Alaska
Howling Mat-Su winds leave thousands without power
PALMER — High winds knocked out power for thousands in Mat-Su on Saturday morning with gusts forecast up to 80 mph in places before the weekend ends.
As of 9 a.m., there were nearly 17,000 members without power, according to Matanuska Electric Association. Major outages included Knik-Goose Bay and Fairview Loop roads. Another large outage knocked out more than 2,000 members from Palmer to Hatcher Pass.
There were reports of trees down on some side roads and damaged railroad crossing gates, as well as at least one small brush fire sparked by a downed power line.
By 10 a.m., the Palmer Airport had recorded a gust of 84 mph while the Wasilla Airport and the Glenn Highway near the Parks Highway had seen gusts of between 70 and 74 mph, according to weather station observations.
A high wind warning from the National Weather Service is in place until 11 p.m. Sunday for the Matanuska Valley including Wasilla, Sutton, Big Lake, Chickaloon and Palmer. The warning calls for northeast winds of 30 to 40 mph with possible gusts up to 80 mph. Wind chill could drop to between minus 10 and minus 20 degrees by Sunday evening, the agency said.
Power outages began early Saturday morning.
“We have multiple crews out in the field and are calling in more as they become available. Winds are not expected to die down today and will last into at least tomorrow evening,” Matanuska Electric Association said in a Facebook post, encouraging people to avoid downed power lines. “Please stay safe – there is a lot of debris scattered outside.”
Wasilla police warned that numerous traffic signals were dark Saturday morning due to power outages. The Matanuska-Susitna Borough announced the central landfill near Palmer is closed Saturday due to high winds.Palmer airport officials on Friday urged pilots to secure all aircraft.
A high wind advisory for the Anchorage area and the northwest Kenai Peninsula — including Nikiski, Kenai, Soldotna and Sterling — remains in effect until 11 p.m. Sunday. Forecasters expected north winds of 20 to 30 mph and gusts up to 50, and wind chill dropping to between minus 5 and minus 15 by Sunday night. Knik Arm, West Anchorage and areas along the coast of northern Cook Inlet were likely to experience the strongest winds, according to the advisory.
This is a developing story. Check back for updates.
Alaska
Alaska Airlines flight diverted back to Anchorage, Alaska, while on its way to Big Island | Big Island Now
A flight headed from Alaska to the Big Island on Thursday afternoon (Feb. 5) was diverted back to its point of departure after declaring an emergency while flying over the Gulf of Alaska, after being in the air for only a few hours following takeoff.
Alaska Airlines Flight 255 — from Anchorage, Alaska, to Kailua-Kona on the west side of the Big Island — was forced to turn around because of a maintenance issue.
Data from FlightAware — an online platform the providing accurate, real-time, historical and predictive flight insights to the aviation industry — show that Alaska Flight 255 took off at 3:53 p.m. Thursday from Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport.
It was expected to touch down between 5 and 6 hours later at Ellison Onizuka Kona International Airport on Hawai‘i Island.
The twin-jet Boeing 737 MAX 9 instead had to turn around at 6:43 p.m. for an emergency landing back in Anchorage because of what several social media pos scheduled to arrive by 4 a.m. today (Feb. 6), about and at least one Hawai‘i media outlet reported was a mechanical or maintenance-related issue.
Alaska Flight 255 landed safely at 7:38 p.m., with no injures, for its return to the Anchorage airport.
Hawai‘i News Report — @hawaiinewsreport on Instagram — posted that fire and emergency services greeted the plane at Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport.
The exact — and official — reason for the emergency and diversion is unknown at this time; however, there are reports that say an engine light came on so pilots decided to turn around.
“My kids was on [Flight] 255 today. They said [it] was some monitors issues, but when they returned over [the] Pacific, everything came back to normal,” wrote Paul Kulakevich in reply to one of the social media posts discussing Thursday’s incident. “‘Captain said we have to go to Anchorage anyway to make sure everything is OK with plane.’”
Anastasiya Baletskaya wrote in reply to another post that “from knowing people on the flight — control board was acting up.”
Kulakevich, whose 7 children were aboard the plane, wrote in another reply that he heard from them that it was nothing serious, “just a control board start acting up.”
Passengers of Alaska Flight 255 were able to board another plane to make the trip to bound for Kona, only much later Thursday night. There also were additional delays connected with that jet.
“Your aircraft was delayed due to operational difficulties,” said Alaska Airlines on its status page about the route, following the emergency Big Island landing. “We apologize for the delay.”
They were scheduled to arrive by 4 a.m. today (Feb. 6) at Ellison Onizuka Kona International Airport on the Big Island, about 5.5 to 6 hours later than originally scheduled.
Visit the Alaska Airlines website for flight statuses and other trip-related information. Be sure to also follow the airline on Facebook, Instagram, X and YouTube.
News reporter Nathan Christophel contributed to this story.
Alaska
‘No perfect tax regime’: Alaska lawmakers list concerns over Dunleavy’s sales tax proposal
Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s proposed sales tax could clash with existing revenue measures in cities and boroughs across the state, lawmakers said during a House Finance Committee hearing on Thursday.
It was just one of a series of concerns raised on both sides of the political aisle during the first hearing on Dunleavy’s fiscal plan for balancing the state’s budgets in the long run.
The sales tax, which is the primary means by which Dunleavy is proposing to increase state revenue, would levy a 4% tax on purchases between April and September and 2% for the remainder of the year.
Dunleavy’s fiscal plan comes in the final months of his eight years as governor, after several years in which he proposed balancing the state’s budget with hundreds of millions in annual draws from state savings.
Several lawmakers pointed out that even though Dunleavy projected his sales tax would raise up to $800 million annually, his plan could still leave Alaska with annual budget deficits in the long run because of his proposal to insert the Permanent Fund dividend into the state constitution and guarantee an annual payout that could cost the state more than $2 billion annually.
Dunleavy’s plan was explained to lawmakers by Acting Revenue Commissioner Janelle Earls, Acting Tax Division Director Brandon Spanos, and revenue department Chief Economist Dan Stickel. Neither the revenue department nor the tax division have had permanent heads for months.
“There is no perfect tax,” Dunleavy’s revenue officials said repeatedly as they fielded questions from lawmakers. It was their answer when asked about the difference in impacts between a sales tax and an income tax; when asked about the impacts of the state tax on communities with existing local sales taxes; and the impacts on rural villages.
“There is no perfect tax regime. We wish we weren’t here talking about this either, but that’s the situation,” said Spanos.
Nils Andreassen, executive director of the Alaska Municipal League, spoke to lawmakers about the potential conflicts between Dunleavy’s proposal and existing local taxes.
“We should probably unpack ‘perfect,’” Andreassen said. “I think what we mean when we say there’s no perfect tax is that at some point somebody pays the tax.”
“There’s no tax that doesn’t impact somebody,” he said. “Are there ways to mitigate some of those impacts? Yes.”
Impacts on communities with local sales taxes
More than 70% of Alaska residents live in parts of the state that lack a sales tax, including in Anchorage, which funds local services primarily through property taxes. But the number of jurisdictions in Alaska with some form of a sales tax exceeds 100.
In parts of the Kenai Peninsula Borough, for example, the combined borough and city tax is 6%. In Ketchikan, the combined borough and city tax reaches 8% in the summer. The City of Kodiak levies a 7% sales tax.
Many of those communities have implemented exemptions for their local taxes in an effort to curb their burden, including carve-outs for senior citizens and caps on the total tax that must be paid from single transactions.
Dunleavy’s proposal would eliminate communities’ ability to implement unique exemptions by transitioning that authority to the state.
The elimination of local exemptions has the effect of going against voter decisions, said Andreassen. In Juneau, residents only recently approved a provision that eliminates sales tax applicability on food.
“Voters contribute to local decision-making when it comes to those exemptions, and the state is saying right now in this proposal, ‘All of what voters asked for in those communities will go away based on our new list of exemptions,’” Andreassen said.
The exemptions proposed by Dunleavy cover medical services, purchases made with food stamps and similar assistance programs, interstate commerce, internet access, sales to the state or the federal government, state licenses or permits, investments, jet fuel, insurance premiums, home sales and rent, among others.
But the tax would apply to most goods purchased by individual Alaskans, such as groceries, fuel and cars.
Under the governor’s proposal, the effective tax rate in 36 Alaska communities would be at least 9%, rising to 13% in some places — which would be among the highest in the nation, said Andreassen.
Rep. Andy Josephson, an Anchorage Democrat who co-chairs the Finance Committee, said that “at some point, the tax rate gets so large that it acts as a deterrent for local economies.”
During the hearing, Department of Revenue officials did not provide data or modeling on the impacts of a statewide sales tax on communities that already levy local sales taxes.
Spanos said the sales tax is “the regime that the governor believes is the best for the state.”
“Certainly we have concerns and the governor would like to not have a tax as well, but that’s not the situation we’re in. We have a fiscal crisis that needs to be resolved, and the governor feels this is the best solution for this time,” said Spanos.
Department of Revenue officials said lawmakers could propose new exemptions to the tax if they saw fit, but Josephson said Dunleavy had not given him indications that he was open to changes to his bill.
“You made it sound like we were welcome to engage in those sorts of adjustments. But I just haven’t experienced that,” he told Earls. “What I’ve experienced is, ‘I’ve got to vote for this bill the way it is,’ and I just don’t know how much allowance the Legislature has to go at it alone and make changes.”
Earls said the plan was “open to some conversation.”
“I can’t speak to exactly what the governor would accept, but I think it’s a conversation to be had,” she said.
Impacts on rural Alaska
Rep. Nellie Jimmie, a Democrat from Toksook Bay, said the proposal would place an undue burden on communities in her district, which includes many Western Alaska villages.
If the tax were in place, Jimmie said, residents who lost their homes and most of their worldly belongings in villages ravaged by storms last year would face the burden of many purchases that would not be exempted from the sales tax, like snowmachines. Costs associated with rebuilding the houses would be exempted, but not the costs of filling a new home with belongings.
That comes on top of highest-in-the-nation prices for food and fuel.
“How is a statewide sales tax meant to be equal when rural Alaskans face much higher costs for the same basic necessities, especially after a disaster?” Jimmie asked.
Earls said she’s “heard that concern from others.”
“I’m not exactly sure how to answer every single individual Alaskan,” Earls said.
The Department of Revenue did not provide any specific modeling on the impacts of the tax on rural Alaska communities, where commodity prices are higher.
“It sounds like a sales tax is equal,” said Rep. Neal Foster, a Democrat from Nome who co-chairs the Finance Committee, “but when you have the cost of milk and cost of fuel and cost of groceries and everything higher up in rural Alaska, that same gallon of milk is really being taxed more.”
“It is not OK,” Jimmie concluded.
Sales tax vs. income tax
Alaska is the only state in the country without a broad-based tax, having eliminated its income tax four decades ago amid a flood of new oil revenue. Andreassen said that the Municipal League supports adoption of a broad-based tax, but favors an income tax over a sales tax.
Rep. Alyse Galvin, an Anchorage independent, said Dunleavy’s proposed sales tax, when compared with an income tax, would have a disproportionate impact on households with limited means. That assertion was supported by data collected by researchers at the University of Alaska Anchorage, who were paid by Dunleavy’s office to review various fiscal plan alternatives.
Asked whether the governor had considered an income tax, Earls said that the sales tax was preferred because it would collect revenue from non-residents and tourists spending money in Alaska.
Galvin argued that an income tax would better capture funds from non-resident workers, who according to recent data make up more than a fifth of the state’s workforce.
“A lot of Alaskans think that it’s not right that people come up here to work and take the very best, highest-paying jobs, and yet they don’t put in to Alaska,” said Galvin.
Rep. Jamie Allard, an Eagle River Republican, countered that imposing an income tax would drive away military retirees like her who chose to reside in Alaska precisely because their military retirement benefits are not taxed by the state.
Department of Revenue officials did not immediately provide any data to the committee detailing the difference in revenue that could be raised from non-residents through a sales tax versus an income tax.
“As was stated earlier, there is no perfect tax. Any tax is going to have negative downsides,” said Stickel, the department’s chief economist. “That’s true of a sales tax. It’s true of an income tax.”
Enshrining the dividend in the constitution
Dunleavy’s tax plan, which also includes raising new revenue from the oil industry, eventually calls for phasing out the new sales tax, along with the state’s existing corporate income tax. At the same time, his plan calls for enshrining the Permanent Fund dividend in the state constitution in perpetuity and paying out dividends through a new formula that allocates roughly $2 billion annually to the payouts in the foreseeable future.
Some lawmakers said that even at the peak of Dunleavy’s proposed new revenue streams, the state budget will be strained, leaving no room to address the maintenance backlog of state-owned facilities, such as university and school buildings.
“I fail to see how enshrining a liability that outstrips the amount of revenue I’m raising in taxation creates anything but more instability and a need for more taxes,” said Rep. Will Stapp, a Fairbanks Republican.
“So why do we need this proposal, and what is the purpose of this proposal, when the proposal spends more money than it raises?” asked Stapp.
Stickel said that several things would have to happen for the governor’s plan to produce balanced budgets in the long run: New oil fields would have to yield significant revenue, the Permanent Fund would have to keep growing, and a yet-to-be-constructed natural gas pipeline would have to begin sending income to the state within five years.
Even if all those things were to happen, the budget would be balanced only if government spending growth were strictly limited in future years, giving lawmakers almost no leeway to increase spending on the maintenance of state-owned buildings.
“There is actually nothing in this plan that will create stability in capital investment in the state, building things, having people working through that building of things, and making life easier for those people by us building things and doing things and maintaining things,” said Rep. Jeremy Bynum, a Ketchikan Republican. “This plan does absolutely nothing for that, that I can see. What it does is it taxes my community to ensure that we’re enshrining a PFD.”
The governor’s fiscal plan has caused many lawmakers in Juneau to wonder: It is worth imposing new taxes to continue paying out Permanent Fund dividends?
By several estimations, Alaska could avoid implementing new broad-based taxes in the coming years if it halted the dividend payments altogether or reduced their size substantially.
It boils down to a question, Andreassen said: “At what point do you pay more in tax than you get in an increased dividend?”
The Department of Revenue did not provide data showing how Dunleavy’s proposed dividends, which would amount to more than $3,000 annually per eligible Alaskan, would compare with the new tax burden at different levels of income.
Bynum also said that Dunleavy’s plan negates one of the main reasons he has given for proposing it. Dunleavy has said that Alaska has the highest revenue volatility in the country, and that making the state’s revenue less dependent on oil, a global commodity, will improve the state’s business climate. But in the long run, Dunleavy is calling for the elimination of the new revenue measures he is proposing, and a return to dependence on oil and gas revenue to fund government services.
“We’re saying we want to have stability by imposing a sales tax because oil revenues are volatile. Then on the other hand we’re saying, ‘Just wait seven years and we’re going to go back to that volatility,’” said Bynum.
Implementation
The Dunleavy administration expects that overseeing the new statewide sales tax would require hiring over 60 new state employees in the revenue department at an annual cost of $10 million.
Andreassen listed a series of technical deficiencies in Dunleavy’s bill that he said made it “unenforceable” without significant changes.
Even if those changes were made, he warned lawmakers that implementing the statewide sales tax as proposed would bring with it significant costs for Alaska’s cities and boroughs.
“This isn’t going to be cheap for local governments to respond and implement,” said Andreassen. Changes would include altering city and borough codes, laying off existing tax collection staff, and transforming local budget processes.
“We just want you to be mindful as you move forward about the complexity of unwinding what is currently a fairly efficient and effective system at the local level,” said Andreassen.
Alaska
Ancient Alaskan Site May Explain How First People Reached North America
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A buried campsite in Alaska’s Tanana Valley is offering a sharper picture of what the first migrations into North America may have looked like, right down to campfires, stone flakes, and a mammoth tusk set in time. Researchers argue that the newly analyzed evidence from the Holzman archaeological site shows people were present in Interior Alaska about 14,000 years ago, and that their tool-making traditions hint at technological continuity with the later, famous Clovis culture farther south.
The study, published in Quaternary International, doesn’t “solve” the peopling of the Americas on its own, but it strengthens a key section of the chain: what was happening in Alaska in the centuries just before Clovis appears across much of mid-continental North America. For a debate often dominated by big routes and big dates, Holzman brings the story back to the intimate scale of daily work – processing ivory, shaping stone, and returning to the same landscape across generations.
Late Pleistocene extent of glaciation at 14 and 13 ka (Dalton et al., 2020, 2023) with the Beringia landmass, and ancient archaeological sites >13 ka. Clovis sites from (Anderson and Miller, 2017).Ancient lakes at approximately 14 ka include Glacial Lake Atna at the 777 m asl level (Wiedmer et al., 2010) and in Beringia (Bond, 2019).
A 14,000-Year-Old Campsite in the Tanana Valley
The Holzman site sits in Alaska’s middle Tanana Valley, a region archaeologists consider especially important because it preserves deeply layered, well-dated traces of Late Pleistocene life. In the paper, the authors describe multiple occupation layers, with the oldest (Component 5b) dated to roughly 14,000 years ago and containing a nearly complete mammoth tusk along with evidence of hearths and stone-working debris.
Just above that, the team reports a later layer dated around 13,700 years ago that looks like a focused production episode: abundant quartz artifacts and a clear emphasis on mammoth ivory reduction. That layer also produced what the researchers describe as the earliest known ivory rod tools in the Americas, made with techniques that later become more visible in Clovis contexts, explains Phys.org.
Findings associated with the Holzman archaeological site. (Wygal et al. Quaternary International (2026)
This matters because it places people with a sophisticated organic-technology tradition (ivory working doesn’t preserve as readily as stone) in eastern Beringia earlier than or alongside the first big expansions south of the ice sheets. In other words, Alaska is not just “a corridor people passed through,” but a place where key technologies may have been refined before dispersal.
Why Mammoth Ivory Tools Are the Real Clue
Stone tools are the durable headline, but mammoth ivory is the more surprising thread. At Holzman, the authors link clusters of quartz flakes and working areas to the carving and shaping of ivory into rods and blanks – materials that would have been valuable, portable, and useful for composite hunting tools.
Phys.org summarizes the connection the researchers are drawing: ivory rods made at Holzman (around 13,700 years ago) appear to use carving techniques later seen in Clovis contexts (around 13,000 years ago). That doesn’t mean “Clovis came from Alaska” in a simple, one-step way, but it does support the idea that some technological roots of later Paleoindian traditions could have been laid in the north during earlier movements through Beringia and Interior Alaska.
This is also where the Tanana Valley’s broader record becomes important. The region has yielded multiple stratified sites with early dates, so Holzman is being presented as part of a wider cultural landscape, one that can connect Siberian-Beringian adaptations to later expansions deeper into North America.
Beringia (the Bering Land Bridge region) once linked Asia and North America during lower sea levels. (NOAA/Public domain)
The Route South: Land Corridor, Coastline, or Both?
Migration into the Americas is not about a single “path,” but timing can still rule routes in or out. The Holzman evidence supports the idea of a southward movement of ancestral Clovis-era populations sometime between 14,000 and 13,000 years ago, after reaching and circulating within eastern Beringia.
That interior story intersects with the long-running “ice-free corridor” debate. Ancient Origins has previously reported research suggesting the ice-free corridor may not have been viable for the earliest migrations until relatively late (around 13,800 years ago for full opening, in that report), which would imply that initial entry into the Americas could have relied more heavily on coastal or other alternatives, with interior pathways becoming more usable later.
The Holzman paper itself emphasizes dispersal south of the continental ice sheets during the 14–13 ka window, but it also sits within a field where multiple routes – coastal, interior, and mixed strategies – are actively weighed against new archaeological and genetic data. Rather than closing the debate, Holzman adds weight to the idea that Interior Alaska was populated early enough to feed later expansions, at least once conditions allowed those movements.
Top image: Illustrative Alaska image, Columbia Glacier, Columbia Bay, Valdez, Alaska. Source: Frank Fichtmüller/Adobe Stock
By Gary Manners
References
Sahir, R., 2022. Ice Wall Blocked Americas Land Route Until 13,800 years Ago. Ancient Origins. Available at: /news-history-archaeology/ice-wall-0016560
Karasavvas, T. 2018. Ancient Infant DNA Rewrites the History of Humans Entering North America. Available at: /news-history-archaeology/ancient-infant-dna-rewrites-history-humans-entering-north-america-009383
Wygal, B. T., et al. 2026. Stone and mammoth ivory tool production, circulation, and human dispersals in the middle Tanana Valley, Alaska: Implications for the Pleistocene peopling of the Americas. Available at: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1040618225004306?via%3Dihub
Arnold, P., 2026. Ancient Alaskan site may help explain how the first people arrived in North America. Available at: https://phys.org/news/2026-02-ancient-alaskan-site-people-north.html
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