Lyndsey Brollini
-
At the mock election in Juneau, participants could only pick one M&M — that’s how Alaska’s new primary will work.
-
If the requirement is eliminated, Sealaska estimates that about 10,000 more people would be eligible to enroll.
-
Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee are pushing for a vote tonight on moving her nomination to the full Senate and hope to get Jackson confirmed before they go on Easter recess this weekend.
-
Mary Kininnook's family has been looking for her for decades.
-
It has been 21 years since the 2001 Roadless Rule for the Tongass National Forest was first established.
-
Tracy Day's family hasn't given up on finding out what happened to her.
-
“The beauty of coming back together, no matter the space, is that everyone wants to make it work,” Riverbend Elementary School teacher Lindsay Baranovic said.
-
Juneau residents who are running out of heating oil are experiencing delays in refilling their tanks. Meanwhile temperatures are in the single digits and, with wind chill, some nights it’s dipping below zero.
-
Flight delays and cancellations have tangled travelers' plans and led to baggage confusion.
-
During the pandemic, some Indigenous language learning groups saw a boost in enrollment.