Alaska
JBER host its 1st annual 9/11 memorial stair climb
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – Twenty-four service members and first responders honored the lives of those who died during the 9/11 terrorist attacks, during Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson’s first annual 9/11 memorial stair climb Saturday on base.
Nicholas Parks, a firefighter and EMT on JBER, was one of the organizers for the event. He said he’s wanted to do a memorial stair climb like this for the past year or so on base.
“We want to make sure they’re not forgotten,” said Parks.
That dream became a reality as service members and first responders climbed 110 flights of stairs in honor of those who died during the 9/11 terrorist attacks. There ceremony remembers those who died that day as well as the thousands of people who continue to face ongoing health complications linked to the 2001 attacks.
“We’re here today to just serve them, honor them, respect them and celebrate their lives,” said U.S. Air Force Airman 1st Class Jahleel Natta-Haynes.
For 20-year-old Natta-Haynes that means thinking about his first-grade teacher, Ms. Morales, whose father died in the towers during the attacks.
“It showed me that, wow, even though I wasn’t there, people go through things, so history is very important,” said Natta-Haynes said. “I’ll be thinking of her about her just see show love to him and her family.”
JBER’s 9/11 event served as a platform to remember the fallen and as a moment for comradery among first responders.
“It has happened and another emergency will happen, we keep in mind that it’s important to be out here, climbing the stairs and working with each other,” said Parks.
Parks said he plans to continue to have a memorial stair climbs to honor 9/11.
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Alaska
Editorial: Hawaiian’s spirit on Alaska’s wings | Honolulu Star-Advertiser
Alaska
Officials finish moving Western Alaska storm evacuees from Anchorage shelters into longer-term housing
All evacuees recently sent to mass shelters in Anchorage after a devastating Western Alaska storm forced them from their homes have been placed in longer-term, non-congregate housing, officials said Friday.
“This transition will help families as they continue to put their lives back together,” said Bryan Fisher, director of the Alaska Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management, in a statement.
Earlier in October, ex-Typhoon Halong displaced scores of residents from their Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta communities after the storm’s powerful winds and flooding severely damaged or destroyed homes and infrastructure across the region.
A mass evacuation effort resulted in more than 650 people arriving in Anchorage in the storm’s wake, with many ending up in mass shelters at Anchorage’s Alaska Airlines Center and Egan Civic and Convention Center while officials looked for more suitable long-term shelter situations.
On Friday, the State Emergency Operations Center said it had finished moving all evacuees — 379 people in total — who had been staying at Anchorage’s two mass shelters into hotels and closed the spaces.
Evacuees who had been sheltering in Bethel have also been placed in non-congregate housing, the State Emergency Operations Center said in a separate Friday statement.
Some shelters will remain in “standby status for the coming days” to accept potential evacuees before placement into non-congregate settings, according to the State Emergency Operations Center.
Officials started moving hundreds of evacuees from congregate shelter spaces in Anchorage into longer-term housing earlier this week while in Western Alaska, crews raced to clean up and winterize communities, or conduct basic repairs in villages, so displaced residents can start returning home.
It’s unclear how long evacuees will remain in the long-term shelters, said Vivian Korthuis, CEO of the Association of Village Council Presidents.
“It’s very stressful right now, but in the long run, things will work out, and we just need to keep on moving forward,” she said.
AVCP, a regional nonprofit that supports and advocates for the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta’s 56 tribes, held a media briefing Friday afternoon to detail its current relief work in affected communities and long-term disaster response priorities.
The organization, alongside others like the Yukon-Kuskokwim Health Corp., Alaska Organized Militia and Alaska Division of Forestry and Fire Protection, has been working to make homes and communities livable since officials wrapped up mass evacuations.
“These relief efforts are not a short-term thing,” said AVCP spokesperson Dendra Chavez. “This is going to be a long-term effort that we’re all working on.”
While work continues in villages for displaced residents to return, officials said they will continue to help evacuees who have moved into longer-term shelter housing in Anchorage access disaster recovery services and financial assistance.
Other resources, like a Midtown Anchorage disaster resource assistance center, will also remain open, Fisher said in a statement.
“We will continue to work with organizations providing services to storm survivors to ensure their needs are met,” he said.
As of Friday, 1,177 people affected by the storm had applied for state disaster recovery aid, while more than 320 had applied for individual federal aid unlocked by President Donald Trump’s Oct. 22 federal disaster declaration, according to a State Emergency Operations Center statement.
Alaska
‘People experience justice:’ First female African-American judge in Alaska judicial history retiring
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – The first African-American female Judge appointed to the Alaska Judiciary is retiring this week — Judge Pamela Scott Washington.
Former Governor Sean Parnell appointed Washington to the Anchorage District Court on August 9, 2010, making history in the process. Prior to Washington. Superior Court Judge Larry Card was the first Black Judge in the state.
“I hadn’t thought about being special because I was the first African-American woman. And I got educated by that from the newspaper,” Washington said.
Washington’s career, trailblazing status, and retirement were celebrated at a party on Thursday evening, hosted by the Alaska Black Caucus.
In the span of her 15 years on Alaska’s Court Bench, Washington served as the Presiding Judge Mental Health Court, and Co-Chair of the Alaska Supreme Court Fairness, Diversity, and Equality Commission. Shortly before going into retirement, Washington was sworn in as the newest president of the National Association of Women Judges.
Reflecting back on her time on the bench, and her nearly 40 years in the legal industry, Washington said she never anticipated being a “trailblazer” when she started, but relishes the impact that she made.
“People experience justice, not just… it’s just not just done,” Washington said. “It’s seen, it’s experienced, it’s felt, and I think if my colleagues recognize that it’s the entire… the administration of justice is a whole process.”
“And so sometimes you can just be kind. People might not like your decision, but they’re going to remember how they experienced you.”
Having served for so long, working with judges and lawyers across the country, even serving on an advisory committee of only five American judges to Pope Francis, Washington’s resume is lengthy. Of all that, Washington said the highlight of her career is the community she served, speaking at schools, and leaving an impact outside of the courtroom.
“I think the thing that I’ve learned the most is that being a public servant and having people recognize you in the grocery store, letting them see that you’re just like them,” Washington said. “We’re doing life the same, doing life together. I think that’s how people trust the system better, if we could be more transparent, more open.”
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