products, this summer has been a difficult year for Alaskan’s favorite fruit. 

Dr. Christa Mulder
Alaska Wildberry Products Kon Lor: “Salmonberries are bad, raspberries, because of all the rail, haven’t been doing that great. Berry people have been finding red and black currants, and I think red and black currants are already dwindling. We haven’t had anything else come in.  Fireweed hasn’t been that great – it’s been so rainy.”

Unseasonably damp conditions are something new that the researchers are looking at as well.

UAF’s Dr. Christa Mulder:”…the other thing that may be really important and we are starting to think about as we are looking at berries from this year, is that if it is a really wet year they may also rot more. It might not just be temperature and timing, it also might be the conditions that they are in when they are hanging out until they freeze.”

Any Alaskan who wants to help can sign up and complete training either in person or online, they are looking for individual volunteers, K-12 classes, after school programs, parents and children.  Participants must commit to watching a berry patch for two years.

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28 September 2017

State Doubles Down In Support of Arctic Outer-Continental Shelf Leasing


 With the re-opening of the Chukchi Sea for oil exploration comes new economic opportunity, and the State of Alaska wants to be sure it has a say in what happens in federal waters off it shoreline.

Thursday, August 31st the State of Alaska filed a motion to intervene in a lawsuit regarding access to the oil and gas resources located in the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas on the Arctic Outer-Continental Shelf.

The U.S. Geological Survey and Bureau of Ocean Energy Management suggests as much as 40 billion barrels of undiscovered, technically recoverable conventional oil and more than 200 trillion cubic feet of conventional natural gas lie in the region.
It is hoped that OCS production would boost throughput in the Trans-Alaska Pipeline, and increase state revenue and jobs.
Kara Mortiarty

Alaska Oil & Gas Association Kara Mortiarty: “Frankly, development can impact Alaska in a very positive way.  It creates jobs. Even though we wouldn’t get the same percentage of royalty as we would a state land, there are still the infrastructure that would be built, there would be property tax paid, they would have to pay a corporate income tax.” 

More than filling up TAPS and lowering the tariff charges, Senate Majority Leader Peter Micchiche feels that the underlying principal of state’s rights must always be vigorously defended.

Senator Peter Micciche (R D-O): “When you look at the folks that are intervening right now, there is a long list – League of Conservation Voters, there is Natural Resources Defense Council, Sierra Club – a lot of people from somewhere else that don’t believe that Alaska has the right to develop our own resources…We have a constitutional requirement to produce our natural resources.”
Peter Micciche

Micciche further stated that it was the reason Alaska became a state, and only by developing our natural resources can we sustain ourselves.

Late in his presidency, President Barack Obama withdrew the entire Chukchi OCS and the vast majority of the Beaufort OCS from the Department of Interior’s 2016 5-Year Offshore Leasing Plan without consulting with state and local governments. In April, President Donald Trump reversed that decision, signing an order reopening the Chukchi Sea OCS and portions of the Beaufort Sea for potential exploration.

This matter is now in court. The State’s motion seeks to intervene in support of the President’s April order. In a written statement, Governor Bill Walker suggested that state agencies routinely balance environmental conservation and protection with responsible resource development, and the Arctic OCS is no different.

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08 September 2017

Campaigns Breaking Law With Political Sign Placement

 With political signs popping up like a field of dandelions next to local roadways, the Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities is reminding enthusiastic Alaskans that the use of public right of ways for political advertising is strictly prohibited.

In 1998, Alaskans overwhelmingly voted to keep the state free from from outdoor advertising.

Alaska statutes and regulations address unauthorized signs both within and along the State’s public right of ways. The ban includes parked vehicles displaying political signs.

The law prohibits political signs on private or commercial property adjacent to the State’s public right of way located within 660 feet of the nearest edge of the right of way or erected or maintained with the purpose of their message being read from the main traveled way.

The signs create safety hazards by obstructing views, distracting drivers, and creating obstacles in collisions.  These signs may be removed by DOT crews without notification, and it can get expensive fast.

The law says that the property owner or the person placing or maintaining the unauthorized political sign is subject to removal expenses of at least $50 per sign; fines of at least $50, and as much as $5,000 if convicted of a misdemeanor; and associated costs.

Items impounded by DOT&PF may be held in storage for a period of up to 30 days. Items in storage are destroyed after 30 days.

Owners may claim the signs by paying all fees and costs associated with removal. DOT&PF is not responsible for damage to the signs during removal, transport, or storage.

Find out if a sign is properly located by searching it’s location on the State Right-of-Way Map page or in the Federal Aid Highways: Interstate, Primary, and Secondary Highways of Alaska. For more information, please review the Department’s webpage.

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06 September 2017

Last Student To Get Forestry Degree Underscores Need For Alaskan Foresters

Sagen Maddalena
UAF’s Sagen Maddalena is an amazing shooter.  Two-time All-American and co-team captain, she just missed representing the United States at the Rio Summer Olympics. Maddalena is just making it through the University of Alaska Fairbanks Forestry program. 

She will be one of the last students to get a minor in Forestry as part of her Natural Resources Management degree.

It wasn’t that long ago that forestry was the second largest industry in Alaska. According to the Alaska Forest Association, 4,600 workers made better than average wages producing  shop lumber destined for remanufacture, dimensional lumber, railway ties, shakes and shingles, and music wood out of the high quality Sitka spruce and western hemlock.

Lower quality timber was made into dissolving pulp, which was sold around the world for producing rayon, pharmaceuticals and paper products.

Courtesy of Ron Niebrugge
Resource Development Council website says Alaska’s forest products industry provides hundreds of jobs and contributes millions of dollars to Alaska’s economy still.  

Furthermore, each direct timber job creates at least three indirect jobs for doctors, retailers, teachers, and more.

Properly managing our forests for multiple uses requires an intimate knowledge of our unique ecology. Alaska hire? Good luck with that.

UAF School of Natural Resources & Extension Director of Academic Programs Dave Valentine: “Four years ago, students could take courses in forest management, silviculture, forest health and get a Natural Resource Management degree with an accredited Forestry option. We no longer have that Forestry option. We no longer have a Department of Forest Sciences that administers that option, and we no longer have accreditation from the Society of American Foresters.”

Valentine says that budget cuts mean that retiring faculty don’t get replaced, and in this case – much is lost.

We are losing more than just jobs for Alaskans, by losing the university program we are losing vital academic research that decision makers should be relying on when making key policy decisions in a changing climate.

UAF Director of Academic Programs Dave Valentine: “If we are in a new climate regime, and it appears that we are, it appears that the spruce bark beetle is able to have a couple of generations a year nowadays where it used to be just one.”

UAF is still offering a minor in Forestry, but Valentine says it struggles to hire retired faculty back to teach the required courses, and he really doesn’t know how long they can continue the program.

Forestry is a scientific discipline. It’s very specific knowledge that keeps our forests healthy. Different species of Alaskan trees need different methods of harvest for optimum regrowth and economic return.

In Alaska, there are two distinct forest types that comprise the two largest national forests in the United States.  The coastal rainforest begins in southern southeast Alaska, and extends through Prince William Sound, and down the Kenai Peninsula to Afognak and Kodiak Islands.  The boreal forest covers much of interior and southcentral Alaska.

The cedars of the Tongass can benefit from being in a mixed forest with multiple age management that would allow them more shade. Here in southcentral,  species like western hemlock and Sitka spruce desire sunlight and space for optimum regeneration and regrowth. 

Clearcut logging can give young trees the opportunity to thrive – better choice than selective harvesting, because the relatively thin bark on these species makes them more susceptible to harm. Spruce beetle kills, wild fire regrowth, and salmon stream protection are all issues that foresters need site specific knowledge to manage properly.

With staff coming up from elsewhere, forest managers will spend more time training new recruits than managing one of Alaska’s vital resources.

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05 September 2017

Kenai Peninsula Borough Assembly To Look At School District’s Marks

Courtesy of Matt Crockett
The Kenai Peninsula Borough School District will be offering it’s quarterly report at tonight’s Kenai Borough Assembly meeting in Chambers at 6pm.

The school district recently received a report card based off of standardized tests taken by the students.  Copies of the test results are going to be in parent’s hands soon, and the school board wants them to understand what they mean in context.

Kenai Borough School District Communications Liaison Pegge Erkeneff: “Doesn’t effect course grades, graduation or grade retention, but students do get focused  support to improve when we can look at those results.

Pegge Erkeneff 
Sunday Aurora Borealis Charter School was ranked first in all the elementary schools in Alaska by SchoolDigger.com. The average standard score for the 188 students was 96.7.  The school benefits from a 15.6 student/teacher ratio.

McNeil Canyon Elementary came in 11th, West Homer 16th, and Fireweed Academy came in 38th.  Soldotna Montessori 45th, Kalifornsky Beach 55, Chapman 59th, Seward 62, Tustumena 64, Redoubt 67, Mt. View 76, Kaleidoscope School of Arts & Sciences 80, Connections 86, Ninilchik 92, Nikiski North Star 113, Soldotna 146, Sterling 149, and Razdotna 155.

Aurora Borealis Charter School continued its domination of the field by keeping its first place ranking for middle schools, with an average score of 99. Homer Middle School ranked 5th, Chapman 14th, River City Academy 25th, Seward 27, Kenai 41, Nikolaevsk 45, Ninilchik 52, Connections 54, Skyview 62nd, and Nikiski 72.

Nikolaevsk High School came in 5th with its 64 students and 9.1 student teacher ration earing an average standard score of 91.9.  This school is distinguished in that almost 80% of students are free lunch recipients.  Homer High ranked 7th, Ninilchik 18th, Connections 29th, and Voznesenka School 36th.   Soldotna High came in 44th, Nikiski 46th, Seward 51st, and Kenai 55th.

The school rankings were updated September 3rd and based on PEAKS English Language Arts, PEAKS Mathematics, ASA Science test scores released by the Alaska Department of Education.

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Faux Service Dogs A Disservice To Disabled


It’s difficult to go a day without running into Kenai residents enjoying their pets.  Whether they are working wildfowl on the flats, keeping time with a baby carriage on the trail or patiently waiting for their owner to get out of the post office – dogs are everywhere.

As much as companion animals are welcomed, some animal lovers have taken it a step further, purchasing gear that suggests their pet is a service animal.  Kacy Cooper of Cooper’s Wounded Bear Farm and Kennel says this does a great disservice to those who actually rely on service animals for assistance, because it diminishes the validity of the practice.

Kacy Cooper: “Real service dogs are amazing animals, and when people just say, oh it is a service dog because they want to take their dog on the plane or the bus or in the grocery store.  I definitely don’t agree with that.”

Courtesy of Benjamin Earl Traylor
Emotional support animals are a completely different animal with a completely different purpose. Because they provide benefit by their mere presence, they are not required to have rigorous training like a service dog – whose thousands of hours of training can cost upwards of $20,000.
  
A pack of untrained, or poorly trained dogs in public places, and on crowded airplanes has lead to significant problems for service dogs as the fake service dogs are giving the real ones a bad reputation.

The Americans with Disabilities Act limits the definition of a service animal to one that is trained to perform “work or tasks” in the aid of a disabled person. Those who register with Soldotna Animal Control get a financial bonus.

Soldotna Animal Control Marianne Clark: “The City of Soldotna will waive a dog license fee if the dog is certified by a recognized service animal institution.”

The key word is “recognized”. Online you find a den of deceit as webstories sell service dog vests, tags, harnesses and other paraphernalia, and websites claim to offer registry, certification, licenses, or other documentation for service dogs—all scams.

A certified service animal is an animal trained to assist someone with a disability and certified by a school or training facility for service animals to have completed such training.  The Kenai Kennel Club offers a Canine Good Citizen certification after a formal process of testing and training good behavior, it’s a great foundation – but not enough to qualify a dog as a service animal.

Businesses are often confused about what is legal and what isn’t when it comes to service dogs, since they are protected by Alaska State law.  The Soldotna Animal Control office reports that it gets a lot of complaints and questions about service animals, since the explosion of “therapy” and “emotional support” animals over the last few years.
Under the ADA, a service animal is a dog that has been trained to perform tasks or do work for the benefit of a person with a disability. The tasks or work the animal does must be directly related to the person’s disability, such alerting a handler of an impending seizures, reminding handlers to take medication, or helping those who are visually impaired to navigate safely.

It is important to note that a dog that is trained to calm a person suffering an anxiety attack due to post-traumatic stress disorder is considered a service dog, while a dog whose mere presence calms a person is not. The act specifically states, “dogs whose sole function is to provide comfort or emotional support do not qualify as service animals under the ADA.”

That same law allows businesses or individuals to ask a disabled person two questions about their service animals: Is the dog a service animal required because of a disability? What task is the dog trained to perform?  They cannot invade a person’s privacy by asking about the nature of the disability and no proof can be requested to prove a dog is a service animal.


Alaska State Law makes it a crime to prevent someone with a disability from being accompanied by, or receiving assistance from, a certified service animal in a public place. Alaska’s Human Rights Law defines a disability as a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits a major life activity or a condition that may require the use of a prosthesis, special mobility equipment, or a service animal. The ADA covers psychiatric service animals, which can help their handlers manage mental and emotional disabilities by interrupting self-harming behaviors, checking spaces for intruders, or providing calming pressure during anxiety or panic attacks.

The ADA allows a public accommodation to exclude service animals if they poses a direct threat to health and safety.  Dogs who are aggressively barking and snapping at other customers, demonstrate that they are not housebroken, or are out of control and the owner is unable or unwilling to effectively control it – all get sent to the dog house. Under the ADA and Alaska law, owners of public accommodations are not required to allow emotional support animals, only service animals.

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01 September 2017

Soldotna Man Sentenced In Alaska’s First Federal Felony Spice Trafficking Case


Philip Drake Kneeland was sentenced Friday to serve 70 months in a federal prison for distributing spice, and possessing a firearm in furtherance of spice trafficking. This was Alaska’s first federal felony spice trafficking case.

In addition to his prison sentence, Kneeland was also ordered to forfeit to the United States over $75,000, a 2014 GMC truck, and four firearms.

The U.S. Attorney’s office Friday announced that the removal of Kneeland from the Kenai area made huge effect on the drug trafficking in the area.

US Attorney Office Public Affairs Officer Chloe D. Martin: “What is also significant is that at today’s sentencing hearing, the court heard testimony that the spice epidemic on the Kenai Peninsula has essentially disappeared since Kneeland’s arrest.”

Kneeland was doing business in the area as Tobacco Distress.

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Your Unused Laptop Can Be A Life Changer For A Foster Kid


As our students are settling into the routine of being back at school there is one group of Alaskan kids whose life is anything but routine – and a youth driven group is asking folks to help.

Facing Foster Care in Alaska (FFCA) is collecting gently used laptops, and funds to buy new ones, for the near 3,000 Alaskan youth who are in foster care every month.

The program has placed hundred of laptops with foster youth over the last few years, and the benefits of this program are starting to show – significantly more foster youth are graduating from high school, many from online programs.

Representative Les Gara and Amanda Metivier 
FFCA Amanda Metivier: “Maybe they get behind because they are moving or whatever happens in their family home before they come into foster care, this allows them the opportunity to catch up through online programs or even get ahead.”

Nationally, only 50% of foster youth graduate from high school. The deck is stacked against them with some Alaskan students experiencing 20 or more foster home placements – which translates to frequent school changes.

Without access to technology and essential items, and twice the emotional problems as their peers, research shows that foster children face a growing digital divide with more than 80% of foster youth not having consistent access to a computer.

Representative Les Gara (D D-20) feels that computer technology and access to the Internet are now a part of everyday education, social interaction, and fundamental to building technology skills needed in the workplace.

Representative Les Gara: “It normalizes a very disrupted life and is necessary if you want kids to succeed.”

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After 70 Years, Only Unangax̂/Aleut KIA in WW2 Gets Honors

Army Private First Class George Fox was a brave Aleut warrior - Unangax/Aleut - the only one known to be killed-in-action during World War T...