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  • The Kenai Peninsula Borough Assembly considers a change to its invocation policy. Plus, numerous rivers and streams in the Northwest Arctic are turning orange.
  • Election results from the Kenai Peninsula’s legislative races. Plus, candidates, sign wavers and poll workers talk Election Day.
  • Harvest Alaska and Marathon Petroleum announce plans to revive the Kenai LNG Terminal in Nikiski. Plus, fiber arts are on display at the Kenai Art Center.
  • A house fire kills a man and levels a home in Kasilof. The state is looking for input on how to improve trail access along its roads. And the studded tire removal deadline is extended due to long-lasting winter conditions.
  • A flood advisory has been issued for the Primrose area, north of Seward, and Cooper Landing, and a group of Alaska organizations have won a $94 million grant for mariculture. Plus, an update on the school district's bus driver shortage.
  • Police arrest two Kenai men for kidnapping and assault. A midair crash in Katmai National Park injures one, and a month after catastrophic flooding in Juneau, a lost cat returns home.
  • A play that retells the story of Robin Hood will be performed inside the Kenai Art Center gallery. And a coal export facility in Seward is set to be demolished, signaling an end to the state’s coal industry.
  • The Alaska Gasline Development Corporation says its close to an agreement to finally build a natural gas pipeline. Plus, Alaskans remember Jimmy Carter's lasting impacts on the state.
  • Federal fisheries managers say they’ve started work on a new salmon management plan for Cook Inlet. And tribes in Kenai and Ninilchik get grants to address opioid misuse in their communities.
  • Fish and Game releases its commercial fishing season summary for Upper Cook Inlet. And there were no fatalities within Alaska’s commercial fishing fleets this year for the second time on record. Plus, a Homer group delays plans to open a charter school on the southern peninsula.
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