Saturday, April 11, 2026
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COVID-19 update: Zero cases

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In the 24 hours that ended Friday night, no cases of the COVID-19 coronavirus were diagnosed in Alaska.

However, on Saturday Sitka Borough officials announced that a person at a long-term care center had contracted the illness. The person, who lives in the Southeast Alaska Regional Health Consortium Long Term Care facility was taken to Mount Edgecumbe Medical Center and isolated.

The likelihood is if that person has tested positive, there are others in the community that will test positive as well. The case will be included in Sunday’s state report.

All of the other residents of the care facility have been tested and an investigation is underway to identify the source of the virus, the borough said.

Health officials will isolate additional people if needed, according to the statement.

State lifts restaurant entryway hand sanitizer health mandate

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On Saturday, the Department of Health and Social Services revised Health Attachment F of Mandate 16, which decreed that either hand sanitizer or hand-washing stations had to be in the entry of all restaurants.

The move came as restaurant owners across Alaska chaffed at the law, which had heavy penalties, including imprisonment, attached to it.

Commissioner Adam Crum said the adjustment was made after it was brought to the department’s attention that many communities still cannot get hand sanitizer in any reliable quantity. Although it is now being manufactured at Alaska distilleries, it is not available in most small communities, and is expensive when it is.

Hand sanitization or handwashing still must be available, but it already is in restaurants. Gone is the entryway hand-sanitizer requirements. These state mandates supersede any local mandates beginning Monday.

[Read the revised restaurant mandates here]

Commissioner Crum said his department is “Here to help, definitely don’t want insurmountable barriers. We will make all corrections we need to make it right.”

Legislative leaders trying to get hands on CARES Act $$

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The State of Alaska received two disbursements from the federal government this week, with instructions to get it out quickly, fairly, and as equitably as possible to address the economic disaster created by COVID-19.

The Dunleavy Administration has a plan in place to make sure 45 percent of the $1.25 billion that came in goes directly to local governments, as required by the CARES Act, that $300 million is used to help struggling Alaska businesses, particularly in coastal communities, and that the rest of the COVID-19 relief funds are stage-gated to help the state survive before the deadline to expend the funds arrives in December. The State Department of Health and Social Services has seen its budget tapped heavily, and will need some reimbursement. The Department of Labor has had to staff up to process the unemployment claims of the 60,000 Alaskans suddenly out of work.

But Senate President Cathy Giessel and other leaders in the Alaska Legislature today are polling members to see if the House and Senate can get enough members show up in Juneau in the next week or the week following, so they can put a stop to the Dunleavy plan to issue the money beginning May 1, and start their own plan for disbursing the COVID-19 disaster money.

According to some state budget experts, they’re on a fool’s mission. The Legislative Budget and Audit committee has the spending plan from the governor and can quickly give him the go-ahead to simply hit the send button and get the money to the municipalities. Is the Legislature prepared to sue him to stop him from disbursing the funds, MRAK sources asked.

In the Senate Majority’s own explanation of COVID-19 disaster funding, the majority admits that the governor has the authority to get the money out — “as needed to fight the COVID-19 pandemic and offset economic losses.”

What would the legislators do differently? It is possible they want to try again to fund items the governor vetoed in the regular operating budget — things like more funding for ferries and public broadcasting, for example. But with 60 legislators, it’s anyone’s guess how that would turn out, or how long it would take to come to an agreement.

Also tricky for the Legislature is that if they convene in Juneau, the governor may pressure them to pay out the remainder of last year’s dividend — and he’ll have the people of Alaska squarely on his side.

This time, he’ll also have the business community — landlords, utilities, and others who are not able to collect remittances due to the actions of SB 241, which put in provisions that don’t allow for collections, repossessions, disconnections, or evictions. The business community is clamboring for the Legislature to release the Permanent Fund dividend. There are some heavy-hitters in that business sector who are not too happy with the legislative majority over its withholding of the $1,000 stimulus check to Alaskans.

And finally, with a 20 percent unemployment rate and people’s pocketbooks empty, there are a lot of Alaskans who suddenly have a lot more time to take part in the political process, and a lot more motivation to do so.

Meanwhile, the governor has asked the Legislative Budget and Audit Committee to act quickly — by April 29 — so that he can distribute the funds starting May 1. The game’s afoot.

How government mandates have brought one Alaska business to brink of disaster

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AND WHAT READERS CAN DO TO HELP

Jason Floyd was living his dream in Soldotna. After being laid off during budget cuts by the University of Alaska a few years ago, he and with his wife Michele and five children opened up a coffee shop in the heart of the Kenai Peninsula.

Ammo-Can Coffee is that coffee shop. Between the regionally famous cups of coffee that bring people streaming through the doors, and the various groups that use the meeting room, Ammo-Can has become a cultural center of sorts in Soldotna, especially for those who love America and the Constitution.

Ammo-Can offers discounts for veterans, and another discount for those responsibly carrying firearms. Floyd asks all his customers if they are packing, and thanks them for supporting the Second Amendment.

He has a sign on the wall that says “Keep your firearm holstered. If need arises, judicious marksmanship is appreciated.”

“We get lots of people taking their photos next to it but really, that’s our rule,” he said. He doesn’t allow people to unholster their firearms in his establishment, but he honors their right to carry.

When the COVID-19 mandates came down, business dropped off dramatically, as it has done all over the state. But the Floyds were able to stay open for several weeks, as they were still able to legally provide take-out coffee. The coffee klatch groups couldn’t gather, and the youth groups from a local church could no longer have their weekly meeting there.

Clearly, the Floyds’ finances were growing more problematic. They were not able to make good on their lease for the first time, and the government aid programs for businesses, they discovered, were not designed for a business like theirs, with all the members of the family working as baristas and bottle-washers.

The Floyds have other businesses to help them make ends meet: They own a small peony brokerage representing farms across the state. This year, weddings are being cancelled all over America, and most Alaska peony farmers will lose their crops because the markets have dried up. He also runs a 4-H program which has been cancelled due to COVID-19. His wife Michele teaches piano and voice.

“She is my rock,” Floyd said.

Usually, diversifying your income streams in Alaska provides some financial security, but not this year for the Floyds: Their income streams have dissolved.

Floyd hit a low point when all of a sudden a call came from the church youth group that had been meeting weekly at the shop. They asked him if he would meet them on the curb.

Jason went out the door and greeted  the youth, who handed him their monthly tithe. They wanted him to know they knew times were tough, and they looked forward to better days ahead. But in the meantime, they wanted him to accept their contribution.

He’d never imagined a world where he would be accepting money from his church youth group customers just to keep his business alive.

HEALTH MANDATE 16 – THE NAIL IN THE COFFIN?

The final blow came with Health Mandate 16, announced on Wednesday by the Dunleavy Administration.

It was supposed to start a “stage-gated” opening of businesses around the state, but for many business owners, it has proven to be a nightmare.

Ammo-Can is experiencing that nightmare. While people have been able to come into the shop to buy coffee to take it with them, the newest mandate says that the business, and all others that serve the public, must provide hand sanitizer at the door.

The problem is, in Soldotna, Nikiski, Homer, and most small towns around Alaska, there is no hand sanitizer for sale at any price. You can’t even find a bottle of Everclear to make your own.

A call to the wholesaler ALSCO in Anchorage verified that no commercial sizes of hand sanitizer is available and there is no date in the future when it will be.

The Floyds, like many businesses that were hanging on by a thread, had great hopes that this Friday they would be able to open to the public. Now, he feels the government has dealt him a crushing blow.

Instead of allowing people inside the shop, as they’ve been able to do for a month, the coffee shop can suddenly only provide curb-side service.

Floyd says the penalties associated with not obeying the mandate are serious: A violation of the mandate can result in an order to close, or a civil fine up to $1,000 per violation. In addition, the business can be criminally prosecuted for reckless endangerment, a Class A misdemeanor.

That means the father of five could face imprisonment for not more than a year if he just stood his ground against the government. 

But the penalties don’t stop there: Under Alaska Statute 12.55.035, any person violating Mandate 16 may be fined up to $25,000 and a business organization may be sentenced to pay a fine not exceeding the greatest of $2,500,000 for a misdemeanor offense that results in death, or $500,000 for a class A misdemeanor offense that does not result in death.

In spite of everything, Floyd says the community is amazing and that “coffee is a special culture in Alaska.” He has put his faith in God.

CAN AMMO-CAN COFFEE SURVIVE?

Ammo-Can Coffee is like thousands of businesses that are suffering under local, state, and federal government mandates.

Must Read Alaska has set up a GoFundMe page to help keep this family-owned business alive.

GoFundMe allows people to make contributions to causes. Like this one, for Ammo-Can Coffee, a solid small family-owned business in Soldotna.

Buy a “virtual cup of coffee” and send some love to the Floyd family so they can make it through the next few weeks of rigid government mandates and keep their doors open and their coffee pot on.

You can also send the business a cash contribution through the Venmo app. Jason’s Venmo identifier is Jason Floyd @ Jason-Floyd76.

Mandates leave one Alaskan confused over lap-dance rule

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Gov. Mike Dunleavy has been hosting live press conferences at 5 pm Monday through Friday to update Alaskans on the progress his administration is making in vanquishing the COVID-19 coronavirus.

Questions from the reporters are about rules and mandates, testing, and local issues.

But the public can also watch these press conferences, which often go for about an hour and feature Dr. Anne Zink, Chief Medical Officer, and Commissioner Adam Crum of the Department of Health and Social Services.

During Friday’s edition of the “daily presser,” one public viewer on the video feed gave a whole new meaning to the phrase “presser” in his comments, captured during Dunleavy’s remarks: If he can get that close to a hairdresser, why not an exotic dancer at the Alaska Bush Company?

(This will certainly be a topic at the Monday morning planning meeting, we presume. As the state government gets its fingers into the running of businesses during the pandemic, this rule making process should be interesting to watch.)

Anchorage mandates: Customers must wear masks

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RESTAURANTS WILL NOW COLLECT YOUR INFORMATION FOR THE GOVERNMENT

As Anchorage opens up for limited business on Monday, Mayor Ethan Berkowitz says that all employees and customers must wear masks inside stores.

Berkowitz said the Municipality worked with local businesses and public health experts to develop safety measures against the coronavirus known as COVID-19 for the following sectors of “nonessential” businesses:

• Food – restaurants that provide table service
• Retail – general retail stores, such as clothing, sporting goods, books, greenhouses, gifts, etc.
• Personal care services – beauty, barber and hair salons; cosmological services, tattoo shops, body piercing, etc.
• Non-critical businesses that interact with the public – service-focused businesses that include a retail-style storefront such as bait shacks, carpet stores, etc.
• Non-critical professional services that do not interact with the public – such as law offices, architectural, engineering and environmental agencies, consulting services, etc.

Available now in the Must Read Alaska shop. Proceeds to go to Covenant House.

All businesses need to have COVID-19 mitigation plans; and employees and customers must wear face coverings; and practice physical distancing of six feet. Hand sanitizer must be available to the public to use in establishments.

Those businesses that can meet the criteria may begin operations on Monday, April 27, Berkowitz said. The lists of required and recommended safety measures for each sector may be found online at www.muni.org/COVID-19.

For retail stores, Anchorage residents can expect these regulations to apply:

  • Employees and customers must adhere to 6-foot physical distancing protocols.
  • Only one adult per household per visit to a store.
  • Employees and customers shall wear face coverings. Businesses should post signage notifying customers of the requirement to wear face coverings at entrance(s).
  • Frequent hand washing by employees, and adequate supply of soap, disinfectant, hand sanitizer, and paper towels available onsite.
  • Hand sanitizer publicly available for customers.
  • Hourly touch-point sanitization (workstations, equipment, screens, doorknobs, restrooms, etc.)
  • Cleaning and disinfecting must be conducted in compliance with CDC protocols
  • Maximum capacity is no more than 20 customers or 25% of the approved occupancy, based on fire and building codes, whichever is less.
  • Walk-in visits to restaurants are prohibited.
  • Reservations, call-ahead, or other form of advance check-in required for dine-in service. 
  • Businesses are required to maintain reservation/ guest log records for 30 days. This information will be made available to the government.
  • Reservation/guest log must contain first and last name, and phone number.
  • Fabric face coverings required for all restaurant employees and encouraged for customers except while eating.

Ravn Air says its CARES Act loan rejected due to formula

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Is Chapter 7 bankruptcy next for Ravn Air?

The regional carrier that filed for Chapter 11 reorganization earlier this month messaged some bad company news to social media today: “Our CARES loan application will NOT be possible due to the ASM (Available Seat Miles) formula — the total number of airline seats multiplied by the total miles flown in one year.”

Ravn was one of the first and most visible business failures to come from the COVID-19 economic fallout. It had served myriad small communities around Alaska until it parked its all of its planes on April 5, as communities began to close down travel due to the highly contagious Wuhan coronavirus.

COVID-19 updated: Another 2

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Much like the report yesterday, two more cases of COVID-19 were diagnosed in Alaska in the past 24 hours for a total of 339 cases of the coronavirus. Some 208 of those cases are now recovered. 

Both of the new cases were in Anchorage. No new hospitalizations or deaths are reported.

The total case count, including both those recovered and those who died:

  • Anchorage: 168
  • Kenai Peninsula: 19
  • Fairbanks/North Star Borough: 79
  • Southeast Fairbanks Census Area: 1
  • Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area: 1
  • Kodiak: 1
  • Mat-Su Borough: 20
  • Nome Area 1
  • Juneau: 27
  • Ketchikan: 16
  • Petersburg: 3
  • Craig: 2
  • Bethel: 1

COVID-19 update: 2 cases

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Two cases of COVID-19 were diagnosed in Alaska in the past 24 hours for a total of 337 cases of the coronavirus. Some 209 of those cases are now recovered.

Both of the new cases were in Anchorage. No new hospitalizations or deaths are reported.

The total case count, including both those recovered and those who died:

  • Anchorage: 166
  • Kenai Peninsula: 19
  • Fairbanks/North Star Borough: 79
  • Southeast Fairbanks Census Area: 1
  • Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area: 1
  • Kodiak: 1
  • Mat-Su Borough: 20
  • Nome Area 1
  • Juneau: 27
  • Ketchikan: 16
  • Petersburg: 3
  • Craig: 2
  • Bethel: 1