FAMILY FUN – Crystal Johns holds her son Zayne , 2, as  she follows her son Ezekiel, 4,  up an inflatable slide Saturday at Xoots Elementary School during the annual Spring Carnival. The event included games, prizes, cotton candy, and karaoke. (Sentinel Photo by James Poulson)

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
Sentinel Staff Writer
    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
Alaska Beacon
    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
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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
    The threat of major cutbacks to the subsistence socke [ ... ]

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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17 Apr 2024 12:52

By GARLAND KENNEDY
Sentinel Sports Editor
    Three amateur athletes from Sitka were among tens of  [ ... ]

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
Alaska Beacon
    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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Sitka Musicians Do Well at SE Music Fest
16 Apr 2024 15:30

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    Musicians from Sitka High and Mt. Edgecumbe High scho [ ... ]

Walk Southeast Offers Fitness, Prizes for Sitkans
16 Apr 2024 15:28

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    Whether you enjoy scaling mountains, walking in the p [ ... ]

Sitkans Turn in Times at Boston Marathon
16 Apr 2024 15:24

By GARLAND KENNEDY
Sentinel Sports Editor
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House Panel Advances Trans Girls-Sports Ban
16 Apr 2024 15:23

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Correspondence School Ruling Raising Debate
16 Apr 2024 15:22

By JAMES BROOKS and
CLAIRE STREMPLE
    The Alaska Department of Education and Early Development is [ ... ]

April 16, 2024, Police Blotter
16 Apr 2024 15:20

Sitka police received the following calls by 8 a.m. today:
April 15
A protective order was issued at 1 [ ... ]

April 16, 2024, Community Happenings
16 Apr 2024 15:17

Chamber Speaker
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15 Apr 2024 15:33

By GARLAND KENNEDY
Sentinel Staff Writer
    From high costs and low availability to challenges sur [ ... ]

Work Groups Look At Housing Proposals
15 Apr 2024 15:31

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
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Other Articles

Daily Sitka Sentinel

Ferry Cutbacks Deal Blow to Team Travel

By GARLAND KENNEDY
Sentinel Staff Writer
    Cuts to the Alaska Marine Highway System have left Southeast schools choosing between difficult and expensive options for team travel, a number of school officials tell the Sentinel.
    “Ferry cuts are killing our C/JV sports programs. We have to fly every place now,” Sitka High Activities Director Rich Krupa said.
    “Right now we don’t even use it (AMHS) because the ferry system doesn’t work out for us,” he said. The combination of higher fares and reduced sailings have forced local teams to use Alaska Airlines, he said.
    School District Superintendent Mary Wegner agreed, telling the Sentinel that “a couple of years ago we started losing a lot of ferry service to Sitka... we have really stopped using the ferry, because the schedule doesn’t work.”
    That hasn’t always been the case, remembers Wolves’ volleyball coach Zaide Allen.
    “I was born and raised here,” Allen said, “and through my job and through sports I have been able to travel to I think every single Southeast Alaskan community that ferry service reaches.”
    “I remember being on the ferry almost every single volleyball trip,” she noted. “As a C-team player we got three trips a year, we were traveling all the time.”
    But in the 2019 volleyball season, Allen said that the Wolves’ C-team only traveled once, and that was courtesy of Allen Marine.
    “Thank goodness we have Mt. Edgecumbe to play, otherwise our C-team would not have very many games,” she said.
    Krupa added that “in the past we’d take our varsity basketball, JV basketball, and C-team and take them to different communities... and that’s just not an option (anymore).”
    The increased dependence on air travel for sports teams has increased the cost of travel as well.
    “The district only pays coaches’ salaries,” Wegner said. “The entire bulk of all of the travel comes from what the city provides to the students to support the travel, and what the students raise.”
     “The burden is placed on our community,” Allen said. “Where we were raising money for a $40 ferry ticket, now we’re raising for a $200, at the minimum, plane ticket just to go to Juneau, and that’s just per kid. And you do the math on that, and it’s kind of scary.”
    But Allen said the reduced ferry service is hurting a lot more than school athletics.
    “I think it’s really sad that this is happening,” she said, “because a lot of these (small) communities... you can’t get this type of life anywhere else, and I think that with having no ferries go to those communities it’s actually threatening their existence.”
    Wegner is also well aware of the big picture of Southeast transportation.
    “I think about health and safety in a community like Angoon,” she said. “With an elderly population, how are they going to get around without the ferry?”
    “We at least have Alaska Airlines,” Allen said. “I cannot imagine those small towns, like Angoon and Hoonah.”
    But all of Southeast will feel the impact of the ferry cutbacks, and in that regard, she said, “Everyone is in the same boat.”
    There was more bad news Thursday when the ferry system announced that the M/V Aurora, one of the smaller vessels that are the transportation lifeline within Southeast, would enter long-term layup starting in January. The announcement said that 24 employees would be “relieved of service” as a result.
    “It was determined that significantly more repair work was required than originally budgeted and AMHS does not have the funds,” the service said in a press release.
    “Part of the reason we’ve increased the fares is to make the system more self-sustainable, and that reduced budget is the result of negotiations between the legislature and the governor,” Ferry system Public Information Officer Sam Dapcevich told the Sentinel. “The AMHS is facing big challenges because we have an aging fleet, repair needs.”

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20 YEARS AGO

April 2004

Photo  caption: Sen. Lisa Murkowski talks with students in Karoline Bekeris’ fourth-grade class Thursday at the Westmark Shee Atika. From left are Murkowski, Kelsey Boussom, Laura Quinn and Memito Diaz.

50 YEARS AGO

April 1974

A medley of songs from “Jesus Christ Superstar” will highlight the morning worship service on Palm Sunday at the United Methodist Church.  Musicians will be Paige Garwood and Karl Hartman on guitars; Dan Goodness on organ; and Gayle Erickson on drums.

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