Tuesday, April 28, 2026
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Acting mayor ends Covid emergency

Acting Mayor Austin Quinn-Davidson said today there is no more Covid-19 emergency in Anchorage, and so she has officially ended the emergency order.

She said the rates of Covid-19 have dropped and vaccinations are on the rise. Although the pandemic is not over, there is no more need for the mayor’s formal emergency powers, she said. During the rest of her administration, which ends July 1, the municipality will continue to encourage people to mask up indoors and to get vaccinated.

She did not mention whether the Municipality would continue to enforce masking in its facilities. The Assembly enforced mask mandates for the Assembly, but a resolution on the agenda removed that mandate later in the meeting at the Loussac Library. Members of the public were also prohibited from entering the chambers because the Assembly is enforcing spacing requirements it has in place.

In late April, the Assembly removed some of the mayor’s emergency powers, making today’s announcement anticlimactic.

Quinn-Davidson will be acting mayor until July 1, when Dave Bronson is sworn in.

Desperate Dunbar: Assembly lifts Anchorage lockdown to aid his ailing campaign

Murkowski measure to address infant mortality advances in Senate

 The U.S. Senate’s Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee advanced legislation led by Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski to improve maternal health, address infant mortality, and support nursing mothers in the workplace. The bills now head to the full Senate for consideration.

The Rural Maternal and Obstetric Modernization of Services (Rural MOMS) Act will give help to new and expecting mothers living in rural communities. The MOMS Act focuses on data collection on maternal health, increases funding for rural care grants, expands maternal telehealth resources, and broadens training opportunities for healthcare professionals in maternal health.

“Coming from Alaska, these disparities – both geographic and socioeconomic – are particularly concerning, which is why I am proud to co-lead the Rural MOMS Act. Every expecting mother deserves the best care available for herself and her baby, regardless of where they live,” said Sen. Murkowski.

The Providing Urgent Maternal Protections (PUMP) for Nursing Mothers Act provides salaried employees in traditional office environments with adequate break time and a private place to pump breastmilk. The bill specifically would expand a 2010 law, which provides space and time for hourly employees who are nursing.

The HELP Committee also advanced the Maternal Health Quality Improvement Act, of which Senator Murkowski joined as a cosponsor. This bill aims to improve maternal health by enhancing evidence-based programs, such as the implementation of rural obstetric networks, maternal telehealth programs, and integrated health care services for pregnant and postpartum women. The legislation also includes provisions to promote vaccinations for pregnant women and infants.

Anchorage man sentenced to 20 months for arson at Seattle Police East Precinct in 2020

An Anchorage man has been sentenced to 20 months in prison for conspiracy to commit arson after he was caught lighting a fire at Seattle’s East Precinct, according to the Department of Justice.

Desmond David-Pitts was arrested on Aug. 24, 2020 during the height of the Seattle riots. He was easily identified because he was wearing pink camo clothing.

Earlier in the summer, David-Pitts had attended a meeting of the Anchorage Assembly and cursed at the police chief, Assembly and then-Mayor Ethan Berkowitz on the theme of racism in policing.

In video captured by Must Read Alaska, David-Pitts can be seen testifying while Dave and Deb Bronson sit in the audience at the Assembly and listen to him.

According to the Department of Justice, David-Pitts had arrived in Seattle from Alaska just three days before the arson.  After marching with the group of protestors in downtown Seattle, David-Pitts was seen on surveillance video piling up trash against the sally-port door at the Seattle Police East Precinct. 

Over an 11-minute period, the surveillance video captured David-Pitts not only piling up the trash, but repeatedly lighting it on fire and feeding the flames with more trash. While David-Pitts was lighting the fire, other people who appeared on the surveillance were attempting to use crowbars and cement-like materials to try to disable the door next to the sally-port to prevent officers from exiting the building. 

At various times on the surveillance tape, David-Pitts was communicating with individuals who were attempting to disable the door and light other fires around the building. Despite efforts to disable the door, officers were able to get outside and extinguish the flames.  David-Pitts was seen on surveillance working with the others to cut through a chain-link fence that was a barrier around the building.  All the fires were extinguished by Seattle Police Officers and members of the Seattle Fire Department.

“A handful of people bent on destruction, by committing arson and threatening the safety of our community, also drowned out the important message of those who peacefully protest injustice,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Tessa M. Gorman.  “This defendant joined with others to put Seattle Police officers at risk.  It is wholly appropriate that he spend time in prison as a consequence of his criminal acts.”

David-Pitts pleaded guilty in January to conspiracy to commit arson. He faced up to five years in prison but was only sentenced to 20 months. David-Pitts agreed to pay restitution to the Seattle Police Department for damage to the building.

Todd Peplow: Taking a stand

By TODD PEPLOW

My 7-year-old granddaughter was very proud when I became, as she called it, “president of the union hall.”

It is more important to me that my now-12-year-old granddaughter is more proud of the stand I’ve taken than it is for me to continue as union president, although she was upset to hear I was being impeached for using my title “President, Local 71” in support of conservative Dave Bronson for mayor.

The LiUNA (Laborers International Union of North America) constitution states, “the Business Manager is the voice of the Union.” The business manager has unrestricted communications with all 2,500 members. As president, I only have access to the 15 to 20 who show up at a union membership meeting.

Use of my title in a previous op-ed, “Labor is not a partisan issue,” published in multiple newspapers around the state, was not a problem because it fit their narrative. 

The business manager had sole authority when he donated $1,000 to the Forrest Dunbar for Mayor campaign. At the next executive board meeting that authority was rescinded, requiring executive board approval prior to all donation. 

As a retired combat veteran, and as a big supporter of law enforcement, I took an oath “to defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic.” When Dunbar publicly said that our constitutional law is shot through with race, and that he was proud of the “wall of moms” and his sister for participating in the “defund police riots in Portland,” I had to take a stand.

It was a very unpopular stand with all the ultra-liberal union leadership in Alaska. The only thing they care about is total and unquestioned support of union contracts. It doesn’t matter the destructive path a political candidate is on. That is the path Anchorage is currently on. Do we want the homeless defecating on the street corners, protesters destroying our businesses? That is the path Forrest Dunbar and the Anchorage Assembly have us on, to be more like San Francisco, Portland, or Seattle. 

Janus V. AFSCME was a good decision for rank and file working union members. No union boss will admit it, but it forces the public sector unions to be more receptive to the concerns of their membership. I am a working member, part time president, and my recent impeachment and removal from office only serves to increase the power and control of the business manager.

However, because of “Janus,” I can opt out and it doesn’t affect my job, and the union doesn’t control my retirement. Private sector unions can silence their members, since the union controls the retirement and even if and when they work. “Toe the line or you’ll never work.” Will the Local 71 Executive Board be a rubber stamp for the business manager or will the membership take control of their union? 

Local 71 is currently in contract negotiations with the State of Alaska. The business manager’s status reports to members has been abysmal. The first wage proposal from the business manager offered to give up longevity/merit raises, changing from every two years to three years at eight years of service. Then no more longevity raises after 23 years of service while only gaining pennies of the front end and for the current workers.

As president, I was not included in the two meetings the negotiating team had to come up with this terrible proposal. After three months with no response from the State of Alaska, a counter offer was 0%, 1%, and 1% for a 3 year contract.

I was the only one to accuse the State of stalling so a contract wouldn’t get in front of the Legislature this year. An unfair labor practice has a high standard to prove, but when your business manager just rolls over and takes it, he says there is nothing we can do. 

I am proud to have served as president of Local 71 for the last five years. It has been a long hard but futile battle. Members always ask where their dues go. For LTC members, 1⁄2 of your monthly dues goes to the LiUNA, which is spent almost exclusively on electing Democrats.

As a conservative, I see two options, join with other likeminded members, attend every meeting, and demand change or opt out. I’ll be doing the latter and I invite others to opt out with me. I refuse to allow any of my dues to continue to be used on the destructive path this country is on that our union supports. 

Todd Peplow is a lifelong laborer, electrician, and now foreman with conservative values, who has served his country through eight deployments. He is a constitutional rights advocate who supports firearms ownership, free speech, the right of the people to affiliate and assemble, and the right of people not to affiliate with a union. 

Assembly tonight will consider certification of mayoral runoff

Tonight’s Anchorage Assembly meeting will feature the certification of the Anchorage Mayoral race. The Assembly will take up the matter forwarded by the Municipal Clerk during its regular meeting that starts at 5 pm at the Loussac Library at 36th Ave. and Denali Street.

Mayor-elect Dave Bronson won over Assemblyman Forrest Dunbar in a close vote, 45,937 to 44,743, a 1,194-vote difference and enough to avoid a recount.

If certified, Bronson will be sworn in on July 1 and Acting Mayor Austin Quinn-Davidson will return to her seat on the Assembly.

Unlike Assembly meetings in the recent year, the emergency order that has been lifted by the Assembly will also allow more people in the chambers to observe the proceedings.

Bear Paw Festival and Parade is ‘on’

The annual Chugiak / Eagle River Bear Paw Festival is back, after taking 2020 off due to the Anchorage Covid shutdown. The dates for the festival are July 14-18, with the parade scheduled for July 17.

The festival will feature the traditional Golden Wheel Carnival, vendor court, parade, beer garden, bands, concessions, and contests. There will be a car show, corn hole tournament, and the Slippery Salmon Olympics.

Bear Paw Parade Co-chairs Jamie Allard (Anchorage Assembly) and Melissa Hickey (business owner) said up to 125 parade entries will be available. The Chugiak Eagle River Chamber of Commerce is the organizer of the event and more information will be posted at https://www.cer.org/bear-paw-festival

The Bear Paw Festival began in 1985 had a handful of vendor booths, and a parade. The 30th year was in 2015, and last year would have been the 35th annual year. This year’s theme is “Roaring Twenties 2.1.”

Breaking: Murkowski to back Jan. 6 commission

Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski will back a bill creating a Jan. 6 commission to investigate the surge into the nation’s Capitol by protesters of the certification of the Electoral College according to a report by The Hill newspaper.

The bill passed the House earlier, without approval from Alaska Congressman Don Young. But 35 House Republicans last week supported the creation of the commission and the bill moved to the Senate.

The newspaper reported Murkowski saying, “I’m going to support it.” On Monday, Sen. Mitt Romney and Sen. Susan Collins had announced they would support the bill, but Collins says the bill is flawed and she will be suggesting changes.

It needs 60 votes to pass, which means it would need 7 more Republicans to vote yes, presuming that all Democrats will vote for it.

Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer says passage of the bill is a priority and that he hopes to have a vote before the Memorial Day recess.

The commission is the brainchild of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who proposed it on Feb. 15.

There’s no word from Sen. Dan Sullivan’s office about the senator’s position on the matter.

Total eclipse, super moon should be visible in wee hours, especially in Aleutians

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Must Read Alaska predicts there will be more than a few moon watchers out tonight, and maybe even hikers camping on Flattop Mountain above Anchorage, cameras on their tripods as they tuck into their sleeping bags.

The only total lunar eclipse of the year will take place starting at about 1:45 am Wednesday, Alaska Time, with the total eclipse at around 3:11 am until 3:25 am in Anchorage.

Coinciding with a super moon, it will be low on the horizon, so for best viewing you’ll probably have to find a place with an unobstructed horizon, such as Point Woronzof, or parts of the Coastal Trail.

Juneauites may be able to see the so-called Super Flower Blood Moon if they head out to Eagle Beach for the night, but the spectacle will occur earlier than in Anchorage, due to Juneau’s more easterly longitude. Unfortunately for moon watchers in Juneau, clouds are moving into the area. You may have better luck in Haines.

Kenai residents may have a clear view of the eclipse from places like Kalifornsky Beach.

The moon will not be visible above the Arctic Circle and will be most visible in Alaska from Kodiak across the Aleutian chain.

According to NASA, the total eclipse phase will be visible in the western United States and Canada, all of Mexico, most of Central America and Ecuador, western Peru, and southern Chile and Argentina. The eclipse can be seen in its entirety in eastern Australia, New Zealand, and the Pacific Islands, including Hawaii and the Aleutian Islands, which are in their own time zone.

For Anchorage, the eclipse will occur during the end of what’s known as nautical twilight, and at the onset of civil twilight, so the sky will be lit already from the east when Earth’s moon will be located the opposite side of the sun.

This full moon will have the nearest approach to Earth of any of the full moons this year, making it appear to be the largest full moon of the year. It will also tend to appear red due to the sunlight filtering through the atmosphere, which is why it is sometimes known as a “blood moon.”

With clear skies in the forecast in Southcentral Alaska, the moon will appear 14 percent bigger, 30 percent brighter and happening when it may be dark enough to make it worth getting up for.

But if you don’t want to get up, you can view the event from your bed on a livestream at the timeanddate.com website.

Must Read Alaska moon watchers are welcome to send their photos to [email protected] for a collection that may be published here tomorrow.

A 50-50 dividend fix causes ADN writers to spill their martinis and spit invectives

By SUZANNE DOWNING

The Anchorage Daily News editorial board set down its martini glasses long enough this week to tell Gov. Mike Dunleavy that his plan for fixing the Permanent Fund dividend was a “clown car.”

The plan is a resolution that is the subject of the special session of the Legislature. It would allow the people of Alaska to vote on a 50-50 split of the earnings of the Permanent Fund. By that, 50% of the available earnings from the Permanent Fund would go to Alaskans as dividends, and the other 50% would be available for the government trough. 

This formula, Dunleavy budgeters say, would prevent the account from being overdrawn in the future and would finish the work the Legislature left uncompleted in 2018, when it passed Senate Bill 26, which set a structured draw of the Earnings Reserve Account at 5 percent. 

Those lawmakers in 2018 never had the courage to decide how that 5 percent would be split, and because of that, today the overwhelming majority of the draw goes to government, and a slight remainder goes for the Permanent Fund dividend. 

Lawmakers and former Gov. Bill Walker left SB 26 incomplete, knowing a day of reckoning would come. The current governor now wants to complete the fiscal plan started by SB 26, by making sure that the way the Permanent Fund dividend is calculated is detailed in the Alaska Constitution, no longer the political football that all lawmakers agree it has become.

Since 2017, the Legislature has chosen to break the statute, and create a politically-charged dividend that has their own heads on the chopping block. It was exactly that “political solution” that cost Senate President Cathy Giessel and Senate Rules Chair John Coghill their jobs in the 2020 election cycle.

The governor has put forth a reasonable proposal to fix the unfairness of the current situation, where Alaskans are perennially the last in line, when before 2016, they could at least count on a fairly determined dividend free of political interference.

You see, Alaskans don’t care how much the dividend is, so much as they care they have been treated fairly.

In its sputtering diatribe, the ADN editorial writers threw adjective after invective at the proposal, and unceremoniously dumped its sponsors in the grease.

Let’s review the ADN’s overwrought word choices: “Horse-trading, mockery, hobbling the state’s future, raid, savings grab, fantastic scenario, cavalier, audacity, inexcusable, shenanigans,” and last but not least, “clown car.”

It was unbecoming of the daily paper to use its senseless prick of the pen to attack the sponsoring senators and governor for trying to put forward a solution. There are 60 lawmakers, plus one governor, and that means there are 61 different solutions for the PFD. 

Yet the only one who has offered a solution in the last three years has been the governor. And he has many lawmakers by his side.

Lucinda Mahoney, Gov. Dunleavy’s Commissioner of Revenue, explained calmly on Monday to the House Judiciary Committee that the 50-50 plan the public would vote on would require a one-time overdraw from the Earnings Reserve Account. Some $3 billion would be transferred to the Constitutional Budget Reserve to tide the state over for a couple of years. That would be an exceptional draw, and no question — it breaks SB 26’s “structured” draw.

Then, by fiscal year 2027, the state would be generating a budget surplus.

Meanwhile, in August, the lawmakers will get to return to Juneau to hash out the other part of the fiscal equation — how to pay for government, once Alaskans are getting their 50 percent of the royalties from the resources the state owns. Gov. Dunleavy has a proposal for that, too: Streamlining the budget some more and enshrining in the Constitution a provision that says no broad-based tax can be instituted without a vote of the people.

The Legislature, in the way it is now calculating the dividend, is already breaking statute. Yes, to draw $3 billion from the ERA is also breaking a different statute. The question is going to be: Which statute do the legislators want to break and how often? SB 26 just once, or year after year after year continuing to ignore Alaska Statute 43.23.025, which is clearly in conflict with SB 26, as it lays out the specific way dividends are to be calculated.

If that statutory formula is to change, Gov. Dunleavy wants the people to be part of that decision.

The ADN had to bring up the ghost of Gov. Jay Hammond, resting otherwise peacefully, when saying that Hammond wanted the Permanent Fund to be a “money well” to pay for state government when the oil wells run dry. That he did, and wisely so.

But along with Hammond, the Legislature created the dividend. The argument at the time was that not only should Alaskans share in the oil wealth, but the dividend itself would create a constituency, a third rail of politics that no politician could touch without getting electrocuted. The people would protect the principle. Without the dividend, the lawmakers would find a way to get to the principle and drain the Permanent Fund.

Hammond, like Dunleavy, advocated for fiscal responsibility, and even introduced an amendment to the Alaska Constitution limiting state spending. He was no more successful than Dunleavy has been at trying to get the Legislature to pass curbs on its own spending appetite.

A side story at play in 1974 was that Hammond had very narrowly beat Bill Egan for the Governor’s mansion. Egan was supported by the Teamsters boss, Jesse Carr of Valdez, and it was a bruising battle. Carr wanted government money for jobs for his union members, and the only way he could get it was if Egan was elected for a fourth term.

Hammond knew that the forthcoming oil money needed to be protected from special interests, but in reality it was the Carr’s cartel. By 1980, the dividend was put into statute, and statute was followed unbroken for 35 years.

How ironic that in 2016, it was another governor from Valdez, Bill Walker, this time with the powerhouse political money of Alaska’s Future and AFL-CIO’s Vince Beltrami still wanting to gnaw away at the Permanent Fund money for his special interests. The windfall oil monies of 1976 had been transformed into Aladdin’s cave, with billions of dollars accessible by a simple majority vote in the Legislature, and a willing friend living in the White House on Calhoun Street in Juneau.

Walker broke the faith with Alaskans when he vetoed half of the dividend in 2016 and put it into the Earnings Reserve Account, where it sits today.

And ever since then, the Legislature has wasted its own time and Alaskans’ money dickering over the dividend, even at a time when the Permanent Fund itself is on track to reach $80 billion this year.

Dunleavy has proposed a solution worthy of robust debate. The ADN needs to back away from the bottle and quit taking up arms against Alaskans. We are not the enemy. We are the shareholders.