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 in a blue surgical mask speaks on a microphone

Alaska House bill would fund schools ahead of time, prevent pink slips

House Bill 169 would fund education ahead of the rest of the state budget, to avoid teachers and other school staff receiving layoff notices next month. This happens when the Legislature goes deep into May without passing a budget, triggering notices required under teachers’ contracts.

For Kenai Peninsula pharmacist, COVID-19 vaccine fight tests friendships

Justin Ruffridge grew up in Soldotna and, as a conservative and a Christian, he's part of the same demographic as some of the COVID-19 vaccine’s biggest skeptics. He’s also a medical professional lends him a measure of credibility that elected officials and other government employees can lack.
a person holds a bowl of butter garlic shrimp

Anchorage’s small international eateries, used to take-out, found a growing market in the pandemic

Smaller, family-owned eateries have done better than established fine-dining restaurants, adapting quickly to social media marketing and online ordering for take-out.

Anchorage School Board passes anti-racism and equity policies with overwhelming support

The policies stemmed from the murder of George Floyd in 2020 and have been hotly debated for weeks. The policies passed the same day a jury convicted the police officer who killed Floyd.
The bow of a white cruise ship

Alaska joins Florida in federal lawsuit over pandemic cruise ship rules

The lawsuit says the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is overstepping its authority with the Conditional Sailing Order, which imposes strict COVID-19 safety precautions on the cruise industry.
A woman eats kelp while a farmer harvests kelp in the background.

Could Alaskan Seaweed Help Save the Planet? | INDIE ALASKA

https://youtu.be/LhbRCzxaqoE Seaweed and kelp are a billion-dollar industry with the potential to help alleviate the pressures of climate change. Currently, the biggest players in the...
A float plane lands in the water

NTSB: Obstructed views, lack of alerts caused midair crash

Obstructed views of the sky and problems with a system that alerts pilots to nearby planes were factors in a mid-air crash of Southeast Alaska sightseeing planes that killed six people two years ago, the National Transportation Safety Board has determined.
As see from above, boats swirl around a small, spruce covered area

A decade after Fukushima nuclear disaster, Alaska expands seafood monitoring

State environmental regulators announced Monday they’re expanding radiation testing of commercially harvested Alaska seafood, including crab, using a gamma radiation detector at a state laboratory in Anchorage.

Ask a Climatologist: Alaska’s spring weather whipsaw

National Weather Service climate researcher Brian Brettschneider, back for our Ask a Climatologist segment, says it's a remarkably quick switch.
A ferry at a port

Matanuska ferry crew members test positive for COVID-19

Two crew members aboard the Matanuska tested positive for COVID-19 over the weekend after the state ferry left Bellingham for ports in Southeast Alaska, according to state officials.

Warm weather and plowing in Anchorage mean clear trails likely a week away

A month into a cold spring that followed a pandemic winter, temperatures in Anchorage are reaching into the 60’s this week and the city’s Parks and Recreation Department is hard at work, transforming the slushy remains of ski trails into clear paths for the bikes, strollers and roller blades of summer.
Goose Creek Prison. Photo by Ellen Lockyer, KSKA - Anchorage.

Alaska prisons to open for visitation after year-long COVID closure

The state Department of Corrections plans to open visitation on Wednesday between fully vaccinated Alaskans in its custody and public visitors like family members.
A woman in a wood-panelled building

Senate votes to remove Reinbold as chair of Judiciary Committee

The Alaska Senate voted 17-1 to remove Republican Eagle River Sen. Lora Reinbold as chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee on Monday.
man at a desk before a microphone with his nose visible over the top of his mask

Peninsula lawmakers introduce bill to block vaccination requirements

Alaska’s proposed bill would also block businesses and public entities from requiring proof of COVID-19 vaccination to access public areas, services or benefits. That includes public schools and University of Alaska campuses.
Two men in work clothes stand in front of a tyvek home

Portable, Sitka-built ‘mini homes’ could help with Southeast Alaska’s housing crunch

A new “mini-home” project is working to tackle a housing shortage in Yakutat by building the houses in Sitka where costs are lower and then shipping them. The construction company behind the project hopes its idea spreads.

Tribes and ANCs present grammar puzzle to Supreme Court, with $530 million at stake

The CARES Act case turns on a definition that specifically includes ANCs as tribes and then seemingly excludes them in the very same sentence.
A white shack in a forest

SpaceX considers Alaska-based stations to improve worldwide internet satellite network

An aerospace and technology company is considering building key parts of a satellite network in Alaska — including Ketchikan, Nome and Fairbanks — that, according to the company, could help improve internet access across the globe.

Young, Murkowski aim to shape Biden’s infrastructure bill

Infrastructure bills are good for Alaska, they say, but they want changes to the Biden proposal.
A dredge in a river bed

Biden administration freezes Alaska mineral development orders, veteran allotments

The department said it wants to review “defects” in the public land orders regarding requirements under the National Environmental Policy Act.
A bicycle parked with oil rigs visible in the backfroung

Bike shortage keeps Alaskan cyclists from hitting the road

Disruptions from factory closures in China and high demand for bicycles means that new bicycles are hard to come by.