Archives for March 21, 2014

State employees prepare to move from Douglas to Bill Ray Center

Lauren Sill didn’t make the end-of-February deadline to rid her office space of personal items.

“I have pictures of my daughter and I have calendars and just different notes and pictures and decorations tacked to the walls and a bunch of coffee cups – I think those we’re allowed to keep until we move, those probably don’t have to go quite yet. And plants, I have plants,” Sill says. 

Sill is a subsistence resource specialist for the Department of Fish and Game. She’s been mostly out of town the past few months for work and plans to start packing when her field season ends in a couple weeks.

About 160 state employees in the Douglas Island building will temporarily relocate to the Bill Ray Center in downtown Juneau starting in April. The move will accommodate the state’s $18 million remodel of the Douglas building. 

“We have a lot less space in the Bill Ray Center so a lot of things are going to storage, so just trying to figure out our files and our books and things that we’ll need for the next little while and pack it up,” Sill says. 

Her officemate Rosalie Grant is further along in the moving process. Last month, she took items off her wall, like artwork, maps and family photos. Her fish tank went home and she gave away her plants.

“My office is looking pretty bare right now,” she says.

More than 100 fish and game employees and 43 from the Department of Corrections are relocating to the Bill Ray Center in waves. Corrections moves in the beginning of April. Fish and Game goes next in four phases. Renovation is scheduled to begin June 1.

Down the hall from Sill and Grant’s office, biometrician Kray Van Kirk is really close to having his office entirely packed up.

We got rid of a lot of stuff. We were purging manuals from, like, 1995 and old Windows 95 disks and things, and ‘how to’ use this and ‘how to’ use that,” Van Kirk says.

Unlike everyone else at the Douglas building, Van Kirk and two others are not moving to the Bill Ray Center. They’re temporarily going to fish and game headquarters located across the Douglas Bridge, but will return to Douglas when the renovation is complete.

“We’ve already – two years out – picked our desk formations and how they fit together along with our little pen holders and cups and everything,” he says. 

In the remodeled Douglas building, fish and game employees will all be in 6-by-8-foot cubicles as part of the universal space standards being unrolled in state buildings throughout Alaska. None of the fish and game employees in Douglas will have an office anymore.

Van Kirk says he has reservations about the open office model. He’s gotten used to talking loudly with other biometricians in his office.

“If we want to work on a stock assessment model and we have a particular issue and one of us says — ‘Hey, what do we do with this catch curve analysis?’ — we can all sit here and jabber and make a bunch of noise. In a large area like that I think we’ll be more hesitant to do that because we don’t want to bother somebody who’s sitting 20 feet away who doesn’t have anything to do with what we do,” he says.

Leon Shaul has worked in the Douglas building since 1984. He’s not looking forward to relocating to the Bill Ray Center, but sees it as inevitable.

“The building obviously needs some work as far as retaining heat. It’s built to 1960s standards. So I think that part’s necessary and to accomplish that, I guess we have to move,” Shaul says.

The state is leasing the Bill Ray Center from First National Bank Alaska for $49,000 a month. The renovation is expected to take 16 months.

Juneau Afternoon 3/24/14

Monday at 3 on KTOO-FM on A Juneau Afternoon, Annie Bartholomew hosts

We’ll talk with Dov Gartenberg and Sue Bahleda about NAMI – Juneau;

Mariya Lovischuk will be here to highlight next month’s Empty Bowls Banquet fundraiser for the Glory Hole;

Terri Campbell and Kevin Ritchie will talk about the Juneau After-School Coalition;

We’ll discuss this week’s Planetarium presentation on Aphrodite & Venus, with guest, Ken Fix.

That, Writer’s Almanac, Bird Note, music and more, Monday at 3 on KTOO-NEWS.

Gallup: Americans Put The Environment Over Economic Growth Again

In 2009, when the Great Recession took hold of the United States, Americans reversed a long-running trend in polling: For the first time since Gallup first asked the question in the 1980s, more Americans said they favored economic growth over protecting the environment.

In a new survey released today, Gallup reports that trend has reversed itself, with 50 percent of Americans saying they agree with this statement: “protection of the environment should be given priority even at the risk of curbing economic growth.”

Take a look at the historical chart:

Gallop
Gallop

Gallup adds:

“Democrats and Republicans are sharply divided as to whether the environment should be given priority, even at the risk of curbing economic growth. Two-thirds of Democrats say the environment should be prioritized higher, while about one-third of Republicans say the same thing. This is the largest partisan gulf since 1997, mainly as result of the sharp rise among Democrats prioritizing the environment higher than economic growth. Both parties give higher priority to the environment than they did prior to the 2008-2009 economic recession.”

Copyright 2014 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.image
Read original article – Published March 20, 2014 6:32 PM
Gallup: Americans Put The Environment Over Economic Growth Again

Google Says It’s Beefed Up Encryption Because Of NSA Revelations

A Google data center in Changhua, Taiwan. Sam Yeh/AFP/Getty Images
A Google data center in Changhua, Taiwan. Sam Yeh/AFP/Getty Images

Google announced on Thursday that it has beefed up its security in response to reports that the National Security Agency was scooping up data from its servers.

In a statement, Nicolas Lidzborski, Gmail security engineering lead, says Google is now encrypting data as a it moves between the company’s servers and every session of Gmail will now use a secure HTTPS connection.

If you remember, back in November, The Washington Post reported that the NSA intercepted electronic traffic sent by Yahoo and Google to their respective data centers around the globe. The NSA, as you might imagine, would want to do this, because the data used to move between servers in a raw format. That means the NSA wouldn’t have to work to decrypt anything.

In the statement, Lidzborski said Google made securing data as it moved between servers a “top priority after last summer’s revelations.”

Of course, this statement comes just a day after the top lawyer for the NSA told the government’s civil liberties watchdog panel that his agency was collecting data with the “full knowledge and assistance of any company from which information is obtained.”

“Prism was an internal government term that as the result of leaks became the public term,” Rajesh De said, according to The Guardian. “Collection under this program was a compulsory legal process, that any recipient company would receive.”

Google and other tech companies have vehemently denied that the U.S. government was granted access to its servers.

As we reported, Google’s Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt called the alleged snooping “outrageous.”

“It’s really outrageous that the National Security Agency was looking between the Google data centers, if that’s true. The steps that the organization was willing to do without good judgment to pursue its mission and potentially violate people’s privacy, it’s not OK,” Schmidt told The Wall Street Journal. “The Snowden revelations have assisted us in understanding that it’s perfectly possible that there are more revelations to come.”

Copyright 2014 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.image
Read original article – Published March 20, 2014 3:08 PM
Google Says It’s Beefed Up Encryption Because Of NSA Revelations

Witnesses begin taking the stand in Yakutat homicide case

Opening statements were held Thursday and the first witnesses took the stand in the case of a man accused of killing his girlfriend at a Yakutat lodge 17 1/2 years ago.

Robert Kowalski, 52, is charged with first and second degree murder for the death of Sandra Perry. The 39-year old woman was shot and killed at the Glacier Bear Lodge in July 1996.

Prosecutor James Fayette jolted the jury and spectators with his opening statements that included a vivid description of the fatal injuries sustained by Perry after a shotgun was fired at her head at close range.

“Blew her head off, clean off,” Fayette said.

That Kowalski was handling the shotgun when Perry was killed is not in dispute. But the question is whether he intentionally killed her or he knew his conduct could lead to her death, or whether it was an accident – as Kowalski claimed — that stemmed from tripping or a reaction after being startled by Perry.

Public defender Eric Hedland said the investigation by local police and state troopers was immediate and thorough.

“I think I will be able to establish that with any witness that is asked to give a rendition of an event, over time, there will be discrepancies,” Hedland said. “That’s true if you’re taking about an alleged victim, a dispassionate eyewitness, or the possible suspect. But the core facts that Mr. Kowalski described did not change.”

After opening statements, some of those who testified included Perry’s oldest son, a waitress and dinner cook at the lodge, and a lodge resident who was asleep in an adjacent room when Perry died.

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