Governor Sean Parnell and First Lady Sandy Parnell held the 99th annual holiday open house at the governor’s mansion on Tuesday. It’s among the most popular holiday events in the Capital City, with eager citizens lining up around the block to get a picture taken with the Governor and First Lady. KTOO’s Danny Peterson has more.
The Alaska Governor's Mansion gets gussied up for the holidays. (Photo by Casey Kelly/KTOO)
Governor Sean Parnell and First Lady Sandy Parnell will host the annual holiday open house at the Governor’s mansion next Tuesday, December 6th.
The open house is among the most popular holiday events in the Capital City every year, with members of the governor’s cabinet serving hot cider and holiday treats to Juneau residents waiting in line to have their picture taken with the first family.
More than 24,000 cookies and 100 pounds of fudge will be cooked up for this year’s event. Students at Dzantik’i Heeni Middle School are making Gingerbread houses that will be on display, and several local school and community groups will perform carols.
The holiday open house has been held every year since the Governor’s mansion was built in 1912, with the exception of two years during World War II. Over the last year, the mansion has undergone about a million dollars’ worth of repairs and weatherization improvements.
This year’s gathering is next Tuesday from 3 to 6 p.m. People with accessibility needs should contact the governor’s office to arrange early entry. The number to call is 465-3500.
Photos courtesy of Temple JoannaShed some of those holiday calories by learning to swing dance. For five months now, community art studio The Canvas has been holding swing dancing lessons, organized by a group called Southeast Swing, an online community of dance enthusiasts in Juneau.
KTOO Intern Danny Peterson reports from the dance floor.
Operation Christmas Child volunteers.Courtesy Kim Garrett.
It’s the time of year to give thanks – and give away some of your many blessings. Southeast Alaska residents have been doing just that.
More than 24-hundred children’s Christmas boxes are headed around the world from Southeast Alaska as part of Operation Christmas Child.
Juneau is the collection point for the shoeboxes packed by Southeast residents for Samaritan’s Purse, an international relief organization.
Tom Brice and his family packed seven shoe boxes this year, in what has become an annual family tradition.
“We tried to get a wide range of gifts for the young kids to the older kids, boys and girls,” he says. “My wife focused on the girls, me and boys focused on the younger boys.”
Samaritan’s Purse recommends shoeboxes be packed with age and gender-specific toys, school supplies, socks, t-shirts, ball caps, hygiene items such as toothbrushes and toothpaste – the list is long and varied. A few things are taboo, such as toy guns and military figures.
Colorful shoe-type boxes were stacked high Sunday at the Chapel by the Lake. Alaska Marine Lines brings the boxes to Juneau from all over the Panhandle. Brice headed up the effort this year, but has volunteered for Operation Christmas Child for six years.
“In that time, this is the largest number of shoeboxes that we received in Southeast and represents probably an 8 to 10 percent increase in contributions and shoeboxes over the past year,” Brice says. “Southeast really came through.”
Volunteers begin packing 2,404 Operation Christmas Child boxes for shipping. Courtesy Kim Garrett.
Samaritan’s Purse is a Christian relief organization that has grown well beyond churches and into entire communities.
Brice says McDonalds donates toys, AML coordinates the shipping, Tyler Rental provides equipment on packing day. The Southeast boxes are headed for an Operation Christmas Child distribution center in California, then to children ages 2 to 14 somewhere around the globe.
“There’s a lot of relief organizations that are focused on basic food and commodities like that. Operation Christmas Child is very specifically focused on kids,” Brice says.
In years past, Southeast boxes have gone to Haiti, the Philippines, Africa, the Russian Far East, Slovakia, Romania, South America; Brice says it’s not known where this years will end up. It’s not too late to pack a box. Go to samaritanspurse.org.
Closer to home, the Salvation Army expects to serve a traditional Thanksgiving dinner to more than 500 people on Thansksgiving Day. The annual event will again be at the Hangar on the Wharf from 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
The Salvation Army has held the community dinner at the popular restaurant for years. It’s not the only public Thanksgiving meal around town, but it’s sure to be the biggest. Captain Donald Warner says the organization can serve more people with fewer resources than by giving out food boxes.
“In other words, 50 turkeys would serve 50 families, whereas 50 turkeys at dinner would serve 500 people, which could be 120 / 140 families, so you more than double the amount of families you can serve by doing it that way,” he says.
Throughout the capital city, charities and churches have stepped up their collections for the holidays, helping the Southeast Alaska Food Bank, the Glory Hole and other organizations as well as individual families. Warner says the number of people seeking food boxes, clothing vouchers and other assistance from the Salvation Army has doubled in the last five months.
The Salvation Army begins taking applications on Friday to help families during the upcoming Christmas season. Warner expects at least 200 families to register.
“And then what we do is try to put them in the program that we think would best suits their needs, whether it’s Adopt a Family or Angel Tree or under general distribution.”
On Friday, normally the busiest shopping day of the year, the Salvation Army bell ringers will be out at Juneau stores. The money collected in the red pails stays in Juneau to meet local needs.
“Sometimes what we do is we’ll put it aside because during Christmas time is where most of the donations come in and during the summer time donations don’t come in as much,” Warner says. “So a lot of times what I try to do with that money from Christmas is to hold it for the summer so we can continue that level of service all the way through the year.”
He says in responding to need, people should get a hand up and not just a hand out.
Courtesy CBJJuneau Mayor Bruce Botelho has won the Alaska Municipal League’s Vic Fischer award for excellence in local government.
The award was presented by Fischer Thursday night at AML’s 61st Annual Local Government Conference in Fairbanks.
The AML Board of Directors established the Vic Fischer Local Government Leadership Award in 2000 in honor of Fischer, who was the secretary to the Committee on Local Government for the Alaska Constitutional Convention. He also served more than 50 years in local and state government.
According to the AML, officials nominated for the award must show significant statewide contributions to improving local government and communities in Alaska.
Botelho is in his third term as mayor of the capital city. He also served as mayor from 1988 to 1991. He’s often described being mayor as the best job he’s ever had. Botelho served eight years as Alaska Attorney General under two governors.
Alaska’s Emergency Alert System test that was scheduled for Wednesday at 10 a.m. has been cancelled.
Officials called off the EAS test due to severe weather across Western Alaska.
The national weather service predicts a storm will hit the coast with hurricane force winds.
The national EAS test uses a special code reserved for the president of the United States in case of a national emergency. The test has never been conducted with all fifty states participating. The national EAS test will proceed in other states.
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