Wednesday, March 18, 2026
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Anchorage turns to Nixle to send COVID alarm message

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IS ‘GATHERINGS AREN’T SAFE’ MEANT TO SCARE VOTERS?

The Municipality of Anchorage is using the Nixle technology platform in a novel way, one that some say is “nanny state” activity.

According to Nixle, text messages from the Municipality and police are for matters of great urgency, such as missing persons, walk-aways from halfway houses, and active crime scenes to avoid. The platform uses email messages for non-urgent messages, according to Nixle’s own terms of use and descriptions.

Now, the Muni appears to be using Nixle to promote panic over COVID-19.

In an “Alert” sent by the Office of Emergency Management, Nixle recipients were warned in the headline, “COVID-19 has killed 210,494 Americans. Cases are surging. COVID-19 could affect you. Take action now to save lives.”

Nixle is a tool that official government agencies sign up for and community members may also sign up for. It’s a way to get emergency information out to people via text messages. But it has rules about use of text messages — they are for urgent notifications.

COVID-19 must be that bad, because hundreds of Nixle users were advised today — via text message, not email — that “GATHERINGS ARE NOT SAFE.”

COVID-19 has killed 210,494 Americans including 36 Anchorage residents. Cases are surging. COVID-19 could affect you.

But it doesn’t have to happen. Together, we must stop COVID-19 with simple steps and smart choices.
 
• Avoid social gatherings, especially indoors. GATHERINGS ARE NOT SAFE.
• Stay home except for essential trips.
• Feeling even mild symptoms? Get tested. Stay home.
• Wear a mask and stay at least 6 feet from others outside your household.

Not all Nixle users were impressed. Several contacted Must Read Alaska and asked if this means Mayor Ethan Berkowitz is readying another round of shutdowns.

“You’ve got to be joking. This is ridiculous to say the least,” wrote one respondent.

“Wow! More fear mongering! Who approved this? To scare people away from going to the polls? This is ridiculous,” wrote another.

“Berki, you are a joke. Stop the insanity,” and “Wow, politicization at its finest. I will be unsubscribing from Nixle now that it’s a part of the Berkowitz propaganda machine,” were two other comments.

Performing Arts Center says ‘no’ to ‘Save Anchorage’ banner on building

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The management of the Performing Arts Center has told Save Anchorage it cannot hang a banner on the side of the Alaska Performing Arts building.

The Black Lives Matter banner that hung there for weeks is now down. It had been approved for the side of the building by the Berkowitz Administration through Oct. 2.

Jamie Allard, Assembly member for the Eagle River area, said the management of the center has been hard to reach, and has not returned her calls, but that a new email she received, there was a clear “no.”

The management of the PAC said that the current banner policy is being revisited due to the kerfuffle over the Black Lives Matter banner, which had turned the building wall into a “public forum.”

But so far the policy has not yet been changed, and that means the Save Anchorage group is being treated unfairly and that the municipality has showed preference to the Black Lives Matter group, Allard said.

In an email to Allard, the PAC management carefully wrote: “As a result of the complaint filed with his office, Municipal Ombudsman Darrel W. Hess informed ACPA that banners for events not happening inside the building create a ‘public forum’ and should not be allowed. As such, the current PAC banner policy is being revised to allow only PAC events to be advertised on any banners placed on the building and no banners that create a “’public forum’ be allowed.

The PAC’s banner policy is here:

Al Gross screws campaign sign on side of State storage building in Ketchikan

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Al Gross’ campaign screwed one of its campaign signs to a building leased by the State of Alaska for lab storage in Ketchikan. At 1283 Tongass Ave, the building is owned by a private company, but leased to the State of Alaska, and used for storage for Fish and Game.

It didn’t take long for this Republican town to respond. A Trump sticker was affixed to the Gross sign.

Not long after that, someone scrawled “is a bitch” on the Trump sticker, which someone had attempted to scrape off, unsuccessfully.

The sign, on the busy thoroughfare, was well-fastened to the building, a job any union would be proud of.

The 2020 general election ends in 28 days.

California governor: Put your ‘mask on between bites’

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CANADA’S TOP DOC SAYS WEAR MASK DURING SEX

You might want to put your mask on because this one may have you laughing out loud:

The governor of California is reminding the restaurant diners of the Golden State that if they go out to eat, they should put their mask on between bites of food.

In a post on Twitter, Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office gave the recommendation, along with a graphic that tells diners to touch their mask as little as possible.

Newsom has served as California’s 40th governor since January of 2019 and has implemented a variety of laws that have outraged conservatives. Last month, he signed legislation to put male inmates into female prisons if they identify as female.

His mask recommendation has elicited a variety of negative responses on Twitter.

While Alaska does not mandate masks, some communities, such as Anchorage and Juneau, do require masks to be worn indoors when in public.

The Juneau mask mandate includes restaurants, except for when diners are eating or drinking, but do not go as far as the Newsom recommendation to put a mask on while chewing food.

Anchorage Mayor Ethan Berkowitz’ mandate states, “All individuals must wear masks or cloth face coverings over their noses and mouths when they are indoors in public settings or communal spaces outside the home.”

The Berkowitz mandate also limits indoor gatherings to fewer than 30. Some of the Berkowitz mandates are being ignored by the public, although mask usage is widespread.

Canada’s top doctor has taken the mask advice a step further — into the bedroom. Dr. Theresa Tam wrote that sexual activity with the lowest risk “involves yourself alone.”

“Sex can be complicated in the time of COVID-19, especially for those without an intimate partner in their household or whose sexual partner is at higher risk for COVID-19,” she wrote. “Like other activities during COVID-19 that involve physical closeness, there are some things you can do to minimize the risk of getting infected and spreading the virus.”

Tam said sexual encounters outside one’s immediate social bubble should skip the kissing and avoid face-to-face contact and “consider wearing a mask that covers the nose and mouth.”

Judges go rogue, showing why we need judicial reform

CROSBY ELECTION RULING SHOWS HOW BAD OUR SYSTEM IS

Alaskans are scratching their heads at Superior Court Judge Dani Crosby’s ruling that says absentee ballots do not need to have a witness signature on them this year.

Crosby said it’s an undue burden for people to have to have a witness on their ballot. The requirement is not that someone watches who you vote for, but simply signs to acknowledge that they know you and that you are the one who voted this ballot. Crosby says that because of the pandemic, it’s just too much to ask.

This ruling is an example of judicial activism, also called “legislating from the bench.”

The case was brought by Arctic Village Council and the League of Women Voters, both heavily dominated by Democrats and liberal allies. The plaintiffs said that some Alaskans will find it too difficult to get a witness and thus would be robbed of their constitutionally guaranteed right to vote.

Earlier this year, the Alaska Supreme Court validated Ballot Measure 2, an effort to upend Alaska’s tried-and-true election system. The justices said that the 25-page multi-dimensional upheaval of election and campaign laws did not violate the statutory “single subject rule” for ballot initiatives. After all, the subject was “elections,” the justices said.

Critics of rulings like these wonder why Alaskans even need a legislative and executive branch, when governing is now being done by judges.

These two examples demonstrate why Alaska needs a complete overhaul to how judges are appointed. Right now, it’s all in the hands of the Alaska Bar Association and the Judicial Council, both liberal bodies. The Judicial Council offers three names to the governor, and the governor must pick from them.

In other words, unelected lawyers pick the judges for Alaskans. The people have absolutely no say through their elected governor.

Will Gov. Mike Dunleavy appeal Crosby’s ruling? It’s doubtful, and maybe he should not. After all, the 2020 election is already underway and having a court case during the election could have unforeseen consequences, should any of the races end up in court (a high probability with close races).

Indeed, ballots have already been sent out to nearly 100,000 voters who opted for absentee or overseas vote-by-mail ballots.

The best thing for Dunleavy to do is to leave this as “unsettled law,” and let this Superior Court ruling hang in limbo.

The Division of Elections, which is not under his authority, needs to be able to move forward with certainty and provide voters with definitive answers on how to handle their absentee ballots.

But to be clear, the Crosby decision puts the integrity of the elections in grave doubt. Already, the campaign of Al Gross is going door-to-door in Anchorage, asking people if they plan to vote for Al Gross, and if they are, providing them with an absentee ballot application.

Voter fraud is now — thanks to our court system — almost a certainty.

There is probably not time to fix it for this round, but the best fix voters can provide is to vote no on the retention of judges on Nov. 3, and send a message to the judiciary.

The best thing the governor can do is to begin working on a constitutional amendment to reform how judges acquire so much power in our state by bypassing the people, and putting the power of governing into the hands of unelected lawyers.

Eagle River’s Yellow Rock gets a new political paint job

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Yellow Rock, which is usually a place for Eagle River resident to paint fun sentiments, has once again become a political billboard.

Earlier this year, residents of the suburb of Anchorage were enraged that someone had politicized the rock that resembles a pig, by painting Black Lives Matter where it sits at the corner of Eagle River Road and Wren Lane.

Until the Black Lives Matter paint job, the rock had never been a political landmark. It was always for lighthearted announcements. Maybe times have changed.

Or maybe someone will come along and paint over the Trump 2020 that is scrawled on the formerly nonpartisan rock.

The Yellow Rock isn’t the only MAGA message popping up around Anchorage. At Service High School in Anchorage, someone had painted MAGA on the sledding hill behind the school. The Municipality burned the grass to get rid of the message.

Media doesn’t care to ask the tough questions of Gross

Now that the news media, or at least what passes for news media in Alaska, thoroughly have dissected Senate candidate Al Gross’s bear tale, perhaps they now could find out what he would do if elected.

It is good to know, we suppose, that a hapless bear was dispatched by someone – the official report names the shooter as Gross’ buddy, by the way – and the killing was legit except that the bruins claws were never turned in, according to news reports.

Yes, yes, that all means something, but it means squat when it comes to experience qualifying someone for the Senate. What do we know? Gross, a Democrat-cum-independent has never held office and his ads claim he killed the offending bear himself, drove a fishing boat, was born in the wake of an avalanche and knew former Gov. Jay Hammond. How in the world does any of that qualify him for the world’s most exclusive club?

Gross is running to unseat Republican Sen Dan Sullivan, but where does he stand on issues? Take, for example, health care. Gross is a guy who knocked down millions each year working a three-day week in the middle of nowhere as an orthopedic surgeon. Now, by golly, he sees the light?

“In Washington I will work with anyone to make healthcare more affordable and that patients are protected,” he says in campaign literature. He wants Medicare to be available to everyone, he says. After that? A blizzard of generalities. “Strengthen.” “Increase.” “Simplify.” “Support.” Not much specific and much like Alyse Galvin’s campaign literature in her race against Congressman Don Young – bland and opaque. (Her main claim to fame, it seems, is her inability to hold a job.)

The news media should explore the consequences for Alaska if Gross were elected as an “independent.” What would that mean? He says he will caucus with Democrats, but Democrats generally advance up the ladder to power more slowly than Republicans.

When Republicans gained the majority in 1995, they changed their rules to allow Republicans on individual committees to vote by secret ballot for their committee’s chairman, no matter that member’s seniority.

Republicans also limited their committee chairman, or, when in the minority, their ranking members, to six-year terms to allow broader participation. Democrats have no such rules, and it could be a very long time before anybody among the Democrats would bother to listen to an “independent” from Alaska.

There is so much we do not know – and there are so few in the media asking questions.

Judge rules that absentee ballots don’t need witnesses

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WILL THE STATE APPEAL?

Superior Court Judge Dani Crosby today ruled in favor of Arctic Village Council and the League of Women Voters, saying that absentee ballots do not need to have witness signatures on them.

Crosby said that due to the coronavirus, requiring a witness on absentee ballots is too much of a burden for voters. She said there’s no reason to believe that removing the signature witness requirement will lead to voter fraud.

The State of Alaska and the village have until Tuesday afternoon to advise the judge on how it will be enforced, since Alaskans are already voting in the Nov. 3 election.

The decision could throw the election into confusion since so many Alaskans are voting by absentee ballot this year, and may misunderstand that, for now, the signature witness rule is still in place. The Alaska Department of Law has not announced if it will appeal the ruling to the Alaska Supreme Court.

Crosby, a notoriously liberal judge, dismissed every single argument the State made to protect the integrity of the election, as though she had made her decision, and then worked back from there to rationalize it.

It’s the court giving Alaskans another example that demonstrates that Alaska’s courts are politicized, pushing causes for the Left, rather than to uphold the integrity of elections for all Alaskans.

Under Alaska’s method for choosing judges, members of the Alaska Judicial Council recommend names to the governor, and those names are nearly always of liberals, who are rated by members of the Alaska Bar Associations.

Alaskans have little say in the choice of judges, except during retention elections. Judge Crosby is up for retention this November.

Fairbanks City, North Pole candidate review

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By SCOTT LEVESQUE

In addition to Fairbanks Borough Assembly and School Board seats on Tuesday’s ballot, the Fairbanks City Council and North Pole City Council have an election for those inside city limits.

FAIRBANKS CITY COUNCIL SEAT E

  • Sue Sprinkle
  • Lonny Marney

A 20-year resident of Fairbanks, Sue Sprinkle’s platform centers on the revitalization of downtown Fairbanks. She desires a vibrant, affordable downtown experience for families and young professionals. Her contention is a regenerated downtown area will provide economic and population growth in an otherwise vacant area of the city. Sprinkle is a registered nonpartisan.

Lonny Marney is a fiscal conservative who desires a balanced budget, protections for the PFD, proper police staffing and keeping Fairbanks debt-free. Marney pledges to be a voice for the conservatives within the city and have an open mind to ideas and legislation. His focus is on lowering taxes and dispersing CARES Act funds, and increasing the Fairbanks attractiveness to potential residents.  Marney is a registered Republican.

FAIRBANKS CITY COUNCIL SEAT F

  • Robert Howard
  • Charles Foster III
  • Montean Jackson
  • Jim Clark
  • David Van den Berg

Jim Clark is running to ensure conservative values are represented and not forgotten on the Fairbanks City Council. Clark will focus on city spending, providing a small government mentality while in office. Clark sees the city council as an ally for local businesses and first responders. He is a Republican.

Charles Foster III sees running for office as his civic duty. After looking at the city budget, Foster is recommending the suspension of open positions to move money to higher priority departments. His vision is to build a convention center to replace the Polaris building downtown. Foster is a registered undeclared voter.

Robert Howard‘s platform focuses on the homelessness problem, substance abuse issues, and police funding. Howard believes increasing the police force and presence in Fairbanks will help with morale and curb many of the issues surrounding homelessness and drugs. He is a registered undeclared voter.

Montean Jackson sees public safety, workforce development, and fiscal responsibility as the key to her city council run. Jackson sees tough decisions ahead as she pledges to maintain a balanced budget. Jackson is a Democrat.

David Van den Berg is a 30-year Fairbanks resident and former business owner who believes in conservative fiscal policy centered on target goals. Van den Berg values credibility, especially in government, and wants to focus on parking enforcement. He is a registered Democrat.

NORTH POLE CITY COUNCIL SEAT 1

  • Aino Welch

Aino Welch is running for reelection and is uncontested for North Pole City Council Seat 1. Welch is a business owner and paraprofessional for the Fairbanks North Star Borough School District. Welch is a strong supporter of the police, including participating in a local “Back the Blue” rally. Welch is a Republican.

NORTH POLE CITY COUNCIL SEAT 2

  • DeJohn Cromer

DeJohn Cromer is also running for reelection uncontested for North Pole City Council Seat 2. Cromer is a registered Democrat.