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
a medical professional swabs a driver's nostril

Alaska reports 9 coronavirus deaths and over 1,100 new cases in 2 days

The cases announced Wednesday are the most since December, when infections were decreasing from a peak in November.

Alaska’s share of fatal, small commercial plane crashes growing relative to rest of U.S.

A fatal plane crash near Ketchikan this month has renewed concerns about the number of fatal, small commercial aircraft accidents in Alaska, which, according to an investigation by member station KUCB and ProPublica, is growing relative to the rest of the country.
A man in a police uniform smiles for a photo in front of flags

Anchorage’s new police chief wants department to refocus

Anchorage Police Chief Kenneth McCoy says law enforcement has made progress combating crime in Alaska's largest city, but he says there are also some continuing problems he'd like to see addressed and some ways he thinks the department can refocus.

Ask a Climatologist: What’s with all the rain?

Sunday was the rainiest day Anchorage has seen in almost six years. Meanwhile, parts of Western Alaska recently saw their wettest month on record, and forecasters are expecting an atmospheric river to soak Southeast.
A man with light hair and a light hat, dark long sleeve shirt and dark pants stands on grass in front of trees.

Bitten on hand, Alaskan still remembers bear’s bad breath 25 years later

It was the summer of 1996 that William Young, an Alaskan fond of wilderness and solitude, survived an attack by a brown bear.
A person wearing blue gloves draws liquid from a vial into a syringe

Alaska’s ‘breakthrough’ COVID cases on par with expectations, state epidemiologist says

State Epidemiologist Dr. Joe McLaughlin says there are some nuances in the numbers related to breakthrough infections but the proportion in Alaska is about what you would expect.
the seal of a fire department

Eagle River man charged with murder after alleged arson kills 2

Firefighters responding to the 20-unit building a little after 2 a.m. Saturday found Alan and Linda Borowski’s bodies in their apartment, the charges say.
A map showing a red dot on the peninsula of ALaska

Why a major Alaska earthquake triggered warnings but no major damage

It was the largest earthquake in the United States in 50 years, a classic Alaska subduction zone earthquake, where the tectonic plate beneath the Pacific Ocean is subducting - or sliding under - the North American plate upon which Alaska sits.

Alaska’s gold medal swimmer looked like a winner even before race, dad says

While much of the pre-race attention was focused on two other more experienced, record-holding swimmers, Richard Jacoby says he knew his daughter had the training to be able to win and that her mind was in the right place, too.
A group of people hold balloons and posters in celebration

‘It’s pure joy’: Seward eager to see hometown swimmer Lydia Jacoby in Olympic finals

Seventeen-year-old Alaska swimmer Lydia Jacoby of Seward has a shot at an Olympic medal in the 100-meter breaststroke Monday at the Tokyo games.
A woman in a baseball umpire's uniform stands with her hands on her hips on the third baseline of a baseball diamond.

LISTEN: Alaska Baseball League’s first female umpire wants to show girls they can be part of hardball, too

Natola Hawthorne headed back home to Atlanta Friday and her main job as a school secretary. But she spent most of the summer enjoying Alaska and honing her craft of umpiring, as one of very few women involved in the male-dominated sport.

Former Bethel school principal sentenced to 15 years in prison for enticement of a minor

A former Bethel elementary school principal will spend 15 years in prison for trying to entice a child to engage in sexual activity in 2019.
Two photos together, the left from a driver's license, of a white man with short gray hair facing the camera and smiling, the second is the same man in black running clothes, a headband and gloves jogging toward the camera.

LISTEN: How did this Anchorage runner go missing in a popular mountain race?

Michael LeMaitre went missing while running the 2012 Mount Marathon Race, never to be seen again.
A man and a woman pose for a photo near a lake in some green mountains

LISTEN: The night a black bear pawed our tent

The attack ended with a ruined cup of peppery coffee.
Dozens of cots in three rows span from the foreground into the distance.

LISTEN: Anchorage mayor points to Outside homeless shelters as a model. This reporter went to see for herself.

The Bronson administration points to examples of shelters in cities like Reno, Nevada, so the Anchorage Daily News sent reporter Michelle Theriault Boots and photographer Marc Lester to see for themselves.

LISTEN: Alaska bumblebees are master twerkers thriving in an unfriendly climate

As bumblebees have declined in parts of the Lower 48, they're apparently thriving in Alaska, even in the high Arctic. But entomologists want to know more.

Fire forces evacuation order for residents near Chena Hot Springs, east of Fairbanks

The state Division of Forestry announced the evacuation Monday afternoon for anyone from Mile 48 of Chena Hot Springs Road to Mile 56.
Smoke rises at the end of a dirt trail in some rolling hills

Alaska News Nightly: Friday, July 2, 2021

The fight continues over whom the governor gets to appoint to the state Supreme Court. And firefighters defend cabins, homes and a popular resort outside of Fairbanks.
A woman in shorts and a t-shirt sprays down a mountain bike with a hose.

Ask a Climatologist: How does a hot Pacific Northwest affect Alaska?

In most of Southcentral, if you ask somebody about June, they'll likely say it's been cool. And that would not be true, says National Weather Service climate researcher Brian Brettschneider, who's back for another Ask a Climatologist segment.
An aerial view looking down on a gravel highway, the tops of two trucks and two separate lines plotting represented by red dots, showing six total temperature sites.

LISTEN: Alaska research shows permafrost melting is affecting infrastructure faster than expected

The study's authors included University of Alaska Fairbanks Geophysical Institute permafrost researcher Vladimir Romanovsky, who says the work will better inform engineers and planners in the future.