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Breakdown: Southwest Airlines blames weather, FAA for 1,800 cancelations this weekend . . . but there may be another reason

Southwest Airlines has canceled over 1,800 flights since late Friday, blaming “disruptive weather” and problems with air traffic controllers.

The FAA, in a message, said the airline itself was suffering from staffing issues.

Speculation is rampant on social media that there is an unannounced walkout by pilots over the Covid-19 vaccine mandate that the airlines has enacted.

FlightAware, a popular flight-tracking service, reports that 30 percent of Southwest’s Sunday flights were canceled, totaling more than 1,000. Another 800 flights were canceled on Saturday, about one fourth of all Southwest flights. People report staying on hold for hours waiting for a Southwest reservation agent to help them reschedule. People all over the country report being stranded in airports, with the airline showing no concern for them.

Southwest said the cancellations began Friday as a result of weather in Florida and “were compounded by unexpected air traffic control issues in the same region, triggering delays and prompting significant cancellations for us beginning Friday evening.”

But other airlines are flying in the same region and through the same hubs with few cancelations, adding fuel to the speculation that this is a pilot walkout.

The Southwest Airlines Pilot Association says it’s not an official or unofficial walkout, but is due to poor management at the airlines:

“Our Pilots will continue to overcome SWA management’s poor planning, as well as any external operational challenges, and remain the most productive Pilots in the world. They will continue to be focused on their highest priority — safety. SWAPA Pilots are true professionals and will always maintain the highest level of responsibility to their crews, their passengers, and our airline,” SWAPA said in a statement on its website.

The FAA said in a statement on Twitter, “No FAA air traffic staffing shortages have been reported since Friday. Flight delays & cancellations occurred for a few hours Friday PM due to widespread severe weather, military training, & limited staffing in one area of the Jacksonville en route center. Some airlines continue to experience scheduling challenges due to aircraft and crews being out of place.”

On Friday, the FAA warned of weather affecting flights out of Charlotte, Atlanta, Miami, Orlando, Tampa, and Fort Lauderdale, which gives credence to the weather theory, but doesn’t explain why other airlines were able to operate.

Giving credence to the pilot walkout theory is that Southwest pilots asked a court for a temporary injunction against the company on Friday to prevent it from following the Biden-mandated Covid-19 vaccinations, at least until a lawsuit is settled involving whether the mandate violates U.S. labor law.

The SWAPA filing says the mandate violates the Railway Labor Act, which has authority over airline-union relations.

The SWAPA court filing says, “The new vaccine mandate unlawfully imposes new conditions of employment and the new policy threatens termination of any pilot not fully vaccinated by December 8, 2021. Southwest Airlines’ additional new and unilateral modification of the parties’ collective bargaining agreement is in clear violation of the RLA.”

The pilots union is also disputing the Southwest Airlines quarantine rules for pilots, as well as some pay and benefit items.

Pilots must pass medical examinations in order to maintain their commercial licenses. Some commercial pilots are concerned that there could be side effects from the Covid-19 vaccine that end their careers.

In a letter to the U.S. Department of Transportation and President Joe Biden, Allied Pilots Association union president said, “Some of APA’s members are unable to undergo vaccination for documented medical reasons, while others are reluctant to get vaccinated based upon concerns about the potential for career-ending side effects.” Pilots are especially worried about blood clots and myocarditis, a heart condition.

APA wants to negotiate with the carriers how adverse reactions would be covered by the existing long-term disability insurance.

Southwest doesn’t serve Anchorage, although it has had summer service some years, but serves many places across the country and is now selling tickets for a new flight starting in November from Seattle to Bellingham, where many who work in Alaska’s commercial fisheries live.

Jab or no job XI: Supervisor says his company’s employees have few options to avoid unconstitutional Biden mandate

This is the 11th in a series of stories of people being fired from their jobs because they have declined to take the required Covid-19 vaccination. The identities of these workers are being kept confidential because they fear reprisal. More stories will be included in future editions of this series as it continues. Previous interviews in this series are listed and linked at the bottom of this story. Send your story to [email protected].

Sam is in the unenviable position of have to threaten termination of a great employee if she is not fully vaccinated or have an “approved” exemption on file by Dec. 8. She’s got just 59 days left, if something doesn’t change.

When the presidential executive order first came out on Sept. 9 for government employees, federal contractors (and Sam’s company is one of them), and for businesses with more than 100 employees, Sam’s company was allowed to simply have an affidavit on hand declaring the employees’ status as vaccinated, exempt, intending to get vaccinated, or intending to not get vaccinated. 

Those protesting would be fired Dec. 8.  Rules for this are being issued by the government agency that contracts to Sam’s company. (Both Sam’s real name and his company name are being kept confidential so his story can be told.)

The first rule change was on Oct. 5, Sam said: “They want copies of our vaccination cards on file in our office, to be shown or disclosed to no one except proper authorities present in our office. “

The second rules change came on Oct. 7:  “Vaccination card copies and copies of the affidavits must be sent to the contractor and the agency,” which Sam sees as a violation of HIPAA, a health privacy law, as well as stored on site.

Sam said home Covid testing is currently acceptable as a form of testing for Covid-19, a relief to him, since there are no health care facilities in the rural community, and no entity is capable of doing Covid testing on a regular basis.

“Still, there are no rules listed for what qualifies as an acceptable exemption –religious or medical — and the language of the government order is threatening to anyone who desires an exemption.  Exemption requests have to be approved by the contractor and the contracting agency.  Approved exemptions will require continued testing – at employees’ own expense after Dec. 8,” he said.

“Our contractor has generously offered to pay for testing until then,” Sam said. But the restrictions continue to escalate, he said. 

“Our labor union is telling us this is not a grievable action – their contract is with our company, not the feds, and not restricted by the collective bargaining agreement.  Perhaps they don’t want to further embarrass their man in D.C.  They are simply ducking the issue of whether organized labor will back anyone protesting the mandate,” Sam said.

“The orders for our union are coming all the way from the AFL-CIO – the union of labor unions.  My employee has concerns because she had an allergic reaction to a vaccine in the past, and should qualify for a medical exemption, but the feds are just demanding she travel to Fairbanks and get jabbed at a clinic close to the hospital.  She must travel at her own expense,” Sam said. “Our local health aide counseled her not to take the vaccine with her concern about anaphylaxis.”

“My employee feels severely bullied and really needs to keep her job, so she has made arrangements to travel to get poked.  She is in fear of her life, lifestyle, and home – all because of an unconstitutional mandate,” he said.

Send your story to SuzanneDowning @ protonmail dot com. Your name and other identifiers will be kept confidential.

Read: Part 1: Nurse losing job, after her medical exemption refused

Read: Part II: Pharmacist losing job

Part III: Southcentral Foundation employee losing job Oct. 15 over shot refusal

Part IV: Dozens of Alaskans come forward to tell their stories of being fired for not getting the shot

Part V: Military man getting discharged in Alaska for not taking jab

Part VI: Nurse says she sees too many blood clotting cases associated with jab, so she’s not taking it

Part VII: Bethel police investigator gets put on leave, won’t be returning to the force

Part VIII: Alaska Native man says unvaccinated patients are getting the shaft

Part IX: Sophies choice, between Moderna vaccine or childbearing?

Part X: Respiratory therapist describes the unvaccinated underground developing among medical workers

Read: ICU Nurse: Let’s stop demeaning the unvaccinated

Read: Doctor says hospitals are not in crisis, not rationing care

Read: My doctor fired me because I won’t take the vaccine

Tim Barto: 1975 World Series game seven

By TIM BARTO

Tuesday, Oct. 21, 1975 – World Series game six. Arguably the greatest game ever played.

In the bottom of the 12th, after the clocks passed midnight in Boston, Carlton Fisk hit a ball a mile high and toward the left field line, waving and willing it fair. Home run. Red Sox win. The series was down to one game.

I was 13 years old, and the Cincinnati Reds were my favorite team. Truthfully, they were most important thing in my life at the time.    

Game seven would be held on the next night. It would decide the Series and cement the Big Red Machine’s place in history, or it would define them as a talented team that couldn’t win it all. Either way, the stage was set to be the biggest night of my young life. 

Following the excitement of the end of game six, I heard a voice.

“Jon’s family is hosting confirmation class tomorrow night.” It was Mom. She was standing in the kitchen. She, too, had watched the game and seen the drama unfold, but the words I heard coming from her just didn’t make sense. 

“What, Mom?

“Confirmation class is at the Burgess’ house tomorrow night.” 

“Mom, please? Can I miss confirmation tomorrow night? Please? Just this once. It’s Game Seven.”

“Confirmation class is every Wednesday night. You know that.”    

“I know that,” I said as I felt my eyes begin to water, “but just this once.”

Mom shook her head “no,” and I trudged upstairs for a night of fitful sleep.  

Wednesday, Oct. 22, 1975. I was, indeed, being made to attend confirmation class on the night of game seven. I had to get ahold of Mom’s transistor radio.

Mom owned a Westinghouse radio purchased with S&H Green Stamps. It lay in the junk drawer in the kitchen, where Mom was preparing supper.

Dad came home, kissed Mom, and joined me in the family room. The television tubes warmed to life and the picture focused on Fenway Park.

Boston had a three-run lead by the fourth inning, and I had to get going to confirmation class. Mom was getting her keys. “Alright Tim, let’s go.” 

“Okay, I gotta’ get my workbook. I’ll meet you in the car.” Thankfully, Mom turned and walked to the garage. I went over to the kitchen, opened the junk drawer, grabbed the radio and ear jack, and stuffed them into my jacket pocket.

It was a quiet, four-minute drive to Jon’s house. “Call me when it’s time to pick you up,” said Mom as she drove off.

Mrs. Burgess was making her signature rectangular pizza, while Mr. Burgess was in the family room . . . watching the game.  

“Alright guys,” said our group leader, Jerry. “Let’s gather around and say Grace.”

Following grace, we sat down, obscuring the TV screen. I took the opportunity to excuse myself and go to the bathroom.  

I didn’t need to use the bathroom; I just needed to get the earpiece cord connected to the transistor radio, through my shirt and over the back of my right ear. Entering the living room, I chose a space at the end of the couch to the teacher’s right, so I could obscure my right side and the earpiece.  

Putting my hand in my jacket pocket, I turned the radio on and adjusted it ever so slightly, listening for the game sounds. Got it! Tony Perez just hit one out of the park, bringing the Reds within a run. 

Top of the seventh. Johnny Bench to the plate with bases loaded. 

 And the radio faded.

I reached into my pocket to readjust the tuner. A staticky click and then . . . nothing. I tried to tune it back in, but the radio was only reporting a faint crackle. 

Completely oblivious to what was being discussed in class, I realized I needed to excuse myself to the bathroom again. Raising my hand and giving Jerry a grimaced look that implied an imminent need for a toilet, he simply said, “OK, go.” 

Inside the bathroom, I took out the Westinghouse and looked at the little white numbers on the small black dial. It was right where it was supposed to be. Why wasn’t I getting any sound? I turned the volume all the way up but heard nothing. 

Prying open the battery compartment lid, I removed the 9-volt battery, then placed the negative and positive terminals on my tongue . . .  because that’s how we tested 9-volt batteries in the 1970s. There was no tingle. The battery was dead, and I didn’t have a spare. 

Heading back to the living room, I really didn’t want to sit down again, so I stopped at the end of the hallway. To my right, now that I was standing, I could see the television screen. Mr. Burgess had the volume turned so low I could barely make out any sound, but I could see the screen.  

Jerry waved his arm to get me to sit. Sitting down, of course, took the TV out of view. Am I really not meant to watch this game?  Was God punishing me? 

As I asked these questions to myself, Mrs. Burgess cleaned the kitchen, wiping down everything in sight, starting with her stainless steel refrigerator.  As she moved away from the refrigerator, which stood at the opening between the dinette and living room, the side of the fridge glowed.  

I was mesmerized by the soft blue glow of the TV screen bouncing off the side of the refrigerator.  The picture was clear enough that in the reflection of that refrigerator I could see Reds runners on first and third. Joe Morgan was at bat. 

Morgan took ball one, swung at strike one, and fouled off a couple pitches. Joe, you’re the best player in the Majors, get a hit here. He heard me, and lifted a dying quail into short centerfield, scoring Griffey and giving the Reds a one run lead. I didn’t want to jinx anything, so I just sat there, not breathing, quietly transfixed to the side of the Burgess’ refrigerator.

As the Red Sox came up in the bottom half of the ninth, Jerry ended the proceedings with another “Amen.” I stood and watched Yastrzemski fly out to end it. The Reds were World Series champions.

Tim Barto is Vice President of Alaska Policy Forum, President of Chinooks Baseball Boosters, and is saving his money so he can buy his own cornfield and turn into a baseball diamond where Covid tests will not be required to play.

Read: Knik’s field of broken dreams

Anchorage Assemblyman Perez-Verdia calls for emergency order to shut down public process and pass compulsory mask law

In a long post on Facebook on Saturday afternoon, Anchorage Assemblyman Kameron Perez-Verdia called for an emergency order — although he didn’t say from whom — “that will allow us to act.” He’s upset that someone brought a gun to the Assembly meeting and says that the process has been corrupted.

He said he wanted to clear up any confusion on where he stands on the compulsory mask ordinance: He favors it.

With a supermajority, the Assembly can end the public hearings, according to the city’s charter.

“I pride myself on being a listener. During my campaign for the Anchorage Assembly back in 2019 one of my core promises was a commitment to listening and asking the hard questions it takes to distill problems down to their root causes. Ever since you elected me to serve, I have worked hard to consider the various perspectives on every issue brought before the Assembly. I am a process-oriented person and – as with every preceding issue – I approached consideration of A0 2021-91 with the same commitment to the process of public testimony and reasoned discussion. Unfortunately, that process has been corrupted,” he said.

He said there’s a line between passionate testimony on an important issue and abuse of the process to delay consideration of the proposed solution.

“This week, we crossed that line. Thankfully, thousands of Anchorage community members have stepped up to offer their genuine perspectives on the proposed mandate – both in person and through email – and after reviewing their statements I am very much decided on this issue.

Then he said that those opposing the mask ordinance have abused the public process.

“Regrettably, members of our community have abused the public process in an attempt to prevent myself and the rest of the Assembly from translating those perspectives into much needed action. Shamefully, while opponents to the ordinance bring weapons to public meetings and harass members of the press, the mayor and his administration have further corrupted the process by removing security from the Assembly chambers in an effort to intimidate its members.

That is why I am also in favor of an emergency order that would effectively end this mockery of due process and allow us to move forward with the critical business of making hard and important decisions for our city.

“I truly appreciate the engagement from so many members of our community on this important issue, and I understand the general feeling of frustration in the face of uncertainty regarding when we will have a final decision on the matter. Thanks to the process of public testimony and the opportunity to consider all of the relevant facts and perspectives, I have reached my decision and am firmly in favor of the proposed mandate,” he wrote.

Then, he again called for an emergency order once again, although again not saying who would issue such an order.

“Unfortunately, due to the misuse of that same process in an attempt to delay a vote, I am also in favor of a potential emergency order that will allow us to act,” Perez-Verdia wrote.

Over the past two weeks, the public has had the opportunity to testify for and against the ordinance, but the vast number of people testifying have opposed it. The ordinance has as many as 17 amendments that have not yet been heard or debated, but Perez-Verdia was silent on whether any of them should be incorporated into the ordinance. One of the amendments would have the mandatory masking for all of Anchorage end as early as Oct. 31. The ordinance, as written, has a requirement for all to mask through the end of the year.

Another amendment exempts certain sports, and this amendment is in response to multiple members of the public, children in particular, asking that they not have to be masked.

The public hearing was fairly orderly until Chairwoman Suzanne LaFrance shut the process down on Thursday, saying Assemblywoman Jamie Allard and Mayor Dave Bronson were no longer allowed to ask questions of those who were testifying. At that point, the public lost respect for the Assembly and started acting out, at times singing the Battle Hymn of the Republic and the National Anthem.

The hearings have been halted because several members of the Assembly and mayor’s staff have been exposed to Covid-19.

Lucas Smith: A few history lessons about ‘dilatory’ for the Anchorage Assembly

By LUCAS SMITH

As many witnessed Thursday evening, Anchorage Assembly Chair Suzanne LaFrance, with the aid of the majority leftist Assembly, voted to prohibit public testimony follow-up questions from Assembly members because, in the view of certain Assembly members, that questioning was viewed as dilatory and inconsistent with the Assembly’s own standards and norms. 

Chair LaFrance asserted that the standards and norms she is basing her ruling on are detailed in various places within the Municipal Charter, Municipal Code, and Robert’s Rules of Order.  

The Anchorage Assembly, in addition to other governing bodies in Alaska (like, for example, the Anchorage School Board), have been extending the rules of decorum spelled out in Robert’s Rules of Order and strictly applying them to members of the public during public testimony. 

This has led to countless instances where public testimony has been cut off either because testimony was too enthusiastic, personal in nature, or simply too embarrassing for the public office holders to hear and face. In these instances, members of the public have been dismissed for creating a “disturbance” and thanked in a callously robotic manner for their participation.  

Following the chair’s ruling and Assembly’s endorsement of prohibiting follow up questions, one member of the public offered testimony on the New York Times Co. v. Sullivan (1964) case in which the court ruled, “the First Amendment guarantees of freedom of speech and press may protect libelous words about a public official in order to foster vigorous debate about government and public affairs.” 

New York Times Co. v. Sullivan | The First Amendment Encyclopedia (mtsu.edu)

In many ways, Chair LaFrance’s ruling epitomizes how supremely ignorant lawmakers seeking to justify their importance have – year after year, federal law after federal law, state law after state law, local law after local law, Assembly precedent after Assembly precedent – managed to chip away at our constitutional liberty to such a degree that things like the perceived normalcy of seatbelt law is used to justify forcing children to wear masks. 

Today, my child rode the school bus for the first time.  As all know, there are no seatbelts on school buses, which suggests to me, the time to wipe the legislative slate clean is well past due.

If I may remind Assembly members of the precedent this Assembly set – for itself – pertaining to dilatory questioning as follow up to public testimony: The public may recall during testimony on the former administration’s (Ethan Berkowitz) plan to address homelessness in Anchorage, Assemblyman Chris Constant questioned Rabbi Greenberg in a rather accusatory manner, asking if he was suggesting homeless individuals loitering around his synagogue should be rounded up and contained in a fenced in area. 

“So the way might be, send them all to one place and put a fence around them,” Assemblyman Constant said. The incident occurred in July of 2020.  This is an example of dilatory questioning, if there ever was one. 

Recordings of the public’s immediate and audible shocked reaction to Constant’s question that evening speaks for itself.  I believe no member of the Assembly spoke up for the Rabbi except for Assemblywoman Jamie Allard.  

Read: Anchorage’s progressive left shows its anti-semitic side

Curiously, the Assembly did not prohibit follow up questioning to public testimony after this incident. 

That incident set the bar and is an example of this Assembly’s historical norms and standards for dilatory questioning as follow up to public testimony. 

It is also worth noting that, while the chair has gaveled down and arrested boisterous members of the public speaking out in opposition to AO 2021-91 (compulsory mask ordinance), the same Assembly continued a meeting in June of 2020 as members of the public rather bizarrely did push-ups and rolled around on the Assembly chamber floor in the space between seated assembly members and the testimony podium.

Read: Meeting turns into farce as transgender rolls around on floor

I hope the Assembly is now more aware of the standards and norms it has set, through its own precedent, for public testimony.  If this Assembly can not police itself to its own standards, perhaps the same set of standards, as this Assembly has now applied them, will continue with the next Assembly.  

Lucas Smith is an Anchorage resident and citizen activist.

Related:

Conservatives win seats on Palmer City Council

The unofficial results are in for Tuesday’s election in Palmer: Steve Carrington and Pam Melin, both Republicans, won three-year seats on the Palmer City Council. The results are expected to be formalized at the Oct. 11 meeting of the City Council.

Coming in third was incumbent undeclared Julie Berberich, and Democrat Lee Henrickson came in fourth. Turnout was 14.2 percent of eligible voters.

Carrington has served four terms for the City of Palmer, starting in 2001-2005, and 2013-2019, again in 2019- 2021.

Berberich’s replacement, Pam Melin, has served on the Planning and Zoning Commission. The council is made up of six members, with three of them considered conservative; one Democrat and two Undeclared registrants make up the rest of the council.

Palmer Mayor Edna DeVries is running for Mat-Su Borough mayor against Matthew Beck. Former Wasilla Mayor Bert Cottle has withdrawn. DeVries’ term as mayor ends in October, 2022, which may necessitate a special election for mayor to complete that term.

The Mat-Su Borough election is Nov. 2.

Mark Hamilton: The Fraser Report shows the importance of ‘policy perception’

Part 11 of a series on the Pebble Project.

By MARK HAMILTON

The Fraser Institute Annual Survey of mining companies looked at 2,700 exploration, development, and other mining related companies around the world.  Their findings consider mineralization and policy perception. They compile an overall investment attractiveness index. The mineralization looks at what’s there, and the policy perception is a judgment on the “hospitality” of the regulations, taxes etc.

Investors report that 40 percent of their investment decision is determined by policy perception. 

Assessment of mineralization puts Alaska as the fifth most desirable in the world.  We have the minerals.  

But assessment of policy perception is not so good.  We rank 29th, about six spots above Botswana.  Comments include “in Alaska, science is determined at the voting booth.” The report notes that frequent ballot initiatives concern investors.

This is not good for a resource development state.  We must have what is seen to be a level playing field, that is, if you can demonstrate that your project is compatible with the environment, you will get a permit.

Besides the every-two years initiatives that target resource development, there are warnings about “foreign companies.”  I have confronted those concerns with “shhh, don’t want to have BP hear you (whoops, too late on that one), or Holland America, or Royal Dutch Shell.  

Come on, people. Do you understand that the four richest families in Alaska could not build a mine.  You must have investors.  Calling out Northern Dynasty as a “foreign investor” is nearly laughable. It’s Canada, not China. Would you feel differently if you knew that 60 percent of the stock is owned by Americans?  Probably not, because the whole point of “foreign investor” is to create some sort of xenophobic caution.

Nothing is out of bounds for the opponents of development. Some are just in it for money, so they know no bounds.  Others, believing they are pursuing the “greater good” excuse themselves from decency; it’s OK to lie, to sell fear, to put out completely unfounded assertions because saving the environment is the greater good. Saving the environment is certainly good; but lying to save it should not be excused.  

Purposefully making people afraid should not be excused. There is a process to determine the environmental impacts. We’ve talked about it, the NEPA process.  Find out what those impacts are, what the values of the project are; then decide the greater good.

Don’t let them Pebble you again!

Read the Fraser Mineralization Report at this link.

Pebbled 1: Virtue signaling won out over science in project of the century

Pebbled 2: Environmental industry has fear-mongering down to an art

Pebbled 3: The secret history of ANWR and the hand that shaped it

Pebbled 4: When government dictates an advance prohibition

Pebbled 5: EPA ‘just didn’t have time’ to actually go to Bristol Bay

Pebbled 6: The narrative of fear

Pebbled 7: The environmentalists who cried wolf

Pebbled 8: Build your media filter based on science, not narrative

Pebbled 9: The history of hysteria

Part 10: Here we go again, EPA doubling down on power grabbing

Goldbelt successfully evacuates Americans from Afghanistan with aid from Don Young

Goldbelt Inc., an Alaska Native Corporation based in Juneau, has successfully evacuated its American workers, former workers, and Afghan allies from Afghanistan, it said today.

With the help of Congressman Young and his staff, employees of Goldbelt, Inc, along with other Americans, and Afghan allies, have been flown to safety and have landed in Qatar.

Amid deteriorating conditions in Afghanistan, Alaska Congressman Don Young worked with officials at the State Department, the White House, the Department of Defense, and with private organizations to secure their safe passage, according to a joint statement from Goldbelt CEO McHugh Pierre and Congressman Young.

“It was difficult to watch what happened in Afghanistan last month, particularly when our brave U.S. servicemembers were killed in the line of duty. As I have previously said, what happened in Kabul reminded me of what we saw in Saigon as the Vietnam War ended. The botched withdrawal created conditions that endangered lives, and resulted in the deaths of American soldiers and countless innocent civilians,” said Congressman Don Young.

“Perhaps most egregious was the fact that so many were left behind; this was unacceptable. Among those left behind were employees of Alaska’s Goldbelt, Inc, making the situation even more perilous. As conditions deteriorated, my staff and I worked around the clock to secure these employees’ safe passage. I am both pleased and relieved that Goldbelt’s employees successfully escaped Afghanistan and safely landed in Qatar. This was a herculean effort, and I want to thank the Goldbelt team, in addition to Air Force veteran Michael Songer, my Senior Legislative Assistant and Defense Policy Advisor, for his unyielding commitment to getting them out of harm’s way. The sad fact is that this is not over, and there are still Americans and Afghan allies facing the Taliban’s brutality. I will continue pushing the Administration to do the right thing and get them to safety,” Young said.

“Goldbelt, Inc. was working in Afghanistan supporting the State Department for more than three years,” Pierre said. The company had U.S. nationals working in country and hired Afghan nationals to support those in-country operations.”

When the transition of power began to occur, Goldbelt moved its U.S. national employees to safety by flying them home.

Goldbelt immediately reached out to the State Department to raise awareness of the potential vulnerability of the former employees who are Afghan nationals and begin the coordination effort to move them, and their families, to safety. Goldbelt took the lead by coordinating with the team because of an existing relationship with the State Department.

“We had one plane chartered and those people are now moved to safety. Goldbelt is now finished with this effort, and thanks everyone involved in making it possible. I especially want to thank Congressman Don Young and his staff for leveraging their extensive experience with both the State Department and the White House, which aided Goldbelt in the safe evacuation of its former Afghan national employees,” Pierre said.

Goldbelt, Inc. is an urban Alaska Native Corporation formed in 1974. Goldbelt has extensive federal contracts, which represent about 96 percent of its revenue sources. It’s involved in IT work; medical services; and military support, including providing weapons, ammunition, and vehicles. It has contracts with the Department of Army, Department of Navy, and the State Department.

In Kabul, the company has a subsidiary that did prescreening for the Green Zone in Kabul for the Bureau of International Narcotic and Law Enforcement Affairs. Examples of Goldbelt’s military and other contracts can be found at this link.

Read original story at Must Read Alaska:

Tshibaka fined $270 for helping small family fishing operation with former Lt. Gov.

When Senate candidate Kelly Tshibaka won in an auction an experience on a small family fishing set-net in Cook Inlet with former Lt. Gov. Loren Leman and his wife Carolyn, she was eager to go. She took her children with her so they could see how some smaller fishing operations work.

But one of her social media posts caught the eye of opponents to her campaign, and she has ended up with a $270 fine, because even as a guest on the boat, she needed to have a commercial fishing crew license.

Tshibaka said she acknowledges the decision and will pay the citation, but she said the statute has an exemption for visitors or guests, and even though she touched some salmon being harvested, they were not fish that were sold.

Troopers were shown the video that her campaign posted on social media in July and opened up the investigation.