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A major storm is bringing dangerous flooding and hurricane-force winds to Western Alaska

Waves from ex-Typhoon Halong cover the Kuskokwim River waterfront in Bethel on Oct. 12, 2025.
MaryCait Dolan
/
KYUK
Waves from ex-Typhoon Halong cover the Kuskokwim River waterfront in Bethel on Oct. 12, 2025.

Some residents are reportedly unaccounted for or trapped in houses as a major storm brings high water and winds to Western Alaska. The remnants of Typhoon Halong have already caused damaging flooding in the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, and the storm is expected to continue into Monday.

The storm brought record water levels to some Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta communities early Sunday morning. According to the state Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management, the worst impacts so far were thought to be in Kipnuk and Kwigillingok.

DHSEM spokesman Jeremy Zidek said as many as eight homes have been pushed off their foundations in Kipnuk. And an Association of Village Council Presidents briefing on Sunday morning reported that 20 people were unaccounted for in Kwigillingok.

An overturned home in Kotlik. The National Weather Service reported a maximum wind gust of 78 mph in Kotlik Sunday morning.
Adaline Pete
An overturned home in Kotlik. The National Weather Service reported a maximum wind gust of 78 mph in Kotlik Sunday morning.

Some houses in Kwigillingok have floated to new parts of town or across the river. Ryan David said he was in his house with his four children when he felt the building start to shake.

“The flood lifted us up, and I didn't think it was going to happen,” David said. “And I'm like, I yelled at my kids to get up and group up here on the stairs, just in case we tip over.”

He said his home appears to have floated along a small creek, where it was caught by a bridge. As of early Sunday morning, David said his family remained trapped inside, with a piece of debris blocking his door. He said he’s been in contact with his neighbors whose homes have also moved.

Zidek said the National Guard’s Rescue Coordination Center was sending searchers by airplane and helicopter to Bethel to stage for possible rescue operations Sunday morning.

“Due to the weather conditions and extreme high winds, we need to make sure that we have weather windows where the flight crews can safely operate and get out there and conduct that work,” he said

According to Alaska climatologist Rick Thoman, the storm track had shifted eastward, reducing the winds and water rise originally forecast for the St. Lawrence Island, Little Diomede and parts of Seward Peninsula. Instead, the remnants of Typhoon Halong hit the Yukon–Kuskokwim Delta hardest.

Joshua Ribail, a forecaster at the National Weather Service’s office in Anchorage, said the storm was expected to move north toward the Seward Peninsula later on Sunday morning and continue up from there.

According to the National Weather Service, the storm’s more eastward track will likely reduce impacts to the Bering Strait region. Still, wind gusts could reach 70 mph in parts of the Norton Sound this afternoon, with elevated water levels expected from Sunday afternoon into Monday morning.

Live updates

12:45 p.m. Emergency shelter opens in Kotzebue

An emergency shelter is open in Kotzebue at the middle school gymnasium. The city is offering transportation help for elders and people with reduced mobility. People who need help getting to the shelter should call police dispatch at 907-442-3351.

12:40 p.m.: Damage in Kongiganak

Milton Bunyan, tribal police officer in Kongiganak, said that around three houses were lifted off their foundations there.

“It’s very disastrous,” he said. “Boardwalk through the school is gone. There's the house that has its roof off.”

Bunyan said that the winds calmed down in the village by Sunday afternoon, but the village officials and residents were still assessing the water levels and the overall situation.

12:30 p.m.: Updated high water forecast for Norton Sound

As the storm unfolded Sunday, the National Weather Service moved up its forecasts for water levels above normal high tide for eastern Norton Sound. Unalakleet, on the eastern edge of the Norton Sound, was expected to reach its highest water levels at 3 p.m., with water slowly receding into the evening. Nome, meanwhile, was forecast to reach its highest water levels at 11 p.m.

Thoman said waves from storms passing through the Bering Strait usually reach Nome first, then flood into the Norton Sound to the east.

“Because the low track was so far to the east of Nome, those usual rules of thumb are out the window,” Thoman said. “It’s all related to this very unusual storm track.”

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

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.
Alena Naiden covers rural and Indigenous communities for the Alaska Desk from partner station KNBA in Anchorage. Reach her at alena.naiden@knba.org or 907-793-3695.
Ben Townsend is the news director at our partner station KNOM in Nome. Reach him at ben.townsend@knom.org.