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Biologists say there are more invasive species in Alaska than ever before

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Biologists say there are more invasive species in Alaska than ever before


ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – Plants and animals that aren’t indigenous to Alaska are called invasive species, and they can harm the natural environment.

Now, wildlife and plant biologists across the state are saying the issue is worse than ever before.

“We’re kind of facing the most invasive species we’ve ever faced in Alaska, just with increased travel for both locals and visitors,” said Tim Stallard, an invasive species manager and consultant in Anchorage. “There are more threats and invasive species present than we’ve ever seen before.”

Stallard, who works with various public agencies, identifies and mitigates invasive plant species.

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“People planted these originally as an ornamental,” said Stallard, pointing to an area of Anchorage’s Chester Creek Trail where the Mayday tree has eliminated the presence of all other plants. “They’re very cold hearty. They grow well here in Anchorage.”

Not only are they annoying, but the Mayday trees are poisonous to moose, Stallard said, and can reduce a healthy food supply for fish.

“In this little area, there’s no food for moose,” he said. “Our native trees contribute a lot of insects to our streams that the baby salmon eat. These trees contribute a few insects but support a lot lower, fewer different species and a lower number. If more areas are allowed to become a monoculture like this, there’s a concern for salmon food availability.”

The European bird cherry, or Mayday tree, is an example of a greater, more serious problem in Alaska.

“It’s very serious,” Stallard said. “Alaskans, we’re so tied in to our natural environment. We rely on our natural resources for our jobs, for employment, for fun, for culture, for food. Everybody in different ways but we all rely on and value our natural resources.”

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There are about 50,000 invasive species in Alaska, according to the Alaska Department of Fish and Game. The ADF&G has advice, and a list of laws, people are encouraged, or required, to follow when knowingly, or unknowingly, interacting with invasive species.



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As crackdown begins under Trump, Alaska advocates educate local immigrants on legal rights

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As crackdown begins under Trump, Alaska advocates educate local immigrants on legal rights


Anchorage attorneys and advocates are preparing local immigrants without citizenship for a Trump administration that, in its first few hours on Monday, pushed ahead sweeping actions on immigration.

Under former President Joe Biden, immigration surged to its highest in American history, averaging about 2 million people per year, according to the Congressional Budget Office. In an executive order on Monday, President Donald Trump declared a national emergency at the southern border to address what the order called a “catastrophic immigration crisis.”

“There’s a lot of fear,” said Anchorage immigration attorney Lara Nations. “Having information is powerful, and empowers people take control of their own life, and helps address some of the fear.”

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Local advocates say they have set out to meet what they say is a profound need among immigrant communities: the need for information.

In Alaska, about 8% of the state’s total population is foreign-born — close to 60,000 people, according to 2023 Census Bureau statistics. That population includes people with a wide range of statuses, including those who reside in the U.S. both lawfully and unlawfully. It includes: those who have become citizens through naturalization, green-card holders on a path to citizenship, a variety of visa holders, those with temporary protected status, refugees and asylees who have fled war or persecution in their home nations, and those without documentation, according to the Census Bureau.

Some of those immigrants may be vulnerable to deportation in an administration that’s proven unfriendly to them, said American Civil Liberties Union of Alaska executive director Mara Kimmel, referencing Haitian immigrants with legal status in Springfield, Ohio, who Trump has repeatedly called “illegal” and whose status he’s threatened to revoke.

But it’s hard to say exactly who will be at risk of deportation, or how many, she said.

That’s, in part, because it’s unclear which populations the Trump administration is prioritizing taking action against.

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Trump campaigned on the mass deportation of millions of unauthorized immigrants.

But many of the people without permanent status in the United States have permission to be here, said Nations.

That includes 2.5 million asylum-seekers awaiting their claims, hundreds of thousands of people granted humanitarian parole from countries like Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, Venezuela, Ukraine and Afghanistan, and the half-million undocumented people brought to the U.S. as children who are protected under an Obama-era law, according to the Pew Research Center and National Immigration Forum.

Also, it’s not clear whether some of the new policies will survive the courts. On his first day in office, Trump signed an executive order to end birthright citizenship in a move that’s already been challenged in federal court, then blocked by a federal judge on Thursday. In a statement this week, Alaska Attorney General Treg Taylor said he didn’t have a position on whether Alaska may defend or oppose the order, but said that “it is important to address the crisis at the border and stem the tide of illegal immigration.”

“The truth is, we just don’t know (what will happen),” Kimmel said of immigration under the new presidency. “And so my big message in all of this is, if people are prepared and know their rights, that’s their best defense.”

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Since December, the ACLU of Alaska has provided advice and information at two information sessions aimed at different populations in the state. In December, the group was invited to present on knowing your rights as a non-citizen for a Pacific Islander audience at an Anchorage gathering. Last week, Kimmel and her staff gave the same presentation to a different group in Anchorage, in partnership with Spanish-speaking immigration attorneys Lara Nation and Nicolás Olano of Nations Law Group to the Latino community.

The idea was to give noncitizens practical advice about how to interact with local police and immigration police, should enforcement crackdowns become more commonplace, said Olano, a U.S. citizen who immigrated from Colombia in 1999.

Attorneys advised attendees on how to respond to escalating scenarios, ranging from routine traffic stops, to an immigration police officer showing up at your door or place of work, to an arrest. ACLU recorded the event and plans to send to Latino communities throughout the state.

The purpose is to help people “realize how immigration police (can) approach them, on a practical level, without making it so abstract,” Olano said. “Like, ‘hey, (they could) show up at your house. They (could) stop you when you’re leaving your house, so they avoid the issues of needing a warrant to get in there.’ I think that we gave practical tools to people to know what to expect, and also how to protect their rights.”

If noncitizens can take one piece of advice on exercising their civil rights, Olano said, it’s this:

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“Just be quiet and ask for a lawyer,” he said.

Nations advises undocumented or under-documented people contact an immigration attorney to get “accurate immigration advice … about their specific situation.”

The U.S. Constitution affords noncitizens, including undocumented immigrants, virtually the same rights as citizens, Olano said. That includes the right to due process, the right to remain silent, and the right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure, according to the ACLU.

State police cannot ask a person for their immigration status in Alaska, but the same is not true for federal agents such as Customs and Border Protection at an airport or a border crossing, or Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers.

“That doesn’t mean that you have to answer them,” Olano said. “They can ask you…and you can say, ‘I’m not talking without a lawyer.’”

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In all scenarios, attorneys advise people dealing with any law enforcement officer or federal agent to remain calm and polite, and not to run away, lie, or give false documents.

They are also suggesting that families make emergency plans for themselves, and particularly their children, in the event a parent is detained, arrested, or deported.

A longtime advocate for the Latino community, Lina Mariscol, stressed the importance of emergency plans in that situation, including child care and power of attorney for children.

“Better safe than sorry,” said Mariscol, who immigrated from Mexico in 1983, and served as the honorary consulate of Mexico in Anchorage from 2000 through 2007 (the Mexican consulate in Anchorage closed in 2015). “It’s kind of like an advance directive. If you need it right now, it’s already too late.”

In an emailed statement this week, Alaska Republican U.S. Sen. Dan Sullivan said he supported the president’s declaration of a national emergency at the southern border, and emphasized a need for legal migration.

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Fellow Alaska Republican U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski in a Thursday interview said that while some of Trump’s new orders are “sending out a message…a very clear message, about where they wish to head on certain policies…the details of implementation of them are not clearly articulated.” In regards to birthright citizenship, Murkowski said the 14th amendment has “a long history, decades and decades, where that has been respected.”

Alaska Republican U.S. Rep. Nick Begich did not respond to requests for comment.

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Weather, avalanche mitigation impacts roads across Alaska

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Weather, avalanche mitigation impacts roads across Alaska


ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – Weather conditions impacted roads all across the state Saturday.

According to Alaska 511, some of the areas most difficult to drive in are around Cantwell, in the Fairbanks area, and North into the Dalton and Elliott highways.

Roads in Anchorage were wet and full of puddles.

And part of Hatcher Pass Road was closed Saturday.

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The Department of Transportation (DOT) said online that Hatcher Pass Road is now closed just north of the Skeetawk entrance. That’s around mile 10.8.

DOT said there was an avalanche Friday that crossed the road around mile 15. DOT plans to assess the road closure daily.

People could still get to Skeetawk Saturday, but the ski area posted online that it was closed because of the weather.

And Sunday, drivers along the Seward Highway can expect delays while DOT works on avalanche mitigation work in two sections.

One stretch will be from milepost 37 to milepost 38 from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday. That’s near the Seward Highway and Sterling Highway wye.

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The other area is from milepost 95 to 100 from 9:00 a.m. to noon Sunday. That’s between Girdwood and Anchorage.

See a spelling or grammar error? Report it to web@ktuu.com



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UMass hockey completes sweep of Alaska with 7-3 win

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UMass hockey completes sweep of Alaska with 7-3 win


AMHERST, Mass. – An early two-goal lead helped University of Massachusetts hockey roll to a 7-3 win to complete its weekend sweep of Alaska at the Mullins Center on Saturday night. With the victory, the Minutemen improve to 13-10-2 on the year, while the Nanooks fall to 7-11-5.

“We were very opportunistic tonight,” said UMass head coach Greg Carvel. “I don’t think the score is indicative. I thought Alaska gave us a really good game and that we were very opportunistic in our scoring early on. It was pretty wide open. A little more wide open than I’d like it to be. I thought (Michael) Hrabal played really well all weekend, and it’s three in a row, we’ll take it and move on and try to make it four.”

The Minutemen opened up the scoring at the 3:22 mark of the first as Lucas Mercuri’s offensive zone faceoff win bounced through Nicholas Grabko and into the back of the Alaska net.

It quickly became 2-0 just 48 seconds later as a rebound from sophomores Dans Locmelis and Jack Musa amidst a scramble in front of the Alaska goal kicked out to Cole O’Hara in the slot for him to bury into the twine for his 13th goal of the season.

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The Nanooks cut their deficit in half with Kyle Gaffney and Brendan Ross starting a rush up the ice that Matt Hubbard was able to tap home at the back post at the 9:29 mark of the opening frame.

UMass then made it a 3-1 margin at 11:55 with Mercuri hammering home a rebound after freshman Francesco Dell’Elce’s initial attempt was stopped. Freshman Larry Keenan earned an assist on the play, as well.

Alaska pulled back within one 19 seconds into the second period when Chase Defoe’s shot off a feed from Cade Ahrenholz banked off the end boards into goaltender Michael Hrabal and in.

Musa promptly gave the Minutemen back some breathing room, knocking the puck into an open net from the slot after graduate student Linden Alger picked up a pass from O’Hara and circled the offensive zone before setting up Musa at the 5:10 mark.

Locmelis extended the gap to 5-2, converting on UMass’ lone power play of the contest off a feed from juniors Lucas Olvestad and Kenny Connors at 18:14.

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With 59 seconds to go in the frame, O’Hara pocketed his second of the night, redirecting a pass from Alger at the net front. Junior Kennedy O’Connor also earned an assist on the play.

Alaska, with an extra attacker on and the net empty, managed to score a power-play goal midway through the third with Dafoe cleaning up a rebound from Peyton Platter and Broten Sabo for his second of the contest at the 12:47 mark.

Connors then pocketed an empty net goal from Musa and junior Owen Murray 15:13 into the final frame to complete the scoring.

The Nanooks finished the night with a 33-28 edge in shots and went 1-for-4 on the power play to UMass’ 1-for-1.

Six Minutemen ended the evening with multi-point performances, led by O’Hara (2g, 1a) and Musa (1g, 2a) with three points each.

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Hrabal totaled 30 saves in the win for UMass, while Grabko and Lassi Lehti posted 16 and five saves, respectively, for Alaska.

The Minutemen will be back in action next Friday, January, 31, when the squad will wrap up its series with Merrimack at 7 p.m. at the Mullins Center.



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