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Tens of thousands of voter addresses changed

FILED FOR PFD WITH DIFFERENT ADDRESS? YOU MAY BE VOTING A QUESTIONED BALLOT

It’s not hundreds of voter addresses that were changed by the Division of Elections without the knowledge of voters.

It’s thousands — tens of thousands. In fact, just under 15 percent of the entire voting population of 567,403 have had their addresses changed by Elections.

An analysis of the July voter files compared to the similar batch of files from March show that some 84,000 Alaska voters have been assigned new addresses by the Elections Division. Most of them without their knowledge or consent.

Some of those address changes will be accurate. Others will have simply “moved” voters into districts where they don’t live and don’t vote.

Take the example of the fisherman in Naknek who lives is Anchorage some of the year, and uses that city address for his Permanent Fund dividend, but likes to vote in Bristol Bay, where his real interests as an Alaskan are.

Or the student at University of Alaska Fairbanks, who wants to vote in Fairbanks but gets her Permanent Fund dividend in Ninilchik. The Division of Elections has moved both of these individuals to voting in their PFD address’ district.

That 84,000 changed addresses represents a 500-600 percent increase from recent years, according to an analysis by David Nees, researcher at Alaska Policy Forum.

The matter came to light in a Must Read Alaska report about candidate Aaron Weaver, District 15, who is running for State House and discovered the State Elections Division had assigned him to District 20, which would make him ineligible to run or vote in District 15.

It was clearly a mistake, and it took a trip to the Elections office on Gambell Street in Anchorage for Weaver to sort it out. Must Read Alaska began hearing from dozens of other voters whose registrations were changed by the Elections Division. For some, it wasn’t a problem, because they keep a Post Office box in their voting district. But most do not, and with seasonal workers, this is a major headache that most haven’t learned about. They’ll find out when they try to vote.

DIVISION OF ELECTIONS RESPONDS

Division of Elections Director Josie Bahnke responded to a query from the Alaska Republican Party about the number of voters having been re-registered by the division into districts where they do not live.

Bahnke said the division sent notices to voters and it’s the responsibility of the voters to review the information and correct it, if they feel it is wrong.

Bahnke tried to explain how it happened in a two-page letter to the Alaska Republican Party:

“As you know, Alaska voters approved the PFD AVR (Permanent Fund dividend automatic voter registration) ballot initiative in November 2016, which amended sections of Alaska Statute Title 15 and Title 43,” Bahnke wrote. The ballot measure instructed the state to use the Permanent Fund Dividend application to automatically register people to vote and ensure the voter registration information is current. The law requires the automatic registration of eligible Alaskans to vote when they apply for their PFD.”

Unless they opt out, of course. Opting out is not intuitive, nor is it necessarily easy. You have to really watch your mail to know if the Division of Elections has reassigned you. Why would the State do such a thing? Most voters cannot imagine the government taking it in its own hands to reassign your voting address.

“The Division of Elections (“Division”) is simply implementing this law,” Bahnke wrote. “The Division is aware that voters’ registration information was updated if they made changes to their residence address through the PFD application process. As required by the law, the Division sent out opt-out notices in the mail to voters whose address on their PFD application was different from their voter record address, or to applicants who were not currently registered to vote.”

The opt-out notices may have languished in post office boxes or could have easily been mistaken as junk mail. Tuckerman Babcock of the Republican Party says this brings into question whether the Voting Rights Act is being violated by the Division of Elections. Should the government be allowed to change voting addresses without people’s permission?

Babcock says the entire process is not what was intended by voters who approved the Automatic Voter Registration initiative. Voters, in information pushed by the groups wanting the law to pass, were told that only unregistered voters would be automatically registered as voters under the new law and that they could easily opt out. Voters were not told that everyone would be assigned an official voting address that would need to correspond to the address they use on their PFD application.

But Bahnke says it’s the responsibility of the PFD recipient to make sure their voter registration information is still accurate:

“The mailer notified Alaskans that the information on their PFD application would be used to update their voter registration or register them to vote unless they opted out by declining the registration opportunity within 30 days. Voters who did not respond to the opt—out notice, were registered or had their voter registration record updated based on information they provided on their Permanent Fund Dividend application, as required by the law.”

Bahnke noted that the law reads: “the director shall, as soon as practicable and in accordance with a schedule established by the director by rule, notify by United States mail and any other means authorized by the director, each applicant not already registered to vote at the address provided in the applicant’s application (1) of the processes to (A) decline to be registered as a voter; (B) maintain an existing voter registration or be newly registered at a valid place of residence not provided in the applicant’s application; and (C) adopt a political party affiliation; and (2) that failure to respond to the notification shall constitute the applicant’s consent to cancel any registration to vote in another jurisdiction. (I) If an applicant does not decline to be registered as a voter within 30 calendar days after the director issues the notification, the application under AS 43.23.015 will constitute a completed registration form. The name of the applicant shall be placed on the master register if the director determines that the person is qualified to vote under AS 15.05.010, and the director shall forward to the applicant a registration card. If registration is denied, the applicant shall immediately be informed in writing that registration was denied and the reason for denial.”

The deadline for voters to register or update their registration for the Aug. 21, Primary Election was on July 22.

Bahnke says the division is instructing voters who didn’t want their registration to be updated for the Primary to vote a questioned ballot at their polling place, and their ballot will be reviewed by a Regional Review Board following Primary Election Day.

According to Nees, it looks like about half of the 84,000 reassigned voters will end up being legitimate changes, but that still leaves some 40,000 or more that may not be correct.

And that is a very big concern. Having tens of thousands of additional voters casting a questioned ballot could clog up the polls on Election Day, and having the delayed results of elections could take days in some close races.

The questioned ballots that would need to be evaluated would require ballot counting watchers from each party to oversee the work, tying up resources that campaigns could use elsewhere in preparing for what is a very short sprint to the General Election.

“None of this was contemplated by statute,”  Babcock said.

Unilaterally using one government form — a PFD application — to override all other government forms is yet another misstep in a series of troubling mistakes made by this Division of Elections in the past three years.

Look up your voter information at Division of Elections

 

Pirate? Campaign reports come in, with ‘aargh’ donor occupations

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Demetrie Alexander of Fort Yukon, Alaska donated $100 to the campaign of Ed Alexander, a Democrat running for the District 6 House seat against incumbent Dave Talerico, who is a Republican. These two candidates will appear on the District 6 General Election ballot in November.

As required for all donors to political campaigns in Alaska, Demetrie had to reveal his occupation.

He listed his job title as “Pirate.”

Demetrie named his employer as “Porcupine River Timber.”

Demetrie, the former magistrate of Fort Yukon, has evidently turned to pirating in his later years. He is among the thousands of donors listed in recent Alaska Public Offices Commission reports from campaigns — with donors who reveal everything from being a “Former Gov.,” the job title listed for Bill Sheffield (who donated to the campaign of current Gov. Bill Walker) and a “maid,” the occupation listed by someone who gave to the governor as well.

Candidates are required to file their 7-day reports by today with the commission and are now on a 24-hour reporting cycle, when they must report all funds received every day so the public can see where the money is coming from in the last week.

Donlin gold mine clears big hurdle; permits come next

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THOUSANDS OF JOBS ASSOCIATED WITH DONLIN

In one of the most impoverished areas of Alaska, where residents live a subsistence life that is heavily subsidized by government checks, two government agencies on Monday issued a joint record of decision for the Donlin Gold project.

U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Alaska District Commander Col. Michael Brooks and Assistant Interior Secretary Joe Balash signed the decision in Anchorage, signaling the end of an environmental impact statement phase for Donlin that started in 2012. The planning for the project has lasted 20 years.

The decision includes key permits to move forward, with the BLM issuing an “offer to lease” for the pipeline right of way to Donlin Gold, which will provide natural gas to power the project.

More than 10 Native villages in the area have passed resolutions opposing the mine in recent weeks. The latest village to sign the resolution was Chevak, where unemployment is 23 percent and rising.

The project would take four years to build and employ up to 3,200 workers during the peak construction, with $300 million annually into workers’ pockets. The construction phase would need 2,500 workers for the mine site and transportation facilities and 650 workers to build the natural gas line that would connect to a line from the North Slope.

Project construction jobs would be seasonal and include heavy equipment operators, site engineers, construction managers, laborers, electricians, pipe fitters, and iron/steel workers.

During operations, some 434 jobs would be filled in the first year, increasing to 1,000 jobs annually for the life of the mine, which is estimated to be 27 years. Total payroll would be $98 million per year.  Mine closure and reclamation would require fewer workers.

Calista Corp. is the owner of the subsurface mineral rights and is estimated to earn $1.5 billion over the life of the project. The royalties it receives would be shared with other ANCSA corporations under the provisions of ANCSA Section 7(i). Other payments to Native-held corporations, such as Kuskokwim Corp. and CIRI for rights-of-way leases and other considerations are included in the partnership agreements.

The issuance of the Donlin Gold decision and the initial project permits are significant milestones for the project, providing the foundation for the 100 or more permits required to build what will be one of the world’s largest and highest grade gold mines, with a total yield of 33 million ounces of gold.

YES FOR SALMON COULD KILL PROJECT

The ballot initiative that has been approved for November’s General Election could kill the project, however.

Ballot Measure 1 would designate all bodies of water in Alaska as salmon habitat, unless proved otherwise. It would require tougher standards for any development in areas that are considered to be part of salmon habitat, including entire watersheds and uplands.

Opponents of Ballot Measure 1 say that the measure is so strict it will bring any development in Alaska to a halt and dry up private investment in the state.

‘Actions speak louder than words’ when union boss beats up on a veteran

LOOK WHO ELSE UNION BOSS VINCE BELTRAMI IS SUPPORTING THIS CYCLE

AFL-CIO union boss Vince Beltrami has piled on with an attack mailer criticizing a U.S. Army veteran for her voting record. Her offense is that she has the audacity to run for House District 14.

Beltrami’s attack message is that “Actions speak louder than words” when it comes to voting. Beltrami says she had time to file for her Permanent Fund Dividend, but not to vote.

Jamie Allard, who served for seven years in the Army, and then as a civilian with top-secret clearance on multiple overseas assignments, didn’t always have time or even the information for who to vote for in Alaska’s elections, since she was deployed overseas so much. She often didn’t get her absentee ballot in time. Veterans know how hard this can be.

Jamie Allard told Must Read Alaska she did file for that dividend, but didn’t always take it. She filed to maintain her residency in Alaska, even while she had to be gone for extended periods of time. And she had three months to file for her and her family.

But Beltrami is doing his thug routine in a flyer supporting her main opponent, Kelly Merrick, the wife of Laborers 341 Union Boss Joey Merrick. Joey Merrick is the guy who is spending tens of thousands of dollars of union money this summer trying to elect “Musk Ox” (fake) Republicans who, once elected, then go to Juneau and put Democrats in control of our State House. Like they did for the past two years.

It would look awkward — very awkward — if Joey Merrick’s union funded the hit on Allard in order to help his wife, Kelly Merrick. It would probably be illegal, in fact. So to maintain outward appearances, his buddy Vince Beltrami at the AFL-CIO is funding the hit for him.

This Beltrami criticism of a U.S. Army Veteran is from a guy who never put on any other uniform than a union jacket and doesn’t lift much more than a bullhorn these days:

Because of the nature of much of Allard’s work as an enlisted soldier and as a civilian working with countries in turmoil in Eastern Europe, she can’t speak about much of her assignments. But she is proud of her service, as she is of her Special Forces husband’s defense of American rights and liberty.

WHO DOES BELTRAMI SUPPORT, BESIDES KELLY MERRICK?

Whenever Beltrami is involved, it’s always wise to determine why he is supporting one candidate over another.

We pulled his personal (as opposed to his union) political contribution file for 2018, and it tells voters in Eagle River what they need to know about why he is supporting Merrick and beating up on Jamie Allard:

Now, take a look at who Joey Merrick is supporting for State House in District 9 — the old Musk Ox himself, Jim Colver. It’s in the fine print (and Must Read Alaska has added Joey Merrick’s photo to the mailer that arrived this weekend in District 9, where Merrick has spent $22,000 of union money to try to get Colver back in the House, as a reliable vote with the Democrats.)

 

Must Read Alaska ran into Colver chatting it up with Mayor Ethan Berkowitz and a group of Democrats this weekend in Spenard, rather than campaigning in his district. Having the kind of union backing he has, Colver perhaps didn’t need to knock on doors:

 

Joey Merrick is controlling nearly $70,000 in election money this cycle in support of Democrats and pseudo-independents such as Rep. Dan Ortiz and Rep. Jason Grenn, and Musk Ox Republican Louise Stutes of Kodiak. His real goal is to maintain Democrat control of the House of Representatives, with a little help from fake Republicans. Not coincidentally, he has a wife running for House in Eagle River District 14 as a “Republican”, named Kelly Merrick.

What can possibly go wrong?

Walker Administration’s political crackdown on signs continues

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BUT IS ENFORCEMENT ARBITRARY AND CAPRICIOUS?

By its own admission, the Alaska Department of Transportation says the department’s crackdown on political signage has not hit the Walker-Mallott signs.

Gov. Walker knew about the crackdown and likely authorized it verbally, and he removed many of his own signs just before the State DOT got busy on sign removal last month.

Now, we are told by the Anchorage Daily News, the governor and lieutenant governor have had none of their remaining signs flagged and none has been confiscated by DOT.

The campaign sign Walker posted at the entrance of Matanuska Lake State Recreation Area has finally been removed, after weeks of criticism from Must Read Alaska over the governor’s misuse of state resources. It is unclear if he or his brother removed it or if the State Department of Natural Resources finally decided the boss had abused the privilege long enough.

Gov. Walker’s illegal sign using state property at the entrance to the Matanuska Lake State Recreation Area.

In the sign graveyard at DOT’s property behind State Troopers’ maintenance yard on Tudor Road in Anchorage, the area is littered with campaign signs of Republicans and Democrat candidates. Each of those signs costs as much as $350, plus volunteer or paid labor.

But no Gov. Bill Walker signs are to be seen there.

Walker was losing the sign war, and candidate Mike Dunleavy was winning it. When Mark Begich jumped into the race as a Democrat and started putting up signs, that’s when the crackdown came.

The Anchorage Daily News editorial board doesn’t see the problem. It thinks the signs have been handled fairly by the Department of Transportation. The editorial that appeared over the weekend says no candidate has been disadvantaged by the enforcement.

Not so.

The Dunleavy for Alaska group, according to APOC reports, has spent as much as $50,000 on signs, and it’s been a great success for that group, pushing Mike Dunleavy’s name recognition to what is now a respectable level.

And Mead Treadwell and Mark Begich, both who jumped into the race on the last day possible, wanted to get their sign game going to compete with Dunleavy and Walker.

Walker, through his surrogates at the Department of Transportation, has just cost his opponents a combined cash outlay of more than $100,000, by selectively enforcing the “no political sign” rule after their signs were already in place, an action he may have to defend on constitutional grounds.

Some campaigns moved their signs when asked to by the State. In reality, all they really needed to do was move them a few feet and tear off the survey tape. But being a scofflaw is something that is not easy to defend as a candidate, even one whose education informs him or her that this is a First Amendment issue.

More than 25 political campaign signs were torn down by DOT in recent days; the agency said it was because they were causing safety hazards.

Saturday in Soldotna: A Walker sign impeding visibility but not flagged by DOT.

But a review of many of the “disappeared” signs shows that’s not the case. Walker signs remain, such as at the Soldotna intersection in the photo above, while small, unobtrusive signs far off the road have been flagged for removal, such as the one shown here in Wasilla.

Sen. Mike Shower shows a campaign sign of his in Wasilla that has been tagged for removal by the Department of Transportation.

DOT spokeswoman Shannon McCarthy told the ADN that the sweep was not motivated by politics. The State’s official position is that the sign law hasn’t been enforced in recent years due to budget cuts, but that’s folklore. The political sign law has never been enforced in dozens of years, according to political observers who have been active for decades.

In late July, DOT workers started tagging signs around Anchorage, and then started removing signs that candidates left in place. At Raspberry Road and Jewel Lake Road, the state said it was a safety concern, although most of those those signs were clearly off the roadway. Only the Mark Begich sign actually appears to be obstructing a sight line:

Jewell Lake and Raspberry Road, before the Department of Transportation crackdown.

According to the Anchorage Daily News, DOT collected 14 Republican candidate signs and 7 Democrat candidate signs from around Anchorage. The most signs removed from any candidate belonged to Edie Grunwald, running for lieutenant governor, who lost four of hers to the DOT sign graveyard.

According to the Anchorage Daily News editorial, the campaigns have been treated fairly. That would require a written plan, not an ad hoc round-up done when it became evident that the election season was getting too hot.

Gov. Walker may have another strategy in mind: The signs build excitement and public knowledge of a primary election. He is not appearing on the primary ballot, however. Every vote for his opponents who are on that ballot will not be a vote for him. Low turnout will benefit him in November, and give him time to convince voters to give the Walker-Mallott ticket another chance.

Or you can go with the Anchorage Daily News editorial theory: “But in its crackdown on illegal signs thus far, DOT officials haven’t flagged every sign legible from the roadway, as they could. Instead, they have wisely opted to focus on ones that are obvious offenders and those that pose potential hazards, much as state troopers don’t try to pull over every speeding driver, only those most likely to present safety hazards.”

But the ADN may not be an honest broker of this matter because every sign that comes down means a possible advertiser and additional revenue for the newspaper.

Candidate accused by State of food stamp fraud

BEKAH HALAT CAMPAIGN IN PERIL AS DOCUMENTS SURFACE?

Bekah Halat, a first-time candidate running against Rep. Chris Birch for Senate Seat M (South Anchorage hillside), and her husband have been accused by the State of Alaska of food stamp fraud.

The State’s complaint is on two counts: The first is a Class C felony for theft of $750 to $24,999. The second is a Class A misdemeanor for misrepresenting the family’s income, according to court documents sent to Must Read Alaska. A search of online cases at CourtView confirmed the charges.

Halat’s husband, Jarek, is named in the complaint with the same charges. Their arraignment is Aug. 24, three days after the Primary election. That’s when they’ll plead guilty or not guilty.

Noteworthy in the State of Alaska’s complaint is that Bekah Halat “is running in the Republican primary.”

Why the State Department of Law finds it important to identify the party affiliation of the accused raises the question of this having been an accelerated interest to the state, or even a witch hunt.

But the accusation draws startling conclusions that bring her continued candidacy into doubt. She will, regardless, appear on the Aug. 21 ballot for the seat that is being vacated by Sen. Kevin Meyer, who is a candidate for lieutenant governor.

Bekah Halat has not returned messages to explain whether it’s a mix up, or whether she is the subject of false accusations by the State. She has not yet said if she is going to suspend her candidacy and focus on repairing her personal situation.

But it’s clear she has known about the pending legal action against her, since she has been interviewed by investigators in July.

The entire complaint is linked here:

Halat Class C Felony Charge

At the same time she was being interviewed by State of Alaska fraud investigators, a story and photo spread about her appeared in the Anchorage Press ,declaring her a new kind of Republican, not the “old white guy” type.

According to the State’s accusation, the Halats applied for the SNAP (food stamp) program in 2017. They had to go through an income certification process to determine if they were low income enough to qualify.

The maximum resource/asset limit for a family of four to qualify is $2,250, after Division of Public Assistance’s allowable deductions. The Halats’ were approved on March 2, 2017 and received $622 per month in food stamps for the household in 2017.

Their food stamp eligibility was based on having no income at all, and the State complaint says they would need to inform the division when Jarek’s unemployment benefits started. Jarek signed a document stating he understood, under penalty of perjury. It is not clear that Bekah signed the document. Applicants must sign a document stating they understand that if they provide misleading or false information, they could be criminally prosecuted.

For 2017, they received $7,374 in food stamps.

The couple had to be recertified in January, 2018. By then, Jarek was making $836 in unemployment insurance benefits and Bekah was working 15 hours a week, earning $20 an hour.

They were approved on Feb. 1, 2018. During the approval process, Jarek mentioned he was no longer working for Uber and Lyft as a driver. The State is saying that is the first time he had mentioned to the Division of Public Assistance that he had any income.

In 2018, the two received $2,296 in food stamps, from April through June, according to the State’s accusation.

Bekah Halat filed to run for Senate on May 31, 2018, announcing her candidacy on Facebook, launching a web site and quickly printing signs and t-shirts. Her signature issue was to repeal the “soft on crime” bill, Senate Bill 91. By then, her family had been awarded food stamps for over a year.

On June 20, 2018, an anonymous caller to the Fraud Control Division of the State’s Division of Public Assistance reported that Bekah had filed for office, was on assistance, and yet appeared to have sufficient income, and that the couple was committing welfare fraud.

The State opened an investigation immediately and did a deep dive into the Halats’ finances and bank accounts. The investigator examined her business licenses with the State and Jarek’s income stream.

Further, once the investigator reviewed Bekah’s campaign page, he noted that she had a campaign bank account at Alaska USA Federal Credit Union, but on the Halats’ SNAP application, they only listed one at Wells Fargo. The investigator found that they had four Wells Fargo bank accounts, and upon looking into matters at Alaska USA, he discovered the couple had other bank accounts, and they also had some small certificates of deposits.

The State is claiming that during the entire time the family was on SNAP benefits, they were ineligible, due to being above the income threshold.

Must Read Alaska reached out to Bekah Halat but did not receive a return call.

Halat’s file at the Division of Elections shows she has lived in Anchorage since 2005. She has a B.A. in political science from the University of Alaska Anchorage, with a theater minor. She owns Bekah’s Dance Expressions, Super Beans and founded a nonprofit called Empowered Arts Alaska. She works at Business Boutique Training Center as the events and office coordinator, business trainer, and is a professional singer and songwriter, according to her file.

The State’s action is complaint, and comes with a felony charge, but it doesn’t represent guilt. Cases such as this are often pleaded down to lesser charges, but cases like this are also not usually laced with political intrigue.

Alaska Airlines plane stolen, crashed by suicidal man

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MAN WAS FROM WASILLA

Hundreds of Alaskans were stuck in the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport on Friday night after the airspace around Seattle was shut down entirely for hours.

A Horizon Air Q400 had been stolen by a man who was later identified as a suicidal -29-year-old, who had taken off in the 76-seater turbo-prop that later crashed the plane on Ketron Island, west of Tacoma.

“I’ve never seen so many planes in one place,” said Jeremy Price, Alaska director for Americans for Prosperity, who was trying to get back to Anchorage after a business trip to New Orleans.

Price’s incoming jet circled for a long time, he said, until it got low on fuel and was landed at Sea-Tac. The pilot had announced the problem to passengers and said the jet might have to land at Boeing Field.

Two F-15s were scrambled out of Portland and were alongside the rogue plane within minutes to keep the plane away from populated areas.

By then, the plane was being piloted in stunt maneuvers such as a barrel roll, before the pilot said he would “call it a night,” and flew it into the ground. The F-15s were trying to steer it out over water.

The unauthorized pilot, identified as Richard “Beebo” Russell, was a ground service employee of Alaska Airlines, which explained his access to the plane. He is reported to have used a pushback tug to move the jet into position before he boarded and took off. No one else was on board. Pierce County Sheriff’s Department said that the FBI has taken over the investigation.

Anchorage former mayoral candidate Rebecca Logan’s daughter was also among the dozens of Alaskans who had just landed in Seattle; the Alaska Airlines jet she was on was stuck on the tarmac for an hour, Logan said.

“She texted me that they landed and asked me if Seattle is the place where there’s always a delay on the tarmac. And then she texted ‘OMG someone stole a plane.’ That’s when we turned on the news,” said Logan, who is president of the Alaska Support Industry Alliance.

Russell, in conversation with air traffic control, said “I’ve got a lot of people that care about me. It’s going to disappoint them to hear that I did this. I would like to apologize to each and every one of them. Just a broken guy, got a few screws loose I guess. Never really knew it, until now.”

Russell also said he was looking for a “moment of serenity,” and asked officials if the plane could do a back flip.

He also said, in jest, that he didn’t need help with landing the plane as he had played video games. And then he wondered aloud if Alaska Airlines would hire him as a pilot if he successfully landed the aircraft. Russell was married and left behind his wife and child.

His family, who calls him by his nickname “Beebo,” released a statement today:

Russell graduated from Wasilla High School in 2008, according to the Anchorage Daily News. He was a football player, wrestler, and thrower in high school and placed fifth in the discus throw in 2008 at the state track and field championships.

He attended  Valley City State University in Valley City, N.D., where he played football for a season.

Ketron Island is 221 acres and has a population of 17.

The video by John Waldron of the plane before it crashed can be found here:

https://www.facebook.com/search/top/?q=John%20Waldron

ANCHORAGE SMALL PLANE STOLEN, CRASHED IN TO BUILDING IN 2015

In December of 2015, a Cessna 172 was stolen from the Civil Air Patrol and was crashed into two buildings in downtown Anchorage, also believed to be a suicide. It was piloted by a licensed pilot and first lieutenant with CAP, but the man was not authorized to fly the plane at that time.

The pilot’s wife worked in one of the buildings struck by the plane, the Brady Building. She was not in the building at the time. The other building that was struck, the Carr-Gottstein Building, caught fire and sustained substantial damage.

Dunleavy campaign headquarters has open house today

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Rainy day putting a damper on your plans?

Alaskans for Dunleavy holds an open house at its Anchorage headquarters Saturday this afternoon, 1-3 pm at 400 Northern Lights Blvd. Candidate for governor Mike Dunleavy will attend and yard signs and bumper stickers are available.

The campaign headquarters is one block away from another Dunleavy group of enthusiasts, named Dunleavy for Alaska. That group is headed by Terre Gales and is separate from the campaign, although is running an independent and robust operation to increase the name-recognition of the former state senator who is now the leading candidate for governor, according to polls from all of the candidates.

That office will also be open today, and people can stop by for their own version of Dunleavy signs, bumper stickers and pins. The campaigns are not allowed to coordinate their efforts and the candidate will not be in attendance there.

PRIMARY VOTING HAS STARTED

The Alaska Primary Election season has started, with early voting now available during weekdays.

Locations for early voting in person are here.

Out of town? You can receive a ballot through the mail if you apply by today, Aug. 11.

Instructions for mail-in voting are here.

Due to the threat of cyber attacks, such as the attempt on Alaska’s voting system in 2016, you won’t be able to submit an electronic ballot, although you can receive one by email. You will need to fax or mail it in.

Other dates to know:

  • Aug. 18: Regional offices open 10 am-4 pm for early and absentee in-person and special needs voting.
  • Aug. 19: Regional offices open 12 pm -4 pm for early and absentee in-person and special needs voting.
  • Aug. 20, 5 pm: Deadline to receive electronic transmission absentee ballot. applications from voters requesting an electronic transmission ballot
  • Aug. 21: Election Day.
  • Aug. 21: Absentee electronic transmission ballots being returned by-fax must be received by 8 pm.
  • Aug. 21: Absentee ballots being returned by-mail must be postmarked on or before Election Day.

As Alaska fire season winds down, Alaska crews head to help Idaho

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ALASKA VILLAGE MEN NOW BATTLE FIRES ACROSS THE GREAT NORTHWEST

Dozens of men from Fairbanks and Interior villages boarded planes this week for Spokane, Washington, where they were transported by bus to Idaho and elsewhere to fight wildfires.

Four Type 2 Emergency Firefighter crews said farewell to Alaska’s wet skies as the 49th State’s  fire season winds down, with few incidences for the crews to work on in what was a quiet season.

Alaska Division of Forestry’s Fairbanks #2 Crew Boss Ken Richards said the crew is happy to be heading south to get to work.

“I’m excited,” Richards said. “Whatever we can do to help in the Lower 48 we’ll do. That’s what we’re here for.”

While the situation in the Lower 48 has resources stretched thin, Alaska has downgraded to a “preparedness level one,” the lowest. Firefighters demobilized from the three remaining staffed fires in Alaska on Tuesday. Meanwhile, the four emergency firefighter crews will bring fresh energy to the more than 28,000 firefighters already working on wildfires across the west. A second jet load with four more Type 2 EFF crews flew south on Friday.

The rural crews were flown in to BLM AFS facilities on Fort Wainwright Saturday and equipped with things like Nomex, fire shelters and packs for a 14-day assignment.

They are the Kobuk Valley #2 crew from Selawik, Ambler, Noorvik and Buckland; the K River Crew from Hughes and Allakaket; and the Yukon Koyukuk Crew with firefighters from Huslia, Nulato, Galena and Koyukuk. They’ll get their hand tools and chain saws once they get to Idaho. Then they’ll more than likely head out to a fire in the Northern Rockies Area which includes Montana, North Dakota, northern Idaho and a small portion of South Dakota.

Those who headed out Friday included men from the Division of Forestry Fairbanks #1 and Delta crews, BLM Alaska Fire Service’s Yukon Flats and Kusilvak Crew. The Yukon Flats Crew is made up of firefighters from Fort Yukon, Venetie and Arctic Village. The Kusilvak Crew, which is named after a mountain about 30 miles from Mountain Village, is made up of firefighters from Marshall, Mountain Village and Pilot Station.

Read the rest of the story and check out the dramatic photography at akfireinfo.com, a web site of the Bureau of Land Management.