Rent
fight chills relations between Fairbanks ice park, railroad - 6/26/10
Anchorage Daily News The Associated Press |
The Alaska Railroad, which owns the Ice Park land, wants higher rent and improvements to the property. Ice Alaska says it can't afford the rent hike, and the "improvements" would rob it of a parking lot for the championships. |
Rent
dispute chills relationship between Ice Park, Alaska Railroad -
6/26/10
Fairbanks Daily News-Miner by Amanda Bohman |
FAIRBANKS — The ice park melted months ago, but relations between Ice Alaska and its landlord remain cool. The nonprofit organization, which champions ice sculpting, leases land along the Chena River from the state-owned Alaska Railroad Corp. |
Usibelli
tests coal export possibilities from Port MacKenzie - 6/23/10
Alaska Journal of Commerce By Sean Manget |
A test to determine whether coal could be shipped from Port MacKenzie to markets abroad has proven successful, officials say. The result puts Usibelli Coal Mine Inc. one step closer to opening its Wishbone Hill deposit near Palmer, and brings the Matanuska-Susitna Borough closer to housing a profitable port. |
Former
mayor hypes railroad line to Port MacKenzie - 6/15/10
Anchorage Daily News By LISA DEMER |
For months now, former Anchorage Mayor Rick Mystrom has been pushing a huge railroad project -- in the Mat-Su. It's one of the projects the Matanuska-Susitna Borough is banking on to make its 11-year-old Port MacKenzie viable. |
Governor
axes over $300 million in state spending - 6/6/10
Anchorage Daily News By SEAN COCKERHAM |
Parnell cut the biggest project in the budget for the Mat-Su Borough. He vetoed $22 million of the $57 million that the Legislature appropriated for work toward an extension of the Alaska Railroad from north of Willow to Port MacKenzie. Mat-Su Economic Development Director David Hanson said the remaining money will go to design and engineer the route, buy right of way and begin construction. |
State
allows railroad to use herbicides; objections raised - 6/6/10
Anchorage Daily News By ELIZABETH BLUEMINK |
State environmental regulators have approved herbicide spraying along the Alaska Railroad tracks for the first time in decades, prompting tribal and environmental groups from Eklutna to Seward to ask them to reverse the decision. Starting Wednesday, the Alaska Railroad has permission for two years
to spray 30 miles of track in a 90-mile segment between Indian and
Seward with two chemicals, including glyphosate, the weed-killing ingredient
in Monsanto's famous Roundup spray. |
State
approves herbicides along Alaska Railroad - 6/6/10
Fairbanks Daily News-Miner by The Associated Press |
ANCHORAGE, Alaska - State environmental regulators have approved spraying herbicide along Alaska Railroad tracks, but environmental groups are appealing the permit. The Anchorage Daily News reports the railroad has permission to spray portions of the track between Indian and Seward to kill brush that could cause a train to derail. The railroad may not spray within 100 feet of a stream or pond. |
Japanese
firm shows interest in Wishbone Hill coal - 5/28/10 Anchorage Daily News By RINDI WHITE |
WASILLA -- Usibelli Coal Mine Inc. has a potential buyer
for its low-sulfur, bituminous Wishbone Hill coal, company officials announced
Wednesday. |
Quick
economic recovery leads to jet fuel shortage for cargo planes - 5/28/10 KTUU.com by Ted Land |
"Flint Hills is our largest customer and they certainly are an important part of our product mix, our revenue stream," said Steve Silverstein with the Alaska Railroad. Now the railroad is expecting 19 extra carloads per day. " They're not ramping up enough for us to add additional train service, but they're ramping up enough to give us an extra revenue, which we could certainly use," Silverstein said. |
Alaska
Railroad seeks president, CEO - 5/19/10 Anchorage Daily News The Associated Press |
The state-owned Alaska Railroad Corp. is taking applications for a new president and CEO. The railroad's last chief, Pat Gamble, left to head the University of Alaska system. |
Mat-Su
rail link construction could start next year - 5/5/10 Alaska Journal of Commerce By Tim Bradner |
If Gov. Sean Parnell gives the OK, a $57 million appropriation in the state capital budget will allow construction to begin next spring on 11 miles of a 30-mile new Alaska Railroad spur line to the Matanuska-Susitna Borough's Port Mackenzie on upper Cook Inlet. |
Alaska
Railroad world-renown for comfort, scenery - 5/5/10 Fairbanks Daily News-Miner by Tim Mowry |
FAIRBANKS, Alaska - If you really want to sit back and enjoy Alaska, consider hopping on the Alaska Railroad for a day or even a week. With more than 500 miles of track running from Seward at the south end to Fairbanks on the north end, the railroad cuts through three different mountain ranges — the Kenai Mountains, the Chugach Mountains and the Alaska Range — and offers unforgettable views that can’t be seen from an RV or tour bus but can from one of the railroad’s luxury domed cars. |
House
adds millions to already bulging capital budget - 4/25/10 Anchorage Daily News By SEAN COCKERHAM |
The largest amount added for a project Friday was $57 million for a rail connection to Port MacKenzie. It's a big chunk of the funding for that project, which has a total cost estimated around $300 million. The idea is to extend the railroad between 30 and 45 miles from the existing rail system north of Willow down to Port MacKenzie. Borough officials hope to attract industrial development at the port. |
Deal
could extend lease for Ice Alaska - 4/17/10 Fairbanks Daily News-Miner by Christopher Eshleman |
JUNEAU — A deal in the works would extend a nonprofit ice sculpting championship’s shaky rental arrangement through 2011. The option, however, would mean shifting the event’s lease from the nonprofit Ice Alaska to the Fairbanks North Star Borough government. |
Alaska
lawmakers push engineering funding - 4/17/10 Fairbanks Daily News-Miner by Christopher Eshleman |
The committee's rewrite of capital spending plans this morning also includes $10 million for Fairbanks road service areas, twice the amount senators proposed last month. It also now holds $57 million for a railroad spur to industrial docks on the northern shore of Cook Inlet. |
State
considers shifting Ice Alaska $1.79 million grant to borough for lease
payments - 4/16/10 Fairbanks Daily News-Miner by Dermot Cole |
While the Alaska Railroad and the borough have agreed to a permit allowing Ice Alaska to stay in place in 2011 on the north side of the river, talks continue on the terms of a 35-year lease or whether the park should find a new home. |
Funding
for Tanana River bridge moves ahead in Alaska Legislature - 4/16/10 Fairbanks Daily News-Miner by Christopher Eshleman |
JUNEAU — The Interior delegation this winter has thrown its weight behind a proposed bridge over the Tanana River that supporters say represents a threshold to future military investment in Interior and Southcentral Alaska. |
Railroad
route - 4/9/10 Fairbanks Daily News-Miner By JULIE STRICKER |
A slice of Fairbanks history runs through the woods, muskegs and back yards in the Goldstream Valley, but many people don’t recognize it as such. In places it’s a well-used recreational trail. In others it’s a tree-choked embankment rising out of the swamp. But occasional railroad ties and other timbers poke out, outlining the route once traveled by the engines of the Tanana Valley Railroad. |
Alaska
Railroad reports higher profits despite lay-offs - 4/9/10 Alaska Journal of Commerce By Sean Manget |
Despite laying off 127 employees last September, the Alaska Railroad Corp. reported nearly $14 million in net income in 2009, slightly above the nearly $12.5 million the corporation earned the year before. |
Alaska
legislators toss $40 million to Tanana River bridge project - 4/8/10 Fairbanks Daily News-Miner by Christopher Eshleman |
JUNEAU — A state Senate committee pitched $40 million in aid Wednesday to help build a bridge across the Tanana River to reach isolated military training grounds, a project that had previously generated little talk among lawmakers this winter. |
MoW
equipment on the move - 4/6/10 Submitted by John Taubeneck, our ever vigilant northwest coast correspondent |
Today I saw three brand new Kenshaw hydraulic tie cranes loaded
and ready to head to Alaska. Each weighs 18,440 pounds. Along with the liner/tampers
and spikers that went north about a month ago it looks like the Alaska RR
is going to do a lot of track work this summer. . |
Alaska
Railroad reports nearly $14M profit in 2009 - 4/2/10 KTUU.COM by Channel 2 News staff |
ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- The Alaska Railroad Corp. earned $13.9 million on total revenues of $169.4 million in 2009, its annual report showed Thursday. |
Alaska
Railroad earns nearly $14 million - 4/2/10 Anchorage Daily News The Associated Press |
Anchorage, Alaska - The Alaska Railroad Corp. says it earned $13.9 million on total revenues of $169.4 million in 2009. |
Alaska
Railroad foresees more belt-tightening - 4/2/10 Anchorage Daily News |
The state-owned Alaska Railroad Corp. reported $13.9 million in profits last year, up 11 percent from a year earlier. |
Page created 5/5/10 and last updated 7/2/10