Alaska
Tragedy behind, hunt of a lifetime ahead: Waseca officer Arik Matson leaves for Alaska adventure
Three years in the past nearly to the day, Arik Matson minimize brief his dinner at a Waseca restaurant and sped in his police cruiser to a modified life.
A name had are available in a few yard prowler with a flashlight, and Arik, then 31 years previous and sporting Waseca Police Division Badge 222, was going to test it out.
At house in close by Freeborn, Arik’s spouse, Megan, about the identical time was placing their two daughters to mattress, Audrina, then 7 years previous, and Maklynn, 5, and planning to show in early herself.
None of them may have identified that their lives have been about to intersect with that of Tyler Robert Janovsky, 37, a “meth head” as one cop would later describe him.
Janovsky was the man within the yard within the 900 block of Third Avenue S.E. in Waseca, and when Arik arrived together with two different officers, Janovsky climbed onto a storage roof and began capturing.
One spherical struck Arik within the head, shattering the precise frontal lobe of his mind.
. . .
Arik was 9 years previous when his uncle Paul Matson first took him duck looking.
Possibly it was the scent of a dank marsh on an early morning. Or maybe the sight of blue-winged teal cupping their wings over decoys.
Or just the chance to be along with his uncle.
No matter it was, from that day ahead, duck looking turned Arik’s ardour, a lot in order that years later, at Minnesota State Mankato, when he met Jeremy Henke in a category and the 2 turned associates, Arik wished to go alongside what he had realized from his uncle.
“We have been each finding out regulation enforcement,” Henke mentioned. “When Arik graduated, he acquired employed as a deputy in Freeborn County, whereas I labored for a 12 months as an officer in Lake Crystal. Then I acquired on as a deputy in Freeborn County as properly.
“As a result of we have been the brand new deputies, we regularly labored the evening shift collectively. Typically in October, we might get off work at 5 within the morning and go duck looking. He knew so much about duck looking, together with the place to go. So it was nice.
“Our friendship continued when Arik moved on to the Waseca Police Division, and when, in 2015, I turned a Division of Pure Sources conservation officer.”
. . .
Chris Tetrault can be a DNR conservation officer, posted in Stillwater. He’s additionally ex-Military, and together with a small group of different regulation enforcement officers and army veterans, about 5 years in the past he fashioned a bunch known as Hometown Hero Outside.
The concept was to assist individuals like themselves — first responders, basically — who have been going by way of powerful instances.
“Our objective has been to get people who find themselves on the entrance traces and who need assistance due to one thing that is occurred to them, to get them outdoor, to do one thing they take pleasure in, to encourage them whereas they meet new individuals,” Tetrault mentioned.
“Our bread and butter is looking and fishing. However we have taken individuals on scorching air balloon rides, ATV rides, canine sledding journeys — no matter they need.
“We began small, right here in Minnesota. However we’re in 26 states now and we have taken greater than 4,000 individuals outdoor. Nationally, we’ve 150 regulation enforcement officers and others who’re volunteers. Nobody will get paid.”
. . .
Chad Davis can be a DNR conservation officer, stationed in Owatonna. After he heard Arik had been shot, he known as Tetrault to ask about placing collectively a visit for Arik.
“He likes to hunt geese,” Davis advised Tetrault.
Neither Davis nor Tetrault knew on the time that Arik had lengthy dreamed of looking king eiders, an elusive and superbly plumed sea duck that’s hunted in just a few locations in North America.
One is Alaska, off St. Paul Island, a 43-square-mile spit of rock within the Bering Sea, inhabited by solely about 500 individuals and infrequently featured on the TV present “Deadliest Catch.” Mendacity about 320 miles west of the Alaska mainland, the island is 770 air miles from Anchorage.
“On the web there is a video known as ‘To Kill a King,’” Arik mentioned the opposite day. “That is the place I first realized about king eiders and king eider looking.”
Looking circumstances on the island are sometimes horrendous, with small boat rides onto raucous seas beset by unpredictable currents and tides. Amid the maelstrom, typically from snowy, windblown redoubts, the eiders are intercepted.
“You are going to be chilly, you are going to get wind in your face and you are going to get rain in your face,” a information says within the video. “If you cannot settle for that, you haven’t any enterprise being out right here.”
Arik was nonetheless in a Twin Cities hospital — he was hospitalized for 3 months earlier than being transferred to an Omaha rehabilitation heart, the place he stayed for seven months — when he was advised that Hometown Hero Outside had awarded him an journey anyplace in North America.
At first Arik mentioned, “I wish to go bear looking in Canada.” Which confused everybody, as a result of he had by no means hunted bears, nor expressed an curiosity in them.
Then he modified his thoughts. “I wish to hunt king eiders off of St. Paul Island, Alaska,” he mentioned.
. . .
On Friday, Arik, alongside along with his uncle Paul, Jeremy Henke, two videographers from a St. Paul firm that’s producing a documentary on Arik’s restoration, and Chris Tetrault will board a Delta flight to Anchorage. From there, on Saturday, climate allowing, they’re going to fly to St. Paul Island.
For Arik, his uncle and Henke, it will be similar to previous instances, looking collectively.
Tetrault, in the meantime, will assist Arik get round.
And he’ll need assistance.
“Arik nonetheless loves being a husband to me and a father to our women,” Megan Matson mentioned. “We’re so impressed by the progress he is made. He is had a few setbacks, however he simply pushes himself that a lot tougher.
“He is completely different, although. Because of the traumatic mind damage, his character is totally completely different from earlier than. That is been an enormous adjustment for me that I nonetheless have not totally accepted.
“Bodily, he nonetheless struggles along with his left arm. However when he is given a shotgun, and he goes duck looking like he did final fall, his arm appears to work like the whole lot is linked.
“I am excited for him for this journey, to get away and to be in his looking aspect along with his finest buddy and his uncle and the brand new associates he is made. He’ll pay for it ultimately. He’ll be exhausted for per week or two.
“However it’ll be value it.”
. . .
Janovsky was given 35 years for capturing Arik.
On the sentencing listening to, along with his Waseca Police Division badge swinging from a series round his neck, and with Megan alongside him, Arik mentioned:
“From at the present time ahead, I select to dwell life to the fullest, belief God’s plan and by no means take something as a right.”
Then he mentioned, “[I] would nonetheless reply to that decision if it have been tomorrow.”
Alaska
Alaska governor, ally of Trump, will keep flags at full-staff for Inauguration Day • Alaska Beacon
Alaska will join several other Republican-led states by keeping flags at full-staff on Inauguration Day despite the national period of mourning following President Jimmy Carter’s death last month.
Gov. Mike Dunleavy announced his decision, which breaks prior precedent, in a statement on Thursday. It applies only to flags on state property. Flags on federal property are expected to remain at half-staff.
Flags on state property will be returned to half-staff after Inauguration Day for the remainder of the mourning period.
The governors of Indiana, Idaho, Iowa, Texas, Florida, Tennessee, Oklahoma, North Dakota, Nebraska, Montana and Alabama, among others, have announced similar moves.
U.S. Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, a Republican from Louisiana, said on Tuesday that flags at the U.S. Capitol would remain at full-staff on Inauguration Day.
Their actions follow a statement from President-elect Donald Trump, who said in a Jan. 3 social media post that Democrats would be “giddy” to have flags lowered during his inauguration, adding, “Nobody wants to see this, and no American can be happy about it. Let’s see how it plays out.”
Dunleavy is seen as a friend of the incoming president and has met with him multiple times over the past year. Dunleavy and 21 other Republican governors visited Trump last week in Florida at an event that Trump described as “a love fest.”
Since 1954, flags have been lowered to half-staff during a federally prescribed 30-day mourning period following presidential deaths. In 1973, the second inauguration of President Richard Nixon took place during the mourning period that followed the death of President Harry Truman.
Then-Gov. Bill Egan made no exceptions for Alaska, contemporary news accounts show, and no exception was made for Nixon’s inauguration in Washington, D.C., either.
A spokesperson for Dunleavy’s office said the new precedent is designed to be a balance between honoring the ongoing mourning period for former President Jimmy Carter and recognizing the importance of the peaceful transition of power during the presidential inauguration.
“Temporarily raising the flags to full-staff for the inauguration underscores the significance of this democratic tradition, while returning them to half-staff afterward ensures continued respect for President Carter’s legacy,” the spokesperson said.
GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.
Alaska
Federal disaster declaration approved for Northwest Alaska flooding
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – President Joe Biden announced the approval of federal disaster assistance on Thursday for recovery efforts in areas that sustained damage from flooding and storms in October 2024.
Those areas include the Bering Strait Regional Educational Attendance Area (REAA) and the Northwest Arctic Borough area where many structures were damaged by a severe storm from Oct. 20-23, 2024.
In a press release, FEMA announced that federal funding is available on a cost-sharing basis for emergency work to the state of Alaska, tribal and eligible local governments, and certain private nonprofit organizations.
The announcement comes just a few days after Biden released the major disaster declaration approval for the August Kwigillingok flooding.
See a spelling or grammar error? Report it to web@ktuu.com
Copyright 2025 KTUU. All rights reserved.
Alaska
Arctic hotspots study reveals areas of climate stress in Northern Alaska and Siberia
Ecological warning lights have blinked on across the Arctic over the last 40 years, according to new research, and many of the fastest-changing areas are clustered in Siberia, the Canadian Northwest Territories, and Alaska.
An analysis of the rapidly warming Arctic-boreal region, published in Geophysical Research Letters, provides a zoomed-in picture of ecosystems experiencing some of the fastest and most extreme climate changes on Earth.
Many of the most climate-stressed areas feature permafrost, or ground that stays frozen year-round, and has experienced both severe warming and drying in recent decades.
To identify these “hotspots,” a team of researchers from Woodwell Climate Research Center, the University of Oslo, the University of Montana, the Environmental Systems Research Institute (Esri), and the University of Lleida used more than 30 years of geospatial data and long-term temperature records to assess indicators of ecosystem vulnerability in three categories: temperature, moisture, and vegetation.
Building on assessments like the NOAA Arctic Report Card, the research team went beyond evaluating isolated metrics of change and looked at multiple variables at once to create a more complete, integrated picture of climate and ecosystem changes in the region.
“Climate warming has put a great deal of stress on ecosystems in the high latitudes, but the stress looks very different from place to place and we wanted to quantify those differences,” said Dr. Jennifer Watts, Arctic program director at Woodwell Climate and lead author of the study.
“Detecting hotspots at the local and regional level helps us not only to build a more precise picture of how Arctic warming is affecting ecosystems, but to identify places where we really need to focus future monitoring efforts and management resources.”
The team used spatial statistics to detect “neighborhoods,” or regions of particularly high levels of change during the past decade.
“This study is exactly why we have developed these kinds of spatial statistic tools in our technology. We are so proud to be working closely with Woodwell Climate on identifying and publishing these kinds of vulnerability hotspots that require effective and immediate climate adaptation action and long-term policy,” said Dr. Dawn Wright, chief scientist at Esri. “This is essentially what we mean by the ‘Science of Where.’”
The findings paint a complex and concerning picture.
The most substantial land warming between 1997–2020 occurred in the far eastern Siberian tundra and throughout central Siberia. Approximately 99% of the Eurasian tundra region experienced significant warming, compared to 72% of Eurasian boreal forests.
While some hotspots in Siberia and the Northwest Territories of Canada grew drier, the researchers detected increased surface water and flooding in parts of North America, including Alaska’s Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta and central Canada. These increases in water on the landscape over time are likely a sign of thawing permafrost.
Among the 20 most vulnerable places the researchers identified, all contained permafrost.
“The Arctic and boreal regions are made up of diverse ecosystems, and this study reveals some of the complex ways they are responding to climate warming,” said Dr. Sue Natali, lead of the Permafrost Pathways project at Woodwell Climate and co-author of the study.
“However, permafrost was a common denominator—the most climate-stressed regions all contained permafrost, which is vulnerable to thaw as temperatures rise. That’s a really concerning signal.”
For land managers and other decisionmakers, local and regional hotspot mapping like this can serve as a more useful monitoring tool than region-wide averages. Take, for instance, the example of COVID-19 tracking data: maps of county-by-county wastewater data tend to be more helpful tools to guide decision making than national averages, since rates of disease prevalence and transmission can vary widely among communities at a given moment in time.
So, too, with climate trends: local data and trend detection can support management and adaptation approaches that account for unique and shifting conditions on the ground.
The significant changes the team detected in the Siberian boreal forest region should serve as a wakeup call, said Watts.
“These forested regions, which have been helping take up and store carbon dioxide, are now showing major climate stresses and increasing risk of fire. We need to work as a global community to protect these important and vulnerable boreal ecosystems, while also reining in fossil fuel emissions.”
More information:
Regional Hotspots of Change in Northern High Latitudes Informed by Observations From Space, Geophysical Research Letters (2025). DOI: 10.1029/2023GL108081
Provided by
Woodwell Climate Research Center
Citation:
Arctic hotspots study reveals areas of climate stress in Northern Alaska and Siberia (2025, January 16)
retrieved 16 January 2025
from https://phys.org/news/2025-01-arctic-hotspots-reveals-areas-climate.html
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