When Alaska makes weather headlines, it’s usually for extreme cold or snow.
Alaska
Devastating Floods Seen From Above In Western Alaska – Videos from The Weather Channel

Alaska
Congressional delegation pledges support as FEMA joins Western Alaska storm response
A day after Gov. Mike Dunleavy asked President Donald Trump to approve a major disaster declaration for Western Alaska to unlock funding, the Federal Emergency Management Agency confirmed it had received the request and sent staff to Alaska, but did not provide a timeline for approving the disaster declaration.
“We’re in receipt of the governor’s request and working closely with Alaska and talking with the leadership hand in hand,” the FEMA press office wrote Saturday in an unsigned statement.
The request for the disaster declaration came days after the remnants of Typhoon Halong battered several villages in Western Alaska, leaving one person dead and two missing as dozens of homes floated off their foundations. Hundreds of residents from Kipnuk, Kwigillingok and other communities have been evacuated to Bethel and Anchorage.
As of Friday, 64 FEMA staff were dedicated to the Alaska storm response, the officials wrote, including two state liaison officers, two tribal liaisons and two mass care specialists who are embedded at the State Emergency Operations Center in Anchorage to provide technical assistance to the state and tribal partners.
FEMA also activated a response coordination center in Washington state and began collecting imagery of the impacted areas to provide early damage assessments to responders, officials wrote.
Members of Alaska’s congressional delegation in speeches at the annual Alaska Federation of Natives convention on Friday and Saturday praised the response from local, state and federal agencies.
U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski called the response from FEMA and other organizations “fabulous.”
However, she said she remained concerned about next steps in assisting impacted communities and residents.
“As with every disaster, it seems that complications always come when you are in that recovery end of things, when you’re actually working through individual assistance applications,” she told reporters in Anchorage.
She said there could be challenges for Yup’ik speakers who are not fluent in English in filling out FEMA forms that are not adapted to the unique concerns of rural Alaska.
“So I’m not worried about the immediate — I’m worried about what comes next,” she said.
Murkowski, along with U.S. Sen. Dan Sullivan and U.S. Rep. Nick Begich, pledged their commitment to ensure the federal government assists impacted individuals.
Begich said he intends to work with Murkowski and Sullivan “to pursue every opportunity available to ensure that families have both the immediate relief that they need and the long-term support that they need to get back on their feet.”
Sullivan praised a social media post from Vice President JD Vance, who wrote on Friday that the federal government is working to get help to affected Alaskans.
“I think that’s good when it comes from the top of the administration,” Sullivan said.
Murkowski was the first member of the congressional delegation to have visited the impacted region, with a short trip to Bethel and Kipnuk on Friday. She provided a more detailed view of what lies ahead during her Anchorage speech.
“It’s pretty powerful to observe first, to hear carefully what the needs are, before we swoop in from Washington or from afar to tell you what to do in your communities,” Murkowski said.
“I want to underscore — what you decide is best, because I will not accept that there are those who are from Washington, D.C., from other parts of the country, who have never been to your region, who have never heard your stories, that they feel that somehow they can determine your future,” Murkowski said, addressing a crowd of hundreds of Alaska Native people from across the state, including the region hit hardest by the storm.
Murkowski said that after meeting with teachers in the Kipnuk school, she thought it was important for children from the affected community to be kept together, even if they are unable to return to their village site for the foreseeable future.
“The more that we can keep these children and these families together in these communities while they are displaced, while they are out of their home, that is what we can do to help them,” Murkowski said.
Murkowski also took time in her speech to respond to the Environmental Protection Agency, which this week defended its decision to rescind a $20 million erosion mitigation grant awarded to Kipnuk — one of the hardest-hit villages — under the previous administration.
In a social media post, EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin said the cancellation of the grant prevented the money from being “swept into the Kuskokwim River.”
Murkowski said she was “offended” by the comment.
“I am outright mad that some have suggested that it is a waste of taxpayer dollars to protect Alaskan communities. We are Americans. Every single person that has been impacted is an American that deserves to be treated with that level of respect,” Murkowski said, eliciting prolonged applause.
The Kipnuk grant would likely not be revived, Murkowski said, “but we’re working to get some portion of that funding to go toward Kipnuk again.”
“We’re still fighting for the funding that we secured, including the resilience grants for Kipnuk that were canceled earlier this year, and while that funding may not have come in time to prevent the disaster that we saw this past week, they may prevent future disasters, and that’s the point,” said Murkowski.
Murkowski said that the Alaska congressional delegation would “keep pushing the administration” to restore funding meant for Alaska, after dozens of grants were canceled earlier this year due to Trump’s targeting of renewable energy and climate change initiatives.
“Simply recovering from this storm isn’t enough,” Murkowski said. “We have to be ready for the next one and the next one to follow, in Kipnuk and in every village, because these once-in-a-century storms are now arriving seemingly every year, and we have to prepare.”
• • •
Related stories:
Alaska Federation of Natives calls for emergency declaration from Trump in wake of typhoon disaster
A village in ruins: ‘I don’t see Kipnuk anymore’
Relief workers look to begin ‘mucking out’ flood-damaged homes in Western Alaska
Gov. Dunleavy requests federal disaster declaration after Western Alaska storm
Anchorage coordinates to help more than 1,000 Western Alaska storm evacuees as mayor declares civil emergency
Here’s how to help those affected and displaced by Western Alaska storms
EPA defends canceling coastal erosion grant to hard-hit Kipnuk
Officials for years knew about flood risks in rural Alaska. The recent storm illustrated how little they have to show for it.
Volunteers are evacuating pets from a flooded Western Alaska village, 1 plane at a time
Alaska
Alaska storm prompts lessons in weather science from SIUE

An unoccupied home rests on its roof after being knocked over in Kotlik, Alaska, on Oct. 12 after the remnants of Typhoon Halong hit western Alaska.
This time, it made headlines for a destructive storm that started as a typhoon.
Article continues below this ad
One person was dead and two were missing in western Alaska on Oct. 13 after the remnants of Typhoon Halong last weekend brought hurricane-force winds, ravaging storm surges, and floodwaters that swept some homes away, authorities said. More than 50 people had been rescued — some plucked from rooftops.
The weekend storm brought high winds and storm surges that battered the low-lying Alaska Native communities along the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta in the southwest part of the state, nearly 500 miles (800 kilometers) southwest of Anchorage.
“It was certainly a weather oddity. A typhoon is basically a hurricane with a different name, and it forms in the western Pacific,” said Dr. Alan Black, an associate professor and graduate program director in the Department of Geography and Geographic Information Sciences at SIUE.
“This typhoon initially formed around Oct. 3 off the coast of Japan, and it reached Category 4 strength, which gave it winds of 130 to 156 miles per hour.”
Article continues below this ad
Tracking toward Canada
The typhoon, though, didn’t make landfall in Japan and instead tracked east away from Japan in the Pacific Ocean. It then move northeast toward Alaska.
“When the storm got to Alaska, it was no longer a typhoon, but just the remnants of it. Around the Edwardsville area, we don’t get hurricanes, but we get the remnants, and this is the same thing,” said Black, who discusses weather topics in a weekly story for The Intelligencer.
“During the storm in the western part of Alaska, where it made landfall, there were wind gusts of up to 100 mph. Several places recorded wind gusts of 90 mph, and other places recorded wind gusts of 70 mph or more.”
Article continues below this ad
That was more than enough, Black explained, to cause significant flooding and potentially deadly or destructive wind damage.
“Along with the high wind came a lot of higher seas and high tides, and like what we see sometimes with a hurricane, there was a storm surge,” Black said. “The winds pushed the water onto land in some cases as much as 3- to 4-feet deep.
“That battered some of these villages that are right along the coast, and several homes washed out to sea. At least two dozen people were rescued by the Coast Guard when their homes were swept away. That has made the situation much more complicated in terms of rescue, relief, and evacuation.”
While flooding scenes are more common in the continental United States, Black added that storms like the one that struck Alaska last weekend are a rare but not unheard-of phenomenon.
Article continues below this ad
“It’s not that strong storms can’t batter the Alaskan coast, and it does happen. But the fact that this started as a typhoon and then came to Alaska makes it somewhat unique,” Black said. “At least 1,500 people were driven from their homes, and unfortunately, one person was killed, and at least a couple more were listed as missing.
Storm hits remote villages
“These were very small villages that were hit, and all of them have populations under 1,000 people. One unique aspect of Alaska is that many of its villages are inaccessible by road, with the only means of access being by ship or plane.”
Black noted that in one village, 20 homes were swept away on a Saturday night.
Article continues below this ad
“Because of the remoteness of these villages, the recovery will take a very long time,” Black said. “This storm was fueled by very warm Pacific Ocean water, and this happens occasionally in Alaska, but not often.
“Another typhoon caused damage along the Alaskan coast three years ago. Some storms are stronger than others, and they get more attention, but we’re not the only part of the world that can be affected by the remnants of these storms.”
Alaska
This Week in Alaska History: Oct. 13-19

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – This week marks several significant anniversaries in Alaska history, from the founding of a university to the territory’s purchase from Russia.
On Oct. 13, 1960 — Alaska Methodist University held its first classes on the Anchorage campus. The school, now known as Alaska Pacific University, was founded by Peter Gordon Gould, the first Alaska Native minister in the United Methodist Church.
Gould, originally from Unga, an island in the Aleutians just east of Cold Bay, attended college in Syracuse, New York, but wanted Alaskans to have a place to study closer to home. The university now partners with the Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium and remains affiliated with the Methodist Church.
Oct. 14, 1865 — This date marks the 160th anniversary of the birth of Sydney Laurence, one of Alaska’s most famous artists. Born in Brooklyn in 1865, Laurence was already established before arriving in Alaska.
He studied and exhibited in New York before marrying another artist and moving to England, where he showed his work in London and Paris. In 1904, he moved to Alaska, initially working as a prospector before returning to art. By 1920, he had become one of the territory’s most prominent artists, known for his stark pastels.
Oct. 14, 1879 — Naturalist and conservationist John Muir visited Glacier Bay with Tlingit guides. According to the National Park Service, Muir believed Yosemite Valley had been carved by glaciers, so he came to Alaska to study the rivers of ice.
Muir, often called the “father of the National Park Service,” was a fierce advocate for wilderness preservation.
Oct. 15, 2000 — A Northwest Airlines 747 cargo plane taking off from Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport experienced mechanical problems. The crew heard a thump, then another, and felt substantial vibration.
The pilot aborted takeoff and tried to stop, but the aircraft ended up off the runway about 500 feet from the tarmac in a cleared area. Two tires were shredded and destroyed, with eight other tires going flat. The plane sustained minor damage.
Oct. 16, 1972 — This day marked the beginning of the search for Alaska’s U.S. Rep. Nick Begich Sr., whose disappearance remains a mystery. His grandson, Rep. Nick Begich III, was born after his grandfather’s disappearance and now serves in the U.S. House.
Oct. 18, 1867 — Commemorating the transfer of Alaska from Russia to the United States. On that date in 1867, the United States took possession of the territory at New Archangel, now known as Sitka. Today, the day is known as “Alaska Day.”
The Russians had wanted to sell the land to the U.S. much earlier in 1859, but negotiations were stalled due to the brewing Civil War. Secretary of State William Seward agreed to purchase Alaska for $7.2 million.
Skeptics called it “Seward’s Folly” until the territory became the gateway to the Klondike Gold Rush and subsequent gold rushes.
Alaska Day is observed on Oct. 17 this year.
See a spelling or grammar error? Report it to web@ktuu.com
Copyright 2025 KTUU. All rights reserved.
-
Augusta, GA1 week ago
‘Boom! Blew up right there’: Train slams into semi in Grovetown
-
Alaska5 days ago
More than 1,400 seeking shelter as hundreds wait to be evacuated after catastrophic Western Alaska storm, officials say
-
Education1 week ago
Video: 3 Former College Teammates Reunite on Rangers Coaching Staff
-
North Carolina1 week ago
Guide to NC State Fair 2025: Tickets, transportation, parking, new rides and special event days
-
Education1 week ago
Nearly 20 Percent Fewer International Students Traveled to the U.S. in August
-
News1 week ago
What we know about the charges against New York’s Attorney General Letitia James
-
World1 week ago
Albanian judge killed in courtroom shooting amid growing anger over justice system reforms
-
News5 days ago
Trump Halts Billions in Grants for Democratic Districts During Shutdown