Lately, we right here on the Division of Knowledge had been perplexed to find that Alaska ranks close to the highest of our listing of states the place individuals select to spend their retirement years. By which we imply: An uncommon share of the retirement-age inhabitants in Alaska comes from out of state.
Alaska
Analysis | Is Alaska really a top retirement destination? An investigation.
Is Alaska an under-the-radar spot to spend your golden years, an arctic Arizona? Or is the Alaska Grey Rush a demographic mirage?
We requested, and also you answered: Scores of theories rolled in from our super-smart, super-responsive readers. Most of you coalesced round a couple of explanations.
The primary and easiest? Alaska could also be chilly, nevertheless it’s lovely.
Reader Sandy Winfree and her partner moved to Alaska for work and, after contemplating Florida and Arizona, determined to stay in Anchorage. The surroundings is the very best in the USA, she wrote, “with no comparability. It has delicate summers in Anchorage, and fairly delicate winters,” and “generally the gap from household in Decrease 48 is good, for drama management.”
Like many who wrote in, Winfree famous that the Final Frontier additionally has some monetary enchantment: By nearly each measure, Alaskans pay the bottom taxes in America. There’s no state revenue, gross sales or property tax, and seniors get a wholesome break on property taxes.
Even earlier than these tax breaks, Alaska has the best common retirement revenue of any state, based on our evaluation of Census Bureau knowledge — solely D.C. is greater. And that’s simply counting revenue corresponding to 401(Okay) disbursements and pensions. Alaska residents may qualify for annual checks from the state everlasting fund, a $77 billion funding behemoth created to protect the state’s oil wealth for future generations. Annual fund dividends differ based mostly on how nicely its investments are doing, however they sometimes prime $1,000. Final yr the fund paid every qualifying resident a document $3,284 — not unhealthy contemplating the typical U.S. Social Safety test was $1,656 a month.
And although Alaska has a status as an costly place to reside, reader Ronald Bates of Anchorage notes that residing prices have been falling as huge chain shops pop up in Alaska’s bigger cities. “I used to be in California final week,” Bates wrote. “The costs in Pavilions — a Safeway model — had been persistently greater than our native Safeways.”
And certain sufficient, knowledge from the Bureau of Financial Evaluation reveals that Alaska’s price of residing has fallen relative to the remainder of nation. Seven states and D.C. are actually costlier.
In fact, Alaskans nonetheless pay extra for items, from gallons of milk to gallons of gasoline, than residents of anyplace however Washington state and Hawaii. However as Bates factors out, the best costs are confined to rural areas. On a metro degree, Anchorage is the Twenty third-most-expensive metropolis within the nation, cheaper than D.C., New York, Miami and Los Angeles.
Alaska’s falling price of residing has one major progenitor: residence costs. Over the previous decade, Alaska’s home-value appreciation has trailed that of each different state. And costs largely averted the pandemic growth, gaining much less worth there than anyplace however D.C., based on Zillow.
In the long run, none of our Alaska correspondents mentioned they selected the state solely for monetary causes. That tracks with financial analysis. For no less than 15 years, economists Karen Conway of the College of New Hampshire and Jon Rork of Reed Faculty in Oregon have been on the lookout for proof that senior-friendly tax insurance policies appeal to measurable numbers of retirees. In 2017, Conway wrote that there was “no constant proof that these tax breaks affect migration choices in a significant approach.” That’s nonetheless true, she and Rork instructed us.
As an alternative, the commonest purpose for shifting to Alaska amongst those that wrote in was army service. The state’s Military and Air Power bases drag tens of hundreds of younger Individuals to the state as soon as derided as Walrussia, and plenty of of them develop a style for the out of doors life-style and frontier tradition. California-born reader Dick Morris wrote that he retired from the Air Power in Alaska and stayed there for his second profession and retirement.
“For these like me who’ve been capable of reside in quite a few different locations and might make a comparability,” Morris wrote, “Alaska is only a higher place to reside.”
And he’d most likely discover loads of firm down on the VFW. Nearly 1 / 4 of Alaskans over 65 served within the armed forces, based on our evaluation of Census Bureau knowledge. That’s simply the most important share within the nation.
And in contrast to another states the place retired veterans dominate — i.e., Wyoming, Montana and Idaho — a mighty majority of Alaska’s veterans come from out of state. Alaska additionally has the best share of all adults who’re veterans.
Veterans have a status amongst researchers as “essentially the most footloose and fancy freed from the aged,” Conway mentioned. They’re used to hopscotching across the nation after many years of hopping from base to base. “They’ve good, huge pensions,” she mentioned. “They usually would possibly wish to transfer the place they may not be taxed.”
However whereas the veteran thesis appeared convincing, it was solely the second-most-common concept we heard from readers. Which is sensible: Even when each veteran introduced a non-veteran partner alongside to Alaska, it could nonetheless depart a bit over half of Alaska’s out-of-state retirees unaccounted for.
The preferred concept? These retirees have been in Alaska for a really very long time.
“I don’t assume anybody critically believes individuals transfer to Alaska to retire,” reader Susan Lakatos wrote from New York Metropolis. “What you’re seeing … is the slowdown in Alaska’s oil growth financial system: There was an enormous inflow of out-of-staters when Alaska was the most popular job market in the USA throughout its oil growth, they turned residents, and now lots of them are sufficiently old to retire.”
For the reason that close by Klondike gold rush, Alaska’s demographics have been distorted by an intense boom-and-bust cycle. From the Forties to Nineteen Eighties, the territory, and later the state, grew quicker than nearly some other. Extra lately, it has slipped to a meager thirty seventh.
It’s not simply crude. Alaska was one of many fastest-growing states lengthy earlier than drillers hit pay dust in America’s biggest oil subject, Prudhoe Bay, in 1968.
The growth began with location, particularly Alaska’s proximity to 2 of America’s biggest foes within the twentieth century, the Empire of Japan and the Soviet Union. From World Conflict II by way of the Chilly Conflict, Alaska skilled a army buildup so huge and enduring that it could energy the native financial system straight by way of to statehood, based on an enchanting historical past by Eric Sandberg, a demographer with the state of Alaska.
However the North Slope oil growth lifted that progress to a brand new degree. The state’s inhabitants nearly doubled in simply 15 years, based on Sandberg. At its peak within the late ’80s, Alaska produced a few quarter of America’s oil. As we speak that determine has fallen to only 3.6 p.c, based on the Power Info Administration. And because the Prudhoe Bay subject dries up, so has Alaska’s inhabitants progress.
This provides Alaska a novel inhabitants profile. Within the Nineteen Sixties and ’70s, it had essentially the most out-of-staters below age 25 of any state. They stayed put, and now, that bulge of outsiders has aged into retirement.
That ageing wave of out-of-staters is what makes it seem like outsiders are selecting to retire in Alaska. We are able to help that thesis by taking a look at how lengthy retirees have lived of their present residence.
In most states, retirement-age individuals who had been born there are considerably extra more likely to have lived of their houses for 20-plus years than individuals who moved in from elsewhere. However in Alaska, natives are solely 4 share factors extra possible than newcomers to have lived of their houses for 20-plus years. That’s the smallest hole of any state (D.C. is smaller) and an indication that Alaska’s retirees had been nicely established within the state earlier than they turned 65.
It’s not fairly a smoking gun, however we don’t want one: Now we have Sandberg, the demographer who wrote that outstanding article about Alaska’s historical past. He factors his finger squarely on the ageing oil boomers.
“It’s true that there was a big rush of the people who find themselves now seniors to Alaska,” Sandberg instructed us through e-mail. “However they rushed right here 40-50 years in the past after they had been of their 20s.”
Hello pals! The Division of Knowledge exists to reply quantitative queries. What are you interested in: Likeliest profession paths for veterans? The school majors most probably to result in a job in a espresso store? The fastest-growing (or shrinking) spiritual denominations? Simply ask!
In case your query conjures up a column, we’ll mail an official Division of Knowledge button and ID card. To get each query, reply and factoid in your inbox as quickly as we publish, join right here. This week’s buttons go to readers Sandy Winfree, Ronald Bates, Dick Morris and Susan Lakatos, whom you’ll bear in mind from earlier within the column. Additionally to readers Jay Edgerton, Susan Brown, Sandy Harbanuk, Marc Rosenberg, Okay. Knudsen and Judy Jessee, whose options helped form our analysis.
Alaska
‘Prolonged’ internet outage in North Slope & Northwest: Quintillion blames optic cable break
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – The president of Quintilian blamed an optic cable break for a North Slope & Northwest Alaska internet outage that will take an undefined amount of time to fix.
“It appears there was a subsea fiber optic cable break near Oliktok Point, and the outage will be prolonged,” Quintillion President Michael “Mac” McHale said in a short statement provided by a company spokesperson. “We are working with our partners and customers on alternative solutions.”
The statement mirrored what the company released Saturday morning on social media.
So far, the company has not provided a specific timeline for the repair’s next steps.
See a spelling or grammar error? Report it to web@ktuu.com
Copyright 2025 KTUU. All rights reserved.
Alaska
Opinion: Alaska’s court system has had solutions for expensive, unnecessary delays since 2009. What’s lacking is accountability.
As a former prosecutor, I was shocked and saddened to read reporter Kyle Hopkins’ recent reporting in the Anchorage Daily News and ProPublica on pervasive, unconstitutional, heartbreaking delays of violent felony cases. Judges granting continuances 50 to 70 times over seven to 10 years — with “typically” no opposition from the prosecution, and no mention of the victims. Victims and their families suffering years before the closure that a trial can bring, some even dying during the delays.
Hopkins’ reporting is recent. The problem isn’t. The Office of Victims’ Rights (OVR) has been covering delays for years in annual reports to the Legislature, beginning in 2014. In 2018, after monitoring nearly 200 cases, OVR said judges were mostly to blame.
Other causes have been noted: understaffed public defender and prosecutor offices; the incentive for defendants to delay because witnesses’ memories fade. But in 2019, OVR said, “It is up to the judges to control the docket, to adhere to standing court orders, to follow the law and to protect victims’ rights as well as defendants’ rights.”
In 1994, 86% of Alaskans who voted supported a crime victims’ rights ballot. That overwhelming mandate was enshrined in our state constitution. It includes victims’ “right to timely disposition of the case.” For years, Anchorage Superior Court judges have ignored this right.
After reading the recent coverage, I began searching. Maybe other jurisdictions had found solutions to similar delays. What I discovered shocked me even more.
In 2008, a working group co-chaired by an Alaska Supreme Court justice determined the average time to disposition for felony cases in Anchorage had nearly quadrupled. “This finding amounted to a ‘call to arms’ for improvements …(.)”
In November 2008, the state paid to send three judges, two court personnel, the Anchorage district attorney, the deputy attorney general and three public defenders to a workshop in Arizona about causes of delays, and solutions. David Steelman was a presenter. He worked with the Alaska group in Phoenix and Anchorage. That work resulted in a 59-page report dated March 2009.
I found Steelman’s report online (“Improving Criminal Caseflow Management in the Alaska Superior Court in Anchorage”). His findings are revealing.
Delays resulted from informal attitudes, concerns and practices of the court, prosecutors and public defense lawyers. To change this “culture of continuances,” it was critical the court exercise leadership and the attorneys commit to change. Judges and the public-sector lawyers must recognize they were all responsible for making prudent use of the finite resources provided by taxpayers. Unnecessary delays wasted resources.
Steelman recommended the judges and lawyers agree to individual performance measurements, and the court engage in ongoing evaluation of his Caseflow Improvement Plan. The plan included a “Continuance Policy for Anchorage Felony Cases.”
I found an unsigned Anchorage court order dated May 1, 2009. It included Steelman’s Continuance Policy recommendation that the court log every requested continuance in the court file, name the party requesting it, the reasons given, whether the continuance was granted, and the delay incurred if it was granted.
More telling, it omitted Steelman’s recommendation that, “Every six months, the chief criminal judge shall report to the Presiding Judge on the number of continuances requested and granted during the previous period(.)”
That provision might have ensured accountability.
After years of only bad news, in 2018, OVR reported a glimmer of “good news” — a pre-trial delay working group was formed by Anchorage Presiding Judge Morse and the court system. In September 2018, Judge Morse issued a Felony Pre-Trial Order. Its goals included reducing delays of felony case dispositions and minimizing the number of calendaring hearings. (Sound familiar?)
But, OVR added, “The real test will be whether judges will hold to the new plan and hold parties accountable for delays. The jury is out on whether the will to change is actually present, but the court ultimately will be responsible for improving this problem unless the legislature steps in and passes new laws to resolve this continuing violation of victims’ rights.”
The jury has been out since 2009. The court failed that test. Based on the ADN/ProPublica reporting, the court failed the test of 2018. Things are worse than ever.
And the court’s response? A spokesperson told Kyle Hopkins there was “new” training for judges on managing case flows, as well as an Anchorage presiding judge’s order limiting when postponements may be used. (Sound familiar?)
I also reached out to the court. I requested documentation of this “new” training and a copy of the latest order. I also asked about the unsigned May 2009 court order. I’ve received no response. Similarly, when Hopkins reached out to Anchorage Superior Court judges, none of the criminal docket judges responded directly.
There are two things courts and judges will respond to: their budget and retention elections.
First, the Alaska Senate and House Judiciary and Finance Committees should hold the court system accountable for its proposed budget. Require it to cost out delays from past years. According to a 2011 report by Steelman, just two Anchorage cases (each with over 70 scheduling hearings), “(M)ay have cost the State of Alaska the full-time equivalent of an extra prosecutor or public defender attorney.”
The court system has proven, since 2008, it can’t be trusted to not waste money on unnecessary delays. It must finally be held accountable by the Legislature.
Second, retention elections. Superior Court judges are appointed by the governor, but they must stand election for retention by the voters every six years. The Alaska Judicial Council evaluates each judge before their election and makes that information public. The council incorporates surveys of attorneys, law enforcement, child services professionals, court employees and jurors.
The Judicial Council does not survey victims, or those who assist them, such as OVR or Victims for Justice. It should. Other than the defendant, victims are the only ones with a constitutional right to a speedy trial. That right is being ignored by judges. Alaska voters who issued a mandate should know which judges are ignoring it.
Val Van Brocklin is a former state and federal prosecutor in Alaska who now trains and writes on criminal justice topics nationwide.
The views expressed here are the writer’s and are not necessarily endorsed by the Anchorage Daily News, which welcomes a broad range of viewpoints. To submit a piece for consideration, email commentary(at)adn.com. Send submissions shorter than 200 words to letters@adn.com or click here to submit via any web browser. Read our full guidelines for letters and commentaries here.
Alaska
Seattle offers much more than a connection hub for Alaska flyers
Lately I’ve spent too much time at the Seattle airport and not enough time exploring the Emerald City.
It’s not just about downtown Seattle, either. I’ve been catching up with friends in the area and we shared stories about visiting the nearby San Juan Islands or taking the Victoria Clipper up to Vancouver Island (bring your passport).
There are some seasonal events, though, that make a trip to Seattle more compelling.
First on the list is Seattle Museum Month. Every February, area museums team up with local hotels to offer half-price admission.
There is a catch. To get the half-price admission, stay at a downtown hotel. There are 70 hotels from which to choose. Even if you just stay for one night, you can get a pass which offers up to four people half-price admission.
It’s very difficult to visit all of the museums on the list. Just visiting the Seattle Art Museum, right downtown near Pike Place Market, can take all day. There’s a special exhibit now featuring the mobiles of Alexander Calder and giant wood sculptures of artist Thaddeus Mosley.
But there are many ongoing exhibits at SAM, as the museum is affectionately known. Rembrandt’s etchings, an exhibit from northern Australia, an intricate porcelain sculpture from Italian artist Diego Cibelli, African art, Native American art and so much more is on display.
It’s worth the long walk to the north of Pike Place Market to visit the Olympic Sculpture Park, a free outdoor exhibition by SAM featuring oversized works, including a giant Calder sculpture. The sweeping views of Elliott Bay and the mountains on the Olympic Peninsula are part of the package.
My other favorite art museum is the Burke Museum at the University of Washington. What I remember most about the Burke Museum is its rich collection of Northwest Native art.
But the term “museum” covers an incredible array of collections. A visit to the Chihuly Garden and Glass Museum is a chance to see the most fanciful creations of renowned glass blower Dale Chihuly. It’s right next to the Space Needle.
You have to go up to the top and see the new renovations.
“They took out most of the restaurant,” said Sydney Martinez, public relations manager for Visit Seattle.
“Then they replaced the floor with glass. Plus, they took the protective wires off from around the Observation Deck and put up clear glass for an uninterrupted view,” she said.
If you visit the Space Needle in February, there’s hardly ever a line!
Getting from the airport to downtown is easy with the light rail system. There’s a terminal adjacent to the parking garage in the airport. The one-way fare for the 38-minute train ride is $3. From downtown, there are streetcars that go up Capitol Hill and down to Lake Union.
Martinez encourages travelers to check out the Transit Go app.
“All of the buses require exact change and sometimes that’s a hassle,” she said. “Just add finds to your app using a credit card and show the driver when you get on.”
Pike Place Market is a downtown landmark in Seattle. Fresh produce, the famous fish market, specialty retailers and restaurants — there’s always something going on. Now there’s even more to see.
Following the destruction of the waterfront freeway and the building of the tunnel, the Seattle Waterfront project has made great strides on its revitalization plan. The latest milestone is the opening of the Overlook Walk.
The Seattle Waterfront project encompasses much more than the new waterfront steps. Landscaping, pedestrian crossings and parks still are being constructed. But you cannot miss the beautiful staircase that comes down from Pike Place Market to the waterfront.
“There’s a really large patio at the top overlooking Elliott Bay,” said Martinez. “The stairs go down to the waterfront from there, but there also are elevators.”
Tucked under one wall is a completely new exhibit from the Seattle Aquarium, which is right across the street on the water. The Ocean Pavilion features an exhibit on the “Indo-Pacific ecosystem in the Coral Triangle.” I want to see this for myself!
Wine lovers love Washington wines. And Seattle shows up to showcase the increasing variety of wines available around the state. Taste Washington brings the region’s food and wines together for an event in mid-March.
Hosted by the WAMU Center near the big sports stadiums, Taste Washington features 200 wineries and 75 restaurants for tastings, pairings and demonstrations. There are special tastings, special dinners (plus a Sunday brunch) and special demonstrations between March 13 and 17.
There’s another regionwide feasting event called Seattle Restaurant Week, where participating restaurants offer a selected dinner for a set price. No dates are set yet, but Martinez said it usually happens both in the spring and the fall.
It’s not downtown, but it’s worth going to Boeing Field to see the Museum of Flight. This ever-expanding museum features exhibits on World War I and II, in addition to the giant main hall where there are dozens of planes displayed. I love getting up close to the world’s fastest plane, the black SR-71 Blackbird. But take the elevated walkway across the street to see the Concorde SST, an older version of Air Force 1 (a Boeing 707) and a Lockheed Constellation.
One of the most interesting exhibits is the Space Shuttle Trainer — used to train the astronauts here on the ground. There’s an amazing array of space-related exhibits. Don’t miss it.
Some travelers come to Seattle for sports. Take in home games from the Seattle Kraken hockey team or the Seattle Sounders soccer team this winter.
Other travelers come to see shows. Moore Theatre is hosting Lyle Lovett on Feb. 19 and Anoushka Shankar on March 13. Joe Bonamassa is playing at the Climate Pledge Area on Feb. 16. There are dozens of live music venues throughout the area.
It’s easy to get out of town to go on a bigger adventure. The Victoria Clipper leaves from the Seattle Waterfront for Victoria’s Inner Harbour each day, starting Feb. 16. If you want faster passage, fly back on Kenmore Air to Lake Union.
The Washington State Ferries offer great service from downtown Seattle to the Olympic Peninsula. Or, drive north to Anacortes and take the ferry to the San Juan Islands. Or, just drive north to Mukilteo and catch a short ferry over to Whidbey Island.
There are fun events all year in Seattle. But I’m circling February on the calendar for Museum Month. Plus, I need to see that grand staircase from Pike Place Market down to the water!
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