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Federal workers in Juneau face terminations, uncertainty as government downsizing continues

Former U.S. Forest Service employee Matthew Brodsky radios with boats that are about to pass through the Narrows in Ford’s Terror in the summer of 2023. As a wilderness ranger, Brodsky would provide mariners with information about hazards and conditions in Tracy Arm Fjord during the busy summer season. (Photo courtesy of Matthew Brodsky)

Matthew Brodsky got his dream job in 2023. 

As a wilderness ranger for the Tongass National Forest, he patrolled Tracy Arm Fjord by kayak in the summer season, monitoring environmental data and providing information to mariners and visitors aboard cruise ships.

But last week, Brodsky says he and other U.S. Forest Service staff in Juneau were called into a meeting. 

“The bomb was dropped that nine people were getting fired that day in Juneau, and it was the first wave of, you know, an indefinite amount of waves,” Brodsky said. “And when it was all said and done, that basically every single probationary employee in the Forest Service was going to be fired for the exact same reason, which was poor performance.”

His termination letter arrived on Sunday. The letter from the Forest Service director of human resources in Washington, D.C. reads in part: “The Agency finds, based on your performance, that you have not demonstrated that your further employment at the Agency would be in the public interest.”

“Even knowing that was going to come, seeing that language show up, and knowing for a month that I’m probably going to lose my job, it didn’t really dampen how that read, and what a slap in the face that was to actually see it in writing from some person I’ve never met and who has no idea, like the work I’ve done, or my coworkers either,” he said.

Most federal employees must complete a one-year probationary period after they’re hired. But Brodsky was hired under a Forest Service program aimed at recruiting people already in Alaska that included a two-year probationary period. For him, that period ends in June. He says some of his coworkers had just a few weeks left in theirs. Many of them are now struggling with whether to stay in Juneau. 

“I don’t want to leave this community,” he said. “I know people that probably will have to – a lot of young people who, you know, saw themselves living here and starting a life here, or they did start a life here … not just for Juneau, but for other communities around Alaska.”

U.S. Forest Service Juneau Ranger District headquarters on Backloop Road. (Photo by Heather Bryant/KTOO)

Shortly after President Donald Trump took office last month, more than two million federal employees received an email from the Office of Personnel Management offering full pay and benefits through September in return for their resignation. 

Brodsky and many of his coworkers didn’t actually have access to the email when it was first sent out – they’re seasonal, and didn’t return to pay status until this month. Nationally, some federal employees have reported being fired even after accepting the offer, though the Trump Administration said Sunday that was a mistake.

Requests for information about the total number of firings within the Tongass region were directed to the Forest Service’s Washington, D.C. office, which has not responded to KTOO. But a local union representative said 124 Forest Service employees across the state had been terminated as of Tuesday. 

According to a report from the Juneau Economic Development Council, Juneau had roughly 700 federal civilian employees as of 2023. In the Southeast region, more than 1,300 people were federally employed.

Across the state, about 15,000 people work for the federal government. 

The layoffs weren’t limited to the Forest Service – the National Park Service and Federal Highway Administration were also affected. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration employees in Juneau have been told to expect layoffs too.

The anxiety Brodsky talked about doesn’t just affect workers on probation. Several federal employees shared their concerns with KTOO anonymously because they were afraid of losing their jobs.

One NOAA employee said the atmosphere at work is grim. He said the federal government’s actions show that probationary workers are being targeted regardless of their performance, and he doesn’t know who will be next.

“I didn’t really think that the administration would break the law in that way. So, yeah, the fear of that went from a scare tactic to more of a reality,” he said. 

He said the unilateral decisions make federal workers like him feel powerless. 

“I’m really sad for people who have lost their jobs, and I’m really sad for America … I don’t think this is what Americans wanted when they chose Trump as president, and don’t think anyone who’s making these decisions actually knows the impact, and that feels like a huge waste.”

Another federal employee in natural resources management said the threat of a layoff meant she had cut back on spending. 

“I’ve spent close to 30 years serving my country and protecting the environment and thinking I was responsible and had a good plan, and now I don’t know if I can rely on that anymore, And I don’t know what I’m going to do,” she said.

She called the emails from the federal government “emotional terrorism” and said she didn’t think it will end with federal employees.

“We’re the targets now, but I don’t even, I don’t know who it’ll be next,” she said. “Who would have ever thought that federal employees would be targeted as the enemy?”

In a social media statement on Friday, U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski criticized the terminations, which her office estimated could be anywhere from dozens to more than a hundred.

“Many of these terminations will do more harm than good, stunting opportunities in Alaska and leaving holes in our communities,” the statement reads.

She wrote that she shared the administration’s goal of downsizing the government, but took issue with the execution.

“Indiscriminate workforce cuts aren’t efficient and won’t fix the federal budget, but they will hurt good people who have answered the call to public service to do important work for our nation.”

More than 500 people rallied against the layoffs and other Trump administration actions outside the Capitol in Juneau on Monday as part of nationwide protests. Among them were recently terminated federal workers, and federal workers who feared for their jobs.

One NOAA employee, who didn’t give her name because she is afraid of retaliation, said workers received an email over the weekend that said it is likely that all probationary employees in her office will be let go.

“Alaska has a lot of subsistence people that need to understand how their weather and their climate and their environment’s changing, and if we lose employees in NOAA, or we cut back NOAA’s power, they’re not going to have those services,” she said. 

But the loss of federal workers in Juneau ripples out into the private sector, too. Especially for the approaching tourism season. Mike Hekkers, a local guide in the summers, said he’s upset about the layoffs.

“I’ve heard a lot of the staff at the Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center have lost their jobs or won’t be there. There’s going to be about 900,000 people coming to the Mendenhall Glacier visitor center area this summer, and there may be no services, nobody patrolling for bear issues, managing the buses and the taxis and the people.”

Looking around at the dispersing rally, he said it was great to see so many people outraged, even as a torrent of changes come from the Trump administration.

“It’s discouraging, but we’re going to keep fighting,” he said. “We’ll see what tomorrow brings, but I’m going to stay the course.”

Brodsky, the former wilderness ranger, says he has no plans to leave Juneau at the moment. He’s looking for other jobs, and he hopes he’ll find something he loves as much as the last one.

Are you a federal worker in Juneau? Share your perspective with KTOO. 

Juneau resident counts his blessings after California fire destroys home of 30 years

Juneau residents Drew Dembowski and Katy Giorgio pose outside Los Angeles International Airport on Jan. 12, 2025. (Photo courtesy of Katy Giorgio)

Everyone saw the images of homes burning throughout greater Los Angeles earlier this month in what has now been called one of the most destructive urban fires in United States history.

That included two Juneau residents, one of whom fled the Eaton Fire as it consumed the community he had lived in for decades.

On the night of Jan. 7, Juneau resident Drew Dembowski had just returned to his home of nearly 30 years. The idyllic brick ranch house sat at the base of the San Gabriel Mountains in Altadena.

Dembowski had just returned to California from Juneau the day before. He was there to finish getting his home ready to put on the market. A guest appearance with the Juneau Symphony in 2017 first brought Dembowski to Alaska. He fell in love with it, and kept coming back as principal bass. Then he fell in love with Katy Giorgio, the symphony’s principal trombone.

After spending his entire career as a studio musician in LA, he was finally ready to retire and live full time in Juneau with Giorgio.

“This was like my big move,” Dembowski said. “I lived here 68 years. It’s time for a change.”

But on that Tuesday, the Santa Ana winds had raged all day, putting the entire bone-dry LA region on edge. Back in Alaska, Giorgio was on edge too, watching coverage of the Palisades fire. As night fell, Dembowski sent her a screenshot from a fire tracking app. It showed a new flame icon in nearby Eaton Canyon.

“I knew immediately, when I saw that map,” Giorgio said. “I was like, ‘This is not good. I think we’re going to lose the house tonight.’”

With the flames rapidly approaching his neighborhood, Demobowski had just enough time to walk through his home to take pictures and grab a few essentials. In a video he captured just before getting in his car, embers sail through the air as the wind shakes trees and street signs. Small fires ignite in the brush across the street.

“I stuck around the house longer than I should have,” he admits.

By the next morning, it was gone.

“I just spent a year and a half and a half-million dollars remodeling the house to sell,” Dembowski said. “It was supposed to be listed in a couple of weeks, and now it’s just a pile of rubble.”

Giorgio caught a flight to LA the next day to help him sort through the aftermath.

Like many Southern California homeowners, Dembowski’s insurance of 28 years dropped his coverage a year ago. He could only find home insurance through a state plan offering the most basic coverage. And then there’s all the other things to think about in the aftermath of a disaster.

“Drew had one pair of pants, like in Los Angeles … that’s all he had,” Giorgio said. “But it was also, like, spending time calling the utility companies.”

They drove up to the house to take pictures and see what was left – a foundation of singed bricks and some surprisingly fire-resistant lawn furniture. The Eaton Fire destroyed more than 9,000 structures and left 17 people dead. The cause is still under investigation, but the community is forever changed.

“Altadena was such a beautiful place. It was an old area with lots of big trees and old houses. And it is just, it’s just gone,” Dembowski said.

The area was known for being the home of many artists and musicians, as well as a historic Black community.

“That’s what I cry about, is, of course, the house, and the things in the house, but it’s really like, that was such a beautiful area and, and I just don’t see it recovering in the same way,” Giorgio said.

It’s easy to count up the things that they lost in the fire – a collection of about 1,500 mountaineering guides Dembowski assembled over 40 years, his bikes and vinyl records, Giorgio’s orchids – but he’s quick to point out that he’s one of the lucky ones.

He already had a place to stay nearby and a home in Juneau to return to. And he was able to save his prized possession – an upright bass from 1790 that he’s owned for half a century.

“Had I lost that instrument, that would have changed my dynamic a lot,” he said. “It’s been my dance partner.”

Months of uncertainty lie ahead. Instead of listing his home on Zillow, he’ll file insurance claims. He knows he won’t recover the full value of his home, but he’s making peace with that. In a way, it’s a relief after struggling for so long to part with it.

“And you know, that’s taken care of now, not the way I would have chosen, but it’s – it’s given me the freedom to move forward and to get where I was hoping to get a little bit sooner,” Dembowski said.

In the end, he has his health, and his loved ones, and his bass.

“I’m counting my blessings,” he said.

Juneau’s legislative delegation wins reelection — not that it’s any surprise

Juneau delegation 2019
From left to right: Rep. Sara Hannan, Sen. Jesse Kiehl and Rep. Andi Story pose for photographers outside the Capitol in Juneau on Jan. 16, 2019. The three Democrats were newly sworn in to represent Juneau in the Alaska Legislature. (Photo by Skip Gray/KTOO)

As results continue to trickle in for the national and state elections, Juneau’s local outcome, at least, is clear. 

Juneau’s delegation in the Alaska Legislature ran unopposed this year. Incumbents Sen. Jesse Kiehl, Rep. Andi Story and Rep. Sara Hannan are all Democrats and will all serve another term in office. All three were first elected in 2018. 

Kiehl represents District Q in the Alaska Senate. That includes Juneau, Haines, Skagway, Klukwan and Gustavus. His term is four years. 

Story represents House District 3, which includes Gustavus, Haines, Skagway, Klukwan and parts of the Mendenhall Valley, Auke Bay and Out the Road. 

Former state legislator Bill Thomas of Haines originally filed to run against Story, but withdrew from the race in June.

Hannan represents House District 4, which includes Douglas, downtown and Lemon Creek. 

Both Story and Hannan will serve two year terms. 

Two Lingít Juneau residents recognized for contributions to arts in Alaska

X̱ʼunei Lance Twitchell (center) receives the Alaska Native Arts Award from Benjamin Brown (left) and Renee Wardlaw (right) during the Governor’s Arts and Humanities Awards on Oct. 29, 2024. (Screenshot from YouTube)

Two Juneau residents were honored Tuesday night at the Alaska Governor’s Arts and Humanities Awards in Anchorage. 

X̱ʼunei Lance Twitchell, a professor of Alaska Native Languages at the University of Alaska Southeast, received the Alaska Native Arts Award. The distinction recognizes his commitment to preserving Indigenous languages.

Twitchell is vice-chair of the Alaska Native Language Preservation & Advisory Council and has spent years recording, documenting and teaching Lingít. 

He opened his remarks in Lingít before switching to English, saying he was hopeful about the future of Indigenous languages, despite the threats they face today. 

“My challenge to every one of you is to say seven generations from now, will those little grandchildren of ours know your name based on what you did to avoid an unnecessary genocide of Indigenous peoples,” Twitchell told the audience. “I think they will know your name. I think they will say ‘this was a moment when things shifted in a positive direction for us. They did this for us.’ Because Alaska Native languages don’t just benefit Alaska Native peoples. They allow us all to survive.”

Also being honored Tuesday was the new state writer laureate Vera Starbard, a Lingít playwright, magazine editor and TV writer based in Juneau. She will serve two years in the role, traveling around the state to promote the literary arts. 

State Writer Laureate Vera Starbard speaks during the Governor’s Arts and Humanities Awards in Anchorage on Oct. 29, 2024. (Screenshot from YouTube)

Accepting her award, Starbard said she was honored to be recognized for sharing the everyday stories of Alaskans. 

“I see much of my job now as translator, and taking this state, and this land and these people that I love so much, and figuring out how to turn that into bite-sized pieces for an outside world that can learn from us,” she said. “Your stories are not only valid, they are needed.”

Another Juneau resident created the awards for the ceremony. Master Chilkat weaver Lily Hope wove a Ravenstail dancing blanket that was divided up among the awardees, symbolizing reciprocity and interwoven identities. 

“When a Chilkat dancing blanket is cut up and given away to dignitaries, this communicates the valuable relationship acknowledged by the receivers, who treasure their small part of the whole in a cultural cycle of reciprocity,” Hope said in a video shared on Instagram

Hours change for some Breeze In locations following new ownership

Change is coming to Juneau’s local convenience store chain following new ownership. 

According to a sign posted on the door of Breeze In locations, the Douglas and Lemon Creek stores will now close at 10 p.m. starting this Friday. 

A sign posted on the door of the Lemon Creek Breeze In on Oct. 29 warns customers of upcoming changes. (Photo by Yvonne Krumrey/KTOO)

At the moment, the Douglas Breeze In is open until midnight seven days a week, while the Lemon Creek Breeze In is open until midnight on Friday and Saturday. It’s open till 11 p.m. the rest of the week right now. 

The Mendenhall Valley location’s hours remain unchanged, with the grocery side of the store open 24/7 and the liquor side open from 8 a.m. to 3 a.m. on Fridays and Saturdays and 8 a.m. to 1 a.m. otherwise. 

According to the Juneau Empire, a new company bought Breeze In this year. The Myers Group is based in Washington state and also owns Juneau’s Foodland and Superbear IGA supermarkets and DeHart’s Auke Bay Store.

A subsidiary company, Juneau Fresh Food, is listed at Breeze In’s Lemon Creek address. 

The registered agent for that company, Rick Wilson, did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Tuesday. 

Juneau’s latest glacial outburst flood was lower than predicted and caused minimal damage

Water rushes in the Mendenhall River on Sunday, Oct. 20, 2024. (Clarise Larson/KTOO)

Water levels on Juneau’s Mendenhall Lake and River are returning to normal following a moderate glacial outburst flood that peaked at 10.7 feet at 11:30 p.m. Sunday night.

City Emergency Programs Manager Tom Mattice said no damage had been reported since the National Weather Service Juneau canceled the flood warning early Monday morning. He said cold temperatures ultimately helped keep flooding minimal.

“We feel fortunate on many fronts, and we’re just going to continue our research on the basin and try and prepare the best we can for the next one,” Mattice said.

The Weather Service issued a flood warning on Saturday morning as water levels dropped in Suicide Basin, a glacial lake behind the Mendenhall Glacier that drains periodically, sending rain and meltwater downstream into the lake and river.

This weekend’s flooding reached only a moderate flood stage, as opposed to August’s record-breaking outburst flood that damaged nearly 300 homes in the Mendenhall Valley.

The water level ended up being lower than expected this time around, thought the Mendenhall Campground and Skater’s Cabin saw the usual flooding. Even at a moderate stage, water was also expected to reach yards on View Drive. But Mattice said that didn’t happen this time.

“We had View Drive ready for closures, but no water actually came up to that level,” he said. “So we got very, very lucky. The upper river corridor carried a little more water than usual, and kept that to a minimum.”

This latest release was anticipated and residents were warned ahead of time. The city distributed thousands of sandbags to residents of flood-impacted neighborhoods over the weekend. That distribution has now ended with more than 130 households receiving sandbags.

The city also tested out a new emergency alert system for the first time. Residents can sign up for text or email notifications on the city website. It also allows the city to auto-dial residents in

“We’re still ironing out the bugs, but that’s the first time we put it to the test,” Mattice said.

Earlier this month, the city announced plans to work with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to install flood protection barriers along four miles of Mendenhall River’s bank in the coming months.

Funding for that project will be discussed at a Juneau Assembly meeting Monday evening.

With freezing temperatures settling in, local officials don’t expect any more outburst flooding this year or through the winter.

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