Letters to the Editor
- A December 2025 decision to share Alaska's voter registration data with the U.S. Department of Justice has raised privacy concerns, with critics citing legal and constitutional issues.
- The Kevin Bell Arena thanked the Homer Foundation for grants from the Kevin Bell & Family Hockey Fund, the Julie Booth Ulmer Memorial Fund, and the Opportunity Fund to replace rental skates as attendance and school use grew, with new skates planned for next fall.
- Hospital leaders have been meeting residents in Homer and Anchor Point to explain the long-range plan after supporting the 2024 bond and post materials at sphosp.org.
- A March 4 legislative hearing concluded illegal actions by the Dunleavy administration, and Alaska voters potentially marked inactive may face burdens proving their registration status.
- The League of Women Voters cautioned that supplying confidential voter data to the U.S. Department of Justice raises privacy concerns, while courts in California, Michigan and Oregon have rejected similar DOJ requests.
28 Articles
28 Articles
Letters to the editor, March 14
'LION OF IDAHO' TURNS INTO 'MOUSE OF IDAHO'
March 14: Lengthy Sloka trial has been painful for complainants, Ford’s $750 for teachers won’t fix education, and other letters to the editor
Letters to the editor condemn floor-crossing by MPs, and describe the toll felt by complainants of the sex assault trial of a local doctor.
From Our Inbox: Letters to the Editor for the Week Ending March 13, 2026
Regarding the March 9 article, “Santa Barbara’s 24/7 VCA Animal Hospital to Close Permanently,” I’ve lived in Santa Barbara for more than 40 years. When I first moved here in 1961 it was not really on the map. Lemon orchards occupied the land where La Cumbre Plaza now is. I lived in the unincorporated area near San Marcos High School. Houses ran $20,000. Now 60 years later, somehow these landlords got around case law and charge three months’ ren…
Letters to the editor – March 13, 2026
Choice of chief justiceCarmel Sciberras of Naxxar writes:After what has happened recently, some believe that the choice of chief justice should be taken away from the hands of politicians and given to the current members of the judiciary – magistrates and judges – for them to elect their primus inter pares.Setting the record straightMatthew Grech...
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Bias Distribution
- 59% of the sources are Center
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