Chilkat Valley News

The Chilkat Valley News has been in publication since Jan. 3, 1966 and is Haines, Alaska's independent Newspaper of Record. KTOO collaborates with partners across the state to cover important news and to share stories with our audiences.

Author Nick Jans revisits Romeo, the friendly wolf, in new book

Nick Jans holds a copy of his new book during a visit to the Chilkat Valley News office. (Lex Treinen/Chilkat Valley News)

Local author Nick Jans has a new a photo storybook that retells the tale of a wolf that forged friendships with dogs and owners alike near Mendenhall Glacier. “A True Alaska Tale: Romeo the Friendly Wolf” follows the six years between 2003 and 2009 that Romeo became part of the Juneau community. It was released last week.

Jans published his New York Times bestseller novel “A Wolf Called Romeo” in 2014. Jans said “Romeo the Friendly Wolf,” published almost a decade later, has the added advantage of distance and perspective. He said making it accessible was another priority.

“I want adults to read it to their kids… kids matter most of all. They’re the ones that make change in this world,” said Jans. He also hopes that the book will be able to reach cruise ship passengers who don’t speak English.

This is Jans’ 14th book, and his first that features photography more than writing. “I’m a writer who takes pictures and the pictures help tell the story,” he said.

Jans came to Alaska in 1979 looking to live around big wild animals in a big wild place. He lived more than 20 years in small Inupiaq villages along the Kobuk River in the Northwest Arctic. He worked as a big game guide, trading post manager, and high school teacher. In the late 1990s, he met his wife and moved to Southeast Alaska but still returns to his home near Ambler for a few months each year.

“I didn’t come [to Alaska] to be a writer, I came here to live,” said Jans.

In Juneau, Jans and his wife Sherrie built their house on the shore of Mendenhall Lake. They met Romeo while walking their dog, Dakotah, and a connection was instantly formed between dog and wolf.

“Usually you have contact with a wild animal and you never see them again,” said Jans.

However, Romeo kept coming back.

“At times during the winter he would come and go but sometimes he’d be there for a period of weeks, and have dozens of interactions with dogs,” said Jans. But then one day, Romeo did not come back.

Romeo often played with Dakotah, Nick Jans' yellow lab. (Photo courtesy Nick Jans)
Romeo often played with Dakotah, Nick Jans’ yellow lab. (Photo courtesy Nick Jans)

Years later, reminiscing on Romeo brought tears to Jans’ eyes on more than one occasion. His voice trembled with emotion as he recalled the impact that Romeo had on the people who grew to love him.

“That this book is coming out is proof that he’s not going anywhere. His story trots on,” he said.

The story of Romeo has proved to be an inspiration for many. Jans said he still gets letters from people around the world who read “A Wolf Called Romeo,” which has been translated into seven languages. An exhibit for Romeo was built in 2017 at the Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center, and last year the Orpheus Project, a Juneau non-profit, hosted a festival of sorts celebrating Romeo’s life.

Todd Hunt, artistic director for the Orpheus Project, said the celebration included “many different artists and their interpretation of what Romeo means to them.” He read Jans’ first book as soon as it came out and realized it “needed some musical treatment,” prompting him to compose a cantata that became part of a two-act piece named “Wolf Songs.”

“I always thought that what I should do is to make the life and death of this exceptional wolf count for something,” said Jans.

He said he wants to keep telling Romeo’s story through his new book, which he said speaks to the heart of humanity’s relationship to the wild.

“If you can make friends with a wild wolf, and he made friends with us, then we need to at least metaphorically make friends with nature,” said Jans.

This story originally appeared in the Chilkat Valley News and is republished here with permission.

Haines challenges census count, with millions on the line

Haines, Alaska
Haines, Alaska. (Alan Vernon/Creative Commons)

The Haines Borough is challenging the U.S. government’s official count of its population, saying the Census Bureau undercounted the town’s population by about 20%. The money threatens millions of dollars of federal funding over the next decade.

The 2020 census reported Haines’ population as 2080, down from 2,508 ten years earlier. That immediately raised red flags for borough officials.

“If we had lost almost 500 people, you would feel it in our town,” said Haines Borough clerk Alekka Fullerton. “You would see it in empty houses, in schools, and in voter rolls.”

Census counts happen every 10 years and help determine U.S. House district maps and how nearly $3 trillion of federal money is distributed around the country. There’s no exact formula for how much an undercount of Haines’ population might cost the borough, but the Alaska Department of Labor estimated in 2018 that each person not counted is worth $30,000 in federal money over 10 years.

That could mean the borough would lose up to $15 million in potential funding.

Fullerton said she and Andrew Conrad, the new borough planner, went through each housing unit in borough records unit by unit to understand where people might be living how they might be undercounted.

“We found several large inconsistencies,” said Fullerton, “There were places where there was a group of mailboxes with the same address and the Census Bureau counted it as one.”

David Howell, a state demographer, said Haines’ challenge “absolutely” had a strong case for its appeal.

“It seemed like a pretty systematic undercount of the Mosquito Lake area. There was a lot of housing units that unexplainably disappeared,” said Howell.

Howell said the state’s annual estimate for Haines in fact showed about a 100-person increase in the Haines population since 2010.

While the borough suspected an error for months, it didn’t submit its official challenge until June 29, the day before the deadline. Fullerton described it as the culmination of “hours and hours and hours” of work.

Challenges aren’t a guarantee that results will be changed. Memphis, Tenn., for example, challenged the bureau’s population estimate. After the Census investigated, it ultimately lowered its results by three people. Other challenges have resulted in increases of more than a thousand people.

“They don’t like to change,” said Howell, but “We are pretty certain there was an undercount in Haines.”

Nils Andreassen, director of the Alaska Municipal League, said several communities reached out to his group, though Haines is the only place to submit a challenge.

“I imagine it would be more widespread if everybody had time to pay attention to it, but it’s not an easy process,” he said.

Borough officials did not have a timeline for when their challenge might be resolved. Some challenges that were submitted earlier have already been reviewed. The Associated Press reported that the quantity of submissions means later challenges could take months to resolve.

Regardless of the outcome, borough officials say they’re glad to have the challenge submitted and off their plates.

“This has been a huge source of stress for me personally,” Fullerton said.

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