Appendix K: Mailing List
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Broadcast Applications 9/30/2013
Federal Communications Commission 445 Twelfth Street SW PUBLIC NOTICE Washington, D.C. 20554 News media information 202 / 418-0500 Recorded listing of releases and texts 202 / 418-2222 REPORT NO. 28084 Broadcast Applications 9/30/2013 STATE FILE NUMBER E/P CALL LETTERS APPLICANT AND LOCATION N A T U R E O F A P P L I C A T I O N AM STATION APPLICATIONS FOR ASSIGNMENT OF LICENSE ACCEPTED FOR FILING MA BAL-20130822AER WBEC 2714 GAMMA BROADCASTING, LLC Voluntary Assignment of License, as amended E 1420 KHZ MA , PITTSFIELD From: GAMMA BROADCASTING, LLC To: GREG REED Form 314 MA BAL-20130822AES WUPE 71436 GAMMA BROADCASTING, LLC Voluntary Assignment of License, as amended E 1110 KHZ MA , PITTSFIELD From: GAMMA BROADCASTING, LLC To: GREG REED Form 314 CLASS A TV APPLICATIONS FOR ASSIGNMENT OF LICENSE ACCEPTED FOR FILING GA BALTVA-20130925ANZ WBFL-CA 48763 NEW AGE MEDIA OF Voluntary Assignment of License TALLAHASSEE LICENSE, LLC E CHAN-13 From: NEW AGE MEDIA OF TALLAHASSEE, LLC GA , VALDOSTA To: TALLAHASSEE (WTLH-TV) LICENSEE, INC. Form 314 GA BALTTA-20130925AOA WBVJ-LP 23487 NEW AGE MEDIA OF Voluntary Assignment of License TALLAHASSEE LICENSE, LLC E CHAN-35 From: NEW AGE MEDIA OF TALLAHASSEE, LLC GA , VALDOSTA To: TALLAHASSEE (WTLH-TV) LICENSEE, INC. Form 314 FL BALTTA-20130925AOE WYME-CA 7726 NEW AGE MEDIA OF Voluntary Assignment of License GAINESVILLE LICENSE, LLC E CHAN-45 From: NEW AGE MEDIA OF GAINESVILLE LICENSE, LLC FL , GAINESVILLE To: WGFL LICENSEE, LLC Form 314 Page 1 of 53 Federal Communications Commission 445 Twelfth Street SW PUBLIC NOTICE Washington, D.C. -
Federal Register/Vol. 69, No. 37/Wednesday, February 25, 2004
Federal Register / Vol. 69, No. 37 / Wednesday, February 25, 2004 / Notices 8727 providing the service. They also argue that extended beyond bypass mail. We agree, but 14. Hageland. since excise taxes are paid when the sale is the Postal Service can undertake its own data 15. Iliamna. made, they may not reflect when passengers collection as necessary to administer its 16. Inland. or freight are actually transported and the tender policy for non-priority, non-bypass 17. Island (Redemption). revenue earned. Warbelow’s Air Ventures mail. Of course, consistent with our rules, all 18. LAB. (Warbelow’s) notes that excise taxes are a carriers are still required to report the T–100 19. Larry’s Flying Service. straight percentage of revenue,7 so in lieu of passenger and freight traffic, even those that 20. Olson. directly reporting excise taxes by each do not transport any bypass mail. 21. Peninsula. market, carriers could meet the requirements Additional Reports, Appendix B 22. Promech. of the law by reporting revenue by market. 23. Servant. We note too that for the freight pool, unlike Larry’s Flying Service recommends that the 24. Skagway. the passenger pool, RSIA permits the Postal Department have carriers report a more 25. Smokey Bay. Service to use either the weight of the freight detailed income statement, in lieu of excise 26. Spernak. transported in the market, as reported on the taxes, stating: ‘‘Scheduled passenger revenue 27. Tanana. T–100, or the associated revenue to follows the Net Income line on [Schedule F– 28. Taquan. determine qualification for tender, and this 1 and] should not be flawed by any code- 29. -
Smoke Communication Strategy and Appendices 2007
A W F C G S M O K E E D U C A T I O N C Smoke Education Communication Strategy O M v.2007 M U N I C A T I O N S Approved: Date: T R A _____________________________ __________________ T AWFCG Chair E G Y v.2007 AWFCG Smoke Education Communications Strategy Page 2 of 11 02/26/07 Table of Contents Section Page / Appendix Purpose 3 Background 3 Communication Goals 3 General Audiences 3 Strategy 4 Tactics 5 Success 6 Tools and Products 6 Target Audiences 6 Target Media 8 Appendices 11 News Release A Key Messages B Talking Points C Public Service Announcement D Poster E Flyer F Web Site Plan G Display Panel 1 H Display Panel 2 I v.2007 AWFCG Smoke Education Communications Strategy Page 3 of 11 02/26/07 Purpose To provide members of the Alaska Wildland Fire Coordinating Group (AWFCG) with a communication strategy to engage the public in smoke information from wildland fires which include prescribe fires, fire use and wildfires, occurring in the State of Alaska. Background The increase in smoke throughout Alaska during the 2004 and 2005 fire seasons hampered fire suppression operations, aviation operations, motor vehicle operations, tourism and recreation. This strategy provides a collective approach to informing the public about smoke-related issues. Communication Goals · Develop a set of key messages to be used by AWFCG member organizations in order to project one voice in a unified effort regarding smoke issues and mitigation measures. · Provide focused communication products that support the communication goals of this strategy. -
United Caribou Association of the Nunamiut
United Caribou Association of the Nunamiut Item Type Report Authors Tooyak, Andrew Jr Publisher University of Alaska Anchorage Download date 02/10/2021 08:48:34 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/11122/6748 UNITED CARIBOU ASSOCIATION OF THE NUNAMIUT By Andrew Tooyak, Jr. RECOMMENDED: _______________________________ Justus “Kenny” Mekiana _______________________________ Nancy Nix, MD, MPH&TM, MEd, CHES _______________________________ Elizabeth Hodges Snyder, PhD, MPH Chair, Advisory Committee _______________________________ Virginia Miller DrPH, MS, MPH Chair, Department of Health Sciences APPROVED: ______________________________________ William Hogan, MSW Dean, College of Health __________________________________ Date UNITED CARIBOU ASSOCIATION OF THE NUNAMIUT A PROJECT REPORT Presented to the Faculty Of the University of Alaska Anchorage In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF PUBLIC HEALTH By Andrew Tooyak, Jr. Anchorage, Alaska May 2016 Abstract Caribou is one food source that the people in Anaktuvuk Pass, Alaska rely on as a dependable and traditional source of food. United Caribou Association of the Nunamiut (UCAN) hopes to emulate the Alaska Eskimo Whaling Commission in a way that secures a first right of refusal over sport hunters and others. What UCAN proposes by its presence are negotiated restrictions to ensure subsistence taking of caribou by residents of Anaktuvuk Pass. Because the caribou of three Arctic herds are unrestrained and transient, and a shared resource of the State of Alaska, the State Board of Game views the caribou as a shared resource to be used by all citizens of the State of Alaska. The framers of UCAN want to ensure that the State Board of Game, sport hunters, and others know that the people of Anaktuvuk Pass are concerned about their food security. -
Alaska's Predator Control Programs
Alaska’sAlaska’s PredatorPredator ControlControl ProgramsPrograms Managing for Abundance or Abundant Mismanagement? In 1995, Alaska Governor Tony Knowles responded to negative publicity over his state’s predator control programs by requesting a National Academy of Sciences review of Alaska’s entire approach to predator control. Following the review Governor Knowles announced that no program should be considered unless it met three criteria: cost-effectiveness, scientific scrutiny and broad public acceptability. The National Academy of Sciences’ National Research Council (NRC) released its review, Wolves, Bears, and Their Prey in Alaska, in 1997, drawing conclusions and making recommendations for management of Alaska’s predators and prey. In 1996, prior to the release of the NRC report, the Wolf Management Reform Coalition, a group dedicated to promoting fair-chase hunting and responsible management of wolves in Alaska, published Showdown in Alaska to document the rise of wolf control in Alaska and the efforts undertaken to stop it. This report, Alaska’s Predator Control Programs: Managing for Abundance or Abundant Mismanagement? picks up where that 1996 report left off. Acknowledgements Authors: Caroline Kennedy, Theresa Fiorino Editor: Kate Davies Designer: Pete Corcoran DEFENDERS OF WILDLIFE Defenders of Wildlife is a national, nonprofit membership organization dedicated to the protection of all native wild animals and plants in their natural communities. www.defenders.org Cover photo: © Nick Jans © 2011 Defenders of Wildlife 1130 17th Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20036-4604 202.682.9400 333 West 4th Avenue, Suite 302 Anchorage, AK 99501 907.276.9453 Table of Contents 1. Introduction ............................................................................................................... 2 2. The National Research Council Review ...................................................................... -
Meteorologia
MINISTÉRIO DA DEFESA COMANDO DA AERONÁUTICA METEOROLOGIA ICA 105-1 DIVULGAÇÃO DE INFORMAÇÕES METEOROLÓGICAS 2006 MINISTÉRIO DA DEFESA COMANDO DA AERONÁUTICA DEPARTAMENTO DE CONTROLE DO ESPAÇO AÉREO METEOROLOGIA ICA 105-1 DIVULGAÇÃO DE INFORMAÇÕES METEOROLÓGICAS 2006 MINISTÉRIO DA DEFESA COMANDO DA AERONÁUTICA DEPARTAMENTO DE CONTROLE DO ESPAÇO AÉREO PORTARIA DECEA N° 15/SDOP, DE 25 DE JULHO DE 2006. Aprova a reedição da Instrução sobre Divulgação de Informações Meteorológicas. O CHEFE DO SUBDEPARTAMENTO DE OPERAÇÕES DO DEPARTAMENTO DE CONTROLE DO ESPAÇO AÉREO, no uso das atribuições que lhe confere o Artigo 1°, inciso IV, da Portaria DECEA n°136-T/DGCEA, de 28 de novembro de 2005, RESOLVE: Art. 1o Aprovar a reedição da ICA 105-1 “Divulgação de Informações Meteorológicas”, que com esta baixa. Art. 2o Esta Instrução entra em vigor em 1º de setembro de 2006. Art. 3o Revoga-se a Portaria DECEA nº 131/SDOP, de 1º de julho de 2003, publicada no Boletim Interno do DECEA nº 124, de 08 de julho de 2003. (a) Brig Ar RICARDO DA SILVA SERVAN Chefe do Subdepartamento de Operações do DECEA (Publicada no BCA nº 146, de 07 de agosto de 2006) MINISTÉRIO DA DEFESA COMANDO DA AERONÁUTICA DEPARTAMENTO DE CONTROLE DO ESPAÇO AÉREO PORTARIA DECEA N° 33 /SDOP, DE 13 DE SETEMBRO DE 2007. Aprova a edição da emenda à Instrução sobre Divulgação de Informações Meteorológicas. O CHEFE DO SUBDEPARTAMENTO DE OPERAÇÕES DO DEPARTAMENTO DE CONTROLE DO ESPAÇO AÉREO, no uso das atribuições que lhe confere o Artigo 1°, alínea g, da Portaria DECEA n°34-T/DGCEA, de 15 de março de 2007, RESOLVE: Art. -
2020 Annual Report Final
2020 IN NUMBERS 30+ PARTNERSHIPS 34,000+ PUBLIC COMMENTS In 2020, we partnered with over 30 organizations We mobilized over 34,000 public comments on to provide programs across the state. We are pressing wildlife issues, including regulations building broad coalitions that unite Alaskans to considered by federal agencies, the Alaska Board of speak up for wildlife. Game, state development agencies, and local councils. 2020 Annual Report 2,000 WILDLIFE WEDNESDAY ATTENDEES 3 CITIZEN SCIENCE PROJECTS We hosted 19 Wildlife Wednesdays and shared - Co-founded and hosted the Alaska Beluga Monitoring them online. Over 2,000 people learned about Partnership surveys in Kenai and Kasilof to track Alaska's wildlife, from whales to bats, bears to endangered Cook Inlet beluga whales (279 whales left). geese. Thank you to all our volunteer speakers - Continued partnership with the Coastal Observation and small business sponsors! You can view our and Seabird Survey Team to monitor seabird die-offs. Wildlife Wednesday presentations at - Launched "Map the Trap" database to document trap akwildlife.org and on our Facebook page. encounters on Alaska's trails. 4 LAWSUITS 32 WILDLIFE ISSUES We challenged extreme sport hunting practices in We submitted scientific and legal comments on 32 Alaska's National Preserves, underregulated wolf wildlife and habitat issues across Alaska. These trapping on Prince of Wales island, drilling in the comments influence decision makers, raise public Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, and the awareness, and build an administrative record of development of the Ambler Road. wildlife advocacy for future work. 28 EVENTS 45% MEMBER SUPPORTED We hosted 28 wildlife education and advocacy 45% of our 2020 revenue came from individual events on a variety of wildlife topics. -
HOUSE RES COMMITTEE -1- April 5, 2010 WITNESS REGISTER
ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE HOUSE RESOURCES STANDING COMMITTEE April 5, 2010 1:06 p.m. MEMBERS PRESENT Representative Craig Johnson, Co-Chair Representative Bryce Edgmon Representative Paul Seaton Representative David Guttenberg Representative Scott Kawasaki Representative Chris Tuck MEMBERS ABSENT Representative Mark Neuman, Co-Chair Representative Kurt Olson Representative Peggy Wilson COMMITTEE CALENDAR CONFIRMATION HEARING(S): Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission Bruce C. Twomley - Juneau - CONFIRMATION(S) ADVANCED Big Game Commercial Services Board Robert D. Mumford - Anchorage - CONFIRMATION(S) ADVANCED Board of Game Ben Grussendorf - Sitka Allen F. Barrette - Fairbanks - CONFIRMATION(S) ADVANCED PREVIOUS COMMITTEE ACTION No previous action to record HOUSE RES COMMITTEE -1- April 5, 2010 WITNESS REGISTER BRUCE C. TWOMLEY, Appointee Alaska Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission (CFEC) Juneau, Alaska POSITION STATEMENT: Testified as appointee to the Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission. ROBERT D. MUMFORD, Appointee Big Game Commercial Services Board Anchorage, Alaska POSITION STATEMENT: Testified as appointee to the Big Game Commercial Services Board. BEN GRUSSENDORF, Appointee Board of Game Sitka, Alaska POSITION STATEMENT: Testified as appointee to the Board of Game. ALLEN F. BARRETTE, Appointee Board of Game Sitka, Alaska POSITION STATEMENT: Testified as appointee to the Board of Game. VIRGIL UMPHENOUR Fairbanks, Alaska POSITION STATEMENT: Testified in support of Mr. Mumford's appointment to the Big Game Commercial Services Board. KELLY WALTERS Anchorage, Alaska POSITION STATEMENT: Testified in support of the appointment of Mr. Grussendorf to the Board of Game. TINA BROWN, Board Member Alaska Wildlife Alliance Juneau, Alaska POSITION STATEMENT: Testified in opposition to Mr. Barrette's appointment to the Board of Game. KARLA HART Juneau, Alaska POSITION STATEMENT: Expressed concerns with the appointment of Mr. -
Alaska National Wildlife Refuges Rule
Alaskans for Wildlife * Alaska Wilderness League * Alaska Wildlife Alliance Alliance for the Wild Rockies * American Forests * Animal Legal Defense Fund Animal Welfare Institute * Audubon Alaska * Back Country Horsemen of New Mexico Born Free USA * Braided River * Center for Biological Diversity * Clean Water Action Conservation Congress * Conservatives for Responsible Stewardship Copper Country Alliance * Daily Kos * Defenders of Wildlife * Earthjustice Endangered Species Coalition * Environment America Environmental Protection Information Center * Eyak Preservation Council Friends of Alaska National Wildlife Refuges * Friends of the Bitterroot Friends of the Clearwater * Friends of the Earth * Friends of the Wild Swan * GreenLatinos Gwich’in Steering Committee * Howling for Wolves * Idaho Sporting Congress Institute for Science and Human Values * International Fund for Animal Welfare Kachemak Bay Conservation Society * Klamath Forest Alliance League of Conservation Voters * League of Humane Voters – Wisconsin Chapter Living With Wolves * Midwest Environmental Advocates National Parks Conservation Association * National Wildlife Refuge Association Native Plant Conservation Campaign * Natural Resources Defense Council New Mexico Sportsmen * New Rules for Global Finance Northern Alaska Environmental Center * Pacific Environment * Patagonia, Inc. Progressive Congress Action Fund * Public Citizen Resisting Environmental Destruction on Indigenous Lands * Save Our Sky Blue Waters Sierra Club * Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance * Southwest -
Airport Operators' Council to Host Aviation
Airport Operators’ Council Fairbanks International Airport FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: May 15, 2018 Contact: Sammy Loud, 907-474-2522, [email protected] Airport Operators’ Council to Host Aviation Day (Fairbanks, Alaska) – The Airport Operators’ Council (AOC) is hosting Fairbanks Aviation Day Saturday, May 19, 2018 from 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, Community Technical College’s Aviation Technology Center on the airport’s East Ramp, located at 3504 South University Avenue. This free event is family friendly and for anyone just “plane crazy.” The event will start early, with a pancake feed at 7 a.m. organized by the Experimental Aircraft Association and NANA Management Services. The pancake breakfast and lunch are a fundraiser for aviation scholarships and safety programs; a total of $3,447 was raised last year. Emma Apitzsch was selected as the 2018 scholarship recipient. The Funbanks Airport, flight activity sign-ups and exhibits will also begin at 7 a.m. At 9 a.m. the Young Explorer Flights will begin where youth between the ages of 8 and 17 can experience a free flight in a small aircraft, organized by Warbelow’s Air, Wright Air Service and Everts Air. A record breaking 199 youth had the chance to experience flight first hand at the 2017 event. Bouncers provided by Romper Room of Fairbanks will be set up near the hangar as well as balloon twisting, demonstrations and airport tours. It is recommended to sign up for flights and tours as soon as you arrive as they are on a first-come, first-serve basis. -
North Pole Road/Rail Crossing Reduction Project
Scoping Summary Report North Pole Road/Rail Crossing Reduction Project May 2011 SCOPING SUMMARY REPORT NORTH POLE ROAD/RAIL CROSSING REDUCTION PROJECT NORTH POLE, ALASKA Prepared for: Alaska Railroad Corporation 327 West Ship Creek Avenue Anchorage, Alaska 99501 Prepared by: DOWL HKM 4041 B Street Anchorage, Alaska 99503 (907) 562-2000 W.O. 60432 May 2011 Scoping Summary Report North Pole, Alaska North Pole Road/Rail Crossing Reduction Project W.O. 60432 TABLE OF CONTENTS Page 1.0 INTRODUCTION ...............................................................................................................1 1.1 General ..............................................................................................................................1 1.2 Project Team .....................................................................................................................2 1.3 Public and Agency Outreach Methods .............................................................................2 1.3.1 Mailing List of Potentially Affected Interests ............................................................3 1.3.2 Informational Flyer/Meeting Announcement .............................................................3 1.3.3 Advertisements ...........................................................................................................3 1.3.4 Project Website ...........................................................................................................4 1.3.5 Project E-Mail Address ...............................................................................................4 -
Notes on the Nunamiut Eskimo and Mammals of the Anaktuvuk Pass Region, Brooks Range, Alaska
University of Nebraska - Lincoln DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln Faculty Publications from the Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology Parasitology, Harold W. Manter Laboratory of 12-1951 Notes on the Nunamiut Eskimo and Mammals of the Anaktuvuk Pass Region, Brooks Range, Alaska Robert L. Rausch University of Washington, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/parasitologyfacpubs Part of the Parasitology Commons Rausch, Robert L., "Notes on the Nunamiut Eskimo and Mammals of the Anaktuvuk Pass Region, Brooks Range, Alaska" (1951). Faculty Publications from the Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology. 502. https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/parasitologyfacpubs/502 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Parasitology, Harold W. Manter Laboratory of at DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. It has been accepted for inclusion in Faculty Publications from the Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. Rausch in ARCTIC (December 1951) 4(3). Copyright 1951, Arctic Institute of North America. Used by permission. Fig. 1. Paneak, a Nunamiut man. Rausch in ARCTIC (December 1951) 4(3). Copyright 1951, Arctic Institute of North America. Used by permission. NOTES ON THE NUNAMIUT ESKIMO AND MAMMALS OF THE ANAKTUVUK PASS REGION, BROOKS RANGE, ALASKA Robert Rausch* HE Brooks Range, in northern Alaska, is biologically one of the least-kn.own Tregions in North America. It has been during the last few years only that the use of light aircraft has made effective travel here possible. Since April 1949, 1 have made field observations in the Anaktuvuk Pass country, in the central part of the range; this work, the investigation of animal-born~ disease, has necessitated a thorough study of the indigenous mammals.