News from around Alaska...

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News from around Alaska... 〰️

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The links on this page are regularly updated from a variety of sources to provide timely and relevant information. Sources may change as new stories and updates become available.

Alaska News, Regional News, Alaska, Typhoon Halong George Sookiayak Alaska News, Regional News, Alaska, Typhoon Halong George Sookiayak

Documenting an Alaska Village, Before and After the Storm That Destroyed It

image from: propublica.org

Joann Carl’s dog Rocky, a long-eared, short-legged mix the color of graham crackers, has become Alaska famous since I first met Carl in April. Over the past few months, she’s seen his photo all over Facebook, she said, rescued after Typhoon Halong wiped away more than half the homes in her coastal Alaska Native village of Kipnuk, population 700.

At the Anchorage Daily News, we’re based in Alaska’s largest city but travel as often as we can to small communities like Kipnuk in an attempt to cover a state that’s twice the size of Texas. We try to report more than one story at a time to justify the expense of plane tickets. Flights to a remote village in a small plane cost the same as a trip to New York. But rarely do we have the chance to document a community just before the breaking news arrives.

Maybe you didn’t hear much about the typhoon. It began as a tropical storm, dumping record rainfall in parts of Japan before swirling toward Alaska. By the time it reached our shores, the remnants of the storm still carried enough force to flood two villages, sweeping away homes and leaving as many as three people dead.

I’m writing to you about the storm because photojournalist Marc Lester and I happened to visit Kipnuk shortly before the typhoon. Marc returned to cover the evacuation, providing a look at an Alaska village on the front lines of climate change just before and after the devastation.

The story of destruction in Carl’s hometown, along with the nearby village of Kwigillingok, adds an exclamation point to long-simmering fears about the future of Alaska coastal villages. Which town will be wiped away next? Where will climate refugees live? Should their former homes be rebuilt? If not, what does it mean for the future of these communities?

(READ MORE - propublica.org)

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ktuu.com, Regional News George Sookiayak ktuu.com, Regional News George Sookiayak

Alaska newborns kick off 2026 hours apart in Nome

NOME, Alaska (KTUU) - Two babies born within hours of each other in Nome helped ring in 2026, despite having different birth years.

Owen Lynden Elton Seppilu, a baby boy, and Octavia Norlina Kogassagoon, a baby girl, were separated by about nine hours at birth last week, but while Owen made it before the end of 2025, little Octavia waited until 2026 to make her appearance.

Octavia is likely the first newborn of the year in Alaska, having an official time of 12:23 a.m. on Jan. 1, 2026. (READ MORE - ktuu.com)

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The Norton Sound is a news and events aggregation site that collects and shares information about what’s happening across the Norton Sound and Seward Peninsula region of Alaska. Unless otherwise stated, content featured on this site is not copyrighted by The Norton Sound; we serve solely as an aggregator, highlighting news, announcements, and events from a variety of sources.