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A protest Saturday in Fairbanks was four times the size of one two weeks ago.An education bill moving through the Alaska Senate may finally give school districts some relief, but other things would need to be cut, possibly the Permanent Fund Dividend.30 Department of Health workers found out they were laid off and the pandemic work they were doing was stopped on Friday.Alaska will now let 18 - 20 year olds serve alcohol in restaurants.Juneau's most popular tourist attraction lost its federal workers. Now the City is trying to fill the gap.
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The city’s struggle to retain emergency medical services mirrors what other rural communities are experiencing.
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AgricultureThis year’s Delta Farm Forum will feature presentations on 21st century agricultural challenges like protecting livestock from avian influenza and standing up a state Department of Agriculture. It’ll also include a look back in time about what archeologists have dug up at a local farm.
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NewsDemand for electric vehicles is growing in Alaska, but a pause on federal funding for the chargers that power them could hold up key infrastructure projects.
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The last two mushers finished the race in Tok last night. Joey Sabin got to the finish at 8:39 p.m. Friday, and Keaton Loebrich was the Red Lantern at 10:34 p.m. for a total of six days, 11 hours and 34 minutes.The 80-mile, 200-mile and other 550-mile racers enjoyed the finisher's award banquet in Fairbanks, celebrating the mushers, the volunteers and the sport of mushing.
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The Air Force has removed two sites from a list of locations around the eastern Interior where the agency has proposed to build radar training facilities. The radar sites are intended to help train F-35 pilots from Eielson Air Force Base to detect and locate signals similar to those emitted by enemy surface-to-air missile facilities that the pilots might encounter in combat.
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Jeff Deeter is the winner of the 2025 Alaska Yukon Quest 550-mile race, and four more mushers have finished the race in Tok.He crossed the finish line at 2:49 p.m. yesterday. It took him five days, three hours and 49 minutes to complete the trail.
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NewsThe six remaining Yukon Quest 550-mile competitors stopped in Eagle for rest after a journey over chunky ice and past sheer cliffs.