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The Kenai City Council donates money to boost landscaping efforts at Triumvirate Theatre's new playhouse. A bill moving through Congress would forbid states from banning lawfully made Alaska ivory art. Plus, Alaska lawmakers consider the future of daylight savings.
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Soldotna mulls how to best fund capital projects after a new report shows spending growth is outpacing income growth. Plus, U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski delivers her annual address to the Alaska Legislature.
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City officials say a fine would discourage cut-throughs and reduce the possibility of car accidents.
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Kenai considers ways to stop drivers from cutting through parking lots. Plus, federal funding cuts threaten Alaska library programs.
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The Kenai Peninsula's gardening season started earlier than normal for many because of this year’s mild winter. Local plant nurseries and greenhouses say that's good for business.
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Police Chief Stace Escott says the existing cameras have multiple problems.
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The City of Soldotna will spend more than $150,000 upgrading the Soldotna Police Department's network of body-warn, vehicle and department cameras. Plus, an Anchorage man roller skates his way across the Kenai Peninsula.
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The team says they will keep looking until they’ve recovered all human remains from the wreckage site.
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A team of volunteers recovers the remains of three members of a Texas family missing since their boat capsized in Kachemak Bay last summer. Seismic activity declines at Mt. Spurr, but geologists say it could still erupt. Plus, a Seward man walks away after being pinned by a 700-pound boulder while hiking.
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The male pup was found without its mother on a beach near Kenai. Alaska SeaLife Center staff estimate the pup was likely born the day he was rescued.
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High school seniors in the Kenai Peninsula Borough School District moved their tassels from right to left last week at graduation ceremonies. That means that nearly 600 students will be leaving the school district, a small part of the district’s downward trend in enrollment.
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Now that borough code matches state law, the assembly will still need to pass an ordinance if it wants to spend public money promoting a ballot proposition. But, they won’t need to go around their own rules first.