A 29-foot Response Boat–Small crew from Coast Guard Station Seattle enforces a security zone at a parade of ships event during during the annual Fleet Week and Seafair Festival celebration in Seattle August 1, 2022. Multiple Coast Guard Cutter crews from around the Puget Sound region joined two Navy ships and two Royal Canadian Navy vessels during the parade along Seattle’s waterfront. (U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 1st Class Travis Magee)
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — The Coast Guard has changed the contact information for Sector Western Alaska and U.S. Arctic staff offices and other units throughout Western Alaska as part of a service-wide telephone modernization directive, Thursday, Feb. 12.
The main phone line for the sector can now be reached at (206) 815-7100.
Callers will be presented with a phone tree, providing them with options to contact one of the following:
Search and Rescue Command Center
National Response Center
Command Executive Assistant
Response Department
Prevention Department
Logistics Department
Emergency Management Division
Other Coast Guard units in Alaska
These other units can be reached directly at the numbers listed below or by dialing the main phone line for Sector Western Alaska and U.S. Arctic and pressing 8 at the automated menu.
Unit
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New Phone Number
Sector Western Alaska and U.S. Arctic – Phone Tree
(Previously Sector Anchorage)
(206) 815-7100
Sector Western Alaska and U.S. Arctic –
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24/7 Search and Rescue Command Center
(866) 396-1361
Regional Exam Center Anchorage
(206) 815-6454
Recruiting Office Anchorage
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(206) 815-6345
Coast Guard Investigative Service Anchorage
(206) 815-6738
Marine Safety Detachment Homer
(206) 815-6992
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Marine Safety Unit Kodiak
(206) 815-7145
Marine Safety Unit Dutch Harbor
(206) 815-6842
Marine Safety Unit Valdez
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(206) 815-6945
Arctic District Command Center
(Previously 17th Coast Guard District)
(800) 478-5555
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Sector Western Alaska and U.S. Arctic remains physically located on Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson.
The sector Search and Rescue Command Center watchstanders are available 24 hours a day at (866) 396-1361 and VHF Channel 16.
For media inquiries, please contact uscgalaska@uscg.mil.
JUNEAU, Alaska (KTUU) – The Supreme Court of Alaska will be taking up the case of the State of Alaska, Division of Elections v. Daniel J. Sullivan, Jr.
The oral arguments will be held Monday at 10 a.m. via Zoom, according to an order and opening notice.
The document also specifies that a decision is expected to be made before noon on Tuesday.
According to documents from the Division of Elections, the state must start printing ballots at noon on the same day.
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This comes after an Anchorage Superior Court Judge ordered Dan J. Sullivan on to the ballot Friday.
See a spelling or grammar error? Report it to web@ktuu.com
A new home under construction in Potter Valley in Anchorage. (Loren Holmes / ADN)
This June, two very different offers reach Alaska families, and both amount to the same thing: $10,000. The difference is everything.
Bill Walker, running for governor, would hand every eligible Alaskan a one-time $10,000 check and then end the Permanent Fund dividend for good. Ask one question: Where does his $10,000 come from?
It comes from the Permanent Fund, the people’s own money and the savings Alaskans built for their children. Walker would spend that endowment once to pay Alaskans to give up the yearly dividend forever.
Think about what that does. It cancels the annual check that gives a family a reason to keep an Alaska address and replaces it with a single payout. You hand people their own savings, call it a gift and cut the tie that held them here in the same motion. It is the oldest mistake in governing money: raid what you have saved to buy a moment’s applause and call the spending generosity.
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A plan that spends the people’s savings to send the people away is not bold. It is foolish.
Now consider the other $10,000. Through Alaska Housing Finance Corp., the state offers families up to $10,000 to build a new, energy-efficient home. AHFC raids nothing. It earns its own way. Over the years, it has returned more than $2 billion to the state treasury, and it spends some of that income the way any good business does: to win a customer.
Here, the customer is an Alaskan who wants to own a home, put down roots and stay.
That is the oldest sound move in business: Invest a little of what you earn to bring in someone who stays. The homeowner remains, the community gains a family and the corporation keeps earning. The money spent comes back. A plan that puts earnings to work to bring people home is not charity. It is clever.
Same amount. Opposite source. Opposite wisdom. One spends savings; the other spends earnings. One pays Alaskans to leave; the other pays them to stay. One empties the state; the other fills it.
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This Homeownership Month, the choice is the size of a single check, and the whole question is where the check comes from and what it asks of you. Ten thousand dollars of your own fund, to wave you goodbye. Or $10,000, earned and reinvested, to help you stay and build.
Evan Swensen is the publisher of Publication Consultants in Anchorage and the author of “What’s the Money For: A Permanent Fund Mortgage Proposal.”
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