Search Results for: climate

A radical alternative to the Tea Party’s methods

U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, spoke with two groups in Juneau on Thursday. Neither were town hall meetings requested by progressive constituents in Juneau. On… Continue reading

  • Jun 4, 2017
  • By Rich Moniak

Juneau sustainability — the city we need, the city we want

Twenty-five years ago, scientists, interest groups and committed citizens gathered at the United Nations Earth Summit in Rio Di Janeiro, Brazil, and discussed sustainable development.… Continue reading

  • Jun 2, 2017
  • By Jim Powell

Trump walks out on global climate pact

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump declared Thursday he was pulling the U.S. from the landmark Paris climate agreement, striking a major blow to worldwide efforts… Continue reading

Cutting public health nursing jeopardizes all Alaskans

In the smallest and most remote communities across Alaska, public health nurses (PHNs) serve in incredibly significant roles: they are advocates for the health of… Continue reading

  • May 26, 2017
  • By ANDREA NUTTY
Celebrating Little Norway

Celebrating Little Norway

Petersburg transforms the third weekend of May. The downtown is closed to traffic, stores load up stock, and people start arriving in droves. The Little… Continue reading

Celebrating Little Norway

Raiding energy industry to solve budget crisis will create more problems

Alaska is in a budget crisis. The “gravest fiscal crisis in state history,” according to Gov. Bill Walker. But the crisis wasn’t caused by a… Continue reading

  • May 23, 2017
  • By DAVID WILLIAMS
Above and Beyond Alaska tour guides Ben Hines, left, and Sarah Galvin, middle, talk with tourists Miguel Faur and Maria Isabel Ramos in the Mendenhall Glacier ice caves on Wednesday. (Kevin Gullufsen | Juneau Empire)

Treading on Blue Ice

We pulled our 20-foot canoe onto a rocky beach about 100 yards from the western edge of the Mendenhall Glacier. Our tour guide, Above and… Continue reading

Above and Beyond Alaska tour guides Ben Hines, left, and Sarah Galvin, middle, talk with tourists Miguel Faur and Maria Isabel Ramos in the Mendenhall Glacier ice caves on Wednesday. (Kevin Gullufsen | Juneau Empire)

Juneau hits 70 degrees for the first time in 2017

Alaska’s capital city saw a high temperature of 71 degrees Tuesday, hitting the 70-degree mark at Juneau International Airport for the first time in 2017.… Continue reading

No representation without taxation

As of Mother’s Day, we now know that our Senate in Alaska has voted down an income tax option as one of the means to… Continue reading

  • May 17, 2017
  • By Richard Seifert
Some of the books that have recently arrived on the Capital City Weekly’s bookshelf. Mary Catharine Martin | Capital City Weekly

Summer Reading, Alaska-style

Here at the Capital City Weekly, we get a lot of books for review. Sadly, we can’t write about them all. Instead, we try to… Continue reading

Some of the books that have recently arrived on the Capital City Weekly’s bookshelf. Mary Catharine Martin | Capital City Weekly

Offshore announcement a win for Alaska families

After years of limitations on natural resource development in our state, President Trump’s decision to revisit and reverse federal roadblocks to domestic offshore energy development… Continue reading

  • May 9, 2017
  • By AVES THOMPSON

9 nonreligious reasons to come to church

You’re not religious? You don’t believe in a Great White Father in the Sky who watches everything you do and is just waiting to pounce… Continue reading

  • May 9, 2017
  • By REV. CAROLINE F. MALSEED

The high cost and low benefits of state timber sales

In his State of the State Address, Gov. Bill Walker said that Alaska should export finished products, not raw resources. I couldn’t agree more. Processing… Continue reading

  • May 9, 2017
  • By ERIC HOLLE

Budget cuts to schools are unacceptable

The budget cuts that have been reducing funding for Alaska’s schools are unacceptable. For students to succeed and seek a higher education so they can… Continue reading

  • May 8, 2017
Blame the glacier? One popular video posits that glacier rebound is responsible for more earthquakes. Here, the entrance to the Mendenhall Glacier ice caves is seen in May 2015. (Emily Russo Miller | Juneau Empire File)

Earthquakes caused by melting glaciers?

Were Monday’s earthquakes caused by climate change? At least one internet personality seems to think so. In a video viewed 92,000 times since Monday, Youtuber… Continue reading

Blame the glacier? One popular video posits that glacier rebound is responsible for more earthquakes. Here, the entrance to the Mendenhall Glacier ice caves is seen in May 2015. (Emily Russo Miller | Juneau Empire File)
Heidi Pearson

The Science of Sustainability

What is sustainability, why does it matter, and how can we work to promote a more sustainable Alaska? These issues form the foundation for this… Continue reading

  • May 5, 2017
  • By HEIDI PEARSON
Heidi Pearson

Know your butterfly species (or at least these 4)

Starting in mid-April this year, we began to see a few species of early-flying butterflies. In general, Juneau is not blessed with a great diversity… Continue reading

In Alaska, mosquitoes bite where Zika won’t

In Alaska, mosquitoes bite where Zika won’t

Mosquitoes bite. In Alaska, Zika won’t. That’s the conclusion of the state’s medical experts, a week after a third Alaskan was identified to have the… Continue reading

In Alaska, mosquitoes bite where Zika won’t

Save ‘Shangrilaska’ and fight climate change

On April 7, 2017 Gov. Bill Walker met with China’s President Xi Jinping in Anchorage. During a tour of Beluga Point, Xi spoke in awe… Continue reading

  • May 3, 2017
  • By Elaine Schroeder
Heather Dillon, who will be showing her work at Shoefly on First Friday, uses electricity to create interesting designs on jewelry made from Devil’s club. Courtesy image.

First Friday features Tlingit masks, devil’s club earrings

First Friday, Juneau’s monthly art gallery walk, takes place on the evening of May 5. Tlingit artwork from local weaver Lily Hope and devil’s club… Continue reading

Heather Dillon, who will be showing her work at Shoefly on First Friday, uses electricity to create interesting designs on jewelry made from Devil’s club. Courtesy image.