Alaska
Fire on the trail: ‘Old Guy’ snowmobilers face new obstacle in Alaska

Alaska is proving a difficult state to traverse for the three “outdated man” snowmobilers who set out March 6 from Grand Rapids, Minn., for Fairbanks.
Starting as an journey that Paul Dick, 72, Rex Hibbert, 70, and Rob Hallstrom, 65, deliberate for about two years, the journey has in some ways change into a saga.
The story’s newest chapter unfolded Saturday, when the three males have been making an attempt to achieve the village of Fort Yukon, Alaska, having left a distant cabin that morning the place they’d bivouacked Friday evening.
Using their sleds alongside and on prime of the frozen Porcupine River, the boys endured deep snow and, at occasions, slush, based on stories they despatched to Hallstrom’s daughter, Kasie Plekkenpol, within the Twin Cities.
The lads had hoped to achieve Fort Yukon by darkish Saturday. However that plan was dashed when, by way of textual content utilizing their inReach satellite tv for pc communication machine, they reported to Plekkenpol that Hibbert’s snowmobile had caught hearth.
The lads have been secure, they mentioned, however annoyed. “They have been so shut and but so removed from their ultimate vacation spot,” Plekkenpol recounted on the boys’s Fb web page.
By air, Fort Yukon is about 150 miles from Fairbanks. Overland, following the Yukon River a lot of the best way, because the snowmobilers intend to do when they’re transferring once more, the gap is indeterminate, given the numerous stops, begins and redirects the boys make whereas breaking path.
Already low on gasoline when the hearth began, Hibbert, Dick and Hallstrom determined to desert in the meanwhile the broken snowmobile and its cargo sled, and proceed on to Fort Yukon, a village of 600 largely Gwich’in Alaska Natives that straddles the Arctic Circle.
In the meantime, Plekkenpol and others who observe the boys’s whereabouts by way of two GPS gadgets hooked up to their sleds contacted folks in Fort Yukon, searching for help.
“We have been humbled by the Fort Yukon group and their willingness to assist,” Plekkenpol reported on Fb. “They went out and met our guys on the path — touring about 50 miles earlier than their paths crossed — they usually have been capable of escort the fellows into city, providing not solely a path, however steering towards the simplest route into city. Deep gratitude for the assist of Joshua Cadzow and the numerous others that pitched in late on a Saturday.”
Ready for the boys once they arrived in Fort Yukon was a scorching stew of moose meat, rice and greens, due to Melanie Olivia of the native tribal authorities, amongst others.
Easter Sunday was the thirty fifth day the boys had been on the path. Challenges overcome to this point on the journey embrace an earlier snowmobile hearth that began when a stick grew to become caught beneath a machine’s hood and lodged towards its engine or exhaust. And in Outdated Crow, Yukon, at the very least two sleds wanted new clutches.
Every man tows a specifically made cargo sled behind his snowmobile loaded with further gasoline and different provides, together with instruments and spare components.
Hallstrom, Dick and Hibbert are adept at sled restore — a talent that was examined in Outdated Crow once they needed to talk by sketchy wi-fi cellphone service which clutch components they wanted delivered by airplane from Whitehorse, Yukon.
Plekkenpol mentioned Sunday evening the plan now could be to retrieve on Monday the sled broken by hearth and get it to Fort Yukon for analysis.
“(The fireplace) sounds fairly gentle, so far as snowmobile fires go,” Plekkenpol mentioned on Fb. “The blokes suppose it could have been a gasoline line leak that sparked the hearth on restart.”
With some luck, the machine can be repaired upfront of a attainable departure for Fairbanks on Tuesday.
Hallstrom is a retired electrician from Park Rapids, Minn. Hibbert is a farmer and rancher from Soda Springs, Idaho. And Dick is a retired beer distributor from Grand Rapids, Minn. Every is an skilled long-distance snowmobile traveler and racer.
The lads have lined greater than 5,000 miles on their Arctic Cat Norseman 8000X sleds since leaving Grand Rapids. A lot of the gap has concerned breaking trails and bushwhacking.

Alaska
Opinion: A troubling vote for Alaska — and for the nation

It’s only been a few months, but after observing recent actions in Congress, I feel compelled to speak out. The House’s passage of the so-called “budget” bill represents a profound failure to lead, and the fact that Alaska’s lone representative cast the deciding vote makes it especially painful, as that member is my nephew, Nick Begich.
I had hoped — both for Alaska’s sake and our family — that Nick would chart an independent course in Congress, as Don Young, Mary Peltola and even my father once did. I hoped he would challenge falsehoods and act in Alaska’s best interests, not follow the lead of a president widely viewed as the most corrupt in our lifetime. I was wrong.
Nick has voted in lockstep with this administration — earning an early endorsement from the president — and has done so despite the consequences to our state. As reported by the Anchorage Daily News, Nick claimed on social media that the bill “marks the single most significant step toward restoring fiscal sanity in a generation.” That statement is demonstrably false.
This bill does not reduce the deficit. It extends tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans while cutting Medicaid and SNAP benefits, which help Alaskans survive. If Alaska tries to shield our residents from these cuts, we could face at least a $63 million shortfall. Even with these harsh sacrifices, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office projects that the bill will add trillions to the federal deficit. That’s not fiscal responsibility — it’s deception. To claim otherwise is to follow the Trump playbook: say something loud enough, and hope no one notices the truth.
But the bill goes even further. One provision removes the courts’ ability to hold government officials in contempt for defying court orders, effectively eliminating a vital check on executive power. With this change, any administration could disregard court rulings — with impunity — unless a citizen can afford an expensive legal battle. This is not a partisan issue. Republican or Democrat, every American should be concerned by this blatant attempt to weaken the judicial branch and undermine the rule of law.
My father, Rep. Nick Begich Sr., worked across the aisle in the 1970s to help settle the Alaska Native Land Claims, secure the pipeline right-of-way and protect Alaska’s most vulnerable. As a professor and legislator, he understood the importance of checks and balances. He knew that winning didn’t mean destroying your opponents or silencing dissent. He would be outraged by this administration’s disregard for democratic norms — and by the complicity of those who remain silent. He would have spoken up.
My nephew may share my father’s name, but he does not share his values. If he did, he would speak up against corruption. He would reject authoritarian tactics and defend the right to dissent. He would stand with the Alaskans who have the least power and the most to lose.
Instead, he has chosen a darker road — one where dissent is punished, courts are weakened, and the concentration of power is celebrated. That is not the America my father served. It is not the Alaska I know.
I hope Nick reads this. I hope he remembers that leadership means more than loyalty to a party or a president. It means doing the hard thing when it’s right. It means standing alone if necessary, for the people you represent. There is still time to choose a different path — one of integrity and courage. One that honors the legacy of those who came before and reminds us of what public service can truly be.
Tom Begich is a former minority leader of the Alaska State Senate and the executive director of the Nicholas J. and Pegge Begich Public Service Fund. His views here are his own and do not represent the fund.
• • •
The views expressed here are the writer’s and are not necessarily endorsed by the Anchorage Daily News, which 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
An audio postcard celebrating the work of Alaska’s maritime professionals
National Maritime Day is May 22. It’s a small but important holiday recognizing the hard work that goes into a career at sea. Alaska is home to thousands of mariners, including fishermen, navigators, maintenance specialists and law enforcement.
KUCB’s Andy Lusk linked up with some local maritime professionals to hear about their experiences in the industry. This audio postcard features some of those interviews.
Thank you to those who interviewed for this story:
Karoly “Charlie” Gaspar
Timothy Davis
Steve White
David Arzt
Phillip Thorne
Alaska
Opinion: Thanks to Alaska lawmakers for supporting public education
Dear members of the Alaska Legislature,
On behalf of the Anchorage School District, we offer our heartfelt thanks for your leadership in overriding the governor’s veto of House Bill 57.
We deeply appreciate and commend the bipartisan action — a powerful, united stand that reflects not only a shared commitment to sound education policy, but also to protecting Alaska’s students, supporting their future, and upholding the strength of our public schools. Your willingness to rise above partisanship in service of our students is leadership at its best.
Securing the 46 votes needed to override the veto was no small feat. Each of you came together to make a resounding commitment to public education. We are grateful for this historic vote — a result of more than a year of conversation, advocacy, and careful negotiation. The $700 increase to the Base Student Allocation represents the largest permanent increase in Alaska’s history, accompanied by high-impact policy reforms that were thoughtfully shaped with input from educators and communities across the state. This legislation is much more than a funding bill — it’s a promise to Alaska’s students, and we are profoundly thankful to the legislators who worked across party lines to make it a reality.
[News coverage: Alaska lawmakers override Dunleavy’s veto of education bill]
We are also deeply grateful to the students, families, educators and community members who raised their voices in support of the override. Their advocacy was essential in moving this legislation forward and ensuring lawmakers heard the collective call for change.
Because of your leadership, ASD has started the process of restoring critical services and hiring teachers for the next school year. Though the threat of a veto to the education appropriation still looms, ASD is committed to moving forward, albeit cautiously, in service of our students and families. We understand that the decisions ahead will be difficult. As you work to develop and implement the sustainable, long-term fiscal plan our state urgently needs — one that ensures funding for the essential services Alaskans rely on — your commitment to bold action gives us hope.
We are proud to stand with you in support of strong, stable, and fully funded public education across Alaska.
Jharrett Bryantt is superintendent of the Anchorage School District.
Carl Jacobs is president of the Anchorage School Board.
• • •
The views expressed here are the writer’s and are not necessarily endorsed by the Anchorage Daily News, which 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.
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