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  • Climate change hasn’t recently been a Republican priority. But some young conservatives are hoping to change the narrative within their party.
  • 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.
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