Alaska Raceway Park Signs on as an NHRA Member Track


CONTRIBUTED BY MICHELLE LACKEY MAYNOR, ALASKA RACEWAY PARK

 NHRA announced RECENTLY that Alaska Raceway Park, located in Palmer, Alaska, has signed on as a new Division 6 NHRA member track. Originally built in 1964, the multi-use motorsports park will become a member of the Northwest Division.

Alaska Raceway Park, owned and operated by Earl and Karen Lackey and Michelle Lackey Maynor, sits about 42 miles northeast of Anchorage, Alaska. As part of the track’s new agreement with NHRA, Alaska Raceway Park will be adding additional facility and safety features.

“The dragstrip has been there for 55 years, and we just opened the NASCAR track in 2016. NHRA is the top name in drag racing and NASCAR is the top name in oval racing, so it seemed like a good fit,” said Lackey Maynor. “We’re excited for the upcoming season. To get back to the fun part of racing. That track family atmosphere is kind of what we’re focusing on for this year.”

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With a season that runs from Mother’s Day weekend until Labor Day, the track will host a slate of NHRA Summit Racing Jr. Drag Racing League events during the year. Racers will also have the opportunity to compete against other racers in the division for a championship “Wally” (the official NHRA trophy) through the Land of the Leaders ET Challenge Series.

“With one of the most beautiful settings a track could be located and a great group of racers, we’re very excited to have Alaska Raceway Park and its racers in the NHRA family,” said Matt Levonas, Division 6 director.

As an NHRA sanctioned track, the facility will be eligible to offer racers a variety of racing opportunities, including the NHRA Summit Racing Series, the NHRA Summit Racing Jr. Drag Racing League, NHRA Jr. Street and the NHRA Drags: Street Legal Style presented by AAA. Additionally, the track will have the opportunity to host NHRA’s specialty events, including the National DRAGSTER Challenge, NHRA Summit King of the Track, and NHRA Summit Racing Jr. Drag Racing League Challenge.

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Biker Elves Toy Drive


Contributed by Glenn Butts, “The Dude”

The Toy Drive was designed by a group of caring BIKERS, from C.M.A. Midnight Son Riders ch801, also other awesome motorcycle groups, and many local motorcycle shops around the Valley, and not forgetting the MANY other caring businesses that join the cause of The biker elves to help collect toys for all the different Christmas toy distribution places in the Valley.

Over the last many years, this cause has come down to only the TOYS FOR TOTS - Special Santa Program, because the others couldn’t continue running. And so has been strictly distributing the collected toys to the (Marines) TOYS FOR TOTS - Special Santa Program.

There have been a lot of different “special” events for the toy drive over the years, the biggest and the one that is still happening - the FLY IN SANTA at The Denali Harley Davidson shop. Every year we are collecting Christmas Toys for the BIKER ELVES DRIVE - through the event that brings Santa in his personal helicopter for all the children, and then will (as long as conditions are safe) give the kids rides in the helicopter over the Valley. And they get to visit with Santa, pictures and all, plus lots of door prizes for the grownups as well. There’s always good food, great laughter, and a “TOTALLY AWESOME” time for all.

And all it takes is the donation of some Christmas toys, by the parents - that will go to help other families with children in the Valley in need of Christmas gifts for their kids. This year, it will be Saturday, December 21st, from 11am-5pm. Please call DENALI HARLEY DAVIDSON for more details.

So, look us up on Facebook at “BIKER ELVES TOY DRIVE” for a distribution spot near you, and help give a special moment to a child for the Christmas season.

Thank you, and may Jesus bless and keep you and yours safe in all the years to come!

- The Biker Elves Community

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Community Pancake Breakfast at Five Loaves Two Fish Kitchen Ministries of Good Shepherd Lutheran Church


Contributed by Linda Meyers-Steele

Community Pancake Breakfast

12/7/2019 - 9AM

Good Shepherd Lutheran Church

501 E Bogard Rd. Wasilla

Cost: $12 per person, $30 per group of 3+ people

On Saturday, December 7th, start your Christmas shopping day with a good breakfast! The community pancake breakfast at Five Loaves Two Fish Kitchen Ministries of Good Shepherd Lutheran Church is being served from 9:00am-12:00pm. Bring your cameras to take photos with Santa Claus between 10:00am-11:30am. There will be cookie decorating activity for kids.

Breakfast $12.00 each or $30.00 for three or more. 

All proceeds go toward the kitchen’s mission of feeding hungry people. Agencies currently being provided meals every week are MY House Teen Resource Center, Knik Houses-Men’s/Women’s, and the Family Promise Program. We are in our sixth year of supporting homeless and people in of need of nourishment.

 Good food changes lives.

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Filling A Need


Contributed by Karen Wichert, Meadow Lakes Market

Opening Meadow Lake Market is Judy Hunter’s way of filling a need for herself and the community. As an artisan herself, she has spent the last five years developing and selling her brand of Jingle Jellies by taking them on the road to local bazaars and farmer’s markets. Her days and many weekends have been dedicated to this means of getting her product out there.

With her Veteran husband, Rex, Judy started looking for a permanent venue for her Jingle Jellies with a commercial kitchen as part of her dream. Finding a 30-by-40-foot building in the Valley was an answer and the beginning of her dream. Rex and Judy have spent the last year updating and remodeling their building. They opened on September 21st of this year. 

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To be able to share this space with local crafters and artisans became a real possibility. With room to spare, Judy has fulfilled her need and extends it to the community by offering a year round space for local artisans and crafters to showcase and sell their one-of-a-kind and Alaska-made creations.  

Giving back to veterans and their families is included in their sharing. Veterans get a 5% discount on all purchases. 

Their first community event was a Car Seat Clinic, held in the parking lot of Meadow Lakes Market, located at 7575 W Parks Hwy. Wasilla on November 16th, from 1pm to 5pm. This free clinic was being provided to help you keep your children safe in the car. People brought their car, kids and car seats for safety help, one-on-one, from technicians, Brittany and Christi. Each inspection took approximately 20 minutes.

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Termination Dust


Contributed by Marilyn Bennett

This time of year, everyone seems to be talking about “Termination Dust”.  

Being new to Alaska, I was curious as to how such a negative term came about, so I looked it up in the wiktionary and this was their definition:  

“Noun. Termination Dust (uncountable) (US) In Alaska, a light, high-altitude snowfall that indicates the end of summer. The miners hurriedly prepared for winter as the termination dust settled on the slopes above them.”

Not sure if that was correct, I then checked out the web page “Learning to Speak Alaskan” and they stated the following:

“Termination Dust: The construction workers during the building boom in the 1940s called the snowfall each year “termination dust” because it meant their jobs would be terminated for the season. Now, it is used to refer to the first snowfall signaling the end of the summer season.”

I guess that whether the term came from the early miners or the construction workers of the 40s, it doesn't matter much anymore. No matter what, the origin of the term does mean the end of fall and the beginning of winter.

Legend has it that snow will fall on the valley floor within 6 weeks of the first showing of snow on the mountain peaks. So, I guess the countdown began back in October. Either way, winter is on its way and since we’re Alaskans, we are going to make the most of it! 

I also discovered that there is a band that started out in Anchorage by the name of “Termination Dust”, and it was voted Best Indie Band in Anchorage Press Picks 2017.  Their music seems to convey a very positive message, which is great in our world of too much negativity. Unfortunately, they left Anchorage in 2018 for the worst of reasons, money. They are playing with Modest Mouse and touring the Lower 48 states. Hope to see them back here soon.

Also the Anchorage Hockey Association has a Termination Dust Tournament each year.

However, even more interesting is that the Midnight Sun Brewery has both Termination Dust Belgian-Style Barley Wine and in 2015, came out with Midnight Sun Termination Dust Beer. This is a specialty wood-aged beer 13.0% ABV, pretty strong beer. It apparently has a dark brown, almost black color and the consensus seems to be that it is a great shippable beer and one of the best to come out of this brewery. Not being a beer drinker I cannot attest to it, but with a name like Termination Dust it's worth a try at this time of year. Just be careful, as you wouldn't want to terminate your driving privileges by sipping too much before heading home.

This is also the time of year that we have a termination of daylight savings time. We ‘fell back’, and now 6PM feels like midnight. I will be glad when days begin to get longer again. Now that the lovely autumn leaves are gone, we all need snow to cover the boring brown landscape. I do enjoy looking at the snow on the mountains, as it makes me contemplate painting pictures or creating poetry. Others may think about winter sports and wonder when they can get out to the slopes. Winter does have its pleasures and compensations. There are so many activities in Palmer between now and the end of the year, that it is just a matter of deciding what suits your particular fancy.

Termination Dust is our first sign of the beautiful snow cover yet to come and the quickest way to terminate winter blues is to get out and enjoy the season, or hunker down inside with a good book or hobby.  

Enjoy.  

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Thankful for Mountains & So Much More


Contributed by Debra McGhan

November, the month we all hear so much and talk so much about being thankful. But 33 years ago, I felt anything but thankful. A lot has changed in my life since then and today, I have so much for which to feel glad-i-tude.

It is true that we do not get stronger when things are easy. We only grow and gain strength when things are hard. I learned that lesson when my husband was killed in an avalanche of snow and dirt the night before Thanksgiving in 1986. He was 33 years old.

It wasn’t a big mountain, Just a small hill. Enough to kill him.

I learned that day, you should never underestimate the power of nature on any scale.

My daughter likes to remind me that every challenge is good news. It brings the opportunity to gain strength, exert greatness and be so much more than we were before.

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Losing someone you love in a sudden tragedy at the peak of their life is one of the greatest challenges.

For everyone who has faced disaster, or knows a friend or family member who’s been impacted, it’s important to know and believe that this too shall pass. What matters is how we respond to the challenges.

There are those who believe they have no power to overcome what’s happened. And there are others who take the kick to the gut, pick themselves up and push forward. They fight back. They rise above and refuse to let something they do not have control over shape their life into misery and failure.

As I’ve heard it said so often, “We are free to make choices. We are not free from the consequences of those choices.”

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After my husband was killed, I chose to get up and fight. I could not change what had happened. I could not bring him back. But I could be a good role model for my children and my community by using my experiences and lessons to help shape a safer future.

For 15 years, I dedicated my life to sharing the lessons of avalanche and mountain safety in Alaska. I spent hours late into the night struggling to figure out the pieces and parts needed to run a successful non-profit organization that could support outdoor safety, especially winter, cold weather and avalanche safety.

My front seat journey in the avalanche world ended in July when the board recognized they needed to slow down, reorganize and get back to a slower speed; a pace at which the teams of people who are dedicated and willing to donate the time needed, can find ways to sustain all that has been created.

While some have chosen to pull their specific location teams closer and drop all support for a statewide effort, others are growing stronger together and knuckling down to make sure no matter what the future brings, from weather to basic services, Alaska has avalanche information centers.

The Alaska Avalanche Information Center is run by dedicated, skilled mountain practitioners who are providing regular snow forecasting in Valdez and Haines, plus a host of educational opportunities all across Alaska from Fairbanks to Ketchikan. They have strong support from dozens of individuals and key sponsors including the Alaska Department of Public Safety, The City of Valdez, Alaska Community Foundation, Rasumuson Foundation, Kendall Toyota and AARP Alaska to mention a few. 

You can find a host of information and links to other educational resources at www.AlaskaSnow.org.

All of this is possible thanks to a core of dedicated individuals who do this from the heart. They know that losing someone you love hurts. They also know getting outdoors to soak up life is critical for a happy, healthy planet.

There is nothing more amazing or energizing than standing on the top of a mountain and having the skill and knowledge to come back home and live to do it over and over. All the people behind this effort understand that.

I’ve learned to appreciate every day and every step forward that results in progress. I’m so proud to see this community of people continue forward while I have the opportunity to take a back seat and cheer everyone on.

This year on Thanksgving instead of grieving, I’m celebrating all the good things that life has given me the opportunity to seize; The 14 years I did have with Bruce, a healthy, happy family, beautiful home, great friends and a stable job that allows me to help my community while supporting myself.

We live in such a tumultuous time, that it’s important to focus on self and inner healing. Get outdoors. Experience the power and beauty of the mountains. Just be wise and get educated before you go.

Each of us has the power to heal ourselves and our planet if we make choices that lead us down the path of education, kindness and wellness. That’s real happiness, and for me, true wealth and the best reason to be thankful.

SIDEBAR:

Are you beeping?

I met a lot of people along the outdoor safety journey who share my passion because they too have lost someone they love. One mother, Janet Tally Walsh, and I share a particularly special bond. Like Bruce, she lost her son, Dr. Liam Walsh, the day before Thanksgiving in an avalanche when he was just 33.

Her stories of Liam, so like my Bruce, were of a man who lived life with ferocity, compassion for others and an unquenchable thirst for adventure.

Janet and her friends and family took a positive step by donating funds for the “Are You Beeping” project in Hatcher Pass. And thanks to a group of dedicated volunteers, there are now three signs installed and maintained in the Hatcher Pass State Recreation area today. You can help ensure project like this continue by lending your support to your local avalanche center.

PHOTO CAPTIONS:

1.  COMMUNITY - Thankful for Mountains & So Much More 1: Recreation access to Archangel and Goldmint. Photo by Debra McGhan.

2.  COMMUNITY - Thankful for Mountains & So Much More 2: Pioneer Peak. Photo by Debra McGhan.

3.  COMMUNITY - Thankful for Mountains & So Much More 3: A popular ski run in Hatcher Pass. Photo by Debra McGhan.

4.  COMMUNITY - Thankful for Mountains & So Much More 4: A Popular Ski Run in Hatcher Pass. Photo by Debra McGhan

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“CABIN: An Alaska Wilderness Dream” Book Review


Contributed by Jeff Ramsyer

“CABIN: An Alaska Wilderness Dream” by Eric Wade, Moonshine Cove Publishing, November 2019

No Owner’s Manual for Wilderness Users: It’s better to do something wrong than do nothing.

Eric Wade, author of “CABIN: An Alaska Wilderness Dream”, published by Moonshine Cove Publishing, received that advice working as a logger in Oregon many years ago. He acknowledges that might not be the best advice, but it stuck with him. Right or wrong, things do tend to get done if you just do something. Wade’s account of fulfilling his dream to build a cabin in Alaska’s wilderness is a heartfelt, educational and fascinating story about doing. He had a wilderness dream since boyhood, fostered by reading about backwoods icons like Daniel Boone, Davie Crocket, Jim Bridger and watching television westerns, so when he got the chance to move to Alaska, he took it. That was forty years ago.

The wilderness cabin is part of Alaska’s lore. Alaska and cabins go together like… well, you know… sourdough and pancakes or black bears and honey, so his dream included a cabin, a log cabin. The cabin was so important, in fact, that it was the focal point of Wade’s experiences in the wilds.

This book is much more than a story about a cabin, though. Wade’s personable and descriptive writing takes you along on his quest and leaves you wishing for more stories. In this memoir, the author literally and figuratively covers a lot of ground, traipsing thousands of miles of road and river to remote Alaska over more than thirty years. He teaches what he has learned and shares his love for fish, trees, animals and family. Besides writing a how-to guide on cabin building, river travel, and just getting by in the wilds, Wade teaches us about the inhabitants in his piece of the Alaskan forest, the personalities of rivers, outboard engines, his firsthand experience with climate change, and much more.

Wade makes it clear there is no owners-manual for wilderness users. Even though he spends all the time he can planning, studying and discussing his small one-room log castle in the wild, no amount of organization or forethought could have prepared him for the many obstacles he would have to overcome. Along the way he learns and teaches, all with good humor and a can-do attitude. With the help of friends, family, strangers, and his patient and thoughtful wife, he realizes his dream—well most of it. There is a lesson to be learned too. What he doesn’t achieve, after years of planning and dreaming, is perhaps what’s most important in this story. I love this book.

This book is now available Amazon and Barnes & Noble online and will be in local book stores soon.

You can visit Eric Wade’s author page at www.ericnolanwade.com.  He also writes a biweekly newsletter titled “Notes from Alaska’s Woods”. Subscribe to the newsletter at theNotes from Alaska’s Woods” Facebook page.

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Mat-Su Concert Band to Play Holiday Favorites at Two Concerts


Contributed by Drewcilla Holifield, Mat-Su Concert Band

December Delights Concert
December 20-21, 2019 - 7:30PM
The Mat-Su Concert Band
The Glenn Massay Theater
8295 E College Dr. Palmer
Tickets: FREE Ages )-5, $5 Students, $20 General Admission

The Mat-Su Concert Band will perform its popular holiday concert, combining seasonal classics and lesser-known holiday gems, at two separate performances.

The “December Delights” concerts will take place December 20th and December 21st at 7:30 p.m. at The Glenn Massay Theater at Mat-Su College. Tickets are $20 for general admission and $5 for students. Children under 5 get in free. Tickets can be purchased online at www.matsuconcertband.org.

The concert includes the band’s popular audience sing-along, as well as a number of masterworks for the holiday.

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The Nutcracker Ballet, with music written by P.I. Tchaikovsky, has become part of the holiday tradition with its Christmas Eve tale of the Prince and Clara, the evil Mouse King, and a troupe of dancing dolls. The band will perform Tchaikovsky’s music in “Suite from The Nutcracker”: eight numbers culminating in the whirling “Waltz of the Flowers”.

The talent of the band’s saxophone section leader and board president, Bruce Brown, is showcased in “O Holy Night”, the well-known Christmas carol composed in 1847 by Adolphe Adam. As legend has it, a French soldier fighting in the Franco-Prussian War during 1871 rose from a trench to sing three verses of the song. Soon after, a German soldier climbed out and sang another carol and both sides observed a 24-hour truce for Christmas Day.

The band will also perform several pieces commemorating the Chanukah holiday including “Eight Nights of Light” – an arrangement of traditional tunes – and “A Chanukah Celebration”, arranged by David Bobrowitz.

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Other selections scheduled for performance include “A Christmas Intrada” by Alfred Reed, “A Christmas Festival” by Leroy Anderson, “With Every Winter’s Breath” by Randall D. Standridge, “The Sussex Mummers’ Christmas Carol” by Percy Grainger, and “In the Bleak Midwinter” by Gustav Holst.

About the Mat-Su Concert Band:

Mat-Su Concert Band got its start in 1984 as the Mat-Su Community Band, formed by Matanuska Music owner, Hank Hartman. Other directors have included Neil Long and Phil Munger.

Current director, Gleo Huyck, is a retired music educator and private instructor. Under Huyck’s baton, the band performs a wide-ranging selection of challenging music. The band this season numbers about 70 amateur musicians who assemble every Monday night for rehearsals at Teeland Middle School.

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Sleeping Beauty Retold


Contributed by Nick McDermott, Alaska Junior Theater

Sleeping Beauty

12/7/2019 - 2PM

Alaska Junior Theater

Atwood Concert Hall

Tickets: $24.75-$33.75

The Alaska Junior Theater is proud to present “Sleeping Beauty” performed by, Grandmaster Storyteller David Gonzales, on December 7, 2019 at 2:00PM in the Atwood Concert Hall.

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David Gonzalez returns with this visually stunning multimedia retelling of “Sleeping Beauty”. A rhymed-verse spin on the classic fairytale with live music and image projections that create a magical multimedia world in which our beautiful (and funky) princess is awakened by true love’s kiss.. .or not.

David uses his street-style humor, the limitless landscape of imagination, kinetic storytelling with live music, mesmerizing video projection and audience participation to captivate all ages with this multifaceted version of a childhood favorite.

David’s last time in Alaska was to perform “Aesop Bops” for sold-out crowds in 2015. He will be joined on stage by accomplished pianist, Daniel Kelly, performing selections of Bach’s “Goldberg Variations”.

While in Alaska, David and Daniel will perform for over 5,000 students at field trip shows, lead three workshops and perform the December 7th public show.

Get your tickets to the December 7th performance of “Sleeping Beauty” in the words of David Gonzalez at 263-ARTS or at www.akjt.org.



Meet Bella!


Contributed by Angie Lewis, Alaska Animal Advocates

Bella has a lot of spunk for a 6-year-old gal. She is an AKC-certified German Wire-Haired Pointer. She has many wonderful qualities: She knows basic commands, does good with other dogs and children, and is house-trained. 

Bella has a few less than thrilling habits and is a counter surfer and likes chickens and other birds a bit too much. All workable issues.

Bella will require a good enclosure because she has jumped her fence and has figured out how to get past a perimeter fence.

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If you are anxious to meet Bella, please call Alaska Animal Advocates at 841-3173, ask for Angie OR email us at akaarescue@hotmail.com.



We're Moving


Contributed by Sara McKinley

Paint Nights with Sara has had an incredible first couple years! Voted Best in the Valley for Hobby Shops, we have been offering paint night classes weekly in our space on the Parks Highway in Wasilla. While this space has been great, we are excited to announce that we will be moving to a new location in December.

Helping us to offer even more space then before, the new location, next to CCS Early Learning and across from Sonic on the highway, we will have space for private parties, corporate events, or birthdays! This is an important part of what we do and we want to be able to offer more than ever to the Mat-Su Valley. More staff, more paint nights, and more fun with the same great experience that you remember sharing with your friends. Best of all, you can enter our giveaway to be one of the first people to paint in the new studio! A $60 value, we will announce 6 winners December 4th who will be part of our VIP Party! This party will include a catered paint night with free drinks and tasty treats. Enter by liking Paint Nights with Sara on Facebook and by sharing the giveaway post posted at the top of the page.

Another great announcement is the release of our step by step paint tutorial paint series, “I Paint with Sara”. Paint from the comfort of your own home as Sara makes painting easy. The library of videos increases each week with holiday paintings, landscapes, animals, and even requests. Perfect for a home school student needing art or a corporate event or party. Sign up for this great service or learn more about our move by going to paintwithsara.com.

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How to Eliminate Crimes, Homelessness, and Wildfire


Contributed by Huhnkie Lee

Greetings, this is Lee, running for Alaska State Senate in District D in 2020.  I have an idea to eliminate crimes and homelessness.  I first thought that Matsu needs a borough level police department.  Then I learned that it would raise property tax to fund the new police department.  How about we change the state law so that we give Alaska National Guards (“ANG” hereafter) the police power?

I understand Posse Comitatus Act prohibits the use of federal military personnel to assist local police, but we are talking about activating state military personnel.  So, let us assume that state legislators manage to make a law that endows police power to ANG so they work with local police.  Then the sky is the limit.

ANG has the man power, are trained in combat and weaponry, and they have rifles, ammunitions, bullet proof jackets and helmets, tactical vehicles, everything that they need to fight off crimes.  If I were an Alaska senator, I would go even one step further: I would convince our two U.S. Senators and U.S. Congressman so that they propose a House/Senate Bills to abolish Posse Comitatus Act.  Then, we can supply manpower to the state/local police/firefighters with federal military personnel and equipment. 

Imagine we come up with a technology of a missile that is equipped with fire extinguishing chemicals.  Upon a wildfire in Alaska, U.S. Airforce jets from JBER can fire the ‘fire-extinguishing’ missiles to that burning forest.  The possibilities are endless.

Regarding the homeless, we will have to change the laws so that police can escort them so that they live in a place that we may call, “Institution of Improvement”, or IOI.  The idea is, we should get back to the basics, hence the name 101.

Why do crimes and homelessness exist?  It is because not everyone has good parents like we did.  We, law-abiding and hardworking citizens were fortunate enough to have parents, teachers, mentors, role-models who taught us, disciplined us, loved us, strengthened us.  But there are people who never had such nurturing environment and some of them become homeless and criminals because they can’t contain anger, or they are not strong and patient enough to handle the stress and pressure at work. 

As long as criminals stay criminal, it is us whose lives and limbs are in danger.  If we allow the homeless live in parks and street corners, our neighborhood will be filled with human wastes, needles, fleas, and bedbugs.  It is time that we, Republicans and Democrats come together and solve this problem.  With partisan politics like ideological warfare, we cannot achieve anything.

So, the idea is that we change the laws so as to allow ANG and federal military personnel to work with state/local police to imprison criminals and escort the homeless to IOI.  Or for simplicity, we may just put them all in jail and rename the prison as IOI.  In those correctional facilities, we will make them work.  First kind of work for prisoners will be sorting out trash in landfills.  We should coordinate with trash collection companies to achieve this. 

Working with trash serve both liberal and conservative purposes.  Inmates will learn to work, and get disciplined.  The proceeds from recycling will help pay for the operation of the prisons.  Reducing the trash will save the environment.  Everybody wins.

If inmates refuse to work, then we will discipline them.  We can reduce their daily portion from 3 meals a day to 2 meals a day; take away gym-usage/visitation privileges; or even reduce the room temperature heating level by 1 degree in winter; solitary confinement, etc.  We will educate inmates just like our parents educated us when we were children.

If inmates prove themselves in recycling in landfills, we will give them a better job, which is the second kind of money-making prison job.  Again, we will have to work with federal and state legislators to change laws to achieve this.  The idea is, to farm Alaskan wild animals in prison.  Let the well-behaving inmates raise bears, moose, etc.  Instead of killing bears that live in Eagle River or letting moose becoming road-kills in Glenn Highway, we sedate them and send them to prisons.  The IOI animal farm will be open to public so the citizens would come with their left-over food to feed bears, moose, etc.  Inmates will clean the farm/zoo/safari and take care of the animals. 

Such prison safari system will satisfy both conservatives and liberals.  Animal activists will love this because we are saving the animals.  Conservatives will like this because inmates will be working and prison will pay for its operation without state fund or taxpayer’s money.  How?  Inmates will carve farm animal bones, tan bear hides, and sell them.  We can even have them process slaughtered bear gall bladders and sell them to Asian countries.  We will be farming them with latest biotechnology so that the animals can reproduce in captivity.  The prison farm/safari will be big, as Alaska has big lands.

If you elect me as Alaska State Senator next year, I will make the projects above my personal and professional mission.

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Census Bureau Officials Detail Effort to Hire Over 1,000 Temporary Workers in Alaska


Contributed by Jessi Curtis

The U.S. Census Bureau is launching a national recruitment effort to hire approximately 1,000 temporary workers to help conduct the 2020 Census in Alaska.“We need people to apply now, so they can be considered for part-time census taker positions next spring,” said Timothy Olson, Census Bureau associate director for field operations. “Recent high school graduates, veterans, retirees, military spouses, seasonal workers and applicants who are bilingual are highly encouraged to apply. It’s important we hire people that have ties to the communities in Alaska in order to have a complete and accurate count.”

Census takers will be hired to work in their communities and go door-to-door to collect responses from those who do not respond to the 2020 Census online, by phone or by mail. In certain remote areas like parts of Alaska, census takers are the only way people can respond to the 2020 Census.

These positions in Alaska pay $28.00–$31.00 per hour, and offer flexible hours, paid training and weekly paychecks.

The selection process for census taker positions begins in December 2020 and will continue through April 2020. Actual enumeration of non-responding households throughout the nation begins in May through early July. Check out 2020census.gov/jobs to apply. 

“AARP knows that historically 50% of census takers are over the age of 50 and many are retirees,” said Dana Marie Kennedy, state director, AARP Arizona. “These folks tend to be reliable, dependable and they know their communities best. They bring with them years of experience and get the job done.”

The 2020 Census officially starts counting people in January 2020 in Toksook Bay, Alaska. Most households in the nation will receive invitations in the mail to respond (online, by phone or by mail) in March 2020. The Census Bureau will begin advertising nationwide in January 2020 to increase awareness about the importance and benefits of participating in the 2020 Census.

The U.S. Constitution mandates that a census of the population be conducted once every 10 years. Census data are used to determine congressional representation in the states and how billions of dollars in federal funds are distributed to states and local communities every year for critical public services and infrastructure, including health clinics, schools, roads and emergency services.

For more information on the 2020 Census, visit 2020census.gov.



Join Us for Colony Christmas: December 13th-15th!


Contributed by Ailis Vann, Greater Palmer Chamber of Commerce

Join us the weekend of December 13th, 14th and 15th for Colony Christmas 2019. This spectacular celebration of both our winter holidays and our rich heritage is sure to bring a warmth of spirit that even a cold Palmer wind can’t beat! Stroll through our delightful winter garden, warm up with a hot meal at one of our fine local eateries, and take care of that pesky holiday shopping list with unique local gifts purveyed at our renowned craft fairs or any one of our amazing small businesses.

A variety of intriguing activities will be hosted throughout Palmer to entertain the young and the young-at-heart. Crafts? We have you covered. Concerts? You bet we have them! We’ll even have a 5ishk, so you can get your exercise in and justify all of the delicious holiday sweets you’ll find. And don’t miss your opportunity with Santa or the Matanuska Maid! Both will be in attendance, so don’t miss your chance to get a photo with either. We’ll have pony rides, horse-drawn carriage rides and reindeer appearances...oh my!

Keep the spirit going at the 2019 Parade of Lights, powered by MEA, which will be full of the community’s best in all their creative glory. You won’t want to miss this chance to see what colorful and creative floats will pass by the grandstand. You’d think we’d cap the night there, but wait, there’s more! Stick around after the parade to feast your eyes on the dazzling fireworks display brought to you by BP. If you’re still craving fun, community and holiday cheer, join us at the MTA Events Tent for a 2-hour concert from Boogie Shoes. 

Make it a priority to bring the family to our cozy little town of Palmer and join us as we embrace the spirit of Christmas, and the spirit of our Colonists in a community celebration that’ll beat any winter’s chill.

Find a schedule of events and the parade application on our website: www.palmerchamber.org or check out “Colony Christmas Palmer Alaska” on Facebook. 



Recycling is Crazy, We Have a Good Solution


Contributed by Jill Farris, Valley Community for Recycling Solutions

Recycling can be confusing! Fortunately, there is a global and national movement to fix our problem. The mission of standardizing recycling labels on bins across the US is gaining traction, from Denali National Park to schools, businesses, and sports stadiums.

The easier it is for people to “recycle right”, the faster recycling becomes a solution to creating a less wasteful economy.  At least that’s what we’ve learned on the job at Valley Community for Recycling Solutions (VCRS), the local non-profit focusing on partnerships and training plus advocacy in order to reduce waste in this great land.

Education holds so much value when it instructs how to save our natural resources and shows what happens to reusable materials. Get the most bang for your buck! Turn waste products back into useful materials instead of burying reusable resources in a landfill. An efficient circular economy is achieved without extra costs or losses. 

The standardized labels on bins help teach consumers how to “recycle right”. As part of the National Park Zero Landfill Initiative, the non-profit Recycle Across America (RAA) is fixing the crisis at federal and community levels with their solution; society-wide standardized labels for recycling bins.

We use (RAA) standardized recycling label system in the VCRS drive through bay and in our classroom, thanks to a generous grant from Subaru of America. Also, attendees at the Alaska State Fair had a chance to see the great work of RAA in action, and to appreciate the huge, nationwide impact a simple label change can have to improve recycling effectiveness.

This summer, RAA staff members brought us new signage on their way to Denali National Park, enhancing major improvements to recycling recovery. The Zero Landfill Initiative, a pilot program, was introduced by the National Parks Conservation Association and Subaru of America with the goal of reducing the total amount of landfill-bound waste in three parks.

After upgrading systems at Denali National Park’s recycling facility, up to 46% of waste has been diverted. Along the road to recycling, VCRS is one of the many partners working to make this program sustainable. We aim to help pave the way for more participants to take the extra step to find a recycling bin. We have been given a great opportunity to spread this message, pushing it forward from our rural back yard into the growing population of Mat-Su community schools, homes and businesses.

The commitment to doing all they can to preserve global natural resources resulted in the first Subaru manufacturing facility in Indiana to achieve zero-landfill status in 2004. One of the starting points that the Indiana plant undertook to work towards its zero-landfill status involved conducting waste audits, literally, dumpster diving, which provided a way to determine what kind of waste the plant was generating.

“I think it’s important to dumpster dive because you actually see what is in there. You can’t get rid of it if you don’t know what it is,” said Denise Coogan, environmental partnership manager at Subaru of America. “We went around everywhere in the [Indiana] plant, we tipped over the dumpsters, and we asked, ‘What are we generating?’ All roads lead back to good inventory, so you must know what you’re generating before you can ever realize how you’re going to get rid of it.”

Continued efforts to nurture the culture will help the Matanuska Valley become zero-waste in 2049 by building relationships with partners who share the same beliefs.

“The future belongs to those who understand that doing more with less is compassionate, prosperous and enduring, and thus more intelligent, even competitive.”

- Paul Hawken



Senior Education Fall Classes


Contributed by Linda Myers-Steele

Senior Education is a program for those 50+ years who want to keep active and continue lifelong learning. Classes are offered free (except for occasion supplies as needed). The fun part is there are no tests, no grades, no homework… Wasilla Senior Center, 1301 Century Circle, Wasilla, hosts the classes at no charge, and all of the presenters are volunteers. Volunteers who are experts in their field! Please join us. No registration required unless noted in the class description. senioreducationwasilla@gmail.com

NOVEMBER SCHEDULE:

BOOK CLUB “I READ WHAT I WANT TO READ”

Tuesday, November 19th, 3:00p.m.-4:00p.m.

ALASKA WILDBIRD REHABILITATION CENTER

Tuesday, November 26th, 3:00p.m.-4:00p.m.

AWRC will care for any wild bird in need, whether injured, sick or orphaned. Kind-hearted members of the public find injured birds and either rescue them or ask for advice. When a bird arrives at the center, its needs are evaluated and their experience to care for the bird is done in the best way possible. Presenter is Jill Parsons, WildBird Rehabilitation Center Volunteer.

DECEMBER SCHEDULE:

AUTHOR of the BOOK SERIES, “AUNT PHIL’S TRUNK”

Tuesday, December 3rd, 3:00p.m.-4:00p.m.

An Alaskan historian’s collection of treasured talents. You will find author, Laurel Downing Bill, interesting, fun and entertaining as she relays the stories of her Aunt Phil’s early life in Alaska, beginning in 1912. And, we’ll have a little Christmas party to celebrate the season.

BOOK CLUB “I READ WHAT I WANT TO READ”

Tuesday, December 10th, 3:00p.m.-4:00p.m.

JANUARY SCHEDULE:

THE BEGINNING of a SERIES of WRITING CLASSES

Tuesday, January 7, 3:00-4:00 p.m.

Have you thought of writing your autobiography, memories of your family, about something that interests you, but you don’t know where to start? This is the class for you. A talented instructor, Tara Wreyford, will help you draw those thoughts out and put them to paper.



Shop Local & Shop Palmer: November 30th-December 20th


Contributed by Ailis Vann, Greater Palmer Chamber of Commerce

Have you ever heard the quote, “When you support a small business, you’re supporting a dream?”

If not, we can promise it's true. People who start businesses are passionate, community-minded and hard-working. The life of a small business owner is a never-ending roller coaster of emotions - constant ups and downs, good news, bad news, great sales days and not so great sales days. What helps these entrepreneurs, more than anything, is your support. Looking for a way to help? Here’s how!

The Greater Palmer Chamber of Commerce works hard to promote and highlight our small businesses. One of the ways that we do this is with our “Shop Palmer” event. 2019 is the second year of this three-week-long event.

Here’s how it works: Come to Palmer to shop between November 30th and December 20th. Every time you spend $10, you get a stamp. There are 10 blocks on the Shop Palmer card. When you complete the card by spending $100, you can drop your card in a box at a participating business of your choice. From there, you can continue to fill cards - there’s no limit on how much you can support our local businesses!

We will be doing twice weekly drawings on Wednesdays and Fridays, rotating through the dropboxes of each participating business for a $25 gift card to that business. On December 11th, we will drop all of the completed cards in a box. We will pick one card and that person will win a $500 VISA gift card. On December 20th, we will gather up the cards again and do another drawing for a $1000 VISA gift card.

It’s a win for you and a win for our small businesses. Do your part to support the dreams and our local economy this holiday season. Shop local and shop Palmer!

For more information, please visit www.palmerchamber.org or check out our event on Facebook.



United Way of Mat-Su Distributes Community Grants for 2020


Contributed by Stephanie Allen, United Way of Mat-Su

United Way of Mat-Su is pleased to announce its FY2020 Community Impact Grant recipients. These agencies meet the health and human services needs of the Mat-Su community in impactful and innovative ways. Projects funded by Community Impact Grants address issues of education, financial stability and health, the building blocks of a strong, vibrant and healthy community.

This year’s grant recipients are:

Access Alaska, Essential Health Access Program: $5,000

Alaska Center for Resource Families, Adopt-A-Palooza: $2,000

Alzheimers of Alaska, Alzheimers and Dementia Support Program: $5,000

American Red Cross of Alaska, Disaster Response: $5,000

Big Brothers Big Sisters, Match Support/Personnel: $4,500

Boys & Girls Club Mat-Su Clubhouse: $5,000

CCS Early Learning, Early Head Start/Head Start: $5,000

Family Promise, Shelter Program: $5,000

Mat-Su Food Bank, Eggs & Margarine: $7,500

MY House, STAY Suicide Prevention Program: $5,000

Nine Star, Fuel Cards for Youth: $2,500

Nugen’s Ranch, Work Therapy Program: $2,500

Palmer Senior Center, Senior Programs: $7,500

Salvation Army Mat-Su Corps, Food Pantry: $7,500

Sunshine Community Health Clinic, Chronic Care Management Program: $2,500

Sunshine Transit, Transit Services: $5,000

The Children’s Place, Counseling Services: $10,000

Upper Susitna Seniors, Meals on Wheels Program: $5,000

Mat-Su Coalition on Housing & Homelessness, Project Homeless Connect: $1,000

Wasilla Area Seniors, Inc., Senior Nutrition Program: $7,500

In total, $100,000 in community grants was distributed to support programs that are helping build a better Mat-Su.

For more information on the UWMS Community Grants program, visit www.unitedwaymatsu.org.



What is a Food Bank?


Contributed by Eddie Ezelle. MatSu Food Bank

What is a food bank?

I have heard on several occasions recently that someone doesn’t think the MatSu Food Bank is a “food bank”. I wish to clarify more by using the description from Feeding America’s website.                                

“A food bank is a non-profit organization that collects and distributes food to hunger-relief charities. Food banks act as food storage and distribution depots for smaller frontline agencies; and usually do not themselves give out food directly to people struggling with hunger..”

(We still maintain the Food Pantry of Wasilla.)

Food banks in the U.S. are very diverse, from small operations serving people spread out across large rural areas to very large facilities that store and distribute many millions of pounds of food each year, and everything in between. A variety of factors impact how food banks work, from the size of the facility to the number of staff members. But, one thing all food banks have in common is that they rely on donors and volunteers to carry out their day-to-day operations.

If you put MatSu in front of “food bank” in the above quote, it describes exactly what we do. Our statistics show from January 2019 to October 2019, we have given other agencies here in the Valley 442,260 lbs. of food. This does not count the 22,000 people served, conservatively, 704,000 lbs. of food in the same time through the Wasilla Food Pantry.

So, I am not sure where the comments about not being a food bank is coming from or based on, but we do a great job of feeding your neighbors in need by helping other agencies and using our own Pantry to get food to families in need. If you don’t understand what we are doing, then I encourage you to investigate, study it and ask questions before repeating rumors about things unknown. If you do not understand what we do, then come see us and find out for yourself. We welcome volunteers!

Thanks,

Eddie Ezelle, Executive Director of MatSu Food Bank



Smoke-Free Laws Protect Everyone’s Health


Contributed by Noel Crowley-Bell

 On October 1st, last year, the Smoke-free Workplace Law was enacted to protect the health of all Alaskans by reducing exposure to secondhand smoke.

As someone who appreciates smoke-free indoor workplaces and public places, I want to say thank you to everyone in our community for supporting the Alaska Smoke-free Workplace Law. I am thrilled to see that our community is free from secondhand cigarette and marijuana smoke, as well as aerosols from electronic smoking devices.

There aren’t a lot of things one can do to save lives, but smoke-free indoor spaces is one of those things that quickly improves the health of our Alaskan communities. Nonsmokers who are exposed to secondhand smoke at work are more likely to develop heart disease or lung cancer. The Smoke-free Alaska Law protects employees and the public from the dangerous health effects associated with secondhand smoke. Smoke-free workplace laws have been proven to reduce the incidence of heart attacks and improve pulmonary function, encourage quitting and preventing kids from starting. This new law may not end our problem with cancer and heart disease, but it will eliminate a known health hazard for nonsmokers who want to enjoy or work in our community’s businesses.

I am proud of our community’s willingness to make healthy workplaces and spaces a reality for the Mat-Su Borough. It is this willingness and support that has helped the Smoke-free Workplace Law be such a success in this first year.