A swing set and dinosaur play structure are buried under several feet of snow at Harborview Elementary School in Juneau on Jan. 7, 2025. (Photo by Jamie Diep/KTOO)
The City and Borough of Juneau has largely wrapped up shoveling on Sít’ Eetí Shaanáx — Glacier Valley Elementary School and began work on Mendenhall River Community School on Friday.
This comes after record snowfall caused the district to close schools multiple times this week, including all schools Friday.
Assistant City Manager Robert Barr said at a press conference Friday the rain from the current atmospheric river could increase the weight on roofs.
“We expect snow weights to increase because of the rain, until it is able to warm up sufficiently for that snow-ice melt to drain both through the roof drains, which we’re giving careful attention to, as well as off the roofs through through, you know, gutter and gutter style systems,” he said.
Juneau School District Superintendent Frank Hauser said shoveling on the roof of Mendenhall River Community School is expected to continue this weekend. He said CBJ engineering teams plan on inspecting schools through this weekend to make sure it’s safe to occupy them on Monday.
Hauser said schools will move to remote learning if there’s any need to be closed for snow removal next week. He said a wider number of factors will determine if another districtwide closure is needed.
“Though none of our schools are in the avalanche zones, it is something that, you know, could inhibit transportation,” Hauser said. “And so as we’re looking at that and looking at the road conditions, those are factors we take when we look at a more broad potential school closure.”
Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé and Harborview Elementary School sit just outside the Behrends Avenue slide path avalanche zone, which is included in the evacuation alert issued Friday.
Hauser encouraged families to make sure their contact information with schools are up to date, and to download the district’s app to receive the latest alerts.
Craig Cimmons interviews for the Eaglecrest Ski Area general manager position during a meeting at City Hall on Friday, Aug. 2, 2024. (Clarise Larson/KTOO)
The general manager of Juneau’s Eaglecrest Ski Area has resigned and the chair of its board of directors has stepped down. Both departures were announced Thursday night during the ski area’s board of directors meeting.
Hannah Shively served as the board chair for less than six months. At the meeting, she said she was leaving the role due to health reasons. The board elected Brandon Cullum as its new chair.
Craig Cimmons, Eaglecrest’s general manager, was absent from the meeting Thursday night and did not immediately respond to a request for comment on his resignation. He has not publicly offered a reason as of Friday morning.
“We’re not sure why the manager is not here tonight, totally honestly, we’re still trying to figure that out,” Cullum said during the meeting. “I’m sure it’s not out of disrespect to anyone, but we’re going to do the best we can to present the information that he’s provided and answer questions.”
Cimmons’ resignation comes after serving in the role for less than two years. He was hired as general manager in the fall of 2024 after the former manager, Dave Scanlan, was abruptly asked to resign by the board.
Both departures also come as the city-owned ski area faces a tough start to its 50th season, including a broken water line and a delayed opening of the Ptarmigan lift. And, that’s all while Juneau has been facing back-to-back snowstorms, prompting city officials and tribal leaders to issue a joint disaster declaration. The capital city is currently bracing for heavy rain and potential flooding from an atmospheric river on Friday.
“This month has been terrible,” Shively said at the meeting. “Pretty much anything that could have gone wrong went wrong.”
Eaglecrest staff originally announced in mid-December that there was a large break in its main water line that supplies its lodges. And, while that has since been repaired, staff say there are still other repairs that need to be done before the water is restored. In the meantime, skiers and staff have been using portable toilets outside of the lodge.
Another issue is the delayed opening of its Ptarmigan lift due to unexpected repairs. The chairlift servesthe middle of the mountain. According to Shively, the ski area hopes to open it soon.
“All our required state certifications have been received, and we’re currently waiting for that final inspection from our insurance provider,” she said at the meeting.
Cimmons agreed to stay in his role for another month to help facilitate finding his replacement. Meanwhile, the ski area’s Director of Snowsports School, Rental, Retail & Repair Erin Lupro will take over the role of acting general manager.
The ski area is slated to celebrate its 50th year as a ski area next weekend.
Part of the front eave on Tracey Muir’s house collapsed under the weight of heavy snow on Jan. 8, 2026. (Photo by Jamie Diep/KTOO)
A portion of a residential roof collapsed Thursday in Juneau under the weight of several feet of snow that fell over the past few weeks.
Tracey Muir was born and raised in Juneau and bought the house in Mendenhall Valley a little over a year ago. He was inside when the roof gave way.
“This morning, I heard crackling, came and took a peek, and it was down and, well, all the snow we’ve been getting is what took it,” he said.
An overhanging section of the roof collapsed on the front of the house, which was built in the 1970s.
The National Weather Service estimated the weight of snow on a flat roof could be around 41.6 pounds per square foot as of Wednesday, based on ground measurements made at their forecast office in Mendenhall Valley.
Emergency officials and engineers say most homes built in Juneau before 1991 were designed with a snow load capacity of 40 pounds per square foot.
Muir said that, thankfully, there’s been no damage to the inside of the house, and that he was already planning to have the roof replaced this spring. He plans to patch it until then.
“I’m definitely done with winter,” he said.
Muir hadn’t cleared snow from the roof, and said he was hoping warmer weather would melt it for him. Now, he suggests others don’t follow in his footsteps.
“Get your roofs cleaned,” he said.
Nate Geary is a civil engineer who specializes in structural design. During the record-breaking storm that dumped four feet of snow on Juneau just after Christmas, he measured the weight that accumulated on his roof using roughly the same method as NWS.
“Once I got close to 40 pounds a square foot, which is the snow load rating for my roof, I decided it was close enough to switch over from a science experiment to going ahead and cleaning it off,” Geary said.
That was on Dec. 30. His home in Mendenhall Valley was built in 1973.
He said a roof will show some warning signs before it gives out.
“It’ll start to deform, which can create some cracks in the sheetrock or make some popping sounds,” he said.
Geary said there are some steps homeowners can take to reduce the risk of roof collapse, even if they can’t clear the whole thing.
“I think the first layer of risk management would be like using a snow rake and clearing eaves and overhangs, since they’re the weakest part of the structure,” he said.
Then, he suggests clearing around vents to prevent moisture accumulation in the attic, and shoveling drainage paths on flat roofs.
Geary is from Juneau and said that when heavy snow has fallen on his roof in the past, it melted relatively quickly. That’s not the case this time.
“This snowstorm is just not like anything that I’ve seen since I’ve lived here,” he said.
More heavy snow and rain are on the way. Meteorologists said that could make the snowpack heavier, wetter and harder to move.
The entrance of Mendenhall River Community School on Thursday, Jan. 8, 2026. (Photo by Jamie Diep/KTOO)
Update, Thursday 7 p.m.:
All Juneau schools are now closed Friday due to the storm.
The Juneau School District notified parents and staff of the closure Thursday night and said that no remote instruction will take place Friday.
Update, Thursday 5 p.m.:
As of Thursday afternoon, Juneau School District Chief of Staff Kristen Bartlett said the district hasn’t received information that more schools need to be closed for snow removal. She said the city’s engineering team is monitoring schools daily, and that decisions are made on a day-to-day basis.
“It’s a balancing act of making sure that we’re continuing to educate kids and making sure that everyone can be safe while that’s happening,” Bartlett said.
Students successfully evacuated to Thunder Mountain Middle School where parents were able to pick them up Thursday afternoon. They have mixed feelings on how the district has handled the winter storm.
Michael Kohan is a parent of a preschooler at Mendenhall River Community School. She said she appreciates the way the district has handled its response to the storm.
“I’m glad that the school took the precautions that they did, to act out of an abundance of caution and move the kids to TM today and cancel school tomorrow to get snow removal taken care of,” she said.
Sarah Overton has multiple children at the school. She said she wishes the schools weren’t open at all this week.
“I’m glad that I was able to come get them and nothing happened, but I feel like they shouldn’t have had school in session at all if there was any sort of concern, and if they hadn’t shoveled the roof,” she said.
Workers shovel snow off the roof of Sít’ Eetí Shaanáx – Glacier Valley Elementary on Thursday, Jan. 8, 2026. (Photo by Jamie Diep/KTOO)
The district expects snow removal at Sít’ Eetí Shaanáx — Glacier Valley Elementary to wrap up Friday as it begins work at Mendenhall River Community School.
Juneau School District Facilities Director Kristy Germain says the school will offer remote learning while closed.
“That process of clearing the roof will continue through the weekend, is the plan,” Germain said. “And then our public announcement to families also includes that we will be communicating if it needs to continue with remote learning on Monday.”
Original story:
Students and staff at Mendenhall River Community School were evacuated from the elementary school Thursday morning due to growing concern about the snow load on the gym roof.
In a news release, the Juneau School District said everyone inside the school is being relocated to Thunder Mountain Middle School “out of an abundance of caution” and that “all students and staff are safe.”
The district is instructing families to pick up students after 1 p.m. from the middle school. Parents and guardians should go to the Thunder Mountain gym entrance facing the Dimond Park Aquatics Center for pick up and must show ID. Any Mendenhall River students not picked up by 2:30 p.m. will be sent home on a school bus.
Crews will start clearing snow from the roof of Mendenhall River school Friday. While the building is closed, the school will offer remote learning.
“Crews will be working through the weekend clearing MRCS. We are hopeful that MRCS will open on Monday, but remote learning may need to be extended into next week if shoveling is not complete,” the district said in the release.
This comes after back-to-back snowstorms dumped more than four feet of snow on Juneau, leading to the city and tribal governments issuing a joint disaster declaration Tuesday. The district says it will continue to monitor all schools as an atmospheric river is forecast to hit Southeast Alaska late Thursday night.
A city worker attempts to clear flooded drains in downtown Juneau on Friday, Jan. 9, 2025. (Photo by Clarise Larson/KTOO)
Update, 10:00 a.m.
The City and Borough of Juneau has lifted the remaining avalanche evacuation advisory for the neighborhood below the Behrends Path.
“Risk from avalanche hazard remains elevated and future evacuation advisories are possible. CBJ is actively monitoring and assessing avalanche risk for all other known slide paths and will provide updates as conditions continue to change,” the city wrote in an update.
The Alaska Department of Transportation has also reopened Thane Road.
Update, Wednesday 9:30 a.m.
After heavy rain and warm temperatures at elevation Tuesday, no avalanche activity has been reported as of Wednesday morning. To better assess current avalanche conditions, officials are waiting to conduct a visual inspection and assessment of the Behrends Path during daylight hours, according to the City and Borough of Juneau. The city will provide updates as they are available.
Update, 11:45 a.m.
The city has updated its avalanche advisory page: “Avalanche risk on the Behrends path is increasing significantly and will peak late today and into tomorrow morning due to heavy rain, high winds and warming temperatures at high elevation.”
An evacuation shelter remains open at Centennial Hall. The city urges people in the Behrends pathway who have not evacuated or have returned to their homes to evacuate now.
Update, Tuesday 10:00 a.m.
The Alaska Department of Transportation will close Thane Road at the avalanche gates today at noon due to elevated avalanche risk.
Update, Monday 7:00 p.m.
All schools in the Juneau School District, including Mendenhall River Community School, are expected to open for in-person classes on Tuesday. This is the first time all schools will be open since the district returned from winter break last Monday.
According to a district email, school buses will run on regular routes, but buses won’t be able to go to these locations:
5th Street in Douglas
Glacier Highway between Highland Drive and Bartlett Regional Hospital
Thane Road
Any trailer parks
Mendenhall Peninsula Road
The district said families with students who normally leave from trailer parks should call First Student at 907-789-7352 to coordinate pick up.
Parking continues to be unavailable along Glacier Avenue near Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé. The district encourages students to take the school bus to and from school. Students can also park at Thunder Mountain Middle School and take a school bus from there.
Update, 8:00 p.m.
Mendenhall River Community School will remain closed Monday as crews continue snow removal efforts. MRCS students will move to remote learning. All other schools in the Juneau School District will be open with regular schedules Monday.
More rain is expected early Tuesday, when another storm could come through Juneau. The National Weather Service has issued a high wind watch starting Tuesday evening.
City facilities, including libraries and pools, will reopen Monday after being closed since Friday.
Update, 7:15 p.m.
The city has rescinded the avalanche evacuation alert for all known slide paths except for Behrends Avenue. Centennial Hall remains open as an evacuation shelter.
Free parking in downtown city-owned parking garages will end Monday at 8 a.m. Anyone who took advantage of the free parking while the city allowed it should move their car before then if they don’t have a permit to park in the Marine or Downtown Transit Center parking garages, otherwise they may be ticketed.
Update, 1:00 p.m.
Fred Meyer grocery store is open after being closed for several days due to concerns about snow load on the roof.
Update, Sunday 11:30 a.m.
The Flood Advisory has ended and Thane Road has reopened, though closures are still possible.
Update, 7:00 p.m.
The National Weather Service has extended its flood advisory to 10 a.m. Sunday.
It was initially set to end at 9 p.m. on Saturday. NWS reports that water continues to pool on side streets and low-lying areas.
-Alix Soliman
Update, 6:45 p.m.
The emergency warming shelter is moving from the Glacier Valley Elementary School gym back to the warehouse off of Thane Road tonight. The shelter will reopen at 9 p.m.
The shelter moved to the school Friday night due to avalanche concerns. Deputy City Manager Robert Barr told KTOO that drone assessments made today by the Alaska Department of Transportation showed avalanche risk has decreased in that specific area.
“Our conclusion is that the amount of snow left in that path is extremely unlikely to cross Thane Road and impact that facility,” Barr said.
But he said avalanche risk remains high in all other known avalanche zones, including Thane Road south of the avalanche gates and the Behrends and White slide paths. An avalanche evacuation advisory remains in effect for those areas and Thane Road is still closed past the gates.
“We’ll continue to monitor, assess and communicate risk about all of those other slide paths,” Barr said.
The emergency shelter at Centennial Hall remains open for people evacuating their homes due to unsafe conditions.
– Alix Soliman
Update, Saturday 1:40 p.m.
The City and Borough of Juneau continues to monitor roof loads and the safety of its public buildings as some roofs increase in weight and others decrease.
The city has teams working at Mendenhall River Community School, as well as at Bartlett Regional Hospital, where roof loads are nearing capacity.
Sixty people are currently working to clear the hospital’s roof, said Bartlett CEO Joe Wanner during a press briefing Saturday morning.
“We’re predominantly focused on patient care areas that have the highest loads. You know, we’re kind of looking at buildings that are showing stress at this point, which will be our admin building,” Wanner said.
He asked people going to the hospital to not park near the buildings.
“We will be offloading the roofs onto the areas next to the buildings. We will try to put cones and barriers up to mark those areas, but I just ask everyone to stay out of those areas.”
Wanner added that many parking spots have been closed off due to the massive amounts of snow, and a lot of heavy machinery is moving around the area.
“At this point, everything is moving in the right direction, and so we don’t anticipate any changes to services as of today,” he said.
In other infrastructure updates, the city moved the location of its emergency warming shelter from its facility in Thane due to avalanche hazard. First, the shelter was moved to Marie Drake building midday Friday, then to Sít’ Eetí Shaanáx – Glacier Valley Elementary. The elementary school had previously been closed earlier this week due to roof snow removal. “That ended up being the only JSD/CBJ facility that was tenable for that space,” Deputy City Manager Robert Barr said during the Saturday press conference.
Barr said the city is actively figuring out another CBJ location for the warming shelter if avalanche risk continues and Thane continues to not be an option.
“There is no scenario where the warming shelter will continue to exist at a school once a school is in operation again, so it will be moving from Glacier Valley. We are working on whether or not that move can happen today or if that move must happen tomorrow. But one of those two things is our goal for that operation,” he said.
– Lisa Phu
Correction: Capital Transit is not running between Bartlett Regional Hospital and the Federal Building.
Update, 1:15 p.m.
Juneau continues to face flooding and avalanches, with more rain expected Saturday.
Aaron Jacobs, senior service hydrologist at the National Weather Service in Juneau, said the weather pattern the city has seen — with record-breaking early-season snowfall followed by warmer temperatures and rain — is uncommon for Juneau.
“These are unprecedented times,” Jacobs said at a press briefing Saturday morning. “The amount of snowpack that we are seeing on the ground at the airport, and then this massive warm-up that we’re seeing, really hasn’t been seen in the climate records.”
Jacobs said extreme weather events are expected to happen more often due to climate change, but he can’t tie a short-term weather pattern directly to long-term climate trends.
Jacobs said this atmospheric river brought about 4 to 8 inches of snow, followed by 1 to 2 inches of rain so far, and winds up to around 35 miles per hour at sea level and up to 60 miles per hour at Eaglecrest. More rain is expected today, and another storm could come through Juneau next week.
Deputy City Manager Robert Barr said that flooding due to clogged storm drains is already impacting buildings, but the city doesn’t yet have a grasp of the extent.
“Water is starting to move into buildings and structures and basements,” Barr said. “We know that water is very damaging to facilities. It’s important to document.”
Barr said residents who witness flooding on city-owned roads before 4 p.m. should call (907) 586-5256.
For urgent flooding on all roads, or after 4 p.m., residents can call the Juneau Police Department non-emergency line at (907) 586-0600.
For flooding on Alaska DOT&PF roads, leave a message at: (907) 465-4655
An avalanche evacuation advisory is still in effect for residents in all known slide paths downtown and along Thane Road. Centennial Hall remains open as an emergency shelter.
John Bressette, the city’s new avalanche advisor, said multiple avalanches happened on Mount Juneau on known slide paths including White Pass, Chop Gully near Flume Trail and above Behrends Avenue. He said he doesn’t know exactly how many occurred, but that it’s somewhere in the double-digits.
The Thane Road avalanche slide path, photographed from Douglas Island on Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026. (Photo by Kelly Aicardi/KTOO)
He said avalanche conditions stabilized a bit overnight when temperatures cooled and rain stopped. But the hazard is high again today.
“We are expecting things to ramp back up today as rain comes back in,” Bressette said.
Thane Road remains closed. Pat Dryer is an avalanche forecaster at the Alaska Department of Transportation. According to the agency’s infrasound detection system, he said eight to 10 avalanches came near Thane Road yesterday.
“The hazard remains elevated above Thane Road, and we’ll be conducting drone reconnaissance in partnership with CBJ this afternoon to further assess current conditions,” he said.
The city advises residents living in an avalanche zone to remain clear of those areas until the city advises otherwise.
Barr said that it’s still too early to know how much this disaster will cost in resources and damages. “All I can tell you right now is that it is going to be substantial. We’re talking in the millions of dollars,” he said.
– Alix Soliman
Update, Saturday 10:00 a.m.
The City and Borough of Juneau will hold another briefing at 10:30 a.m. today about avalanche risk and ongoing storm response. City, state and tribal staff will share information and the National Weather Service will provide an update. Tune in live on the radio 104.3 FM or 91.7 FM or watch here.
Thane Road currently remains closed at the avalanche gates.
The Juneau Arts and Culture Center will be closed today in order to serve as a supplemental emergency shelter if necessary. According to the city, 47 people stayed at Centennial Hall last night.
Update, 9:45 p.m.
Eaglecrest Ski Area has posted an uphill travel closure beginning at 6 a.m. Saturday while crews work on avalanche mitigation. More conditions and status updates can be found here.
Update, 8:30 p.m.
All City and Borough of Juneau facilities will be closed Saturday and Sunday. That includes all public libraries, the Juneau Douglas City Museum, pools and parks and recreation facilities and the recycling center and hazardous waste facility. The Shéiyi X̱aat Hit Youth Shelter will remain open.
Update, 7:45 p.m.
The avalanche evacuation advisory remains in effect. As a reminder, The American Red Cross of Alaska has opened an emergency shelter at Centennial Hall (101 Egan Drive) for those evacuating the avalanche hazard area. Mass care support, feeding services and pet sheltering are available at Centennial Hall.
Parking is available in the lot between Juneau Arts & Culture Center and Centennial Hall. Residents with questions, concerns, or that have been displaced from their home due to the winter storm can call 1-800-RED-CROS for information and follow-up. According to a City and Borough of Juneau public service announcement, residents that are unable to vacate their homes and need transportation assistance to access emergency sheltering should call 911 for assistance.
Blankets sit in a stack for avalanche evacuees at Centennial Hall on Friday, Jan. 9, 2025. (Photo by Clarise Larson/KTOO)
Update, 7 p.m.
Alaska DOT&PF will re-evaluate the emergency closure of Thane Road at 8 a.m. Saturday. DOT warns that Thane residents should be prepared for extended road closures.
Update, 6:30 p.m.:
According to a city release, the winter emergency warming shelter operated by St. Vincent De Paul is not moving to Marie Drake due to unsafe conditions. Instead, it’s moving from its previous location within the known avalanche hazard area at 1325 Eastaugh Way off of Thane Road to Glacier Valley Elementary School. The shelter will be open at 9:00 p.m.
“The roofs at both Centennial Hall and GVES have been surveyed by a structural engineer and deemed safe for occupancy,” the release says.
Update, 6:15 p.m.:
The Alaska Department of Transportation has detected several slides in the Thane Road area.
Update, 3:25 p.m.:
The emergency warming shelter located on Thane Road is relocating due to avalanche danger.
Update, 3:00 p.m.:
The city is warning residents that roads are beginning to flood, and the snow on roofs is getting heavier.
At the city briefing earlier, National Weather Service meteorologist Nicole Ferrin said the heaviest rain is expected to fall throughout the day Friday into the evening. The National Weather Service issued a flash flood watch across Southeast Alaska this morning that will last through the weekend.
“We do have a flood watch that remains in effect for localized flooding, ponding of water on roadways and other hazards that can come out of that, like hydroplaning and things like that,” she said.
The existing snowpack, with some berms over five feet tall in parts of town, is blocking drainage on roads. She said cars can get stuck in the high water, which residents are sharing videos of on social media.
“If you’re not sure how deep the water is across a roadway or otherwise, or if you don’t know if your vehicle can make it through, then find an alternate route,” Ferrin said. “If your tailpipe is reaching the level of the water, then you could easily get stuck and cause more issues there also.”
And as the rain falls, the existing snowpack absorbs it “like a sponge” making it heavier, Ferrin said that additional weight may increase the risk of roofs collapsing.
The city advises anyone who is not in an avalanche evacuation area to stay at home and off the roads while crews work to clear storm drains and make them safe for travel again.
-Yvonne Krumrey
Update, 12:30 p.m.:
Capital Transit has suspended service along Glacier Highway in areas in the avalanche zone.
“Our team at Capital Transit has suspended bus service along Glacier Highway in that avalanche area … that really looks like between the federal building and the hospital on Glacier Highway,” said Ryan O’Shaughnessy, the emergency programs manager for the City and Borough of Juneau, during the city’s briefing Friday. “Capital Transit routes are still running on Egan, but stops that are located along Glacier Highway are not being serviced at this time due to avalanche risk.”
Update, 11 a.m.:
An avalanche evacuation alert has been issued for all downtown Juneau residents in slide zones. An emergency shelter is being set up at Centennial Hall in downtown Juneau.
“This evacuation advisory is made with the safety of Juneau residents in mind,” the alert from the City and Borough of Juneau reads. “This decision is not made lightly and CBJ realizes that evacuating under extreme weather conditions may be difficult. Again, the safety of Juneau residents is our main factor in making this evacuation advisory.”
Update, Friday 10 a.m.:
The City and Borough of Juneau will hold a presentation at 11:30 a.m. about avalanche risk and ongoing storm response.
City, state and tribal staff will share information and the National Weather Service will provide an update. Tune in live on the radio 104.3 FM or 91.7 FM or watch here.
Update, Thursday 6:45 p.m.:
All Juneau schools are closed Friday in anticipation of heavy rain and snow.
The Juneau School District notified parents and staff of the closure Thursday night and said that no remote instruction will take place Friday.
“For the safety of our students, staff and families, all classes, meetings, and activities are canceled. The Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé Hockey games at Treadwell are also canceled.”
City engineers and maintenance staff will continue to monitor the roofs of school facilities.
The University of Alaska Southeast’s Juneau campus will also operate remotely Friday.
All City and Borough of Juneau facilities are closed Friday as well. That includes city hall, city offices, public libraries and parks and recreation facilities.
Residents are once again encouraged to stay off the roads. Capital Transit will continue running on winter routes.
Update, Thursday 6 p.m.:
The City & Borough of Juneau sent out an alert Thursday evening warning residents that the avalanche risk is “very likely to significantly increase” in the next 24 hours due to the atmospheric river making landfall. The alert is not an evacuation advisory.
The Alaska Department of Transportation will close Thane Road Friday at noon and will re-evaluate the closure at 8 a.m. on Saturday. But the city said in its alert that Thane residents should be prepared for extended road closures.
Original story:
As the state of Alaska responds to Juneau’s disaster declaration, the capital city is bracing for heavy rain and potential flooding from an atmospheric river expected to hit Southeast late Thursday night.
This comes after back-to-back snowstorms dumped more than four feet of snow on Juneau. The city and tribal governments issued a joint disaster declaration Tuesday, requesting help from the state as local resources have been stretched thin.
The National Weather Service issued a flood watch in Juneau for Friday morning through Saturday evening.
At a press conference held in coordination with city, state and tribal officials Wednesday evening, NWS Warning Coordination Meteorologist Nicole Ferrin said the agency expects the storm to bring both snow and rain to Juneau.
“The most likely scenario right now is for anywhere from four to five inches of snow out of that event,” Ferrin said. “But if the warm-up takes a little bit longer into the day on Friday, then we could see upwards of possibly seven inches of snow before we change to rain.”
She says the heaviest rain is expected to hit Juneau on Friday.
Streets have already been pooling with water due to warming temperatures and rain, and Ferrin said to expect road conditions to worsen with the deluge coming while snow and ice block drainage.
But she said the agency is not expecting snowmelt to cause much of the flooding at this point.
“The snow itself will absorb a lot of the water, because we had some dry layers in there initially,” she said.
“That verbal declaration carries the weight of law,” said Jeremy Zidek, a spokesperson for Alaska’s Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management, during the press briefing. “He activated the state’s public assistance program, which is to fund repairs to damaged critical infrastructure and also to help with emergency response costs.”
In addition to helping clear roofs of public buildings like schools, water treatment facilities and Bartlett Regional Hospital, the state also plans to help dig out storm drains and fire hydrants.
But state and city officials said that the assistance from this declaration will not include helping local residents or businesses clear snow from their roofs.
“The declaration and assistance from the state is unfortunately not available to help clear snow from private residences or commercial properties,” said Deputy City Manager Robert Barr at a special Juneau Assembly meeting Wednesday evening, where the city adopted a resolution approving the disaster declaration.
Barr said the state’s individual assistance program is designed to help private residences, but only after property has been damaged. The program doesn’t prevent damage.
Barr said the city has been prioritizing shoveling the roofs of public buildings based on how close each building is to its designed snow load capacity, which he said staff have been measuring daily or sometimes more often.
“Some are quite close, very few — only one that I’m aware of right now — are over [weight capacity],” Barr said. “That’s the Auke Bay Fire Station. So we’ve limited occupancy to that, and we’ll be addressing it as quickly as we can.”
Pat Dryer, an avalanche forecaster at the Alaska Department of Transportation, said the agency is anticipating road closures due to the potential for large avalanches.
“Given the current weather outlook, we’re anticipating heavy snowfall, heavy rain and warming temperatures at higher elevations,” he said. “This will lead to rapid rises in avalanche hazard, specifically for Thane Road.”
City officials said that state assistance could include committing additional personnel to the avalanche hazard, flying helicopter-mounted LIDAR flights to monitor the risk and potentially ordering radar systems.
This is a developing story. Check back for updates.
A swing set and dinosaur play structure are buried under several feet of snow at Harborview Elementary School in Juneau on Jan. 7, 2025. (Photo by Jamie Diep/KTOO)
The Juneau School District plans to close at least two schools to remove snow on the buildings’ roofs following recent record-breaking snowstorms.
The district closed Sít’ Eetí Shaanáx – Glacier Valley Elementary first and reopened the rest of its schools Wednesday, following district-wide closures Monday and Tuesday.
During a press conference Wednesday afternoon, Juneau Assistant City Manager Robert Barr said a team of engineers determined the elementary school needs to be shoveled first.
“We started there due to pre-existing damage that we knew about at that facility that made us more concerned for them,” he said.
Barr said the city contracted with a 25-person, out-of-state team to work on the school.
As of Wednesday, the district says no school is above its load capacity based on measurements taken. Sít’ Eetí Shaanáx – Glacier Valley will remain closed for the rest of this week.
Mendenhall River Community School is next in line for shoveling.
Though most schools are open, Superintendent Frank Hauser said students will be excused if they can’t attend school due to unsafe weather conditions.
“Even when schools are open, you know the conditions in your immediate neighborhood and are the best judge of whether or not to send your child to school,” he said.
With parking limited at Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé, the district encourages high school students to take the school bus or public transit to school. Students also have the option to park at Thunder Mountain Middle School and take a school bus in.
School buses will be running snow routes all week, the district says, and will not be going to trailer parks due to conditions.
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