Jennifer Canfield, KTOO

‘Our Voices Will Be Heard’ brings child sexual abuse to the forefront

"Our Voices Will Be Heard" playwright Vera Starbard (right) and Perseverance Theatre Executive Artistic Director Art Rotch. (Photo by Jennifer Canfield/KTOO)
“Our Voices Will Be Heard” playwright Vera Starbard (right) and Perseverance Theatre Executive Artistic Director Art Rotch. (Photo by Jennifer Canfield/KTOO)

Set in a fictional Tlingit village in the late 19th century, “Our Voices Will Be Heard” is Vera Starbard’s semi-autobiographical story of a mother whose daughter is sexually abused by a relative. The show premiered Friday at Perseverance Theatre in Juneau and will play in Anchorage in February.

The play actually began as a short story Starbard wrote when she was 18 years old. It came together at an all-night diner. She began writing at 10 p.m. and didn’t stop until 4 a.m.

“I sat there and the waitress kept bringing me diet sodas, and it was done,” Starbard said. “While I did a few revisions to it, the whole story was finally told. And it was a huge kind of healing moment in my life and I never really did anything with it.”

About 10 years later, she heard about the Alaska Native Playwrights Project and decided to apply. She got in and during the process began to understand the story she wanted to tell was more than just her own.

One of the most difficult experiences she had when writing the play came about halfway through the yearlong project.

“I had a relative, a cousin, who I grew up with like a brother, who became an abuser himself.”

It hit her hard. Here she was, trying to artfully make sense of the sexual abuse she had experienced as a child and she learns her cousin was an abuser. Then she finds out he’d been abused by the same uncle who had hurt her.

“It was surprising to me that I still loved him,” Starbard said. “I loved him like a brother and that didn’t change because of these things he had done. (I struggled within) myself to come to terms with not wanting that person to be around children anymore and … still caring about him and caring about what happened to him. I really took that into the play.”

The play is quite different from the story Starbard wrote when she was 18. That version, she said, was from the perspective of a child. The younger Vera saw her abuser as a “boogeyman,” an evil figure to be despised, not pitied or missed.

“There’s a scene in there where the mother is talking to Raven and sort of going through these emotions herself where she does confess that she misses this family who turned against her and hurt her child,” she said. “That would not have been in there when I was 18.”

A promotional image for "Our Voices Will Be Heard" by Vera Starbard. (Image courtesy of Perseverance Theatre)
A promotional image for “Our Voices Will Be Heard” by Vera Starbard. (Image courtesy of Perseverance Theatre)

In the years since her all-nighter at the diner, Starbard came to understand what her own mother endured. She saw the toll it took on her to report her own brother. She realized how lucky she was to have a mother who steadfastly supported her despite being ostracized by family members who preferred the abuse go unaddressed.

Three days before the first reading of the play in Anchorage, Starbard told her mother what it was about.

“She actually thanked me at the end of the reading,” Starbard said. “It doesn’t show mother being perfect but it shows a mother never giving up. That’s what I really wanted to talk about; that was important to me and my life that I had a mother who never gave up even though she was struggling herself.”

Starbard’s story is not unique. Alaska consistently has one of the highest rates of child sexual abuse, and child abuse in general, in the nation. Despite that, state lawmakers spent two years debating a bill to require K-12 students receive age-appropriate education on sexual abuse and teen dating violence. Starbard wrote letters and testified at the capitol in favor of Erin’s Law, which eventually was adopted as the Alaska Safe Children’s Act.

As Starbard went through the process of writing, revising and holding readings for the play, she saw signs that more education about child abuse is sorely needed.

“Since this has come out, a lot of people have come up and some of them have said, ‘Well, I’ve never been abused, but –’ and then they tell some story and I realize — no. That’s abuse. That really is abuse. And they genuinely don’t see it that way because it’s been minimalized in their own life.”

Starbard said she hopes people who see the play leave feeling hopeful and energized.

“I think it’s a pretty light-giving play, a play that gives healing,” Starbard said. “It’s not something that they’re going to walk away from and wonder what to do. … They’re actually (going to) be motivated to do something, to act, to find some hope.”

In Juneau, the play runs through Feb. 7. A representative from SEARHC or AWARE will be available after each showing. Volunteers from Standing Together Against Rape will be present when the play shows in Anchorage.

Former Juneau woman missing since New Year’s Day in Anchorage

Former Juneau resident Linda Skeek went missing in Anchorage Jan.1. (Photo courtesy of Anchorage Police Department)
Former Juneau resident Linda Skeek went missing in Anchorage Jan.1. (Photo courtesy of Anchorage Police Department)

A former Juneau woman has gone missing in Anchorage. Linda Skeek, 32, was last seen at her home in south Anchorage on New Year’s Day.

According to a public announcement from the Anchorage Police Department, Skeek left her home on foot after a fight with her husband. She was reported missing Jan. 4.

Skeek, whose maiden name is Sheldon, moved to Anchorage from Juneau in April and still has many friends and family members in Southeast. Skeek’s family told Anchorage police that she had left for the weekend before but would always return by Sunday so she could go to work the next day.

On Nov. 30, Skeek filed for a protective order for herself and two children against her husband. She withdrew her petition for a permanent protective order 10 days later. Skeek’s mother Laura Sheldon says the two had a fight but had resolved it.

Skeek is 5′ 10″, about 200 pounds, with brown hair and brown eyes. She was last seen wearing a black coat, red vest and red skirt.

Anyone who knows of Linda Skeek’s whereabouts are asked to call the Anchorage Police Department at 907-786-8900.

The most popular stories of 2015

You’ve read about the biggest stories of 2015, now take a look at our most popular. Of all the stories KTOO published in 2015, here are the 10 you clicked on the most.

10. Passengers survive, pilot dies after Wings plane crash near Juneau
Lisa Phu
July 18, 2015
Fariah Peterson, 45, piloted the Wings of Alaska plane that went down near Point Couverden, west of Juneau. The four passengers survived. Unfortunately, Peterson did not. 

9. Watch the president yuraqing with Dillingham children
Sep. 2, 2015
While President Barack Obama’s trip to Alaska was focused on climate change, it was video of the president Yup’ik dancing with Dillingham students that won the Internet that day.

President Obama dances with children in Dillingham during his visit to rural Alaska. (Photo courtesy of TheObamaDiary.com)
President Obama dances with children in Dillingham during his visit to rural Alaska. (Photo courtesy of TheObamaDiary.com)

 

8. Improbable archaeology: Stone tool found in Sitka landslide
Robert Woolsey, KCAW
Mar. 2, 2015

A landslide that wiped out years of habitat and stream restoration work also uncovered a prehistoric stone hammer, an uncommon find in Sitka. The “curiously-shaped rock” was found “amid the thousands of tons of rubble.”

7. No budget by July means no ferry service
Ed Schoenfeld, CoastAlaska 
Jun. 1, 2015
The Alaska Legislature went deep into overtime hashing out the budget. As they debated, Southeast residents and future tourists worried about the future of the Alaska Marine Highway System.

Three ferries tie up at the Ketchikan Shipyard in the winter of 2012.
Three ferries tie up at the Ketchikan Shipyard in the winter of 2012. Commercial users will likely pay higher rates beginning next winter. (Ed Schoenfeld/CoastAlaska News)

 

6. Juneau mayor remembered as a dedicated public servant
Jennifer Canfield and Lisa Phu
Dec. 1, 2015
Neighbors, friends and family all remembered Mayor Greg Fisk as a man who was committed to the capital city. Juneau grieved the loss of the progressive-minded man who had big dreams for this small town.

5. Police: Fight over property led to fatal stabbing
Elizabeth Jenkins and David Purdy
Dec. 3, 2015

Days after the death of Mayor Greg Fisk, a fatal stabbing in West Juneau made headlines. Kevin Scott Nauska, 19, fatally stabbed 37-year-old Jordon J. Sharclane. Nauska was charged with murder, and attempted murder in the first-degree for stabbing Sharclane’s son, 19-year-old Michael Sharclane.

4. Juneau Police confirm Mayor Greg Fisk found dead at home
Jennifer Canfield and Lisa Phu
Nov. 30, 2015
Greg Fisk had been in office for less than two months when this story broke. The mayor was found dead at his home by his son. News of the popular mayor’s death shocked and saddened Juneau residents.

A candle and a note reading "Rest in peace Greg Fisk. Neighbor, mayor, friend. Nov. 30, 2015" outside a neighbor's house on Kennedy St. Monday evening. (Photo by Mikko Wilson/KTOO)
A candle and a note reading “Rest in peace Greg Fisk. Neighbor, mayor, friend. Nov. 30, 2015” outside a neighbor’s house on Kennedy St. Monday evening. (Photo by Mikko Wilson/KTOO)

3. 15-year-old plane crash survivor receives U.S. Coast Guard recognition
Lisa Phu
July 31, 2015
The heroic actions of one young man was the silver lining in this sad story about a plane crash near Hoonah. Jose Vasquez, 15, used his Boy Scout survival skills to save himself and three other passengers

2. 4 survive, 1 dead in Juneau to Hoonah plane crash
Lisa Phu, Jennifer Canfield, Mikko Wilson, Elizabeth Jenkins and Lakeidra Chavis
July 17, 2015

News that a Hoonah-bound flight had gone down worried many who have friends and family living in the small town west of Juneau. Two survivors were rescued in serious condition and another in critical condition.  

1. Hiker who freed trapped eagle due in court today
Lisa Phu
Jan. 22, 2015
No good deed goes unpunished in this story about a woman who freed an eagle from a trap. After Kathleen Turley, née Adair, freed the bird, she then set off other traps she spotted nearby. More than two weeks later, Alaska Wildlife Troopers cited her for hindrance of lawful trapping.

Kathleen Turley encountered this eagle stuck in two traps Dec. 24, 2014. She freed the eagle and tampered with other legally set traps in the area. She's now being sued. (Photo courtesy of Kathleen Turley)
Kathleen Turley encountered this eagle stuck in two traps Dec. 24, 2014. She freed the eagle and tampered with other legally set traps in the area. She’s now being sued. (Photo courtesy of Kathleen Turley)

Fairbanks Four indictments and convictions thrown out, men walk free

Update|7:30 p.m.

Three of the Fairbanks Four were released Thursday evening. While one of the men, Marvin Roberts, had been released in June on parole, the other three men were still behind bars 18 years after being convicted for murder of 15-year-old John Hartman. The men say they didn’t commit the crime. George Frese, Kevin Pease, Eugene Vent and Roberts were celebrated at the Chief David Salmon Tribal Hall in Fairbanks.

Head over to the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner for more on this story.
-Jennifer Canfield

Update|5:40 p.m.

The brother of a Fairbanks teenager killed in 1997 says he’s flabbergasted at the deal reached Thursday that throws out the convictions of four indigenous men deemed responsible for the beating death.

Chris Kelly tells The Associated Press that he can’t believe the deal was made between prosecutors and the men. Kelly says it feels like his family has been “completely wronged” by the agreement.

“Only guilty people would take that deal,” Kelly said. He also voiced his objections at Thursday’s hearing.

The four men have long maintained their innocence. They were seeking to have their convictions overturned in civil court when the state made a surprise offer to free them. In exchange, the men can’t sue various government entities, among other provisions.

Many Alaska Natives believe the convictions of the four men were racially based.
-Associated Press

Update|5:30 p.m.

“Justice prevails!”

Those were the words from Alaska’s senior U.S. senator after the so-called Fairbanks Four were released on Thursday.

The four men were convicted of beating a Fairbanks teenager to death in 1997, but many called their convictions a rush to judgment based on their race. Three of the men convicted are Alaska Natives and the other is an American Indian.

In a statement, Sen. Lisa Murkowski praised the lawyers that took up their case, including the Alaska Innocence Project.

Murkowski, a Republican, had previously asked the state of Alaska to examine whether the convictions were just. She also asked the U.S. Department of Justice to determine if there were any civil rights violations in the case.
-Associated Press

Update|5:15 p.m.

Alaska Gov. Bill Walker is hailing the agreement that will release the so-called Fairbanks Four, four indigenous men who have been imprisoned since their convictions in 1997 for the beating death of a Fairbanks teenager.

The four have long maintained their innocence. They were seeking to have their convictions overturned in civil court when the state made a surprise offer to free them. In exchange, the men can’t sue various government entities, among other provisions. A state judge approved the deal Thursday, throwing out the men’s murder convictions.

Some in the Alaska Native community had considered the convictions of the four men as racially based, and there had been pressure on Walker to pardon the men.

In a statement Thursday, Walker says he’s pleased that a mutually acceptable agreement could be reached among all parties.

Walker says he hopes this beings the healing process and provides “some measure of justice and closure” for the four men.
-Associated Press

Original story published at 5:03 p.m.

Gov. Bill Walker addresses the 49th annual Alaska Federation of Natives conference in Anchorage. The AFN called on Walker to free the Fairbanks Four. (Photo by Mikko Wilson/KTOO)
Gov. Bill Walker addresses the 49th annual Alaska Federation of Natives conference in Anchorage. The AFN called on Walker to free the Fairbanks Four. (Photo by Mikko Wilson/KTOO)

This is a developing story. Please check back later for details. 

A Fairbanks judge has dismissed the indictments and convictions of four men who have served 18 years in jail for a murder they say they did not commit.

According to Fairbanks reporters, more than 150 people gathered outside a courtroom on the fifth floor of the Rabinowitz courthouse. Some had been there since 9 a.m. waiting to hear if the men would be released in time for Christmas. More than 50  people were let into the courtroom around 4:15 p.m.

Indictments and convictions against George Frese, Kevin Pease, Marvin Roberts and Eugene Vent were thrown out as a result of a deal between the men and state prosecutors.

Last week prosecutors offered to let the Fairbanks Four go free as long as it could maintain that the men were guilty and that they’d no longer claim innocence. The men have maintained their innocence for the 18 years they were in prison and with today’s deal they may continue to do so.
-Jennifer Canfield

 

Juneau mayor remembered as a dedicated public servant

Read the latest on this story here

Update | 11:40 a.m.

Juneau Police Department communications manager Erann Kalwara confirmed that injuries were discovered on Mayor Greg Fisk’s body. She couldn’t share the details about the nature of the injuries.

“We haven’t ruled anything out or confirmed anything about the injuries or cause of death yet. We are waiting on those autopsy results,” Kalwara said.

The police expect those results back in a couple of days. Kalwara said there was no sign of forced entry into Fisk’s house.
-Elizabeth Jenkins

Juneau Mayor Greg Fisk was found dead in his home on the afternoon of Monday, Nov. 30, 2015. (Photo courtesy Greg Smith)
Juneau Mayor Greg Fisk was found dead in his home on the afternoon of Monday, Nov. 30, 2015. (Photo courtesy Greg Smith)

Original story

The mayor of Juneau was found dead in his home Monday afternoon. Greg Fisk, 70, was elected to the city’s top office in October and was sworn in only five weeks ago. His cause of death is still unknown. City meetings scheduled for last night were canceled.

Fisk’s adult son, Ian Fisk, called 911 around 3:30 p.m. after discovering his father’s body.

As police investigated in and around Fisk’s home, residents in Juneau’s Starr Hill neighborhood lit candles in his honor.

A candle and a note reading "Rest in peace Greg Fisk. Neighbor, mayor, friend. Nov. 30, 2015" outside a neighbor's house on Kennedy St. Monday evening. (Photo by Mikko Wilson/KTOO)
A candle and a note reading “Rest in peace Greg Fisk. Neighbor, mayor, friend. Nov. 30, 2015” outside a neighbor’s house on Kennedy St. Monday evening. (Photo by Mikko Wilson/KTOO)

Juneau Police Department Chief Bryce Johnson said the investigation will continue Tuesday morning.

“Our job is to make sure we preserve everything exactly in its condition, collect all the evidence, so when we get a cause of death we’re prepared to move forward from there,” Johnson said.

Johnson said rumors that Fisk may have died from an assault were only speculation and that other plausible, less sinister theories exist. Johnson said there was no evidence of a break-in and no suspicion of suicide.

Police don’t know how long Fisk was dead before he was found. Johnson said people were unable to contact Fisk that morning, prompting his son Ian to check on him.

“I think the community deserves to know what happened and to have it investigated properly. … As soon as we know, we’ll let everyone else know.”

Fisk’s body will be sent to the State Medical Examiner’s Office in Anchorage for an autopsy. Johnson said he expects results in the next several days.

Assemblymember Mary Becker said she was about to leave home to attend meetings at City Hall when she received a call that Fisk had died.

Becker, who also serves as the city’s deputy mayor, said she last spoke with Fisk by phone on Sunday. Fisk had asked her to lead Monday night’s meetings. Becker said they talked briefly about what was on the assembly’s agenda.

“He was very upbeat and sounded just like Greg,” Becker said.

Becker said Fisk was an easy person to work with and he’d been building a cohesive team within the assembly. She said the mayor was a great man and that the news has been devastating to the assembly.

“We’re all in this sadness together and we will make it through and the city will continue to run,” Becker said. “We have a wonderful staff, an assembly that works well together and we’ll continue to do what we need to do, we’re just sad right now.

Neighbors gathered to remember Mayor Greg Fisk on Monday evening. They stood in silent respect, holding candles, as Fisk's body was removed from his home on Kennedy Street. (Photo by Mikko Wilson/KTOO)
Neighbors gathered to remember Mayor Greg Fisk on Monday evening. They stood in silent respect, holding candles, as Fisk’s body was removed from his home on Kennedy Street. (Photo by Mikko Wilson/KTOO)

Becker is now responsible for mayoral duties. City attorney Amy Meade will determine what happens next.

Becker, along with assemblymembers Jesse Kiehl and Maria Gladziszewski, remember Fisk as someone who cared about everyone’s opinions and was eager to learn from others. He was admired for being a limitless source of ideas.

Kiehl said that when Fisk found something to agree with you on he’d “grab hold with tremendous energy.”

“It was inspiring, and the way he jumped in to work on things made you want to work on them harder than you were before and really inspired you to go after it,” Kiehl said. “That was just such an exciting thing about working with him.”

Gladziszewski, like others, was shocked by the news of Fisk’s death and didn’t believe it at first.

“It’s just a huge loss for the community. He was only newly elected, and he had so many ideas and a lot of energy. He was on his way to becoming a great mayor.”

Fisk had a long history of working on land claims settlements for Alaska Natives and First Nations communities in Canada.

He graduated from Indiana University in 1971 with a degree in economic and cultural geography. A year later he was at the University of Alaska Anchorage working on the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act.

His experience eventually landed him in Montreal working as the senior negotiator on Canada’s first aboriginal land claims settlement since the 1920s.

In 1981, Fisk returned to Alaska to work for the state on land management policy. He eventually transitioned into consulting on fisheries policy in Alaska and Quebec.

Fisk gave welcoming remarks recently at the Sharing Our Knowledge Tlingit Tribes and Clans Conference in Juneau.

“It feels very, very odd to welcome you because it’s really you who are welcoming me. I’ve been here half my life, but that’s just a twinkling in the eye in the long arc of time that people have lived on this land and navigated these waters. So really I have to thank you for having me here to speak to you.”

Late Monday night, Fisk’s neighbors gathered outside to remember him.

Bob King, friend and neighbor of Mayor Greg Fisk, holds a lantern to guide and remember Fisk on his final journey as his body is carried from his home by Juneau Police on Monday evening. (Photo by Mikko Wilson/KTOO)
Bob King, friend and neighbor of Mayor Greg Fisk, holds a lantern to guide and remember Fisk on his final journey as his body is carried from his home by Juneau Police on Monday evening. (Photo by Mikko Wilson/KTOO)

Fisheries historian Bob King was Fisk’s next door neighbor, a good friend and the chairman of his mayoral campaign. Fisk beat incumbent Merrill Sanford 2-1.

“It’s just so sad that a person with so much promise, so many great ideas, would be snuffed so soon,” King said.

Fisk owned Seafisk Consulting and Management and was a commercial fisherman. He’d served on the Docks and Harbors Board, the Fisheries Development Committee, the Juneau Economic Development Council board and the Downtown Business Association board.

King said his friend often spoke about fish and fisheries management over dinner conversations.

“Fish was very important to him, and the responsible management of that natural resource, which is incredibly controversial,” King said. “But he would jump into that fray and always be involved.”

As Fisk’s next door neighbor, King said he’ll miss interacting with him on a regular basis.

“That image of him sitting at his window in his office — and he was always sitting there working — It’s just very, very sad that I won’t be seeing that face in that window again.”

Fisk leaves behind his son Ian and grandson Kai.

Juneau Police confirm Mayor Greg Fisk found dead at home

Update | 9:18 p.m.

Juneau Mayor Greg Fisk’s body has been removed from his home and will be sent to Anchorage for an autopsy.

According to a news release from the Juneau Police Department, autopsy results are expected “within several days.” The news release also says that it was Fisk’s son, Ian Fisk, who discovered the body.

JPD called rumors of an assault “speculation” and said detectives are “actively investigating facts of the incident and all evidence is being preserved and documented.”

Update | 6:51 p.m.

Update | 6:30 p.m.

Juneau police have confirmed that Mayor Greg Fisk was found dead at his home on Kennedy Street earlier this afternoon. JPD said in a news release that they received a 911 call at 3:34 p.m. from a male reporting the discovery of a dead body inside Fisk’s home. Fisk is identified as Stephen “Greg” Fisk in the release. Police are investigating.

City and Borough of Juneau clerk Laurie Sica said the city will issue a press release tomorrow with details on how city government will operate. The city’s deputy mayor is assemblymember Mary Becker.

CBJ meetings scheduled for tonight have been canceled.

Update | 6:16 p.m.
Mayor Greg Fisk was found dead at his home on Kennedy Street earlier this afternoon. Fisk was elected to the seat last month.

In a profile published by KTOO, Fisk detailed his personal opinions on numerous issues facing the City and Borough of Juneau.

Fisk was 70-years-old. He leaves behind his son Ian and grandson Kai.

Original story

Greg Fisk is running for mayor. (Photo by Jennifer Canfield/KTOO)
Juneau Mayor Greg Fisk was found dead at his home Monday afternoon. (Photo by Jennifer Canfield/KTOO)

Emergency responders are currently at the home of Juneau Mayor Greg Fisk.

According to bystanders, an ambulance left the scene earlier. Police are currently on the scene. Kennedy Street is closed between 4th Street and 5th Street.

A reporter on the scene says Juneau police were seen in the home with flashlights.

This is a breaking news story. Please check back later for updates. 

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