Alaska
University of Alaska president highlights impact on workforce, research and economy in address • Alaska Beacon
University of Alaska President Pat Pitney focused on the university’s critical role in retaining talent and driving the state’s research, workforce and economic development in the recent annual State of the University address.
But Pitney acknowledged in the Jan. 30 speech that there are “headwinds” and challenges, like the numbers of high school graduates declining, rising costs, and the uncertainty ignited by recent federal executive orders and potential budget cuts.
“I’m confident that together we can overcome these challenges,” she said. Pitney delivered the speech at the Alaska Chamber’s Legislative Fly-In Luncheon at Centennial Hall in Juneau.
“Investing in and engaging with the University of Alaska is necessary to build a skilled workforce in our state,” she said. “With vocational and industry certificates, to baccalaureate and graduate degrees, we’re not just educating, we’re ensuring a brighter future for Alaska.”
She said the university is focused on investing in growing enrollment, improving retention, and speeding student’s time to graduation.
Beginning last year, student enrollment increased for the first time since 2011, and continued to rise 3% in the fall semester, to an estimated 19,600 students.
The university system offers a variety of academic and vocational programs, she said, From short-term work development to doctoral programs, the university provides a wide range of opportunities for Alaskans, to stay living and working in-state.
“But in our state, fewer students choose to go on to higher education, not just here, but anywhere,” she added, in an interview after the speech. “Then of the people who go to higher education, a lot feel like it’s time to go outside. But we have many programs where a student can start with us and go on a national student exchange to almost any university in the nation, on in-state tuition.”
The surge in Alaska Performance Scholarship awards is also helping Alaskans stay and study in-state, she said. Last year, 65% more scholarship-eligible students applied and enrolled in UA. Those awards were made larger this year, and can be used for any program, she added.
“They can use it for any degree level they want – a traditional degree such as biology, fisheries, computer science, engineering, finance, nursing, pre-med, or a 1- or 2-year workforce credential in health care, welding, aviation, process technology, construction management, and many others,” she said.
Pitney said these programs can help reverse the states’ population decline.
For the business audience she was addressing, she emphasized the university as essential to the state’s workforce development, as “Alaska’s largest and most comprehensive workforce provider, offering over 200 career and technical education programs.”
She highlighted the university continuing to build partnerships with industries, including construction management and mining.
She also emphasized scientific research projects. Research revenues have grown by 50% over the last five years to nearly $240 million. “For every one dollar of state funding we receive, we leverage eight in federal and other research funds,” she said. “That’s being noticed.”
The Arctic in particular, is a major center of research and economic development, she said, including for the maritime and aviation industries, national security and the new
“In a changing and globalized Arctic, UA’s position as the only U.S. public institution in the region allows us to attract interest and knowledge from around the world to improve Alaska’s future,” she said.
But Pitney acknowledged “turbulence ahead” with the Trump administration’s threatened cuts to federal funding.
“As we navigate the federal executive orders, I want our researchers to know that I appreciate each of them, and the valuable work they do,” she said. “They and the incredible research they do positions UA to manage some of the current turbulence.”
A federal judge’s ruling temporarily blocked the presidential order last week.
When asked about the federal funding freeze in an interview, she pointed to some of that funding required by contract.
“If it does happen, we have about just over $600,000 a day in federal receivables,” she said. “It’s $16 million-plus a month, and $200 million across a year, that’s the amount of federal work we do across the system. If it’s a pause for a week, we just have a bigger receivable.”
Pitney said there’s “a very low chance” that the pause would become a full-blown cancellation of federal spending, “because these are contractual obligations.”
National Science Foundation grants are in limbo, as well as grants with the National Institutes of Health, with a freeze on grant reviews, communications, hiring and travel. But she said the NIH freeze would have a lesser impact on university research.
“We don’t have a lot of NIH research. We have some,” she said. “The existing grants will come through. The new grants will be delayed, but it’s a smaller portion of our overall research portfolio.”
Pitney expressed optimism a federal review would favor Alaska’s programs.
“So, you know, it’s really (about) the holding on to the receivables until they do pay,” she said. “But our emphasis in research is very much aligned with what the federal government wants to accomplish. So we will weather it as well as anyone.”
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Alaska
Flooding closes Alaska Highway, cuts off access to U.S.-Canada border | CBC News
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The Alaska Highway has been flooded just north of Beaver Creek in the Yukon.
Officials have closed the highway from the U.S. border to Canada’s Beaver Creek customs office as of Sunday afternoon.
“We have crews out there working on it,” said Julia Duchesne, an information officer with the government’s Emergency Co-ordination Centre. “I can’t speculate on how long the closure will last until we know more about the cause.”
Duchesne said there are a couple of different ways spring melt could cause water to pool on the road, like a ditch spilling over or a culvert washing out with spring melt.
“We do know that in April our hydrology team did identify that across the Yukon, steep streams that cross roads and highways are an area of elevated concern, what with the snowpack across the territory,” she said.
“The roads looked like they started shifting a bit,” said Chealsea Johnny, who works at the Beaver Creek visitor information centre. “There’s definitely going to be some tourists stuck for however long it takes for them to open it.”
For the most up to date information on road conditions, Duchesne encourages drivers to check 511yukon.ca. She says she understands the closure may be disruptive to travellers, but asks anyone who had planned on crossing to be patient.
“We do sometimes see people going through barricades or moving barricades,” she said. “It’s a bad idea, both for your own safety and the safety of crews who are trying to fix the problem.”
Territorial officials say an update on road conditions will be issued before 2 p.m. Monday.
Alaska
Book review: ‘The North Face of Summer’ offers a compassionate look at an Alaska conflict
“The North Face of Summer: An Alaskan Novel”
By Russell Tabbert; Cirque Press, 2025; 504 pages; $20.
In 1978, President Jimmy Carter, under powers granted by the Antiquities Act, declared National Monument status for 56 million acres of federal land in Alaska. His act triggered massive protests across the still-young state, and pitted resource interests against preservationist organizations in a bitter struggle over what the term “public lands” means and how such territories should be managed.
One of the regions fought over most fiercely was the Kantishna Mining District, adjacent to the eastern border of what was then Mount McKinley National Park. Home to several active mines that had been worked for 75 years, it became a flashpoint in the battle between those who had long earned their living from the ground itself, and the emerging environmentalist viewpoint that public lands belong to all Americans and should not be used for private gain.
A firestorm resulted in Alaska and raged throughout the summer of 1979, particularly in the Interior, where mining had long been an economic mainstay. Carter was burned in effigy, and opponents of his move quickly began defying federal laws on the newly preserved regions. For proponents of resource development, the lands had been locked up. For those who supported leaving the lands untouched by industrialism, they were locked open.
It’s into these contentious events that Russell Tabbert steps in his recent novel “The North Face of Summer.” In this story, mostly set in Kantishna, Tabbert explores the conflict through richly drawn characters, presenting this history from several sides, seeking not to pit good against evil, but instead to find how basically decent human beings with widely divergent views can, through the complexities of their own histories and experiences, come to near blows when their individual values run head-on into each other.
The book opens on an airliner bound for Alaska where Natalie Thorsen, fresh out of high school, is being sent north from Illinois by her overbearing mother to spend the summer with her miner uncle Bill Dunham. Beset by a drunken roughneck, she receives aid from Kent McDonald, born and raised in Fairbanks and on his way home from college.
McDonald, we quickly learn, has been hired by the Wilderness Forever Coalition to spend the summer in Denali covertly photographing mines in Kantishna, looking for violations that can be used against their operators.
One of those mine claimants is Bill, who collects Natalie in Fairbanks and takes her south to stay for the season.
Also key to the story, which has far too many critical characters to list in a brief review, are Lars Peterson and his wife, Elvira, who have a nearby claim to Bill’s. Bill and Lars, longtime friends, are taking separate approaches to the arrival of National Park Service overseers of their operations. Bill is opting to cooperate with Park Service and work as best he can within its mandates. Lars, along with most miners in the district, chooses to defy the government and continue business as usual.
From there the primary drama in the book plays out. Slowly but steadily, officials with Park Service begin asserting themselves, seeking to enforce federal regulations. Each step is matched by an equally steady increase in reaction from Lars and others who want none of it.
Caught in the middle are Bill and Natalie.
Bill, willing to bend to whatever extent allows him to keep working his claim, understands the resentment of his fellow miners, but is willing to adapt to new circumstances.
Stuck in an even deeper bind is Natalie, who genuinely adores Bill and Elvira, while at the same time is falling into a summer romance with Kent. Both she and Bill can see the good in others found on both sides of the conflict, and both want to find some middle ground that will prevent things from taking a turn toward violence.
The standoff does turn physical in the book’s central scene, set at a Fourth of July picnic at one of the tourist lodges in Kantishna, where tensions between the two sides come to a head and Kent runs into trouble. From there, any hope for common ground is all but lost.
Tabbert has done something here that a lot of authors would fail to accomplish. He’s crafted characters across the spectrum that readers will sympathize with and come to like quite quickly.
Those who have read the novels of Edward Abbey, who explored similar themes, will recall that he created straw men out of miners and others drawing their livelihood from the land, leaving damage in their wake. And though often an uproariously funny writer, Abbey failed to ascribe much humanity to his villains.
For Tabbert, the miners aren’t villains. This is most poignantly illustrated by Lars, who emerges as the most fascinating and conflicted character in the book. Well into their 60s, he and Elvira have lost a son in Vietnam, while their daughter, a lesbian, is estranged from her father and living in San Francisco with her partner. Add the sectioning off of a mine claim he’s worked for decades, and we find an aging man living far from a rapidly changing American culture, yet feeling assailed by it. Tabbert doesn’t endorse Lars’s sometimes bigoted views, but he does thoughtfully lead readers into understanding how the man became who he is. No easy task, but the author pulls it off.
With each chapter, Tabbert shifts viewpoints from one character to the next, exploring their inner narratives and thus, instead of hectoring readers toward one conclusion, forcing them to understand the events of 1979 as a human drama in which lines of judgement aren’t to be simply drawn.
History tells us where this story will end beyond the book’s closure. But what “The North Face of Summer” offers is a compassionate look at the people inescapably pulled into what happened. It’s an unusually mature book for such a fraught topic, but by choosing the difficult path of broadmindedly exploring a volatile time still contentiously fought over, Tabbert serves a monumental piece of Alaska’s history well.
[Book review: Homer author Naomi Klouda has produced her best work yet with ‘The Octopus Murders’]
[Book review: Mary Jacobs takes the helm as both fisherman and writer, with daring and perseverance]
[Alaska author underscores the value of science and history by highlighting individual experiences]
Alaska
Relatives, friends and supporters walk to bring attention to Alaska Indigenous victims
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