The King Arthur Flour Cake Bake Off results were incorrectly listed in our August 2 paper. The correct results are as follows: youth winner, Selby Long; adult winners, First Place (tie) Betsy Shiner and Shannon Cooper, Second Place Deanna Wheeler, and Third Place Jennifer Motes.
In the article “Assembly advances publicly funded solid waste program” in the Aug. 9 edition of the CVN, it was incorrectly stated that Melissa Aronson and Molly Sturdevant spoke during public comment in support of an ordinance that would ask the voters to approve an up to 1 percent sales tax to pay for a municipally funded solid waste program. Both Aronson and Sturdevant did not speak in favor of or against the ordinance. They supported recycling and composting as components of any possible borough solid waste plan.
In the same edition, in an article titled “Voters one step closer to deciding no police service outside townsite” it was reported that during a public hearing Janis Merriman was critical of two ordinances that would expand police powers. Merriman supported voting on police service areas, but only if residents in Mud Bay, Lutak and the Haines Highway were able to vote separately—an amendment to the ordinance the assembly later approved.
The King Arthur Flour Cake Bake Off results were incorrectly listed in our August 2 paper. The correct results are as follows: youth winner, Selby Long; adult winners, First Place (tie) Betsy Shiner and Shannon Cooper, Second Place Deanna Wheeler, and Third Place Jennifer Motes.
In the article “Assembly advances publicly funded solid waste program” in the Aug. 9 edition of the CVN, it was incorrectly stated that Melissa Aronson and Molly Sturdevant spoke during public comment in support of an ordinance that would ask the voters to approve an up to 1 percent sales tax to pay for a municipally funded solid waste program. Both Aronson and Sturdevant did not speak in favor of or against the ordinance. They supported recycling and composting as components of any possible borough solid waste plan.
In the same edition, in an article titled “Voters one step closer to deciding no police service outside townsite” it was reported that during a public hearing Janis Merriman was critical of two ordinances that would expand police powers. Merriman supported voting on police service areas, but only if residents in Mud Bay, Lutak and the Haines Highway were able to vote separately—an amendment to the ordinance the assembly later approved.