Murkowski Announces Investments for Sitka in FY24 Six-Bill Appropriations Package

Washington, DC – U.S. Senator Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), a senior member of the Senate Appropriation Committee and Ranking Member of the Interior-Environment Appropriations Subcommittee, announced investments for Sitka on the six-bill Fiscal Year 2024 appropriations package. The bill passed the Senate in a bipartisan 78-22 vote.

 

“After months of unnecessary delay, Congress has finally taken a big step by passing six of our 12 appropriations bills for Fiscal Year 2024 on an overwhelmingly bipartisan basis. Considering the vast size of our state and limited infrastructure, the significant investments I have included in these measures are well-justified and much-needed,” Murkowski said. “From programmatic wins to congressionally directed spending projects, the funding I have secured is the direct result of working together with Alaskans from across the state to address the needs of their communities. This package invests in our military while enabling us respond to workforce shortages, food insecurity, clean drinking water needs, the housing crunch, the high cost of energy, crises in our fisheries, and more.”

 

“The effects of the housing shortage have been seen across the state, but nowhere are the impacts felt more acutely than in Sitka. Securing over $2 million for the Sitka Community Development Corporation to build a new apartment complex will offer new home ownership opportunities for first time buyers, with the Trust’s model of ownership preserving that affordability permanently. Thanks to the partnership of the city and the borough, we are looking at a new neighborhood of fourteen homes plus apartment units.”

 

Click here or the icon above to download an audio version of Senator Murkowski’s quote.

 

Alaskans have expressed their appreciation for Senator Murkowski’s work to deliver these strategically targeted investments.

 

“The Sitka Community Land Trust is deeply grateful for the funding which Senator Murkowski has secured for an apartment building in Sitka,” said Randy Hughey, Sitka Community Land Trust. “This CDS will enable the work of this non-profit to continue for years. This helps Sitka a great deal!”

 

“Senator Murkowski’s support for the Alaska Longline Fishermen’s Association’s Boat Energy Transition Accelerator (ALFA BETA) Feasibility Study is a huge step toward lowering energy costs in Alaska’s seafood industry and reducing our fleet's carbon footprint,” said Linda Behnken, Executive Director of the Alaska Longline Fishermen's Association. “With Senator Murkowski’s leadership, our fishing communities will drive the transition to locally-generated and renewable energy. We are tremendously grateful for Senator Murkowski relentless advocacy for Alaska’s fisheries.” 

 

FY24 Six-Bill Appropriations Package Highlights for Sitka:

 

Expanding Housing, Childcare, and Community Development Access

 

Murkowski listened to the needs of Alaskans and worked to bring home funding for housing and childcare facilities in the state. She also focused on protecting Alaska’s diverse history and landmarks—from the Iditarod Trail to Native languages, Murkowski is working to ensure future generations have access to our state’s rich history.

 

·       Statewide: $3.3 million for the Alaska Department of Public Safety to establish rural public safety housing.

·       Sitka: $2.17 million for the Sitka Community Development Corporation to build an apartment complex. 

 

Cleaner and More Affordable Energy

 

As a leading voice on energy, Murkowski continues to provide crucial support to advance Alaska projects and make our state’s energy cleaner and more affordable. In this package she provided support for tidal energy projects, secured funding for critical mineral activities, and provided for the Arctic Energy Office to support projects in rural communities and throughout the Arctic.

 

·       Sitka: $514,000 for the Alaska Longline Fishermen’s Association to research and identify decarbonization and clean energy transition options for vessel owners and shoreside businesses.

 

Strengthening Alaska Fisheries and Oceans Research

 

Alaska’s oceans and fisheries are the heartbeat of communities across the state—and that’s why Murkowski worked hard to include provisions throughout the appropriations package that will strengthen our blue economy, support coastal communities, promote electronic monitoring development and installation, and enhance research abilities to create healthier fisheries.

 

Murkowski helped secure more than $205 million for Fisheries Data Collections, Surveys, and Assessments; $44 million for Regional Fishery Management Councils and Fisheries Commissions; and $65 million for the Pacific Coastal Salmon Recovery Fund. 

 

She also secured the following CDS requests to strengthen Alaska’s fisheries and oceans research abilities:

 

·       Statewide: $2.01 million for the Marine Exchange of Alaska to create a user guide to keep ships sailing safely in the Arctic.

·       Statewide: $1.2 million for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game to fund coastal marine surveys that support sustainable salmon management in the northern Bering Sea, southern Bering Sea, and western Gulf of Alaska.

·       Statewide: $2.5 million for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game to better equip their research vessels with necessary technology and upgrades.

·       Statewide: $4 million for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game to fund juvenile Pacific salmon research.

·       Statewide: $2 million for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game for research and equipment related to Alaska critical salmon stocks.

·       Statewide: $2.8 million for the University of Alaska System to research the impacts of environmental stressors on freshwater and marine aquatic life in Alaska.

 

Fighting Illegal Drug Use

 

As illegal drugs devastate families and communities throughout Alaska, Murkowski continues to fight for drug prevention efforts and support for those impacted by this terrible scourge. In addition to the recently enacted FEND Off Fentanyl Act, she has supported the Community Based Coalition Enhancement Grant Program, which will encourage community-led coalitions to raise awareness of fentanyl and prevent drug overdose deaths caused by the drug. 

 

·       Statewide: Murkowski continues to support the Drug Free Communities program and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas program. 

·       Statewide: Murkowski has pushed to ensure that medication assisted treatment is available and accessible to individuals with substance use disorder (SUD). The bill includes language to permanently require state Medicaid plans to cover medication-assisted treatment, and to allow treatment of SUD at institutions

Supporting Victim Services, Public Safety and Services Efforts, and Vulnerable Populations

 

Murkowski continues to focus on preventing domestic violence and sexual assault in Alaska and providing critical services for victims. From funding the Sexual Assault Services Program at $80 million, to advocating for increases to the Services for Rural Victims program—she is working to provide significant support for Alaskans who are at risk or in need. Murkowski is also dedicated to supporting survivors of domestic violence and sexual assault while investing in projects that work to stop the violence from occurring in the first place.

 

·       Statewide: $4 million for the Council on Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault to support victim services organizations.

 

 

 

Ensuring Access to Quality Health Care

 

Murkowski continues to fight for funding to increase access to health care. She has continued to support additional funding for the Community Health Centers and the National Health Service Corps, programs that provide critical care to Alaskans throughout the state.

 

This appropriation’s package also includes a boost in Medicare pay for doctors to address the additional strain that physicians saw when physician reimbursement was cut on January 1, ensuring our providers receive adequate reimbursement and that our Seniors continue to have access to their providers. Community Health Centers were reauthorized through 2024, with a much needed increase of $270 million in annual funding.

 

Bolstering Food Security

 

Murkowski worked with her colleagues to ensure support for Alaska’s farmers and help them increase food security. Some of her top priorities were ensuring programmatic funding for essential programs for Alaska’s food security, including an increase for the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children (WIC) and full funding for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). Additional programmatic wins include increasing for the Summer Food Service Program, enabling children in low-income families to receive the nutrition they need when schools are closed.

 

Background:

 

H.R. 4366 includes the annual funding bills from the Appropriations Subcommittees on Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies; Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies; Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies; Energy and Water Development; Military Construction, Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies; and Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies.  

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For further information, please contact Senator Murkowski’s press office at 202-224-9301 or 202-224-8069. Visit our website at http://murkowski.senate.gov

ALFA is Partnering with Real Time Data to Advance Deckhand’s Logbook Platform

Deckhand, 2024

The investment will support the development of Deckhand, an electronic platform that aims to revolutionize sustainable commercial fisheries management worldwide.

[Bellingham, WA] – Real Time Data, a global provider of advanced data collection solutions for the commercial seafood industry, announced today that the company has secured a strategic investment from Builders Vision, a Chicago-based impact platform dedicated to building a more humane and healthy planet. The partnership is the latest investment for the company, which has raised USD $750,000 in this round, including from existing investors who have a strong belief in its success, and aims to enhance the capabilities of Deckhand, Real Time Data's flagship electronic logbook technology that captures catch, environmental, and fishing business data on the ocean. The technology was designed to better measure and promote sustainability in the fishing and seafood industry.

Read it here

Scientists are freaking out about ocean temperatures

New York Times

by David Gelles

February 27th, 2024

From his office at the University of Miami, Brian McNoldy, an expert in hurricane formation, is tracking the latest temperature data from the North Atlantic with a mixture of concern and bewilderment.

For the past year, oceans around the world have been substantially warmer than usual. Last month was the hottest January on record in the world’s oceans, and temperatures have continued to rise since then. The heat wave has been especially pronounced in the North Atlantic.

Read more here

Tell NOAA No to Bottom Trawling

UPDATE: NMFS has suspended this experiment in response to public concern. Thanks for speaking up!

From SalmonState:

In an effort to “research” the effects of commercial bottom-trawling activity on the seafloor and animals that live there, the Alaska Fisheries Science Center proposes to drag trawl gear, or as they put it “conduct a commercial bottom-trawl research project” in the Northern Bering Sea Climate Resilience Area. Under this project named, Northern Bering Sea Effects of Trawling Study, or 'NETS' they will use research trawl gear to test whether bottom-dwelling species recover and, if they do, what changes there are one or more years after intentionally damaging their habitat.

Tell NOAA to abandon NETS

My Turn: We need to make food security a priority in Alaska’s 2024 legislative session

Juneau Empire

By Colin Peacock

Sunday, February 4, 2024 4:15pm

After years of investment through Gov. Dunleavy’s Food Security Task Force (2023), the Legislature’s Food Strategy Task Force (2023-present), and the Alaska Food Network’s Statewide Food Security Action Plan (2022) we are incredibly well-informed and ready to move forward on meaningful actions to improve food security across the state. This 2024 legislative session presents a huge opportunity for our leaders to enact some of these changes, and prioritize building a thriving food system, strengthening a vital economic sector and safeguarding the well-being of every Alaskan.

Read it here

Fishing Far into the Future

AKBiz Magazine

By Dimitria Lavrakas

February 2024

Crew training aims to hook a new generation

Thirty years ago, all a young person needed to fish commercially was a boat, some gear, and a sense of adventure. According to the Alaska Longline Fishermen’s Association (ALFA), young fishermen today face staggering entry costs, high operating costs, and a level of risk that is equivalent to buying a starter hotel.

ALFA is committed to helping interested persons enter the industry. Through a variety of programs, it’s helping the next generation of commercial fishermen launch and sustain viable businesses.

Read full article here.

Help Alaska’s fisheries – reduce methane emissions

Alaska Beacon

By LINDA BEHNKEN and KATE TROLL

JANUARY 9, 2024 4:02 PM

NOAA now confirms that another critical Alaska fishery is in decline due to successive marine heat waves. First there was the loss of 10 billion snow crabs and the close of the once-lucrative Bering Sea crab fisheries; now we know that climate change (warming seas) is the culprit behind the crash of chum salmon on the Yukon and Kuskokwim rivers. Both these fisheries are the lifeblood to many Alaska communities and villages. From the Yukon to Kodiak, from the Arctic to Ketchikan, Alaska’s coastal fisheries must now confront the dual threat of heat waves and ocean acidification.  

See article online here


Reducing Carbon Emissions in the Fishing Fleet

Read online at National Fishermen

December 22, 2023

Guest Author:

Linda Behnken & Kay Kreiss

The Sitka fishing fleet is pioneering energy-efficient commercial fishing. In 2021, the Alaska Longline Fishermen’s Association (ALFA) was selected by the DOE’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) to partner in exploring ways fishing vessels can be powered by low- or zero-emissions propulsion systems. Two years later, the Vehicle Technology Office (VTO) funded ALFA to oversee three projects that will pilot different low-emission technologies.

The first is a hybrid battery-diesel system that allows a fishing boat to use diesel when traveling quickly to fishing grounds and then switch to a battery-electric motor when fishing. This system can reduce fuel consumption by up to 80% without requiring significant changes in fishing practices on one-to-two-day trips. It will be funded with grant support from AgWest Farm Credit and Acme Seafoods, with coordination and data support from Kempy Energetics. The hybrid system is designed to optimize the use of the engine and motor and will be equipped with data loggers to measure the fuel efficiency achieved at sea.

The second pilot project will test a different type of propulsion system that will be determined based on interest from the fleet. One candidate is a series hybrid system that allows fishing boats to reduce fuel use when running short or long distances. At all speeds, an electric motor powers the propeller, and a battery powers the motor. The battery can be charged at a Sitka dock with our green hydropower, or if a skipper needs to travel hundreds of miles, a diesel generator on-board can recharge the boat’s batteries. ALFA is inviting boat owners to apply for this retrofit.  You can find the pre-application at https://www.alfafish.org/vto-project.

Trawlers sue over halibut bycatch limit

From ALFA Staff

December 27th, 2023

On December 19th, 2023,, the Amendment 80 (A80) trawl fleet sued to prevent implementation of the Bering Sea halibut bycatch action that ties bycatch caps to halibut abundance. While not unexpected the refusal by the A80 fleet to share in the conservation responsibility for halibut is at best disturbing.  

The Final Environmental Impact Statement for this action documents that the A80 companies were responsible for 23.8 million pounds of halibut mortality from 2010-2019.  Bycatch levels not only exceed limits set for the directed fishery but in some years bycatch has threatened to preclude the small boat directed fishery completely.

Bycatch is deducted from the total allowable catch before catch limits are set for the directed halibut fishery. Bycatch caps, set when halibut were far more abundant, have never been triggered. Meanwhile catch limits for the directed halibut fisheries have been steadily reduced as halibut abundance has declined to protect the stocks from overharvest.    

After six years of analysis, testimony, and debate, the Council voted to connect halibut caps to halibut abundance, lowering bycatch when stocks are low to prevent overfishing. Sound reasonable?  Not if you are one of the five A80 companies.  Council action reduced bycatch caps below current bycatch levels by 2.4% --but even that sharing of conservation is too much for the A80 fleet.  

ALFA will join long-term allies to intervene in the lawsuit on behalf of the federal government.  We are fundraising to support our engagement.  Please contribute through the ALFA website (alfafish.org) with the memo “halibut lawsuit” and we will dedicate your contribution to defending halibut stocks from trawl bycatch. 

Contribute like the future of the halibut stock – and of your fishery—depend on it.

Why Are Alaska’s Rivers Turning Orange?

Streams in Alaska are turning orange with iron and sulfuric acid. Scientists are trying to figure out why

Scientific American

BY ALEC LUHN

January 1st, 2024

“It was a cloudy July afternoon in Alaska's Kobuk Valley National Park, part of the biggest stretch of protected wilderness in the U.S. We were 95 kilometers (60 miles) from the nearest village and 400 kilometers from the road system. Nature doesn't get any more unspoiled. But the stream flowing past our feet looked polluted. The streambed was orange, as if the rocks had been stained with carrot juice. The surface glistened with a gasoline like rainbow sheen. “This is bad stuff,” said Patrick Sullivan, an ecologist at the University of Alaska Anchorage.”

“….Less than a dozen meters away the stream flowed into the Salmon River, a ribbon of swift channels and shimmering rapids that winds south from the snow-dimpled dun peaks of the Brooks Range. This is the last frontier in the state known as “the last frontier,” a 1,000-kilometer line of pyramidlike slopes that wall off the northern portion of Alaska from the gray, wind-raked Arctic Coast.

“Now, however, the Salmon is quite literally rusting.”

Read Full Article Here