The Dunleavy administration does not want public records about Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s plan to allow snowmachines and ATVs on public roads to become public.
Read MoreThe subject is 49-year-old George A. Parks, who was on his way by train to Washington, D.C. when a photographer for the “Daily Illustrated Times” lit him up in Chicago’s Union Station at 9 a.m. on Nov. 15, 1932.
Read MoreOver the decades my late brother often used one historic Alaska photo of a saloon to make a point, not about drinking or playing cards, but about the importance of paying close attention and being ready for the unexpected.
Read MoreGov. Mike Dunleavy is raising the stakes on his effort to attract media coverage Outside and trying to elevate his status in right-wing circles for his next campaign.
Read MoreEngineers and others with expertise in transportation in Fairbanks may ask the Dunleavy administration to halt its plan to allow snowmachines and ATVs on roads with speed limits of 45 mph or slower.
Read MoreGov. Mike Dunleavy is making it a habit to try to stand tall on issues that appeal to his right-wing fans and carry zero political risk.
Read MoreA Dunleavy campaign donor or one of his friends probably came up with the idea, according to the former Public Safety Commissioner fired by Dunleavy, Amanda Price, and Dunleavy gave the go-ahead, opposing efforts by state officials who wanted to create a plan with public safety in mind.
Read MoreDunleavy has never said publicly that he supports requiring driver’s licenses, registration and insurance for those who would drive snowmachines, ATVs, air-cushion vehicles and other all-purpose vehicles on roads. But the state claims that is the Dunleavy plan, made possible by changing a few words in state regulations.
Read MoreSince Kelly Tshibaka is making her expertise at saving the state money a central part of her argument for sending her to the U.S. Senate, Alaska news organizations should dig into the question of why she approved a plan last summer to pay a former barista $350 an hour—a total of $358,400 for six months.
Read MoreWith her resignation Monday as administration commissioner and the official start of her U.S. Senate campaign, Kelly Tshibaka posted a letter to Gov. Mike Dunleavy that is at least 11 pages long, exaggerating how much she has saved the state.
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