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Attendees at the Juneau Mining Forum discussed how the new administration could change the U.S. mining industry’s permitting process to streamline development.
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Little about how Trump discusses tariffs is normal — not only because he threatens tariffs on a weekly, even daily, basis, but also because it's often unclear if or when those tariffs will happen.
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As the state faces an estimated half-billion-dollar deficit between this year and the next, Alaska Senate leaders are reviving options for raising revenue.
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The House is calling for spending cuts that would likely reduce Medicaid, the government insurance program covering one in three Alaskans.
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A couple dozen Fairbanksans sang songs and rallied on a main street corner Monday, in an impromptu protest marking three years since Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
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After most Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center staff were fired, city tourism leaders worry that the popular destination may reduce services or even close for the summer.
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The Merit Systems Protection Board, the quasi-judicial agency that hears appeals in federal employee labor disputes, has ordered a stay in the firing of six probationary employees.
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We discuss what is known and what has service-providers concerned about the ongoing freezes on federal funds on this Talk of Alaska.
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Longtime State Rep. Bryce Edgmon, I-Dillingham, recently spoke with KUCB’s Andy Lusk after picking up the House speaker’s gavel again for the first time since 2021.
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Twenty-one members of the United States DOGE Service have resigned, they said in an anonymous letter, citing DOGE's ongoing work dramatically reshaping the federal government.
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The ’75-25′ split proposal is worth about $1,420 per recipient this year but faces budgetary obstacles.
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Monitoring of wastewater discharged shows an increase over time in the number of samples with pollution levels above regulatory limits.