PODCAST · news
KRBD Evening Report
by KRBD
Local and regional news from the newsroom at KRBD-FM in Ketchikan. Published every weekday evening.
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1000
Wednesday, May 13, 2026
A look at the City of Thorne Bay’s unofficial special mayoral election results. Plus, the federal government decides against listing Gulf of Alaska king salmon with Endangered Species Act protections, and middle school students in Juneau are learning about traditional Lingít carving by crafting their own canoe paddles.
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999
Tuesday, May 12, 2026
A Prince of Wales Island man is charged following an Alaska State Trooper drug investigation. Plus, a Juneau lawmaker’s bill to increase state funding for free legal aid is headed to the governor, and Petersburg’s annual Little Norway Festival is rapidly approaching.
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998
Monday, May 11, 2026
The Ketchikan Gateway Borough School Board is on a tight timeline to find new revenue streams because of a multimillion dollar budget shortfall. Plus, Tracy Day, a Tlingit woman who disappearing in Juneau in 2019, is remembered by her daughter, and high schoolers from across Southeast Alaska visit Ketchikan for a music festival.
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997
Friday, May 8, 2026
The school district has more debt than previously realized.Activities expand in Ward Cove.
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996
Thursday, May 7, 2026
The City of Ketchikan meets with cruise line representatives to share updates and air grievances. Plus, a Juneau reporter questions police about the disappearance of Tlingit woman Tracy Day, after a judge wouldn’t let the family.
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995
Wednesday, May 6, 2026
A canoe awakening in Metlakatla marks the beginning of paddling season, and a new data center is proposed in Petersburg.
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994
Tuesday, May 5, 2026
The family of a missing Tlingit woman works to question Juneau police about their investigation. Plus, a baby humpback whale skeleton is on display at the University of Alaska Southeast in Sitka.
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993
May 1, 2026
A lawsuit is filed against the old state ferry MalaspinaInternet outages hit Ketchikan.
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992
Friday, May 1, 2026
Ketchikan High School’s National Honor Society honors the victim of the fatal 2024 landslide. Plus, Alaska Native artists are frustrated at online retailer Etsy’s plan to ban fur products, and the state Department of Fish and Game estimates the commercial salmon harvest this year is less than two-thirds of what they ended up harvesting last year.
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991
Thursday, April 30, 2026
Family members of Ketchikan-born Tlingit carver Israel Shotridge talk about his life and legacy. Plus, Petersburg’s local tribe unveils a new killer whale canoe.
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990
Wednesday, April 29, 2026
Kayhi seniors face scholarship deadlines amid the end of the school year, and Sitka gets a new hospital.
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989
Tuesday, April 28, 2026
The Forest Service has revived plans for a huge logging project on Prince of Wales. Absentee voting for the next mayor of Thorne Bay opened today.
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988
Monday, April 27, 2026
The Federal Subsistence Board denies a request to reconsider Ketchikan’s rural status. The city selects a new manager.
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987
Friday, April 24, 2026
The U.S. Forest Service is seeking feedback on how it should manage Prince of Wales Island’s federally owned landscapes. Plus, a new article shows how access to commercial fishing looks a lot different in Metlakatla compared to other coastal Alaska Native communities.
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986
Thursday, April 23, 2026
The Ketchikan Gateway Borough School District’s approved budget includes a cut of over 50 staff members and the closure of two elementary schools. Plus, two tribal groups on Prince of Wales Island are asking the Federal Subsistence Board to reverse Ketchikan’s rural designation, and Petersburg’s Borough Assembly approves a highly anticipated lease agreement with American Cruise Lines.
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985
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
The City of Craig’s tourism survey results are out. Plus, the Chilkat River in Haines is named one of the top endangered rivers in America, and Sitka’s local bookstore celebrates its 50th birthday.
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984
Tuesday, April 21, 2026
A local man was charged with assault after stabbing his landlord last fall. Juneau’s school district sees major leadership changes.
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983
Monday, April 20, 2026
Gubernatorial candidate Adam Crum visits Saxman. Petersburg’s local tribe gets a new canoe.
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982
Friday, April 17, 2026
KRBD's news team is out of the office, connecting with other journalists this week at the annual Alaska Press Club Conference in Anchorage. We're looking back on some previous stories from our newsroom that have won awards at this conference.
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981
Thursday, April 16, 2026
KRBD's news team is out of the office, connecting with other journalists this week at the annual Alaska Press Club Conference in Anchorage. We're looking back on some previous stories from our newsroom that have won awards at this conference.
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980
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
KRBD's news team is out of the office, connecting with other journalists this week at the annual Alaska Press Club Conference in Anchorage. We're looking back on some previous stories from our newsroom that have won awards at this conference.
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979
Monday, April 13, 2026
The City and Organized Village of Saxman holds a state of the community address. Plus, a nonprofit tribal organization publishes a new book that presents Tlingit Raven stories for the first time in the original language.
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978
Friday, April 10, 2026
A water main broke in Wrangell. Alaska Seaplanes in Southeast now have new safety approaches in cloudy conditions.
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977
Thursday, April 9, 2026
The Ketchikan Gateway Borough School Board votes to close two elementary schools. Plus, a Wrangell teacher and high school wrestling coach is charged with assault, and Alaska's first-ever hybrid engine commercial fishing vessel is christened.
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976
Wednesday, April 8, 2026
Ketchikan’s borough assembly approves a hotly debated KIC healing center rezone. After a Sitka student reported a sexual assault, the school was required, under Title IX, to conduct a thorough investigation – and there were holes in its process.
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975
Tuesday, April 7, 2026
Fishermen in Southeast Alaska will be able to harvest about 70,000 more king salmon this season than last year. Plus, Senator Lisa Murkowski pays a visit to Sitka, and three of Alaska’s key shipping companies are set to hike rates amid fuel price increases.
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974
Monday, April 6, 2026
Ketchikan’s new movie theater gets ready to open its doors.The Borough Assembly looks at their comprehensive trail plan.
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973
Friday, April 3, 2026
The Forest Service invites local input on the Tongass management plan. Ketchikan and Wrangell partner to make a Southeast Alaska Maritime Industrial Corridor.
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972
Wednesday, April 1, 2026
The mayor of Ketchikan gives his annual State of the City address. And, after a Sitka doctor is convicted of assaulting patients, a former Ketchikan colleague comes forward.
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971
Tuesday, March 31, 2026
A labor union representing Ketchikan shipyard workers files three charges against the yard’s new operator. Plus,a rainbow pride Ravenstail robe is danced for the first time, and a library event in Sitka highlights stories from Alaska fisherman.
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970
Monday, March 30, 2026
Towns across Southeast Alaska protest the Trump administration. The U.S. Interior Department extends the deadline for public comment on subsistence management.
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969
Friday, March 27, 2026
Ketchikan is expected to see over 1.6 million cruise ship passengers this summer. Plus, the Alaska Board of Fisheries votes down three proposals to limit hatchery production of pink and chum salmon, and a 90-year-old murder investigation is the subject of a new history exhibit in Petersburg.
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968
Thursday, March 26, 2026
The Ketchikan School Board delays school closures. The Army Corps of Engineers looks into solutions for glacial outburst flooding in the Mendenhall Valley.
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967
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
One year has passed since Ketchikan’s non-fatal Wolfe Point rockslide. Plus, a Pulitzer prize winning comic artist spends two weeks in Sitka teaching high school students how to analyze and create their own comics.
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966
Tuesday, March 24, 2026
Ketchikan lost a contest that offered free construction of a tunnel to Gravina. The commanding officer of a Ketchikan-based cutter was temporarily relieved yesterday.
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965
Monday, March 23, 2026
A Ketchikan jeweler will have to pay $60-thousand to the state and restitution to customers for selling fake gold. Plus, a look at ways Alaskans without insurance can seek affordable healthcare, and youth from across the state present films they made highlighting the impacts of climate change and other environmental issues.
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964
Friday, March 20, 2026
The Ketchikan City Council approves an 8% utility rate increase for the city’s electricity services. Plus, the numbers are in for Southeast Alaska’s commercial Dungeness crab season, and Alaska youth and advocates are calling on lawmakers to create a statewide fund for suicide prevention.
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963
Thursday, March 19, 2026
The state ferry Lituya will soon begin 7-day-a-week ferry service between Ketchikan and Annette Bay. Plus, Alaska Seaplanes announces it will implement a temporary fuel surcharge due to ongoing conflict in the Middle East. And, this winter in Juneau differs from a trend that climate change has caused winter in Alaska’s largest cities to warm more dramatically than other major U.S. cities.
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962
Wednesday, March 18, 2026
The U.S. Coast Guard identifies two people who died while working on a freight barge near Ketchikan. Plus, a proposal that would make it easier for out-of-state nurses to practice in Alaska is facing fierce pushback in the Legislature, and a bill meant to protect Alaskans from contaminated drinking water has its first committee hearing.
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961
Tuesday, March 17, 2026
Over 50 community members speak out about the proposed healing center north of Ketchikan. The Sitka school board asks for community input on how to trim over a million dollar deficit.
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960
Friday, March 13, 2026
Many Juneau residents say they don't believe the city is doing enough to mitigate tourism impacts on residents.Plus, Sitkans have voted on the Sitka Sound Science Center’s newest Giant Pacific Octopus.
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959
Thursday, March 12, 2026
The Ketchikan school board delays approval of a reduction in force plan. A nonprofit is proposing building a second public use cabin in Haines.
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958
Wednesday, March 11, 2026
An interview with gubernatorial candidate Tom Begich. Plus, the Juneau school board selects its superintendent.
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957
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
The Ketchikan School Board will vote on a reduction in force plan that includes the closure of two schools and cutting over 40 staff positions.Plus, social service providers in Juneau say they’re worried about fallout of Juneau's most critical social services.
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956
Monday, March 9, 2026
The state’s transportation department and a Southeast Alaska nonprofit are partnering in a new way to help the region plan for its future.Plus, more than 100 people from around the world will arrive in Haines for a backcountry ski competition this week.
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955
Friday March 6, 2026
Craig Public Library receives a grant to improve accessibility for disabled patrons. Plus, tribal members speak out against the Cascade Point ferry terminal.
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954
Thursday, March 5, 2026
The City of Craig is asking residents how they would like to see tourism exist in the community. Plus, the Alaska Supreme Court hears arguments on whether prisoners can be forcibly medicated with psychiatric drugs without a court hearing, and a new cost estimate to install a gondola at Juneau’s Eaglecrest Ski Area is more than three times higher than originally expected.
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953
Wednesday, March 4, 2026
The Borough Mayor gave his State of the Community Address. Plus, Canada wants to limit U.S.-based Tribes from government consultations related to environmental projects.
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952
Tuesday, March 3, 2026
Police find the body of an 18-year-old woman underneath a former Ketchikan building supply store. Plus, the Ketchikan Gateway Borough School District will have to make major changes to pay off over $5 million in debt, and this year’s guest artist at the Alaska Folk Festival shares what he thinks makes the annual event special.
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951
Monday, March 2, 2026
The state expands a fishing closure for shrimp in Southeast Alaska. Plus, Wrangell could soon be home to Southeast’s largest shipyard, and two popular Sitka restaurants are nominated to be within the top 10 in Alaska.
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