Casey Grove, Alaska Public Media - Anchorage

Casey Grove, Alaska Public Media - Anchorage
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Casey Grove is host of Alaska News Nightly, a general assignment reporter and an editor at Alaska Public Media. Reach him at cgrove@alaskapublic.org. Read more about Casey here
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In Alaska’s legal confusion over public funds for private schooling, Law Department says it’s under review

Alaska Beacon reporter Lisa Phu has been following the issue and says her reporting started with what she thought would be a simple question.

All-Alaska Native reality series shows ‘we’re here, we’re strong,’ says cast member

Jody Potts-Joseph hunts and fishes near her family fish camp on the Yukon River, and those subsistence activities have been featured recently on "Life Below Zero: First Alaskans."
An Alaska woman holds a possum by the back of its neck as terrified New Yorkers in a bar look on.

When a possum walked into a Brooklyn bar, Sara Fulton said, ‘I’m from Alaska. I got this.’

A viral video of Fulton, who's originally from Anchorage, shows her grab the possum by the neck and release it, safely, outside on a sidewalk.

Southcentral Alaska poised to break streak of 70-degree days, as fire danger remains high

National Weather Service climatologist Brian Brettschneider says the second half of May was the second warmest on record in Southcentral.
A fox in grass

Bird flu detected in red fox and eagles found dead in Unalaska

Wildlife officials say the animals were most likely feeding on birds that had died from the H5N1 avian influenza.
Wildfire flames flare high above a forest.

Alaska forestry officials warn of dangerous fire conditions heading into holiday weekend

Warm and dry weather heading into Memorial Day weekend has prompted warnings for Alaskans to be extra careful not to start wildfires.
Two men stand in front of a map of Alaska

How the battle over Alaska’s legislative districts landed in court

The state’s high court agreed with an earlier Superior Court decision and wrote that the Redistricting Board “engaged in unconstitutional political gerrymandering."

Walruses are skittish. That’s why this scientist is using drones to count them.

USGS research biologist Tony Fischbach says drones have proven to be safer, and they've helped with a long-running problem of understanding how many walruses just happen to be out of view underwater when researchers fly over.

Crews contain Anchorage wildfire that spread from burning home

A burn ban remains in effect for Anchorage, along with warnings for much of Southcentral Alaska.
A sailboat on calm water with mountains in the background.

The Race to Alaska is back, both in film and on the water

There's a new documentary out called "The Race to Alaska" that stitches together stories from the 750-mile, engineless, unsupported boat race.
A ochre and white concrete building in a greay cloudy day

Alaska Legislature meets deadline, passing budget and some bills that resemble ‘turduckens’

Alaska Beacon reporter James Brooks was up late following the Legislature's frantic scramble to pass bills before the deadline.
An aerial view of one of the exploration pads and wells that ConocoPhillips drilled during the 2018 exploration season at its Willow prospect.

Alaska’s largest oil producer asks judge to block release of drilling info from NPR-A

ConocoPhillips Alaska is asking a judge to issue an injunction against the Alaska Oil and Gas Conservation Commission that would maintain the confidentiality of records the commission has from Conoco’s wells in the NPR-A.
a group of people sit at a table

Alaska News Nightly: Monday, May 16, 2022

A missing seven-year-old from Kodiak is found dead a few miles from his home. Also, liberal-leaning Alaska voters worry about splitting the vote in a crowded special primary to fill Don Young's seat. And deep snowpack in the Interior last winter led an increase in wildlife deaths.
a woman sits on the beach

Police say they’ve caught Duffy Murnane’s killer. Now her mom is fighting cancer: ‘I’m going to be there at that trial.’

Sara Berg says she's glad to know what happened to her daughter and to have a chance at getting justice. But she says what happened was horrific, and now Berg is trying to hold off cancer long enough to see Kirby Calderwood taken to trial.
A barge with an excavator on it surrounded by chunks of ice on a river

Alaska News Nightly: Friday, May 13, 2022

Industry leaders and politicians criticize the Biden administration's cancellation of a Cook Inlet lease sale. Also, a mom in Homer finally has some answers about her daughter, who went missing in 2019. And a "ghost barge" is free-floating down the Kuskokwim river after it froze into the river last fall.

Alaska Permanent Fund dividend amount still in limbo, as state House leaders delay budget vote

For individual legislators, in an election year, stalling a bigger PFD in the name of sustainable budgeting is a tough call, especially with oil prices high. But for others, it's clear cut: If oil prices drop, the state will spend down savings and have to make up the difference with taxes, drastic cuts or both.

Alaska wildland fire crews ready for action, with state funding to reduce hazardous fuels

Norm McDonald, the state Division of Forestry's Chief of Fire and Aviation, says all it would take to go from an average fire season to a huge one is some hot, dry weather and a lightning strike, or the careless burning of some brush or a campfire.
a woman sits on the beach

Former Homer resident kidnapped, murdered woman missing since 2019, police say

The charges against Kirby Calderwood are the first public explanation of what happened to Anesha “Duffy” Murnane since she went missing in October 2019.

Alaska’s biggest electric utility fired new CEO less than a month after hiring him

According to a document Chugach Electric Association’s lawyers filed in federal court Wednesday, the company’s board terminated its employment agreement with Halpern “for cause” a little more than three weeks after both sides signed it.