News

All news stories, regardless of topic (local, statewide + national news stories, as well as Talk of Alaska, Alaska News Nightly, Alaska Insight, Alaska Economic Report). Some news stories may also have other categories marked, which will also put them on a subpage. Not all news stories will fall into a subpage.

A tall snowy mountain, its peak peaking out through the clouds.

Utah climber fined, banned for making false rescue claim

A Utah physician was fined and banned from climbing Denali for five years after he made false claims to get himself and his friends rescued off the mountain.

Hundreds gather at Anchorage Baptist Temple to remember the late Congressman Don Young

The more than 500 attendees included Don Young’s family, plus many current and former politicians and Anchorage Baptist Temple’s religious leaders.

Anchorage residents rally for police accountability, 3 years after APD killing of Bishar Hassan

“For me, it was receiving energy from the community," said Abdira Haman, a relative of Hassan's. "I see that motivation, courage and power, that I realize that the community, they are with us all the way.”
Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin speaks at the 2016 Politicon at the Pasadena Convention Center in Pasadena, California, June 26, 2016. (Creative Commons photo by Gage Skidmore)

Sarah Palin among 50 candidates running to fill remainder of Don Young’s term in US House

Palin joins more than 50 other people who have filed to represent Alaska in the U.S House of Representatives.

Alaska Airlines asks passengers to brace for more cancellations as pilots picket Anchorage airport

Nearly 100 pilots picketed at Anchorage’s Ted Stevens International Airport on Friday over contract negotiations with Alaska Airlines.

How Basketball brings communities across Alaska together | Alaska Insight

Across the state, basketball serves as a healthy outlet for teens and a source of pride and socialization for communities in the winter. Lori Townsend speaks to players about the important cultural role basketball serves in rural communities in particular.
brain health

Line One: The psychology of cults

The idea of cults seems to both fascinate and scare us. Why do intelligent people often give up everything to blindly follow these leaders and their ideologies?
a hand singing in papers

How the most affordable student loan program failed low-income borrowers

Income-driven repayment plans were intended to help low-income student loan borrowers, and eventually cancel their debt. New documents paint a breathtaking picture of the program's failure.
A blue building with a water tower that says 'palmer'

What’s wrong with the word ‘colony’? Here’s what’s behind a Palmer festival’s name change controversy.

After the Greater Palmer Chamber of Commerce announced its decades-old summer festival Colony Days would be renamed the Braided River Festival, public backlash led to a reversal. Some tribal advocates of the new name say angry residents missed the point.
the tail of an Alaska Airlines plane

Alaska Airlines cancels dozens of West Coast flights as pilots picket

More than 100 Alaska Airlines flights were canceled by the airline, including 66 in Seattle, 20 in Portland, Oregon, 10 in Los Angeles and seven in San Francisco.
a person administers a vaccine to another person

Second boosters available as BA.2 omicron variant spreads

People over 50 and immunocompromised people can receive a second booster four months after their first booster. Pfizer and Moderna boosters are available for those who received a Johnson and Johnson first dose or booster.
Two women, one n kuspuk coat, wa;lomg dpwm snowy urban street

Talk of Alaska: Confronting Alaska’s high rate of violence against women

Two councils recently established by Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s office are tasked with addressing missing and murdered Indigenous people and human and sex trafficking.

John Oliver sends man in polar bear suit to Nenana, pledges $10K to Food Bank of Alaska

On his show last Sunday, comedian John Oliver called the Nenana Ice Classic “the single greatest ice-melting contest in the world."
A shopper in a supermarket dairy aisle

Food prices are going up — and at levels Americans haven’t seen in decades

As for take-out or dine-in menus, the USDA said those prices are predicted to go up between 5.5 and 6.5% for the remainder of this year.
a woman in a pink shirt

Murkowski says she’s still undecided on Jackson for Supreme Court

Sen. Lisa Murkowski, Sen. Lindsey Graham and Sen. Susan Collins were the only three Republicans to vote to confirm Ketanji Brown Jackson on the appeals court in 2021.

In Tanana, Alaska, ‘a way of life’ comes to a bittersweet close

The team narrowly missed the state title, and it will be years before the village sees another team step onto a court.
A person with a sign that says where is she

Washington is the first state to create an alert system for missing Indigenous people

The law creates a system similar to Amber Alerts and so-called silver alerts, which are used respectively for missing children and vulnerable adults in many states.
A woman on a bridge

Alaska’s top doctor on living with COVID in the post-restriction era

KTOO’s Claire Stremple spoke with Alaska Chief Medical Officer Dr. Anne Zink about this moment of living with COVID while many are ready to move on.

10 candidates file to fill Don Young’s unexpired term as deadline looms

Candidates face a Friday deadline to file with the state Division of Elections to run in the special primary, set for June 11.