COSMIC CARNIVAL – Kasey Davis performs under black lights at Sitka Cirque studio Wednesday night as she rehearses for the weekend’s Cosmic Carnival shows. The shows are a production of Friends of the Circus Arts in collaboration with the Sitka Cirque studio. (Sentinel Photo by James Poulson)

School Board Weighs Options for Cutbacks
19 Apr 2024 15:27

By GARLAND KENNEDY
Sentinel Staff Writer
    Significant staffing cuts are likely in Sitka’s scho [ ... ]

Assembly Wraps Up Balanced 2025 Budget
19 Apr 2024 15:25

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    The Assembly at a special meeting Thursday improved t [ ... ]

Cirque Silk Artists to Fly in Cosmic Carnival
19 Apr 2024 15:24

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    From solar flares, to black holes, comets and shootin [ ... ]

Planners OK S-T Rental, Hear Housing Summary
19 Apr 2024 14:17

By ARIADNE WILL
Sentinel Staff Writer
    At its regular meeting Wednesday, the Planning Commission [ ... ]

Senate Offers $7.5M To Aid Fish Processors
19 Apr 2024 13:29

By NATHANIEL HERZ
Northern Journal
    The Alaska Senate has proposed a new aid package for the sta [ ... ]

Legislators, Families Await Correspondence Ruling
19 Apr 2024 13:27

By CLAIRE STREMPLE and
JAMES BROOKS
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    Over the last 26 years, Penelope Gold has used [ ... ]

Sitka Wins Three Softball Games
19 Apr 2024 13:25

  HOME OPENER - Sitka’s Sadie Saline runs after hitting what became a two-run triple against Thu [ ... ]

April 19, 2024, Police Blotter
19 Apr 2024 13:18

Police Blotter
Sitka police received the following calls by 8 a.m. today:
April 18
At 1:22 p.m. a dog w [ ... ]

April 19, 2024, Community Happenings
19 Apr 2024 13:11

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Everyone is Invited
Sitka Tribe of Alaska will host a free Family Fun  [ ... ]

Funding for Schools Now a Waiting Game
18 Apr 2024 14:24

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    Rep. Rebecca Himschoot says in the discussion on educ [ ... ]

Hard-Knock Life? Not for Sitka Young Players
18 Apr 2024 14:23

By GARLAND KENNEDY
Sentinel Staff Writer
    Song, dance and a cast of school-aged actors will brin [ ... ]

Medicare Advisers Warn of Scam Calls
18 Apr 2024 14:21

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
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    Don’t talk to people claiming to be from Medicare o [ ... ]

House Sends Senate Carbon Storage Bill
18 Apr 2024 14:20

By JAMES BROOKS
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    The Alaska House of Representatives voted Wednesday to allow comp [ ... ]

Corps Upholds Denial Of Pebble Mine Permit
18 Apr 2024 14:19

By YERETH ROSEN
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    The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has dismissed an appeal filed by [ ... ]

April 18, 2024, Community Happenings
18 Apr 2024 14:16

Mr. Whitekeys
In Sitka to Tell
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Sitka Historical Society and Museum will present ‘‘Th [ ... ]

April 18, 2024, Police Blotter
18 Apr 2024 14:13

Sitka police received the following calls by 8 a.m. today: April 17
At 9:08 a.m. a transformer was r [ ... ]

Weir Funds Sustain Redoubt Subsistence
17 Apr 2024 15:16

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
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Assembly Moves Ahead with 2025 Budget Talks
17 Apr 2024 15:13

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    With the first vote on the city budget for fiscal yea [ ... ]

Ye Loco Taco Wins Championship
17 Apr 2024 15:12

By Sentinel Staff
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Sitkans Stretch Legs in Boston Marathon
17 Apr 2024 12:52

By GARLAND KENNEDY
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House Advances Bill On Drug OD Kits in Schools
17 Apr 2024 12:50

By CLAIRE STREMPLE
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Report: Kobuk River On List of ‘Most Threatened’...
17 Apr 2024 12:49

By YERETH ROSEN
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    Alaska’s Kobuk River, which flows out of the Brooks Range above [ ... ]

April 17, 2024, Police Blotter
17 Apr 2024 12:38

Police Blotter
Sitka police received the following calls by 8 a.m. today:
April 16
At 8:07 a.m. a woman [ ... ]

April 17, 2024, Community Happenings
17 Apr 2024 12:24

Presentation On
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Daily Sitka Sentinel

Forest Service Honors Engineer Logan Wild

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    Logan Wild, a lifelong Sitkan, has been named 2018 Engineer of the Year for the Alaska Region of the U.S. Forest Service.
    “Logan’s technical engineering expertise has contributed to the Forest Service’s success in facilities management and long-term planning of facilities needs for a complex portfolio including two world class visitor centers and more than 60 administrative buildings across eight Ranger Districts,” the Forest Service said in its announcement.
    Wild, 34, was born and raised in Sitka and is a 2003 graduate of Sitka High School. Growing up, he studied trombone, and earned his bachelor of arts in music from Rice University in 2007.
    But he’s also always loved spending time outdoors, and during college took summer jobs in the Sitka Ranger District of the Tongass National Forest, clearing trails, cutting wood, digging outhouses and keeping cabins in working order, mostly living in the cabins and shelters during the work week.
    “I liked working outdoors,” Wild said. “As I was spending time doing that, I learned about the work that engineering was doing to maintain and improve recreation areas and recreation facilities. That was my initial hook before I went to (engineering) school.”

Logan Wild (Photo Provided)

    After graduating from Rice, he continued working outdoors, in the Gallatin National Forest in Montana and Olympic National Park in Washington, before deciding to get a civil engineering degree at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. During his junior year at UAF he was selected for the Pathways program, which allowed him to job shadow a Forest Service engineer during the summer.
    “That’s what connected me to a career in the Forest Service,” Wild said.
    Wild was hired by the Forest Service as an engineer in 2011, and currently works in the supervisor’s office in Sitka, where he has enjoyed collaborating with other engineers and natural resource professionals on projects.
    “The biggest learning experience for me was working with Barth Hamberg (USFS landscape architect) on recreational enhancement projects throughout the forest,” Wild said.
    “The White Sulfur bathhouse stands out,” he said, referring to the replacement of the hot springs bathhouse in the West Chichagof Wilderness Area, 65 miles north of Sitka.
    He and Hamberg also traveled together on a three-week detail to national parks in Uganda, where they helped management agencies with recreational master planning, specifically helping the parks create projects to generate income to protect wildlife. 
    His work on the North Prince of Wales District with Petersburg engineer Tim Chittenden was also a rewarding experience, he said.
    Wild said working as a civil engineer for the Forest Service was not exactly what he thought it would be – in a good way – and it has continued to afford him more opportunities to work outdoors.
    “What I like about Forest Service engineering is I’m involved in cradle-to-grave management,” he said. “From the initial scoping and planning, through planning, survey and design; construction administration; operation and maintenance; and eventually decommissioning. Being involved, you see the big picture. It’s pretty illuminating, compared to the private sector where you may be dealing with just one aspect.”
    Hamberg said he was pleased to see Wild honored, although he had tried to steer him into another Forest Service career year ago.
    “When I recommended Logan (for the award), I told the story of how I tried to talk him into being a landscape architect, before he went to engineering school,” Hamberg said. “I thought he had such potential. He’s widely educated, and open minded, and a creative thinker. These are great qualities to bring to the engineering profession.”
    Sitka District Ranger Perry Edwards has enjoyed working with him, too.
    “Logan is amazing,” Edwards said. “He has the ability to deal with the technical experts but also able to deal with contractors in common, plain language.”
    Edwards said Wild was instrumental with the conversion the old warehouse into the new District headquarters, which he called a huge achievement.
    “Logan was in charge of that project,” Edwards said. “Early in his career he did a project that’s bigger than many engineers have in their entire career, and he handled it. He’s just very people-oriented.”
    Wild is the son of Jane Eidler and Mike Wild, whose own career included 20 years in the Forest Service maintenance department.
    Logan is married to Kenley Jackson.


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20 YEARS AGO

April 2004

The 7th Annual Honoring Women dinner will feature Roberta Sue Kitka, ANS Camp 4; Rose MacIntyre, U.S. Coast Guard Spouses and Women’s Association; Christine McLeod Pate, SAFV; Marta Ryman, Soroptimists; and Mary Sarvela (in memoriam), Sitka Woman’s Club.

50 YEARS AGO

April 1974

Eighth-graders Joanna Hearn and Gwen Marshall and sixth-graders Annabelle Korthals, Jennifer Lewis and Marianne Mulder have straight A’s (4.00) for the third quarter at Blatchley Junior High.

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