Alaska
Vicky Ho named editor of the Anchorage Daily News
Vicky Ho, who was serving as the interim editor of the Anchorage Daily News following the retirement of longtime newsroom leader David Hulen in March, has been named its editor.
President, CEO and Publisher Ryan Binkley announced the change Tuesday, effective immediately.
“Running the most powerful newsroom in a state like Alaska is a unique job in journalism and we were lucky to have a robust slate of candidates,” Binkley said in an email to staff. “In the end it was clear that the person most qualified to lead the newsroom into its next phase is Vicky.”
Ho had been the newsroom’s managing editor since 2022 and previously served as deputy editor/online in addition to other roles. In her new position, she will be responsible for content and the overall direction of the newsroom in addition to overseeing the management of day-to-day news operations across platforms.
She succeeds Hulen, who retired as editor in mid-March after 10 years in the role and 39 years overall at the Daily News.
Tuesday’s announcement comes in the wake of other changes to Daily News leadership earlier this year. Binkley stepped into the role of publisher after the departure of predecessor Andy Pennington, who had overseen overall company operations since 2018. Kea Cuaresma, formerly the chief revenue officer, is now the vice president of revenue and community engagement, overseeing sales, subscriptions, events and community relations.
Ho joined the ADN in 2015 after working at the Steamboat Pilot & Today in Colorado, where she held the role of evening editor. At the Daily News, Alaska’s most-read news site and newspaper, she has helped lead online coverage and strategy initiatives that resulted in significant increases in paid digital audience as well as growth in Alaska readership. She’s also worked to develop partnerships with other news organizations and identify other opportunities for collaboration, capacity-building and development.
“I’m honored to be stepping into this role at a critically important time for the ADN, Alaska journalism and the news industry overall,” Ho said. “The work of independent local journalists is as important as ever. Every day, I’m inspired by my colleagues’ deep commitment to our community and readers’ strong connection to our journalism.
“As we continue to work toward building out a newsroom team aligned around the mission of serving Alaskans, I remain hopeful for the future of our organization and optimistic about what the next era of the Daily News may bring.”
In addition to her work at the ADN, Ho has coached newsrooms from across the country that worked to transition to a sustainable digital publishing model, as part of an intensive program hosted by the Poynter Institute. She is a member of the Alaska Press Club’s board, as well as a member of the Online News Association and Asian American Journalists Association.
“These next few years will be critical as we execute the final stages of our digital transition, and as new tools, products and platforms come online that will change the work of news-gathering,” Binkley said. “We are facing a time of great disruption and we’ll be lucky to have Vicky’s steady hand on the rudder as we navigate it.”
Alaska
Haines Quick Shop reopens after burning down in 2024
Last Friday evening in Haines, there was only one place to be: The brand new Quick Shop, a shiny new building stocked with everything from ice cream and gun safes to an entire row of Xtratuf boots.
It seemed that much of town was packed into the building on the Haines’ waterfront — the store had just reopened after burning down more than a year ago.
The October 2024 fire destroyed a string of apartments and businesses including the convenience, liquor and sporting goods shop known collectively as the Quick Shop.
“It’s a big day for our town,” Haines Mayor Tom Morphet shouted from the checkout line that stretched through the store.
Minutes after opening, some 50 people were already in line, with dozens more milling about. Many kids’ arms were piled high with goodies.
Further back in the store, owner Mike Ward was busy scanning toilet paper amid the chaos. In between greeting customers, and accepting their congratulations, he said it’s been a long road to get here.
“It’s a relief to finally be open,” Ward said. “But we got a lot of work ahead of us, so it’s not that much of a relief.”
Ward said he aims to have the store fully stocked and in order by the fire’s two-year anniversary on Oct. 5. He added that he rebuilt as quickly as possible because he had heard a larger convenience chain was thinking about moving into Haines.
“So that’s one of the major reasons why I got aggressive, right?” he said. “I didn’t even think about taking the money.”
But the money part hasn’t been easy. Ward had insurance, but his policy didn’t come close to covering rebuilding costs – or the $1.8 million in inventory that also went up in flames.
“I got hosed,” he said. “I took a $2.5 million loss.”
The loss was felt in the community, too. Haines’ grocery stores close by 8 p.m. most days, and even earlier on Sundays. The Quick Shop is open until midnight.
“I feel like not having anywhere to get food late at night is pretty hard for people. So I feel like everyone’s pretty excited to have it back,” said local Ryan Irvin, who worked on the crew that built the facility.
He added that it’s cool – and somewhat novel – for the community to have a space that was actually built for its purpose.
“We’re always retrofitting old buildings, making them work. But this is actually designed for what we’re doing, what Mike’s doing, rather,” Irvin said.
Morphet, the mayor, echoed that point. He said the new store is a testament to Ward’s faith in Haines’ capacity to keep it open.
“We’re only 2,000, 2,500 people here, so it’s kind of a shot in the arm to town morale,” Morphet said. “People like the town to have nice stuff, and this is beautiful.”
Alaska
State profiting from higher prices for Alaska oil on U.S. West Coast – Chilkat Valley News
The first month of the U.S. war against Iran caused crude oil prices to skyrocket around the world, and the price of Alaska’s oil has risen particularly far.
That rise is making tens of millions of dollars, maybe a few hundred million dollars if high prices persist, available for state services and the Permanent Fund dividend, even as it squeezes the finances of individual Alaskans.
In figures newly compiled by the Alaska Department of Revenue, the average price of a barrel of Alaska North Slope (ANS) crude was $111.17 in April.
That’s $8.70 higher than the average price of a barrel of Brent crude, a benchmark price for Europe’s North Sea oil. It was also $13.11 per barrel higher than the average price of West Texas Intermediate, the benchmark for oil from America’s second-largest state.
“The differential is the largest monthly value since the year 2000 and may be the highest value in history,” said the Department of Revenue, referring to the gap between Brent and North Slope crude.
“The large premium is due to a tightness in the Pacific basin oil market, where ANS is traded,” the department said.
Alaska crude goes to refineries in Washington state and California, with a small volume delivered to a refinery in Nikiski on the Kenai Peninsula.
In addition to Alaska oil, U.S. West Coast refineries obtain their crude from Canada, North Dakota and California oil fields, and a substantial volume from overseas suppliers.
“Uncertainty about shipping and delivery is incentivizing refiners to pay a premium for available crude that does not transit areas with substantial security risks. Crude grades from the Americas are the safest option. Brent primarily trades in the Atlantic basin, where the impacts from the Iran war are not quite as pronounced on a barrel-for-barrel basis.”
The premium now being paid for Alaska crude will have a significant impact on the state treasury if it continues for months.
Each $1 increase in the average price of a barrel of ANS crude for a full year is worth roughly $30 million to $50, depending on the price.
While more than half of the state’s general-purpose revenue now comes from the Alaska Permanent Fund’s investments, oil is still the No. 2 source of flexible spending money for the state, and prices — combined with production — cause the amount of available money to flex up and down each year.
Legislative budgeters write the state spending plan with an average crude price in mind for an entire fiscal year, from July 1 through June 30 of the following year.
In the current fiscal year, which ends June 30, the Department of Revenue expects prices to average $75.26 per barrel.
Thanks in part to the Alaska premium, the average through May 5 was $75.71. Every day that prices stay above that level, the more unexpected money the state will receive.
The state Senate already has a plan for that extra money.
The first $96 million would go to an “energy relief” payment that increases the amount of the 2026 Permanent Fund dividend by $150 per Alaskan. The next $111 million would be distributed to public schools, and anything above that would go into the state’s principal savings account, the Constitutional Budget Reserve.
While Alaska’s state treasury is receiving a boon from the high prices, legislators don’t expect it to last. In the fiscal year that starts July 1, they’re anticipating significantly lower average North Slope oil prices.
“The Senate operating budget, when combined with spending agreements for the capital budget, balances the budget on $73/barrel oil, with some money left over,” said Bethel Sen. Lyman Hoffman, co-chair of the Senate Finance Committee, speaking about the Senate’s budget proposal on May 6.
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