Top Stories

News stories, radio and TV episodes that warrant one of six spots on our homepage. The homepage is in chronological order of publication date, so stories are moved off the homepage as more are categorized “top stories.”

A woman sitting on a chair with her laptop on her lap

Millions of Americans have long COVID. Many of them are no longer working.

An estimated 4 million workers in the U.S. are struggling to work due to debilitating symptoms from long COVID. The government is urging employers to provide accommodations to keep them on the job.

Is now the time for Alaska’s massive liquified natural gas line project?

The massive gas line plan has been on the table for as long as Alaska has been an energy state, though the steep costs of constructing the pipeline have long been too prohibitive to make it a reality.

New K-12 charter school will serve growing Alaska Native population in Mat-Su Borough

The Knik Cultural Charter School will offer in-person learning, a homeschool program and a blended option. The Knik Tribe has spent the last three years planning the school with the help of a federal grant.
A microscope image of gray oval shapes

Alaska’s first monkeypox case recorded in Anchorage

Anchorage Health Department officials say the person who tested positive is an Anchorage resident and is isolating at home. Officials say the person did not require hospitalization, and was a close contact of a person who recently traveled out of state. 
a man sits on a boat called Norseman

‘Alaskan Bush People’ get the cold shoulder when looking for land in Southeast

The famous Brown family tried to buy land in Alaska after living in Washington the last three years. But locals did not welcome them as neighbors.

For the first time, live invasive green crabs have been found in Alaska

Metlakatla Mayor Albert Smith says he’s concerned about what this means for the community’s traditional food sources.
Interior: Seattle-Tacoma International Airport

Tribal IDs should work at airports, but travelers say TSA often rejects them

Scanning machines at security checkpoints reject the cards even though they're on TSA’s list of accepted IDs.
a woman gives a man a shot

Summer boosters for people under 50 shelved in favor of updated boosters in the fall

The Biden administration is scrapping plans to offer COVID boosters for people under 50 this summer. Instead officials will push for an earlier release of the next generation boosters in the fall.
Wooden gavel and dollar banknotes

Cost estimates for constitutional convention in Alaska range widely

Issues include the length of the session and the amount of support delegates will need.
An Alaska State Trooper cruiser parked on Nome’s Front Street in January 2015.

Troopers say there’s ‘no obvious reasons’ why Fairbanks teen killed 3 siblings and then himself

“The only person — people — that know what really happened in that moment are deceased,” said a troopers spokesperson.
A man with a yellow safety Jacket giving speech in office.

Alaska Airlines workers to vote on a new contract that could put them among the highest paid airline workers in the industry

IAMAW represents around 5,300 Alaska Airlines reservations and customer service agents, ramp workers and other employees. About 900 of those workers are spread out across Alaska.
moonrise over Capitol, with dome to the left and purple sky.

Congress approves bill to boost US production of computer chips; Sullivan votes no.

Sen. Dan Sullivan was the only member of the Alaska delegation voting this week.
People walk on a construction area in fornt of some suburban houses and a snow covered mountain.

Anchorage’s huge development deal for Girdwood draws local ire over lack of affordable housing

That's not because Girdwood doesn't need more housing. Most there agree it does. But the city's plan to develop 60 acres near Glacier Creek into more than a hundred homes does not include any units cheaper than half a million dollars.
A wagon with a painted cardboard sign that says "Lost $ everything need cash" and two tents in the background

Salvation Army moves families at Centennial Campground to Anchorage shelters

The Salvation Army took over efforts to connect campers to housing and other services last week and prioritized moving families into more permanent shelter. The youngest child at the camp last week was two days old.
a shopper in a mask walks by a store

Who wins and who loses when the Fed hikes interest rates?

Another month, another Federal Reserve interest rate hike.
woman in sunglasses

Alaska voters are welcome to write ‘Tara Sweeney’ on the special election ballot, but here’s why it might not count

Sweeney is campaigning for a full term in Congress. She hasn't ruled out registering as a write-in for the special election.
An Alaska State Trooper cruiser parked on Nome’s Front Street in January 2015.

Four children killed in Fairbanks murder-suicide, troopers say

Troopers say their investigation determined that a 15-year-old boy shot three siblings and then himself.
a portrait of a man peering over his glasses

Another big Fed rate hike is here to battle inflation. Economy hangs in balance.

U.S. Federal Reserve raises rates for fourth time in 2022, this time by another three-quarters of a percentage point to battle inflation. It's at a size and pace we haven't seen since the 1980s.
A tan building

Anchorage Assembly puts more than $7 million toward sheltering and housing initiatives

The Assembly also rejected a proposal from Mayor Dave Bronson that would've allowed for the waiving of camping limits for people who are homeless and staying at the controversial Centennial Campground.