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Energy, crime and homeschool allotments: The big bills to watch as time runs out in Alaska’s legislative session

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Energy, crime and homeschool allotments: The big bills to watch as time runs out in Alaska’s legislative session


JUNEAU — With just days left in the Alaska Legislature’s regular session, major policy measures are unresolved related to energy, crime, homeschool allotments and elections.

In recent years, the budget has been the biggest source of contention and debate between legislators and Gov. Mike Dunleavy. This year, the budget has largely advanced smoothly. However, the size of this year’s Permanent Fund dividend has not been reconciled. Across the political spectrum, legislators expect it will be close to the Senate’s approved figure of almost $1,600 — lower than the nearly $2,300 figure sought earlier in the session by the House.

Senate President Gary Stevens, R-Kodiak, said Saturday that crime and energy bills are the “most crucial” measures being considered this year.

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Legislators say that a multipart elections bill is the least likely of the big policy items to pass. It combines a proposal to clean up the state’s voter rolls with election provisions typically supported by progressives, like same-day voter registration.

Fairbanks Democratic Sen. Scott Kawasaki, the chief sponsor of the elections measure, acknowledged that energy, education and the budget are the highest priorities for the Legislature.

”But you can’t forgo the other issues that are part of this Legislature, like elections,” he said. “These are other things that have to pass.”

The House spent more than seven hours Saturday debating a doomed bill to restrict how transgender girls participate in school sport teams. Meanwhile, the Senate Finance Committee continued discussing and amending some of the Legislature’s biggest policy priorities.

There have been frequent breaks so legislators and the governor’s staff can meet behind closed doors to negotiate. But House members were kept largely occupied by the floor debate, halting their work on some legislation they have sought to prioritize.

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The Alaska Legislature’s regular session must end by midnight on Wednesday, May 15.

Energy and transmission

Addressing a looming shortfall of Cook Inlet natural gas has been a key priority this year for Dunleavy and many in the Legislature.

Several measures have been heard to reduce royalties on oil and gas production, which are intended to incentivize new gas production. Members of Senate leadership have raised concerns that forgoing state royalty revenue won’t necessarily see more gas produced. Stevens said there’s simply not enough time left to consider and approve those bills.

“I just don’t see how we can come to a conclusion on that because we just don’t know the implications,” he said Saturday.

Asked if he thought royalty relief was off the table this year, Sutton Republican Rep. George Rauscher said, “Not at all.” He said House Bill 223 could be considered Saturday or Sunday on the House floor as discussions continue with the Senate.

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The bill was initially scheduled for a floor hearing Saturday morning, but its hearing was delayed to allow time for the hours-long debate on transgender policy.

“We’re still negotiating but I’m stuck on the floor. Otherwise, I would have been able to get a lot farther today,” Rauscher said Saturday.

Green bank bills have advanced to a final vote on the House and Senate floor. The measures proposed by Dunleavy would allow the Alaska Housing Finance Corp. to offer loans for renewable energy projects. More than 80% of the Railbelt’s power comes from natural gas. A green bank bill has been supported as a way to diversify the Railbelt’s sources of energy, and is expected to pass into law this year.

Measures are also being heard by the House and Senate finance committees to modernize the Railbelt electric grid. The proposal for an integrated transmission system has divided the Railbelt utilities. Several prior attempts to form a transmission organization have fallen short over the past 50 years.

Chugach Electric Association — the state’s largest electric utility — has opposed key elements of the plan, leading legislators to coalesce around a more limited version of the proposal. The transmission organization would not have planning authority or management of the utilities’ assets. Sen. Cathy Giessel, R-Anchorage, said Saturday that would be a “shell” of the proposed transmission organization she helped author.

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The measure originally proposed by Dunleavy would also have exempted renewable power producers from local property and sales taxes. On Saturday, legislators said that provision is still being negotiated between lawmakers and the governor.

Another key measure is House Bill 50. It would develop a statutory framework so the state could lease depleted gas reservoirs to store carbon dioxide deep underground. Once pitched as a revenue-raising tool for the state, carbon sequestration has now been supported as a way to attract oil and gas investment.

A provision added to HB 50 would allow the Alaska Industrial Development and Export Authority, or AIDEA, to issue loans to producers based on their gas reserves. Those loans are intended to assist BlueCrest, an Alaska-based producer, that needs $400 million to buy a platform to produce gas from the Cosmopolitan Unit in Cook Inlet.

The bill has a provision intended to prevent oil companies from deducting carbon capture and storage expenses from their state oil production taxes. But producers could still deduct costs for enhanced oil recovery.

Officials at the Department of Natural Resources have said enhanced oil recovery is a currently allowable tax deduction, and part of the oil industry’s normal operations on the North Slope. Sen. Bill Wielechowski, D-Anchorage, has argued that allowing deductions for enhanced oil recovery could potentially “blow an enormous hole” in the state budget.

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A contentious provision to raise taxes on Hilcorp by more than $100 million per year was removed from the bill Wednesday after a fierce lobbying campaign.

The carbon storage bill was in the Senate Finance Committee as of Saturday evening. There have been concerns expressed in public testimony that carbon sequestration is expensive and largely unproven. But the bill has been a key priority for Dunleavy and many in the Legislature, and is expected to pass this year.

Crime bill

An omnibus crime package in the Senate combines proposals from a handful of House and Senate bills. The package has been crafted to get enough support in both legislative chambers, and is broadly expected to pass this year.

“As we move into an election here, people want to take a stance on crime. It’s such a powerful thing for people to run on,” Stevens said.

House Bill 66 contains provisions for tougher sentences for stalking; enhanced penalties for committing domestic violence and sex assault offenses in the presence of a child; renaming child pornography as child sex abuse material in state law; and the imposition of “some additional jail time” for repeated violations of conditions of release from prison.

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Homer Republican Rep. Sarah Vance, chair of the House Judiciary Committee, said “it is very, very important” to pass a crime bill this session.

”Addressing crime and protection for victims is just as important as addressing energy and education. I believe we can do all at the same time,” said Vance.

”Do I love everything? No. But I can live with most of it,” Anchorage Republican Rep. Craig Johnson said Saturday.

Alaska reported its highest-ever rate of fatal opioid overdoses in 2023. As a response to the state’s fentanyl crisis, a contentious set of provisions would impose longer sentences on drug offenses.

Sandy Snodgrass, whose son Bruce Snodgrass died from a fentanyl overdose in 2021, spoke in support of those provisions. She said Alaska’s leaders need to respond “to the scourge of fentanyl and illicit drug poisonings in our state.”

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The ACLU of Alaska opposes several key elements in the bill. Michael Garvey, advocacy director of the civil rights law firm, said longer sentences would not act as a deterrent.

“However, they often have the opposite effect of incarcerating people with substance use disorders and deterring people from calling for help,” Garvey said Thursday.

Under HB 66, crime victims and witnesses would no longer need to present in-person at grand juries. That change would allow law enforcement officials to summarize a victim’s testimony or to show a video of that testimony at grand jury proceedings. Victims’ rights groups have said that could help avoid retraumatizing crime victims, particularly in domestic violence and sexual abuse cases.

The federal government and 33 states allow “hearsay” evidence to be presented to grand juries to secure an indictment, which is constitutionally required in Alaska for a felony charge to proceed to court. The change would apply not just to domestic violence and sexual abuse, but to all felony offenses.

Civil liberties groups have raised concerns that using second- and third-hand evidence at grand juries could deny Alaskans long-held protections against unfounded charges.

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Susan Orlansky, a private attorney who often volunteers with the ACLU of Alaska, said she was concerned because grand jurors could not evaluate the credibility of witnesses or ask follow-up questions. Under the bill, the law enforcement officer presenting to the grand jury may not have interviewed the victim or investigated the case.

”By allowing second- and third-hand hearsay, the bill authorizes testimony that’s no more reliable than the last statement in a game of telephone,” Orlansky said.

Sen. Jesse Kiehl, D-Juneau, said Saturday that he’s sensitive to the concerns of victims’ rights groups, but he is also trying to craft an amendment to narrow what hearsay evidence can be presented to grand juries.

Another key provision in the bill would extend the period certain people can be involuntarily committed. That comes after an Anchorage woman, Angela Harris, was stabbed in the back two years ago in the Loussac Library by a man who had been deemed unfit to stand trial.

Supporters say involuntary commitment reforms could help protect Alaskans. But the ACLU of Alaska has raised constitutional concerns about the impacts of extending involuntary commitment from a maximum period of six months to two years. Sen. David Wilson, R-Wasilla, said he was concerned that the long-struggling Alaska Psychiatric Institute could also be overwhelmed with new patients.

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Homeschool and education

Competing bills in the House and Senate would instruct the Alaska board of education to draft new regulations governing Alaska’s correspondence programs, after an Anchorage Superior Court judge ruled last month that two state statutes violated the state constitution by allowing public funds designated for the program to be used at private and religious schools.

But the bills — and the urgency that some lawmakers see in passing legislation to shore up the schools that serve nearly 23,000 homeschooled Alaskans — could be used as a vehicle to add other education provisions, including a permanent increase to state spending on education long sought by educators.

The correspondence school statutes, conceived by Dunleavy when he was a state senator, were enacted in 2014, allowing for a growing practice of families using correspondence allotments of up to $4,500 per student per year to be used to pay tuition at private schools.

The decision by Judge Adolf Zeman, which prohibited the practice but kept correspondence programs in place, was paused through June. It was appealed by the Dunleavy administration to the state Supreme Court, which has proposed an expedited hearing schedule.

House Bill 400, authored by Rep. Justin Ruffridge, a Soldotna Republican, would create a temporary solution, instructing the state board — whose members are appointed by Dunleavy — to put in place regulations that will expire in 2025, allowing lawmakers to work on a permanent solution when they return to Juneau next year that takes into account the supreme court decision.

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At Dunleavy’s urging, the bill would also keep on the books the statutes that Zeman found violated the state constitution, meaning they could be reinstated if the Alaska Supreme Court overturns Zeman’s decision.

The House Finance Committee held a hearing on the bill that lasted late into the evening on Friday. During the hearing, some minority members raised concerns about whether the state board of education could be trusted to enact regulations that followed the constitution.

“They’re going to philosophically follow what the attorney general tells them to follow,” said Rep. Andy Josephson, an Anchorage Democrat. Attorney General Treg Taylor has used correspondence allotments to pay tuition at private Christian schools.

Senate Bill 266, authored by Sen. Löki Tobin, an Anchorage Democrat, would instruct the state board to author permanent regulations — with more defined guardrails on how the correspondence allotments can be used, including a limit on the amount of funds that can be kept from year to year, and a limit on the amount of funds that can be used to pay for private music, arts and physical education classes.

Stevens, a Kodiak Republican, said he trusted that the board would enact constitutional regulations, even if lawmakers failed to pass a bill instructing them to do so before the end of the session.

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“In the end, if we can’t get a bill through — I’d prefer it if we could, but if we can’t — then I think the governor and the administration and the department has the wherewithal to write the rules,” said Stevens.

The Senate bill must be heard by the Finance Committee before it can head to a floor vote. It has yet to be scheduled for a committee hearing.

“As they often say, they are not a rubber stamp, so they’re going to do their due diligence,” Tobin said of the coming hearing in the Finance Committee, adding that she expected the House proposal could pass before the Senate finishes considering its competing proposal.

Despite Dunleavy’s indication that he wanted to keep the struck-down statutes on the books, Tobin said she wanted to see them amended in legislation that lawmakers consider this year.

“My approach is to pass legislation that will create stability and certainty,” she said.

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In Friday’s House Finance Committee hearing, Rep. Alyse Galvin, an Anchorage independent, proposed an amendment that would have permanently increased Alaska’s education funding formula. That amendment was tabled in a narrow 6-5 vote. The committee ended its work for the day at 8 p.m. without passing the bill, leaving open the possibility of further changes when the House Finance Committee reconvenes.

“To me, there’s nothing more important than having predictable, adequate, stable funding,” said Galvin. “This is just a lift-all-boats amendment.”

Lawmakers earlier this year agreed to permanently increase the Base Student Allocation from $5,960 to $6,640, amounting to an increase of roughly $175 million per year. But Dunleavy vetoed that bill and lawmakers failed by a single vote to override his veto.

The current year’s budget already has an equivalent funding boost, but the funding was added on a one-time basis, meaning it would not be included in next year’s budget without additional action by lawmakers, and schools are limited in how they can use the funds.

Supporters of the permanent boost have said it will aid all public school students in Alaska, including correspondence and charter students, who have been championed by Dunleavy.

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Lawmakers opposed to the move, including many House Republicans, have said they opposed it because Dunleavy has said he will veto an increase to the Base Student Allocation unless his priorities are satisfied.

Dunleavy said earlier this year that he is seeking to empower the state board of education to approve new charter schools — a power currently given only to locally elected school boards. Leaders of the bipartisan Senate majority have said they’re opposed to the proposal.

Tobin said that without specific guidance from Dunleavy on whether he would support a permanent BSA increase, the bipartisan Senate majority would be unlikely to pursue adding a funding boost to a bill meant to stabilize correspondence schools.

“I do not see the bandwidth of my caucus to go back through the negotiation process just to have a similar outcome as what happened (on the vetoed bill),” said Tobin.

“It is a little difficult to know what we could get across the finish line at this point in time. So it feels like it’s a bit of a shot in the dark.”

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Dunleavy, EPA visit UAF to discuss regulations in the arctic environment

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Dunleavy, EPA visit UAF to discuss regulations in the arctic environment


Fairbanks, Alaska (KTUU/KTVF) – On Wednesday, Gov. Mike Dunleavy, Alaska Attorney General Stephen Cox and Lee Zeldin, the administrator for the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), spoke to press at the University of Alaska Fairbanks power plant.

During their time at the university, the federal and state leaders spoke about developing resources such as coal, oil, gas and critical minerals in the 49th state.

During his 24-hour trip to Fairbanks, Zeldin said he has spoke to business and state leaders about environmental regulations impacting operations in Alaska, saying the EPA needs to consider whether regulations are solving problems or are solutions in search of a problem.

He also discussed the concept of “cooperative federalism,” where the EPA takes its cues from state leaders to determine where regulations and help are needed.

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“We’re here at the University of Alaska’s coal plant, and the most modern coal plant in the United States of America,” Dunleavy said.

Zeldin said visiting Fairbanks in winter helps inform decisions the agency is considering.

“There are a lot of decisions right now in front of this agency that the first-hand perspective of being here on the ground helps inform our agency to make the right decision,” he said.

Zeldin also said the agency is hearing concerns from Alaska truckers about diesel exhaust rules in extreme cold.

“We then met with truckers who have been dealing with unique cold weather concerns with the implementation of EPA regulations related to diesel exhaust fluid system,” he said.

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When asked about PFAS in drinking water, Zeldin said the EPA is not rolling back the standards.

“So the PFAS standards are not being rolled back at all,” he said.

On Fairbanks air quality and PM2.5 regulations, Zeldin said the agency wants to work with the state.

“We want, at the EPA, to help the Fairbanks community be able to be in attainment on PM 2.5. We want to make it work,” he said.

Dunleavy said energy costs and heating needs remain a major factor in Interior air quality discussions.

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“People have to be able to live. They’ve got to be able to afford to live,” he said.

Zeldin said EPA is considering further changes to diesel regulations and urged Alaskans to participate in the rulemaking process.

“We need Alaskans to participate in that public comment period,” he said.

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

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Opinion: Life lessons learned from mushing and old-time Alaska

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Opinion: Life lessons learned from mushing and old-time Alaska


A steel arch commemorating sled dog racing was installed over Fourth Avenue in downtown Anchorage in November 2025. (Marc Lester / ADN)

This is the beginning of the Iditarod spring, signaled by the burst of sun and what used to be the long wait for dog teams to pass under the arch in Nome, the finish line a thousand miles away from Anchorage. For old-timers, it’s the story of the way Alaska used to be. What once was a 30-day wait has become about 10 days for winners to celebrate and the rest of us to shout, “Well done.”

My story is about family that welcomed immigrants from all over the world to be among the last groups of Indigenous people in the country, a life of taking good care of dog teams, and of parents who taught their children how to live in a wild, rugged frontier.

I came to be in a different age, a time of dog teams that ruled the trails to mining camps and where the salmon ran strongest — before the introduction of the snowmachine that revolutionized rural and Native Alaska.

For the Blatchford family, it is a recognition that some things will always stay the same and everything else changes. All four of my grandparents were noncitizens. My mother Lena’s parents of Elim were Alaska Natives, as was my dad Ernie’s mother, Mae, of Shishmaref. The name Blatchford comes from his father, the Englishman who was born in Cornwall and arrived in Nome during the gold rush. His brother, William, was one of the early immigrants, and by 1899 there was a creek just outside Nome named after him. He discovered gold. My grandfather, Percy, found gold, too, but it was a different kind of wealth, a finding that he had found home and never left.

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I was born in Nome, delivered by an Iñupiaq Eskimo midwife in a one-room cabin where the frozen Bering Sea met the treeless tundra’s permafrost. Dad had a dog team. I like to think that the dogs were anxious for me to be born because it was hunting time for Dad to hitch them up and mush out to where the sea mammals, snowshoe hares, ptarmigan and other game thrived in the winter. My earliest memories are of dogs; all of them working as a team to bring home the game so we could have a fine meal cooked by Lena. In the Arctic, dogs were essential for family survival. If you didn’t hunt, you didn’t eat.

There are several memories that remain strong. I suppose I can call them lessons of the Arctic.

The first is to take care of the dogs and treat them well. Dog lovers all over the world know very well that a dog, whatever the breed, is loyal and will die to protect the one who feeds and pets it. If you don’t feed a husky, it won’t pull, and it could mean a long time before the family eats. When a dog team is hungry, it will race back home to be fed a healthy meal. Mother Lena must have been a great cook because Dad said the dog team always raced back to the edge of Nome, where Lena was waiting beside the propane stove. For Mike, Tom and me, our job was to take the rifle, shotgun and .22 into the cabin to be cleaned and oiled. Once that was quickly done, we unhitched the dogs and then fed the team.

All three of us boys had special responsibilities to Tim, Buttons and Girlie. Tim, the lead dog, was brother Mike’s pet; Tom had Buttons, and I had Girlie. We made sure they were healthy and well cared for. Dad would often comment that “Papa,” our grandfather Percy, the Englishman, took good care of his dog teams, being kind to the dogs and feeding them. Dad was the oldest of a large family that lived in Teller and later Nome.

“Papa” Percy was a prospector, fox farmer and a contestant in the All-Alaska Sweepstakes, the dog team race from Nome to the mining camp of Candle, a 400-mile race. He didn’t win, but he finished well, very well. The stories of the Sweepstakes have remained with the family for over a century. At a memorial service in Palmer for “Doc” Blatchford, Aunt Marge, without a question or a prompt, said that Papa took good care of his dogs.

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Percy Blatchford was a legend in the Alaska Territory. As a teacher of Alaska newspapers, I would find headlines similar to one in the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner that blazed on the front page: “Blatchford Wins Solomon Derby.” There was even a story in The New York Times.

There’s probably no other sport in Alaska that brought Alaskans together like dog mushing. When old-timers would visit over strong coffee, dogs and dog team racing would come up. In the territory, there were few high schools and fewer gymnasiums, so the only team sport was dog mushing. It was something to talk about that was unique to Alaskans.

I used to travel in rural Alaska quite a bit. In the smaller communities, I would see the teams and would wonder how long they would power the engines that brought the mail and the foodstuffs down and up the trails. When I think of dog teaming, I think of the Iditarod and wonder, and then come to know, what the strength of the story would mean for bringing generations together from Papa Blatchford to his eldest son Ernie and to the fourth generation of Blatchfords in Alaska.

There are times when I think that old-time Alaska is gone. But then my faith and confidence in the old-time spirit are ignited when I see what others in the Lower 48 see. When I was walking in downtown Philadelphia, I looked up and saw on an ancient federal building a stamped concrete sculpture of a dog musher leaning into a blizzard. Such is the way I think of the Iditarod and the lessons I learned growing up with the dog team, preserved in my memories.

Edgar Blatchford is former mayor of Seward, Mile 0 of the Iditarod Trail.

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These lines are adding Alaska cruises. Is your favorite on the list?

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These lines are adding Alaska cruises. Is your favorite on the list?



New Alaska voyages debut in 2026 as lines like MSC Cruises and Virgin Voyages expand into the booming market.

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Travelers will have new ways to see Alaska this year.

A number of cruise lines are launching sailings to the Last Frontier in 2026, from luxury to large family-friendly and adults-only ships. About 65% of people visiting the state during the summer do so by cruise ship, according to Cruise Lines International Association Alaska, and demand is high.

“I think Alaska is always very popular, but we’re seeing that ships are selling out way quicker than they used to,” Joanna Kuther, a travel agent and owner of Port Side Travel Consultants, told USA TODAY. 

With new inventory opening up this season, here’s what travelers should know about Alaska cruises.

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Which cruise lines are adding Alaska sailings?

  • MSC Cruises will launch its first-ever Alaska sailings aboard MSC Poesia on May 11. The ship will be fresh from dry dock to add enhancements, including the line’s luxe ship-within-a-ship concept, the MSC Yacht Club.
  • Virgin Voyages’ newest ship, Brilliant Lady, will operate the company’s inaugural Alaska cruises. The adults-only cruise line will set sail there starting on May 21.
  • The Ritz-Carlton Yacht Collection will debut its first Alaska cruises this year on its Luminara vessel. The first of those sailings will depart on May 28.

Those join other operators like Holland America Line, Princess Cruises, American Cruise Lines, Norwegian Cruise Line, Royal Caribbean International, Disney Cruise Line, Celebrity Cruises and more.

What are the draws of Alaska cruises?

Glaciers are a major attraction for visitors. “One of the major (draws) is Glacier Bay,” said Kuther. “…And then the other one is definitely the wildlife.”

That includes bears, whales, moose and salmon. In addition to its many natural wonders, the state is also a cultural destination where visitors can learn about its Native peoples.

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When is the best time to take an Alaska cruise?

That depends what you’re looking for. The Alaska cruise season generally runs from April through October, and Kuther said visitors will tend to see more wildlife between the end of June through August.

“That’s super peak season,” she said. “That’s also where you’re going to have more families, more crowds.” Some locals have also said those crowds are putting a strain on the very environment tourists are there to see.

Travelers may find less packed ships and ports by visiting earlier or later in the season – and there are other perks. If passengers go in May “it’s still a little bit snowy, so your scenery is going to be really cool,” Kuther said. Travelers visiting in September or October, meanwhile, could have a better shot at seeing the northern lights.

Where do ships usually sail?

The most popular itinerary is the Inside Passage, according to Kuther. That often sails round-trip from Seattle or Vancouver with stops such as Juneau, Skagway and Ketchikan. “People will go back to Alaska and do different routes,” she said. “This is a very good way to start.” 

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Other options include one-way cruises between Vancouver or Seattle and Anchorage. Travelers can also take cruisetours that combine sailings with land-based exploration, including train rides and tours of Denali National Park and Preserve.

Tips for Alaska cruises

  • Book early: Alaska itineraries sell out quickly, and so do shore excursions. Unique offerings like helicopter tours and dog sledding are popular, and there are only so many spots.
  • Consider a balcony cabin: This is “almost a must” in Kuther’s opinion. Crew members may make announcements about whales or other sightings near the ship, and guests with their own private viewing spot won’t have to race out on deck.
  • Pack carefully: “Packing is an art when it comes to Alaska,” Kuther said. “It really is, because you need so many things.” Her top three picks are bug spray, layers of clothing for the fluctuating temperatures and a waterproof jacket in case of rain.

Nathan Diller is a consumer travel reporter for USA TODAY based in Nashville. You can reach him at ndiller@usatoday.com.



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