Alaska
Kaladi Brothers Coffee’s Dale Tran’s Day of Giving to benefit Covenant House Alaska in 2025
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – The last night of 2024 and the first day of 2025 will raise money for youth in the community by way of donations to Covenant House Alaska via the upcoming Kaladi Brothers Coffee Dale Tran’s Day of Giving on Jan. 1.
A collaboration between Kaladi Brothers Coffee and Covenant House, as well as Rustic Goat, will celebrate the new year by bringing in donations for youth experiencing homelessness or trafficking. On New Year’s Eve, Rustic Goat is hosting a five-course meal, including wine pairings; and on New Year’s Day, 100% of Kaladi Brothers Coffee cafe drink sales – at stores in Anchorage, Wasilla and Soldotna – will be given to Covenant House Alaska.
The gifts to Covenant House are part of an annual tradition started by Dale Tran of Kaladi Brothers Coffee, Dale Tran’s New Year’s Day of Giving.
“He wanted the company to have a place in social impact, and so, they came up with the term ‘Catalyst for community’ early on,” said Joe Hemphill, Chief of Development and External Affairs for Covenant House Alaska. “They started to engage with non-profits whenever they could. Bring a coffee cart, for example, to a non-profit event. And they would serve free coffee drinks. That was a very small but meaningful way that they could help non-profits.”
Starting Dec. 28, Kaladi Brothers will also donate 50% of online coffee bean sales until Jan. 1.
Hemphill said Kaladi Brothers partners with Covenant House because of its work with youth specifically.
“If you think about the demographics of many of our barista friends, they are adolescents,” he explained. “Some are still in high school, many are post-high school.”
The partnership has resulted in substantial donations in the past. According to Hemphill, last year’s event raised about $100,000.
“We could break it down into the number of meals that serves or pairs of socks that provides, but more significantly, $100,000 pays for a manager of a program for a year,” Hemphill said. “So, if you think about what we pay them and their salary and all their benefits, $100,000 pays for our whole human, and that is something that I think that the community can really, really be proud of.”
Hemphill said the event is an easy way to start the new year positively.
“People also are always thinking about vulnerable populations, whether it’s puppy dogs or or adolescent kids,” he said. “And they want to know how they can help.”
He said a purchase most might already plan on making will go toward youth in the community, which is, “one of the easiest ways to help people feel like they have made an impact that I’ve ever seen.”
Hemphill challenged the Anchorage community to get out and help on NYE and NYD.
“We are Alaskans, and we get out and help every chance we get,” he said. “We dig big cars out of ditches, we go and help people paint their houses.
“We are gritty,” he continued. “So this is this is a challenge for you to get up out of your house on New Year’s Day for one hour or less and drive to your closest coffee shop.”
Tickets for dinner at Rustic Goat are $125 a person, and can be reserved over the phone or in person.
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Alaska
Alaska Airlines adding new daily flight between Bellingham, Portland | Cascadia Daily News
Alaska Airlines is adding a daily flight between Bellingham International Airport and Portland International Airport starting next spring, the airline announced Dec. 18.
The flights will begin March 18, 2026 and will be offered during the year on the E175 jets. The announcement is part of a slew of expanded routes Alaska will begin offering in the new year across the Pacific Northwest, Wyoming and Boston.
“Anchorage and Portland are essential airports to our guests and us in our growing global network,” Kristen Amrine, vice president of revenue management and network planning for Alaska, said in the announcement. “Portland is not only a great city to visit, but we also offer convenient nonstop connections for those continuing their travel across our wide network.”
The Portland route is the first time in years the Bellingham airport has offered a flight outside of Seattle or its typical routes in California, Nevada and Arizona. In the last 10 years, Alaska and Allegiant Air ceased non-stop flights to Portland, Hawaii and Las Vegas.
Matthew Rodriguez, the aviation director for the Port of Bellingham, said Thursday his team is excited for the expanded route. The route will also allow Alaska to start data gathering to see if there’s market demand for more direct flights out of Bellingham.
The airline will be able to examine how many people from Bellingham are flying into Portland and then connecting to other flights, including popular destinations like Hawaii and San Diego.
“It’s going to help our community justify a direct flight, which, in my opinion, we have a data that already supports the direct flights, and we already had an incumbent carrier doing those direct flights,” he said. “So I don’t think it’s going to take very much additional data for Alaska to acknowledge that.”
Guests can already start booking the hour-long flight to Oregon on the Alaska Air website or app.
Intrepid airport enthusiasts have also noted Alaska is phasing out one of its nonstop flights between Bellingham and Seattle in early January.
In a statement, Alaska said the “flight adjustments are about putting more connecting flights from Bellingham through Portland to decrease some of the strain in Seattle.”
The phase-out allows for the Portland route to be brought online in time for spring travel.
Alaska is also adding a daily year-round flight between Paine Field in Everett and Portland in June.
This story was updated at 11:53 a.m. with additional comments from the Port of Bellingham.
Annie Todd is CDN’s criminal justice/enterprise reporter; reach her at annietodd@cascadiadaily.com; 360-922-3090 ext. 130.
Alaska
Alaska is reporting 18 in-custody deaths so far this year, tying a grim record
The Department of Corrections this week reported the 18th death of an inmate this year, tying the record for the highest number of annual in-custody deaths in at least the past decade.
Kane William Huff, who had been imprisoned at Goose Creek Correctional Center near Wasilla, died Dec. 11, according to a DOC statement. Huff, 46, was serving a sentence for a 2018 conviction on two counts of sexual abuse of a minor, according to online court records. DOC officials said he had been in custody since 2015.
Huff was found unresponsive in the prison’s infirmary, where he had been housed, said Department of Public Safety spokesman Austin McDaniel. Alaska State Troopers, who handle in-custody death investigations, have closed their investigation and are awaiting autopsy results from the State Medical Examiner Office, McDaniel said. Troopers don’t believe Huff died by suicide or that foul play was involved, he said.
The last time as many people died in state custody was in 2022, when a record seven inmates also died by suicide, according to a department snapshot of deaths since 2015.
The Department of Corrections began consistently keeping inmate death statistics in 2001, said spokesperson Betsy Holley. The department also posts data showing in-custody deaths since 2015. That year, 15 people died while in DOC custody.
The state’s official count for 2025 doesn’t include the death of 36-year-old William Farmer, who died in a hospital in January after he was severely beaten by his cellmate at the Anchorage Correctional Complex the month before.
An upward trend of in-custody deaths in the past several years has alarmed some prisoner rights advocates and prompted state lawmakers to ask Department of Corrections officials to address the deaths in multiple hearings this year. The department has also found itself under fire for inmate suicides.
This year, at least four inmates have died of natural or expected causes, such as disease or a medical event, while at least five have died by suicide, according to information provided by Alaska State Troopers.
Officials have also said that a Spring Creek Correctional Center prisoner died of an overdose in April.
Another inmate, 53-year-old Jeffrey Foreman, died in July after being restrained by guards after an altercation with his cellmate at the Anchorage Correctional Complex.
[Correction: An earlier version of this story incorrectly described the year the Department of Corrections started consistently keeping inmate death statistics. It was 2001, not 2015.]
Alaska
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