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Murkowski joins 16 GOP senators in voting to advance infrastructure bill

Sen. Lisa Murkowski joined 16 other Republicans in advancing the $1.1 trillion infrastructure bill she helped negotiate with the Biden Administration and Democrats.

Sens. Roy Blunt, Shelley Capito, Bill Cassidy, Susan Collins, John Cornyn, Kevin Cramer, Mike Crapo, Deb Fischer, Chuck Grassley, John Hoeven, Mitch McConnell, Rob Portman, James Risch, Mitt Romney, Mike Rounds, Tom Tillis, and Todd Young joined all Senate Democrats in a vote to end debate and move the bill toward amendments and an up-down vote this week.

The Saturday vote was 67-27.

Sen. Dan Sullivan was a no vote on this procedural motion on Saturday, although that is not an action that would signal how he will vote on the bill ultimately.

“We can get this done the easy way or the hard way,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-NY, said to the Senate just prior to the vote on cloture. “In either case, the Senate will stay in session until we finish our work. It’s up to my Republican colleagues how long it takes.” 

The bill is made up of $550 billion in new spending for infrastructure. But another section of spending has not yet been revealed, and it may include what Sen. Minority Leader Mitch McConnell calls a product of the “full radicalism of the far left.” 

In the House, radical Democrats find the bill too limiting, as it doesn’t address their climate change and social justice agenda. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said she will not take up the bill unless it includes those far-left items.

Much of the money going to states will go to governors to spend as their states need it, rather than being doled out by the federal government.

Yelp now screens for Covid-19 vaccinations for diners, staff

If you’re planning to dine out and you haven’t had a Covid-19 vaccine, you may want to spend your money in Alaska rather than heading to Seattle for that weekend away or planning a week in New York City.

According to Puget Sound news reports, nearly 130 restaurants in Seattle are now screening their clientele for Covid-19 vaccinations before allowing them in. No shot? No table.

New York City will require proof of vaccination to enter restaurants, fitness centers, and all indoor entertainment venues, Mayor Bill de Blasio announced last week.

“If you’re unvaccinated, unfortunately, you will not be able to participate in many things,” he told reporters. “If you want to participate in our society fully, you’ve got to get vaccinated.”

Although not yet an ordinance, the popular Pink Door on Post Alley in the Pike Street Market district is one of those Seattle restaurants turning away those who haven’t completed their vaccination series. A monitor goes through the line outside the door explaining the policy to people and putting them on the host’s list if they can prove they took the jab.

“In the Seattle area, a list of bars and restaurants enforcing proof of vaccination now includes nearly 130 businesses,” said KOMO news.

Yelp, the online review company, now has a way to see which restaurants are requiring all staff and/or all diners to show proof of having had the vaccine. The Yelp site only shows a handful of Seattle restaurants requiring the shot for diners, with over 20 reporting their staff is fully vaccinated.

But no restaurants in Alaska have reported to Yelp that they are requiring “shots to dine,” or “shots to work,” according to a search. Not in Juneau, Anchorage or Fairbanks, anyway.

Businesses of all types across the country — including retail stores — are receiving emails from Yelp asking them if they require their employees to be vaccinated, their clients to be vaccinated, and whether staff or clients are required to wear masks. Yelp will add that to the company’s online profile.

About a year ago, Yelp started racially profiling black businesses by making it an optional box to check as people searched for goods and services. The Yelp service does not provide a similar screening tool for other racial groups.

Another Misty Fjords plane crash, but all survive this time

The Coast Guard rescued two people from a plane crash Saturday 40 miles southeast of Ketchikan late Saturday afternoon.

An MH-60 Jayhawk helicopter crew from Coast Guard Air Station Sitka rescued the two from the U.S. Forest Service Cabin at Humpback Lake in the Misty Fjords National Monument after their Cessna 180 float plane crashed during takeoff.

The helicopter crew lowered a rescue swimmer who safely hoisted both individuals before transferring them to awaiting emergency personnel in Ketchikan.

The two survivors were the only passengers aboard the privately owned aircraft. No injuries were reported, according to the Coast Guard.

“This case highlights the importance of having safety equipment that is accessible and in working order,” said Lt. Maren Balke, search and rescue mission coordinator at the Sector Juneau command center. “The pilot was able to call for help using a satellite phone shortly after the crash, and they also activated a personal locator beacon, which allowed our air crew to quickly respond to their exact location.” 

Weather conditions on scene were 5 mph winds, visibility of 10 miles, ceilings of 5,000 feet with an air temperature of 65 degrees. 

Last week, six died after a sightseeing plane crashed in Misty Fjords. The National Transportation and Safety Board arrived in Ketchikan on Saturday to begin investigating the cause of the crash.

Alaska State Troopers identified the victims of that accident as pilot Rolf Lanzendorfer, 64, of Woodinville, Washington; Mark Henderson, 69, and Jacquelyn Komplin, 60, of Napa, Calif.; Andrea McArthur, 55, and Rachel McArthur, 20, of Woodstock, Georgia; and Janet Kroll, 77, of Mount Prospect, Illinois.

Troopers said their bodies will be transported to the State Medical Examiner’s Office in Anchorage.

Arguable: Is the state’s rural energy subsidy fund special and protected, or part of the general fund?

It’s a simple concept: The Alaska Constitution allows no special carve-out funds besides the General Fund, the Permanent Fund, and the Constitutional Budget Reserve, a special fund created by voters in 1990, where the state deposits certain income from disputes over mineral-related income. 

But Recall Dunleavy attorney Jahna Lindemuth tried to convince a judge Friday that the Power Cost Equalization Fund is also protected by the Constitution.

It’s not. It’s an unprotected fund created by the Legislature in the 1980s to help lower power prices in rural areas that don’t benefit from state-funded power projects in urban areas.

The lawsuit brought by Lindemuth on behalf of Alaska Federation of Natives was heard in court on Friday. Lindemuth came into the courtroom with two other briefcase-toting lawyers to try to make the case that the PCE fund is protected and the governor should have not “swept” those funds at the end of the fiscal year. Normally, all unspent funds get swept, and then the Legislature reverse-sweeps the funds back into their designated homes.

Lindemuth’s argument was made more difficult by the fact that the Legislature had the option to reverse sweep the funds, but politically it chose not to. It just let those funds go back into the Constitutional Budget Reserve. So Lindemuth, who has sued the governor repeatedly for various items, found a plaintiff to help make the case that the PCE fund is special.

Lindemuth made her argument all about the governor, not the appropriators in the Legislature. Time and again, she referred to “the governor,” even after the Department of Law attorney pointed out that Lindemuth was making it personal and that it was not the governor, but the State of Alaska that was the defendant.

Lindemuth, who stuttered and stumbled through her argument that the $1.15 billion PCE fund was protected, was the former attorney general, until her boss, former Gov. Bill Walker, was shown the door by voters. Now she makes a living suing Gov. Mike Dunleavy.

The state attorney Katherine Demarest argued that the Legislature could fund the rural power subsidy with an annual appropriation if it wanted to. It just didn’t have the political will to do so.

She likened the special funds categories like PCE in the general fund as basically sticky notes, which could be moved around to create legislative intent for how to spend various buckets of money.

Superior Court Judge Josie Garton appeared noncommittal and her lines of questioning revealed little. She said she would try to provide a decision on the matter in a timely way, which likely means this coming week.

Gov. Dunleavy is attempting to persuade the Legislature to allow voters to decide whether to put the PCE fund under constitutional protection, along with a formula for how the Permanent Fund dividend will be calculated going forward. He has had little to no cooperation from the House and Senate majorities, but his question to them is the core of the Aug. 16 special session in Juneau.

White House celebrated ‘Pride Month’ in June but ignored Purple Heart Day

The clock struck midnight on Aug. 8 Eastern Time, and Aug. 7 had passed without an official White House recognition of Purple Heart Day.

The White House official channel was silent on the matter of honoring wounded and fallen warriors.

Purple Heart Day commemorates the men and women who were wounded or killed by opposing armed forces during military service. The Purple Heart is the nation’s oldest military medal.

Alaska State Sen. Josh Revak is one of the recipients of the Purple Heart. He served two tours in Iraq as a battle tank crewman with 1-37 Armor, 1st Armor Brigade, 1st Armor Division, the “Bandits”. Revak was wounded by enemy mortar shrapnel in June, 2006 and walks only with the assistance of a brace on his shattered leg. Must Read Alaska was unable to reach him for comment.

Speaking for himself and not his organization, Dan Collins, commander of the local Military Order of the Purple Heart Chapter 0593-AK-3, said that Purple Heart recipients “are not political and don’t expect to be recognized. I think we’ll survive.”

There are about 300 members of the various chapters of the Military Order of the Purple Heart in Alaska. The organization provides support to wounded combat veterans. Fairbanks has been designated a Purple Heart City due to the number of wounded veterans and MOPH chapters.

On Aug. 7, 2020, President Donald Trump issued the following proclamation:

General George Washington established the Purple Heart-then known as the Badge of Military Merit-238 years ago today to recognize meritorious service in action during our Nation’s war for independence. Today, the Purple Heart is reserved for military service members wounded or killed in action. On this day, we pay tribute to these men and women, who have suffered and sacrificed so much for our Nation.

The Purple Heart medal, in its present form, bears the profile of General Washington. An American hero of unparalleled stature in our history, George Washington not only inaugurated this award, but he exemplified the uncommon courage, valor, and devotion to our Nation showed by all who receive it.

As we commemorate the establishment of one of our Nation’s highest honors, we also reaffirm our support and admiration for the remarkable heroes of America’s Armed Forces. Each day, these men and women safeguard peace and prosperity at home and abroad and protect our unique American way of life. Our Nation is forever indebted to these valiant warriors for their service and sacrifice.

The First Lady and I join a grateful Nation in paying tribute to Purple Heart recipients, their loved ones, and our Gold Star Families. As one Nation, we pray for the safety of our country’s men and women in uniform-both past and present-and commit to honoring their legacy of service now and for generations to come.

President Biden acknowledged Purple Heart Day on Twitter today with 27 words:

“This Purple Heart Day, we remember and honor the sacrifice, valor, and grace of all those who were wounded or paid the ultimate sacrifice on the battlefield.”

To learn more about the history of the Purple Heart, watch this 2-minute video at Military.com

Alaska Life Hack: How to navigate Canada’s rigorous new entry requirement

Let’s say you want to drive to Haines or Skagway from Anchorage next week. On Monday, the Canadian border is opening up for those wishing to drive, fly, or arrive by water into Canada. But it’s complicated, so if you are not in that special “essential worker” category, it’s best to know before you go.

All travelers must log into the ArriveCan mobile app or online portal and submit their information 72 hours before arriving at the border.

ArriveCAN is available to download as a mobile app or you can create an account and sign in online.

Whether you’re entering Canada by air, land or boat, you will need to submit:

  • contact information for you and other people travelling with you, as long as you’re staying at the same quarantine location
  • the purpose of your travel (such as exempt travel, work, study, family reunification or compassionate reasons)
  • travel details, such as your:
    • date of arrival
    • port of entry if you’re entering by land or marine vessel or
    • flight number, airport and airline if you’re entering by air
  • your vaccination information, and upload proof of vaccination if asked (unless entering by marine)
  • the trip reference code for your 3-night reservation at a government-authorized hotel (for air travellers only, unless exempt)
  • information about the countries you stayed in or visited in the 14 days prior to your arrival in Canada (don’t include countries where you had a connection stop along the journey from one destination to another).
  • your quarantine plan if your travel isn’t exempt from quarantine requirements

For your quarantine plan, questions include:

  • whether you have accommodation where you can quarantine for 14 days or possibly longer
  • the address of your final quarantine location (the place where you’ll finish your 14-day quarantine)
  • whether you can avoid all contact with other people who didn’t travel with you while in your place of quarantine
  • whether you’ll have access to basic necessities of life, including water, food, medication and heat, without leaving quarantine
  • if there are people at increased risk from COVID-19 at that place who:
    • are 65 years or older
    • have underlying medical conditions
    • have compromised immune systems
  • if there are any people at that place who work or assist in a facility, home or workplace that includes people at increased risk from COVID-19
  • whether it’s a group living environment or houses multiple families, such as:
    • group residence
    • care facilities
    • living with roommates you can’t avoid who didn’t travel with you

If you do not travel with a smartphone, submit your information within 72 hours before your arrival to Canada by creating an account and signing in online. Have your receipt and take it with you when you travel.

If you are unable to access data on your phone when traveling, submit your information before you leave and take a screenshot or printout of your ArriveCAN receipt to show upon entry into Canada.

If you don’t submit your information through ArriveCAN, you won’t be denied boarding if arriving by air or entry into Canada at a land border

However, you won’t be eligible for the fully vaccinated exemption and may face additional delays at the border for public health questioning.

If you’re traveling with others, you can include multiple travelers in your ArriveCAN submission.

As the primary traveler, you may provide travel information for yourself and for:

  • your spouse or common law partner
  • your children (or children for whom you have legal guardianship), aged 18 years or younger
  • any other adult for whom you’re a legal guardian

You can provide information for up to 8 travellers, including yourself, in a single submission. Use this when:

  • you’ll all stay together at the same address for the entire quarantine or isolation period (including the government-authorized hotel) and
  • you have their permission to collect and share this information

If you’re travelling with a child whose only documentation is a birth certificate, you don’t need to submit their information in ArriveCAN. You’ll be provided with an alternative option at the Canadian border.

Exempt travelers must complete their own submission. They can’t be part of a group submission.

If you’re not the traveler, you can submit travel information on behalf of others who may be unable to use ArriveCAN.

You’ll need to fill out ArriveCAN with the traveler’s:

  • quarantine address or plan information
  • contact and travel information

You’ll then be able to print or email the receipt to the traveler.

The traveler can complete their post-border reporting by calling 1-833-641-0343 each day during their 14-day quarantine. The information they provide when they call must match what you submitted in ArriveCAN on their behalf.

You must send the receipt to the traveler to show to the Canada border services officer upon arrival to Canada. The traveler is responsible for ensuring they’re compliant with the requirements for entry into Canada.

You may be exempt from having to quarantine if you’re entering Canada under certain conditions. This includes if you provide essential services and maintain the flow of essential goods or people. Truckers and government workers are exempt.

If you’re exempt from quarantine, you don’t have to include a quarantine plan through ArriveCAN. However, you must still submit your contact information, travel details, and symptoms you may be experiencing. You don’t need to complete any reporting through ArriveCAN after you enter Canada.

Find out if your travel is exempt.

ArriveCAN won’t confirm your exempt status. An ArriveCAN receipt shows that you’ve successfully provided your information. It doesn’t validate your eligibility to enter Canada or exempt travel status. Your exempt travel status will be determined at the border.

Getting your ArriveCAN receipt

Once you submit your information through ArriveCAN:

  • a receipt will be displayed and emailed to you
  • show the receipt to a Canadian border services officer when you enter
  • you can show your ArriveCAN receipt from:
    • the app
    • a screenshot
    • your email
    • a printout

The ArriveCAN mobile app saves your contact information (name, date of birth and travel document information) for travel at a later date.

The day after you arrive in Canada, all travellers, whether you travel by air, land or marine, must use ArriveCAN to:

  • confirm that you’ve arrived at a government-authorized hotel and/or the address you provided for your quarantine or isolation location
  • complete daily COVID-19 symptom self-assessments until the completion of your quarantine period or until you report symptoms

Government of Canada officials will call you to ensure that you’re complying with your mandatory quarantine or isolation. You must answer calls from 1-888-336-7735 and answer all questions truthfully to demonstrate your compliance with the law. You may also receive a visit from a designated screening officer to confirm your compliance with the quarantine or isolation order.

If you’re directed to a designated quarantine facility, you won’t have to report through ArriveCAN. However, you’ll be subject to reporting requirements at the facility.

If you’re exempt from having to quarantine, you don’t have to report after you’ve entered.

And in addition to all of that, don’t forget to bring your passport.

Walker World, other politicos spotted in Ketchikan

Former Gov. Bill Walker was spotted in Ketchikan today with his former chief of staff Scott Kendall, giving additional fuel to the rumor that Walker is considering a run for governor.

Walker and Kendall were attending the breast cancer fundraiser at the Waterfall Resort on Prince of Wales Island, which is an annual fishing event sponsored by the Murkowski family. Kendall has been said to be working to convince Walker, age 70, to make another run of it, after Walker’s spectacular political crash in 2018. Kendall is also considered the architect of Ballot Measure 2, which created jungle primaries and ranked-choice general elections in Alaska, to ease the way for a Murkowski victory in 2022; he is also the force behind the Recall Dunleavy group.

As speculation increases about Walker, word of possible running mates has brought out the names of former Commissioner of Labor Heidi Drygas, a Big Labor Democrat; and current Eagle River Rep. Kelly Merrick, a Big Labor Republican. Merrick, if she drops out of the House race in 2022 to run for lieutenant governor, would open up a slot for Anchorage Assemblywoman Jamie Allard to run for House, as some have pushed her to do.

In Ketchikan, political discussion at local watering holes swirled around a new rumor that former U.S. Senate candidate Al Gross is also considering a run — but not for Senate against Lisa Murkowski. He may be planning to run for governor, instead, according to those who have spoken with him.

Also spotted in Ketchikan and at the Waterfall Resort were Portland political strategist Jim Lottsfeldt, who has worked on Sen. Murkowski’s campaigns; Mike Pawlowski, Murkowski’s former chief of staff and now part of a consulting firm in Alaska; former House Speaker Terry Gardiner; former Lt. Gov. Mead Treadwell; and Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s Chief of Staff Randy Ruaro, with his wife Dana. Ketchikan is the Ruaros’ hometown.

Many business leaders were also there, including the executives from Wells Fargo, Alyeska Pipeline Company, Edison Chouest, and Providence Hospital.

Missing was Sen. Lisa Murkowski, who is having to remain in Washington, D.C. for a potential vote on the big infrastructure bill that she negotiated.

Senate candidate Kelly Tshibaka and her campaign manager Gina Ritacco were seen arriving in Ketchikan for the annual Blueberry Festival. They had visited Haines, Hoonah, Juneau, Sitka, Petersburg, and Wrangell on their way to the First City.

Earlier this week, Walker and his wife Donna attended a fundraiser for Congressman Don Young in Anchorage, where Walker shook many hands.

Anchorage mayor speaks out against masking students in schools

Anchorage Mayor Dave Bronson on Friday ended his silence about the mask mandate on all students and staff in Anchorage Public Schools.

Although his authority doesn’t allow him to override Superintendent Deena Bishop and the Anchorage School Board, Bronson came out unequivocally against the back-to-school mask policy announced by Bishop last Saturday.

On his official Facebook page, he urged the school district to reconsider its policy:

“My position has been, and will continue to be, very clear on the issue of COVID mandates: I am opposed to mandates. I am opposed to mandates masking our residents and our children. I am opposed to mandates shutting down our businesses. I am opposed to mandating vaccinations. Anchorage residents should be free to make their own decisions about their healthcare, about their families, and about their children’s education.

“Therefore, I strongly oppose the Anchorage School District’s back to school mask mandate and strongly encourage them to immediately reconsider. Masking choice has been successful in the Anchorage School District throughout the summer school session and can be successful now. Moreover, student masking remains optional in various other school districts across Alaska. This should be about parental and student choice, not top down government mandates,” Bronson’s statement said.

Teachers in the Anchorage School District begin working on Aug. 12, and classes begin on Aug. 17, with pre/kindergarten classes beginning Aug. 24.

At this stage, all will be forced to mask in schools, including charter schools, on buses and in other school district facilities. The rule applies to those who have been vaccinated against Covid-19 as well as those who have not. Kenai and Mat-Su have chosen to make masks optional.

Read: Teachers dance and clap at pep rally with superintendent, no masks

The mask is believed by the Anchorage superintendent and school board to lessen the transmission of the Covid-19 virus, which is spreading once again among those unvaccinated individuals around the country, as well as occasionally infecting those who have been vaccinated.

Must Read Alaska has learned that the projected enrollment for Anchorage Public Schools has dropped by thousands, although final enrollment numbers won’t be known until October.

Read: Parents express outrage at masking policy for schoolchildren

Donald Trump Jr. jumps in, supports Kelly Tshibaka for Senate

In June, it was President Donald Trump’s endorsement. In July, it was the Alaska Republican Party endorsement. Now, Donald Trump Jr. is supporting Kelly Tshibaka for U.S. Senate, with a fundraising letter that went out to the email list of Kelly for Alaska.

Donald Trump Jr. is a well-known hunting and fishing enthusiast and is a major force on social media, with an Instagram account followed by 4.7 million Instagram users.

“I’m taking over the Team Kelly email to send you all a special message! When my father endorsed Kelly earlier this year I was so excited. There’s finally a STRONG CONSERVATIVE running to take out Lisa Murkowski and her name is Kelly Tshibaka,” he wrote.

“I don’t have to tell you how important this election is. This is our opportunity to ensure Alaska has an actual Conservative representing them in the US Senate and not a swampy DC Insider like Lisa Murkowski,” he wrote.

Trump Jr. is the author of  Triggered: How the Left Thrives on Hate and Wants to Silence Us. He also authored Liberal Privilege: Joe Biden And The Democrats’ Defense Of The Indefensible.

Trump Jr. is known as an effective fundraiser, making it difficult to see where former Gov. Sarah Palin lands, if she decides to file as a candidate for Senate.

Read: Sarah Palin delivers click bait to mainstream media.