Alaska
Crews ordered for fires burning near Central and Circle
Crews were ordered to join smokejumpers who are hard at work on the Deception Pup Fire (#252) burning near Central and the Flasco Fire (#259) south of Circle.
Three highly trained and cohesive hotshot crews arrived in Fairbanks from California Wednesday. The Smith River Hotshots and Lassen Hotshots will make the 150-160 mile drive up the Steese Highway Thursday to help the smokejumpers already on the ground trying to suppress these two fires.
In addition, a Type 3 Incident Management Team from Idaho is gearing up to take over efforts on a group of fires, including the Deception Pup and Flasco fires, in northeastern Alaska.
At an estimated 150 acres and burning near a group of Native allotments and homes north of mile 124.5 Steese Highway, the Deception Pup Fire was the highest priority in Alaska Wednesday. The 21 smokejumpers assigned got a hose lay around half of the fire Tuesday in anticipation of using water to cool down the edges. The fire calmed early Wednesday morning, but they were expecting things to pick back up as the day got hotter.
The smokejumpers reported the aerial water drops and retardant drops were effective in slowing down the fire’s growth Tuesday night. Water scoopers and a helicopter continued that effort Wednesday while the smokejumpers tried continued to get a line around the fire.
The Flasco Fire, only 30 miles away, is threatening another group of Native allotment and homes burning just south of Circle. This fire is burning in heavy spruce timber which requires substantial saw work to construct a fireline. Smokejumpers estimated it was 5% contained Wednesday morning. The 145 smokejumpers assigned will continue to construct a fireline in hopes to keep the fire within a 7-acre footprint.
Both fires had scoopers and helicopters dropping water on the fire to help cool them down.
The concern is upcoming Red Flag Conditions Thursday in an area already plagued by persistent hot and dry conditions. Thursday’s weather not only includes temperatures reaching into the 80s and possibly as high as 90, but the area could experience easterly wind and dry lightning. There’s a potential for thunderstorms in the area Thursday that could bring gusty, erratic winds and a chance of dry lightning. This could result in rapid fire growth on existing fires and dangerous new fires in Interior Alaska.
Other fires the Idaho Team will manage include:
The Crazy Fire (#152) is approximately 329 acres and burning in the Yukon Flats National Wildlife Refuge about 46 miles north of the Steese Highway. It is in limited management option area and will be monitored. This lightning-caused fire was detected on June 17.
The American Fire (#262) started on Tuesday and is burning approximately 15 miles northeast of Mount Prindle and about 20 miles north of mile 77 Steese Highway. This lightning-caused fire is about 7 acres and burning in a limited management option area. It will be monitored by the team.
The Ikheenjik Fire (#184) is burning on BLM-managed land almost 12 miles southeast of Circle Hot Springs and 20 miles southeast of Central on the east side of the Ikheenjik River. This lightning-caused fire was detected on June 18 and was estimated at 35 acres on Wednesday. It is burning in limited management option are and will be monitored.
-BLM-
Bureau of Land Management, Alaska Fire Service, P.O. Box 35005 1541 Gaffney Road, Fort Wainwright, Ak 99703
Need public domain imagery to complement news coverage of the BLM Alaska Fire Service in Alaska?
Visit our Flickr channel!
Learn more at www.blm.gov/AlaskaFireService, and on Facebook and Twitter.
The Bureau of Land Management Alaska Fire Service (AFS) located at Fort Wainwright, Alaska, provides wildland fire suppression services for over 240 million acres of Department of the Interior and Native Corporation Lands in Alaska. In addition, AFS has other statewide responsibilities that include: interpretation of fire management policy; oversight of the BLM Alaska Aviation program; fuels management projects; and operating and maintaining advanced communication and computer systems such as the Alaska Lightning Detection System. AFS also maintains a National Incident Support Cache with a $18.1 million inventory. The Alaska Fire Service provides wildland fire suppression services for America’s “Last Frontier” on an interagency basis with the State of Alaska Department of Natural Resources, USDA Forest Service, National Park Service, Bureau of Indian Affairs, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the U.S. Military in Alaska.
Categories: Active Wildland Fire, BLM Alaska Fire Service
Alaska
Opinion: Alaska’s whale-strike risk is growing while regulators keep studying the obvious
The recent strike and killing of a pregnant fin whale by a cruise ship in the Gulf of Alaska tragically highlights decades of inaction by the federal government and shipping industry to enact reasonable measures to reduce this risk. Such whale protection measures include vessel speed reductions, or VSRs, to 10 knots or less and bow watches posted in designated whale habitat. A voluntary vessel speed reduction off California has reportedly reduced ship-whale strikes by half, while also reducing underwater noise, fuel use and harmful stack emissions.
While technological options to detect and avoid whales, such as thermal imaging infrared cameras, forward-looking sonar, sonic pingers and passive acoustic monitoring, are useful, the best way to reduce the risk of ship-whale strikes is slower speed and a posted bow watch.
Similar to speed limits for cars in school zones when children are present, ship speed reductions give both a ship crew and whales more time to detect each other and avoid a collision. They also reduce the risk of more serious or fatal injuries if a collision occurs.
We know that the number of whales actually observed killed by ships is just the tip of the iceberg in terms of total mortalities. To be detected, usually a struck whale must remain pinned across the bow of a ship and carried into port. Studies have estimated that whale mortalities unobserved offshore compared with those observed are anywhere from 7-to-1 to 25-to-1. Given the thousands of whales and ships overlapping in Alaska waters each year, it is more than likely that hundreds of whales have been struck and killed here.
It is important for the public to know the record of failure by government and industry to reduce this risk.
Beginning in 2009, I proposed to the incoming Obama administration that it enact greater protections for Unimak Pass in the eastern Aleutians and Bering Strait, including ship-whale strike reduction measures. I reiterated this specific ship-whale strike reduction request in 2013, 2018, 2021 and 2022. Each time, the federal administration declined to act.
Additionally, in 2022, I proposed directly to the Prince William Sound tanker owners that they enact voluntary speed reductions to reduce the risk of whale strikes. These huge oil tankers steam year-round directly across the paths of hundreds of whales. In June 2009, the Exxon tanker Kodiak entered Valdez with a dead humpback whale stuck on its bow.
I then proposed to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the PWS Regional Citizens Advisory Council that they press the tanker owners to adopt voluntary whale protection measures.
NOAA convened an informative technical workshop on the issue but declined to take any action, presenting a flawed assessment of the risk. In response to a formal scientific integrity complaint I filed with the agency, the NOAA National Appeals Office directed its Alaska staff to provide a supplemental assessment of the ship-whale strike risk in PWS that corrected some, but not all, of its previous flawed assessment. The agency continued to decline to take any action.
In July 2024, the PWSRCAC sent a letter to tanker owners asking them to consider adopting a speed reduction in PWS, which the tanker owners declined the following month, saying they would only “follow the guidance, direction, and regulations provided by NOAA/NMFS on this matter.”
In March 2023, two organizations I am associated with, Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility and The Ocean Foundation, submitted a proposed rulemaking to NOAA asking the agency to adopt a nationwide protocol to reduce whale strikes by ships
The petition proposes that the agency designate critical whale safety zones in all U.S. waters in which ships would be required to slow to 10 knots during the day, 8 knots in low visibility, such as nighttime, fog or heavy weather, and post bow watches to detect whales ahead. Neither the Biden nor the Trump administration responded to the petition, the latter saying earlier this year only that “NMFS is still considering the 2023 petition.”
After two suspected ship strikes on whales in Icy Strait in August 2024, I urged the Cruise Lines International Association with its 59 member companies, to adopt voluntary speed reductions and other whale-strike reduction measures in critical Alaska whale habitats. The cruise ship association ignored the request.
Again in February of this year, I urged the Cruise Lines International Association and NOAA to enter into a memorandum of agreement specifically to reduce the risk of whale strikes this summer in Alaska. In a Feb. 20 email, the cruise association responded: “In addition to specialized training for crew, cruise lines have agreed to the voluntary slowdown of vessels in sensitive areas or when marine life is observed/present. Cruise lines also use methods and technologies such as bow-positioned observers and online monitoring and reporting apps to carefully navigate in ways that are respectful and protective of marine mammals.”
When I pressed them for details on these vague, questionable assertions and reiterated our proposed memorandum of agreement between the Cruise Lines International Association and NOAA, the cruise association went silent. Later that month, NOAA’s Alaska regional director responded to the proposal: “Here in Alaska, we continue to engage with the cruise industry to reduce the risk of vessel strikes (e.g., encouraging the use of Whale Alert). Due to reduced capacity we’re quite limited in our ability to do more proactive work with the cruise industry at this time.”
After the fin whale was struck and killed by the Ovation of the Seas in the Gulf of Alaska last month, I again pressed NOAA and the Cruise Lines International Association to enter into a memorandum of agreement to reduce such risk, suggesting that important whale safety zones in Alaska waters that need strategic vessel speed reductions include at least Icy Strait, Prince William Sound, Resurrection Bay/Kenai Fjords, Unimak Pass and Bering Strait.
The cruise association has yet to respond, and NOAA’s regional director said simply that they are reviewing the situation and potential next steps.
Tragically, there is still no commitment by the shipping industry or government to address this issue in Alaska. While these same ship owners participate in voluntary whale-strike reduction measures elsewhere, they refuse to do so here in Alaska.
As these ship owners remain unwilling to remedy this voluntarily in Alaska, it is time that NOAA adopt our 2023 proposed rulemaking requiring them to reduce this risk to whales here in Alaska and across the nation.
Alaska whales, who share their ocean home with us terrestrial primates on ships, deserve nothing less.
Rick Steiner is a marine conservation biologist in Anchorage, former marine professor at the University of Alaska and board chair of Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility.
• • •
The Anchorage Daily News 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
Alaska, Trump Administration Settle Biden-Era Oil, Gas Plan Case
Alaska agreed to settle with the Interior Department on Monday over a Biden-era plan aimed at restricting drilling and leasing, a deal that could expand the state’s oil and gas development.
The state and the Alaska Industrial Development and Export Authority in consolidated cases agreed to drop the suit if Interior offered a written admission that its approval of the Biden-era plan was flawed and violated the 2017 Tax Act.
The 2024 plan included restrictions such as protecting more than 1 million acres of coastal plains. According to the proposed agreement, that move eliminated interest in a Jan. 6, 2025 …
Alaska
Kei to stay, new Alaska law makes import vehicles roadworthy
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – Kei trucks and other K-class vehicles are now road legal in the state of Alaska following the passage of SB 239.
The small Japanese import vehicles have drawn a following among owners who say the compact trucks and vans can handle more than their size suggests.
Since kei trucks are imported vehicles that do not meet federal motor vehicle safety standards, they must be at least 25 years old to be brought into the country, per the Imported Vehicle Safety Compliance Act of 1988.
Chris Blankenship drives a 1995 Suzuki Carry and has owned it for about two years after buying it from a previous owner in Tok.
“You don’t need a full-size American truck to do a lot of stuff,” Blankenship said.
He uses the truck for everything from groceries to camping.
“You can do so much with them. I have mine with a cargo carrier on it, the GoPros, the Starlink. I have a truck bed tent for it too,” Blankenship said.
Before SB 239 was passed, Alaska did not align with the federal 25-year import rule.
“Over the decades before, SB 239 came along, folks that would import them thinking that the state would follow the federal 25-year law,” Blankenship said.
While the vehicles could be imported, they couldn’t be registered.
“But before the bill was passed and signed into law, the state of Alaska says, ‘no, you can’t do it,’” he said.
SB 239 was passed last June, aligning Alaska with the federal law and allowing kei trucks that meet the age requirement to be registered as fully road legal.
Blankenship bought his truck in-state and does not have the original import form needed to register it under the new law. To obtain the paperwork, he must take the vehicle out of the state into Canada and back.
“And they’ll check it over, look at the paperwork and do their stamp and go, welcome to the U.S.,” he said.
He is also looking for others in the same situation.
“I’m trying to find out who’s all in the same boat. Because maybe we can drive up there and do them all at once,” Blankenship said.
Prior to the law change, Blankenship’s truck was registered as an all-purpose vehicle, similar to an ATV, allowing for “limited on-road operation,” according to the Alaska DMV.
“It says up to the discretion of law enforcement if they want to pull you over and give you a ticket, tow it, whatever. But I’ve had so many different law enforcement at the city, state and federal — they’re like, ‘we love these things.’ I’ve had folks say, ‘Hey, can I buy it? Can you find one?’” Blankenship said.
Owners say the trucks draw attention from other drivers as well.
“Folks will look at you, they will grin, they will laugh, they’ll say cute truck, they will ask about it,” Blankenship said.
Blankenship said his F350 with a plow has largely been replaced by the kei truck in his daily routine.
“It’s just a really fun truck to drive. My 2000 F350 that has the big plow on it — that stays parked like 99% of the time now, and I drive this,” he said.
See a spelling or grammar error? Report it to web@ktuu.com
Copyright 2026 KTUU. All rights reserved.
-
Arkansas4 minutes agoArmy names intelligence facility for Arkansas Tech graduate
-
California11 minutes agoHow California Effectively Legalized an Open-Air Sex Market
-
Colorado14 minutes agoJulian Lewis Says Deion Sanders’ Colorado ‘Wasn’t Really Looking at Defenses Much’ Last Season
-
Idaho19 minutes agoWarhawk Air Museum receives $500K grant honoring fallen Idaho soldier
-
Connecticut19 minutes agoSeveral beaches closed to swimming due to potential bacteria in the water
-
Delaware26 minutes agoDelaware Libraries Introduce Digital Literacy Specialists Program – State of Delaware News
-
Florida29 minutes agoVideo shows man attack Florida deputies in snake-and-gator-infested canal, sheriff says
-
Georgia34 minutes agoGeorgia Supreme Court upholds convictions of men in deadly shooting during gas station carjacking