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August 2022 | Volume 38 | Number 8 | AKBIZMAG.COM

Contents

Features

Locking the Digital Vault

Cyber security to protect banking customers
By Tracy Barbour

Trial by Iron

Juneau hosts Alaska’s first Ironman triathlon
By Amy Newman

Three Little Numbers

A telecommunications lifeline for suicide prevention
By Scott Rhode

Say G’Day to 88 Energy

Australian firm explores the North Slope, but not ANWR
By Scott Rhode
Mining: Living Up to Its Name

Living Up to Its Name

How Hecla Mining keeps Greens Creek green
By Alexandra Kay
Hecla

Concretum Aeternus

How to keep concrete forever solid
By Rachael Kvapil
Richard Giessel | DOT&PF

Concretum Aeternus

How to keep concrete forever solid
By Rachael Kvapil
Richard Giessel | DOT&PF
Construction: Concretum Aeternus

Locking the Digital Vault

Cyber security to protect banking customers
By Tracy Barbour

Trial by Iron

Juneau hosts Alaska’s first Ironman triathlon
By Amy Newman

Three Little Numbers

A telecommunications lifeline for suicide prevention
By Scott Rhode

Say G’Day to 88 Energy

Australian firm explores the North Slope, but not ANWR
By Scott Rhode
Mining: Living Up to Its Name

Living Up to Its Name

How Hecla Mining keeps Greens Creek green
By Alexandra Kay
Hecla
Special Section: Industrial Support Services

About The Cover

The figures are as old as the Tlingit system of formline design, dating back thousands of years. The colors are new: digital pigments shaded in ways that traditional artists could only see in the sky, not on their painted cedar or woven blankets. Juneau artist Crystal Worl blends old and new together—but not just for art’s sake.

This month’s cover article, “The Big Picture,” shows how Worl, her brother Rico, and other graphic artists apply their creativity to public-facing projects. For instance, Worl’s “healing hand” design makes Capital City Fire & Rescue ambulances doubly eye-catching.

While her grandmother, Sealaska Heritage Institute President Rosita Worl, promotes art to preserve indigenous culture, Crystal Worl’s expressive designs also fall under the category of Industrial Support Services (for purposes of this magazine). She is an aesthetic engineer, lending her talents to organizations in need of visual flair.

Illustration by Crystal Worl | Photography by Kerry Tasker | Composition by Monica Sterchi-Lowman
Alaska Business (ISSN 8756-4092) is published monthly by Alaska Business Publishing Co., Inc. 501 W. Northern Lights Boulevard, Suite 100, Anchorage, Alaska 99503-2577; Telephone: (907) 276-4373. © 2022 Alaska Business Publishing Co. All rights reserved. No part of this publication June be reproduced without written permission from the publisher. Alaska Business accepts no responsibility for unsolicited materials; they will not be returned unless accompanied by a stamped, self addressed envelope. One-year subscription is $39.95 and includes twelve issues (print + digital) and the annual Power List. Single issues of the Power List are $15 each. Single issues of Alaska Business are $4.99 each; $5.99 for the July & October issues. Send subscription orders and address changes to circulation@akbizmag.com. To order back issues ($9.99 each including postage) visit simplecirc.com/back_issues/alaska-business.

From the Editor

It may be surprising to some how early we plan our editorial calendar. We’re already hard at work on the 2023 calendar, which will be finalized by the time this letter is published. Guiding us are lessons learned from our 2022 planning process, in which we moved away from writing specific headlines a year out, opting instead to identify over-arching themes in which we could find tighter angles closer to publication.

We also added a “focus” to almost every month. Some months focus on a particular region, others on a specific topic. The idea of the focus isn’t one feature story or a special section but instead how we can apply that focus throughout the issue, where appropriate.

Alaska Business logo
Volume 38, #8
Editorial Staff
Managing Editor
Tasha Anderson
907-257-2907
tanderson@akbizmag.com
Editor/Staff Writer
Scott Rhode
907-257-2902
srhode@akbizmag.com
Social Media
Carter Damaska
907-257-2910
enews@akbizmag.com
Editorial Assistant
Emily Olsen
907-257-2914
emily@akbizmag.com
PRODUCTION Staff
Art Director
Monica Sterchi-Lowman
907-257-2916
design@akbizmag.com
Design & Art Production
Fulvia Lowe
production@akbizmag.com
Website Manager
Taylor Sanders
webmanager@akbizmag.com
Photo Contributor
Kerry Tasker
BUSINESS STAFF
President
Billie Martin
VP & General Manager
Jason Martin
907-257-2905
jason@akbizmag.com
VP Sales & Marketing
Charles Bell
907-257-2909
cbell@akbizmag.com
Senior Account Manager
Janis J. Plume
907-257-2917
janis@akbizmag.com
Senior Account Manager
Christine Merki
907-257-2911
cmerki@akbizmag.com
Full-Charge Bookkeeper
James Barnhill
907-257-2901
accounts@akbizmag.com
CONTACT
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turning the page
Finance
Locking the Digital Vault
Cyber security to protect banking customers
By Tracy Barbour
W

hen it comes to data security, people can be the weakest link. They can also be the strongest and best defense against cyberattacks—if they know how to respond to potential threats.

A thriving fraud industry has developed around the misuse of consumers’ personal information, often mined from social media, harvested through email schemes, or stolen using malicious software. The ill-gotten data is often sold on the dark web marketplace, where a Social Security number can go for $2—or more if it comes with a name and date of birth—and a person’s credit card information can fetch up to $35. Hackers and organized crime syndicates purchase the information for their own nefarious purposes or resell it to end users who commit various cybercrimes.

The
window
into
what’s
possible.

We’ll meet you where you are to help you see where you can go. CU1 is your window into what’s next.

cu1.org / 907.339.9485 Insured by NCUA
Credit Union 1
Tourism
Trial by Iron
Juneau hosts Alaska’s first Ironman triathlon
By Amy Newman
Trial by Iron
Juneau hosts Alaska’s first Ironman triathlon
By Amy Newman
S

wim. Bike. Run.

Those three words encapsulate the Ironman triathlon, considered one of the most grueling single-day sports events in the world. The “epic race” tests the endurance of competitors, who attempt to complete a 2.4-mile swim, 112-mile bike ride, and a 26.2-mile marathon, usually within a 17-hour time limit.

On August 7, the City and Borough of Juneau (CBJ) is hosting hundreds of competitors in Alaska’s first-ever full-distance Ironman triathlon.

“I think this is going to be a huge, positive impact on the community,” says Kara Tetley, destination marketing manager for Travel Juneau. “I think that being able to showcase Alaska is very, very cool for our community.”

Invested in Alaska.
Span invests in infrastructure through our service centers, technology, and equipment. The results are increased capacity, shipment visibility, and security with the highest quality of service.
To schedule a pick up or find the service centers nearest you, call 1-800-257-7726 or visit us at spanalaska.com
Span Alaska logo
Invested in Alaska.
Span invests in infrastructure through our service centers, technology, and equipment. The results are increased capacity, shipment visibility, and security with the highest quality of service.
To schedule a pick up or find the service centers nearest you, call 1-800-257-7726 or visit us at spanalaska.com
Span Alaska logo
HC Contractors logo
PO BOX 80688 • Fairbanks, AK 99708
Phone: (907) 488-5983 • Fax: (907) 488-9830
Top 49ers 2021 logo
HC Contractors’ mission is to provide services and improvements that benefit everyone
Construction
Richard Giessel | DOT&PF
Concretum Aeternus
How to keep concrete forever solid
By Rachael Kvapli
C

oncrete is the foundation of modern civilization. This ancient construction material is as much a part of the modern urban landscape as wood, brick, steel, and asphalt. Its ingredients are simple: water, cement, aggregate (sand and gravel), and air. However, strength and durability depend on the mix-design as much as proper application and curing. Done correctly, concrete structures can last a lifetime or, in the case of the Roman Pantheon and Colosseum, outlast the culture that built them. Despite its staying power, manufacturers and mix-designers are always looking for ways to improve concrete for enhanced performance and environmental sustainability.

Manufacturing Concrete
Given that concrete is composed of few ingredients, manufacturing it should be simple, yet mix designs vary depending on their application. According to the Portland Cement Association (based in Skokie, Illinois; portland cement is named for an English island), a typical concrete mixture starts with 10 to 15 percent cement and 15 to 20 percent water that creates a paste that coats 60 to 75 percent aggregate. Around 5 to 8 percent entrained air (purposely created air bubbles) is added during the mixing process to make concrete more workable during placement and increase its durability when hardened in climates with high freeze-thaw cycles.
Material Flow and Conveyor Systems Inc.
Toll Free
877-868-3569
Phone
907-868-4725
Fax
907-868-4726
6112 Petersburg St.
Anchorage, AK 99507
Visit Our Website:
www.materialflow.com
CAT construction machine picking up dirt on mountain
The Solutions Company
Full facility removal, asbestos, remediation, waste management, demolition and site work
CAT construction machines on dirt lot
Central Environmental Inc. logo with company information
INDUSTRIAL SUPPORT SERVICES

Industrial Support Services

men stand on an industrial platform wearing safety gear

Resolve Marine Alaska

Resolve Marine Alaska

I

ndustrial Support Services is a big topic, and it’s exciting to take a different approach to the special section each year. One opportunity that such a broad topic presents is to feature companies and services that don’t fit neatly into one region or industry. “Sector Crossover” looks at several organizations that defy industry classification and instead provide a suite of services to suit their clients. Similarly, “Work Away from Work” explores the plethora of uses for modular buildings across every sector—they are especially well suited to solve many challenges that projects encounter in Alaska.

Guest author Steve Edwards is a senior public relations specialist for Stantec, a global company that exemplifies the idea of support services. In “Forwarding Sustainability” he provides a broad overview of how any company, in any industry, can initiate sustainable practices.

Subway
Easy, Tasty Catering
Subway combo
All snack brands are registered trademarks of PepsiCo, Inc. or its affiliates. ©2022
© 2022 The Coca-Cola Company. “Coca-Cola”, “Diet Coke”, & “Sprite” are registered trademarks of The Coca-Cola Company.
®/© Subway IP LLC 2022.
INDUSTRIAL SUPPORT SERVICES
The Big Picture
Large-scale graphic design for businesses and public spaces
By Vanessa Orr
Crystal Worl
W

hen designing on a grand scale, there are a lot of factors to consider, ranging from the amount of work required to the “canvas” itself and the reactions of the many people who are going to see the mural, project, or installation.

“The beautiful thing about public art is that it is shared with everyone,” explains Crystal Worl, who co-owns indigenous design firm Trickster Company along with her brother, Rico. “You’re not creating one painting that will be sold to one individual for just that person to see but something that everyone can enjoy.”

INDUSTRIAL SUPPORT SERVICES
Mountain Tops to Ocean Floors
Safe practices belong in every toolbox
By Tasha Anderson
Resolve Marine Alaska
M

any projects and processes have a naturally high potential for injury or damage, but that doesn’t mean an accident is unavoidable. On the contrary, companies around Alaska demonstrate daily that, with the right attitude toward safety, risky jobs can be carried out with a positive outcome for all involved.

GCI
Over its more than forty-year history, GCI has invested more than $4 billion in Alaska, including its massive Terrestrial for Every Rural Region in Alaska (TERRA) network, which serves approximately 45,000 Alaskans in eighty-four rural communities.
INDUSTRIAL SUPPORT SERVICES
A Deep Dive
C

arhartts and HiVis are fine for construction workers and equipment operators on land, but when the work site is underwater, it’s time for neoprene and air tanks. Just another day at the office for Global Diving & Salvage, the Anchorage-based provider of marine construction, support services, and casualty response worldwide (as well as all of the images found in the following pages). Saltwater is a harsh environment, so everything it touches needs constant maintenance. Global Diving & Salvage is that handyman, seen to the right repairing the steel jacketing on wharf piles at the Port of Alaska. The work can be cold and dangerous, even bobbing at the surface, so Global Diving & Salvage puts safety first.

All photos courtesy of Global Diving & Salvage
Global Diving & Salvage, founded in 1979, has been servicing the offshore oil and gas industry for decades
Part of the safety regime has crew members above water monitoring
Global Diving & Salvage, founded in 1979, has been servicing the offshore oil and gas industry for decades. Crews have experience working from dynamically positioned vessels, four-point moored, lift boats, barges, and floating production systems. One of the regular tasks in Cook Inlet is performing annual subsea inspections for multiple platforms (left).
INDUSTRIAL SUPPORT SERVICES

Forwarding Sustainability

What design firms can do
By Steve Edwards

STANTEC

C

arbon neutral. Net zero. Sustainability. Greenwashing. When it comes to climate change, sometimes it seems like there are a lot of buzzwords out there. What do they all mean? Let’s look at some of the key definitions below:

  • Carbon neutral means that the carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions and carbon dioxide reductions equal each other, leading to net neutral emissions.
  • Net zero means completely negating the amount of greenhouse gasses produced by human activity.
  • Sustainability is a word that can be used to vaguely signify eco-consciousness. However, sustainability is technically the idea that a process or practice can meet present needs without jeopardizing future generations.
  • Greenwashing essentially refers to marketing strategies designed to make a company and/or its products appear eco-friendly or sustainable despite such claims being exaggerated or even fraudulent.
INDUSTRIAL SUPPORT SERVICES

Mickey Richardson | Turnagain Marine Construction

Mickey Richardson | Turnagain Marine Construction
Sector Crossover
Support services that blur industry boundaries
By Katie Pesznecker
M

any companies excel at providing services that are easily defined by a single industry: a retailer, a financial institution, a transportation company. For others, it’s not so straightforward. They may have started in one service area and expanded over time, or perhaps they identified a specific need that requires a range of experts to get the job done, ultimately creating a business model that defies industry classification.

Take, for example, Alaska Executive Search, which used to be all about, well, searching. When businesses needed help finding the right person to hire, they let the experts handle the task. Alaska Executive Search is gone now, and in its place is a firm with a broader mission and a bigger name.

FLEXIBLE. MOBILE. READY TO WORK.
GET TO WORK FASTER WITH TEMPORARY WORKSPACE.
We understand that on remote Alaskan jobsite locations, having durable temporary workspace that is configured to your exact needs is key to being productive from day one. At WillScot, our team of experts work hard to deliver quality modular work camps, mobile offices and storage containers where and when they are needed so our customers can focus on what they do best – working their projects and meeting their goals. One call, one quote, one delivery and you can get right to work.
Contact our team at 907.315.9755 or visit willscot.com
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3-Tier Alaska logo
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CIVIL – SURVEY – ENVIRONMENTAL
3-Tier Alaska has merged with Travis/Peterson Environmental Consulting, Inc.
SURVEY / CIVIL SERVICES
As-built Plot Plans • Boundary Surveys
Road Alignments • Grading Design
Construction • Surveying
Earthwork Quantities/Cross Sections
Cadastral Remote Parcel Surveying
Landscaping & Drainage Design
Water Sample Testing & Analylis
Septic System Design & Testing
Percolation & Sample Analysis
Commercial Site Development
Subdivision Design & Platting
Right of Way/Easements
ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES
NEPA Compliance Audits & Permitting
Storm Water Pollution Prevention Plans (SWPPP)
Wetlands Delineation & Mapping
Environmental Site Assessments
Environmental Impact Statements
Permitting & Regulatory Compliance
Wetlands Jurisdictional Determination Report
Wastewater Treatment System Design & Permitting
Drinking & Storm Water System Design & Permitting
Spill Prevention, Response & Site Remediation
Spill Prevention Control & Countermeasure Plans (SPCC)
Civil/Survey: 326 Driveway St. Suite 102 • Fairbanks AK 99701 • 907-451-7411
Environmental Services: 329 2nd Street • Fairbanks AK 99701 • 907-455-7225
Environmental Engineering: 3305 Arctic Blvd, Suite 102 • Anchorage, AK 99503 • 907-522-4337
INDUSTRIAL SUPPORT SERVICES
Alaska Structures
Work Away from Work
Modular buildings suppliers put roofs over remote sites
By Vanessa Orr
C

onstruction season in Alaska is short, and many sites—such as oilfields and logging camps—are extremely remote. Shipping in the materials needed to build traditional offices, workforce accommodations, repair facilities, and even military installations can be expensive and time consuming, causing delays in the construction process.

For this reason, many industries turn to modular facilities. These types of buildings are prefabricated using the same materials and designed to the same codes as conventionally built facilities. They can be shipped anywhere they are needed and assembled on-site.

Engineering Results to Meet Alaskan Challenges Since 1979
Tank Inspections
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Engineering Design
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Industrial Hygiene / CIH
Environmental Remediation
Hazardous Materials Management
Regulatory Compliance Support
Certified Inspection Services
HSE Program Development
Contingency Planning
Energy Efficiency
Sanitary Surveys
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907-452-5688

ANCHORAGE
907-222-2445

JUNEAU
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Learn more at www.nortechengr.com
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SAVVY EXPERIENCE ACROSS THE UNITED STATES, CANADA, EUROPE AND ASIA
Over 550 lawyers from Dorsey & Whitney’s 20 offices provide clients global reach, local resources and productive relationships. All with a deep understanding of our clients’ business, industry and the goals that drive them. Making us a wise choice for smart businesses everywhere.
Top Ranked Law Firm in Alaska; Leading environment, natural resources & regulated industries practice box
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worldwise advantage
SAVVY EXPERIENCE ACROSS THE UNITED STATES, CANADA, EUROPE AND ASIA
Over 550 lawyers from Dorsey & Whitney’s 19 offices provide clients global reach, local resources and productive relationships. All with a deep understanding of our clients’ business, industry and the goals that drive them. Making us a wise choice for smart businesses everywhere.
Top Ranked Law Firm in Alaska text box
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We are the PIPEFITTERS & WELDERS of the UNITED ASSOCIATION
Building Alaska’s
Pipelines for Over 40 Years
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UA Local 375 Union Hall
907-479-6221
local375@ualocal375.org
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Joint Apprenticeship Training Program
907-456-5989
jatc@ualocal375.org
Local 375 JATC logo
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UA Local 375 Union Hall logo
UA Local 375 Union Hall
907-479-6221
local375@ualocal375.org
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Joint Apprenticeship Training Program
907-456-5989
jatc@ualocal375.org
UA Local 375 is in the top 5 apprenticeship programs in the nation.

APPRENTICESHIP INTERVIEWS YEAR AROUND

Telecom & Tech
Three Little Numbers
A telecommunications lifeline for suicide prevention
By Scott Rhode
T

hree little numbers can be a hassle when a phone call requires dialing ten digits instead of seven. Three little numbers can be a boon, when even a toddler can remember 911 in case a parent or guardian has a medical emergency. And now three little numbers can save the life of someone in despair–perhaps nearly twice as many as before.

Those three numbers are 988, which as of July 16 is the number for the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline. In an emergency, those three digits are less cumbersome and more memorable than the old number, 1-800-273-8255 (TALK).

Mining
Living Up to Its Name
How Hecla Mining keeps Greens Creek green
By Alexandra Kay
H

ecla Greens Creek mine is unique in the United States. Located on Admiralty Island near Juneau, it is the only mine in the country allowed to operate inside a federally protected natural monument. Situated in the mountains at the north end of the island, with additional facilities on the northwestern shore, Greens Creek is entirely surrounded by part of the Tongass National Forest known as the Kootznoowoo Wilderness, after the Tlingit name for the island, which means “Fortress of the Bear.”

Greens Creek has been in production since 1989 (minus a care and maintenance period from April 1993 through July 1996). It is currently ranked as the tenth largest silver mine in the world. The property includes 440 unpatented lode mining claims, 58 unpatented millsite claims, 17 patented lode claims, and one patented millsite. In addition, the Greens Creek site includes properties under lease from the United States Forest Service (USFS), and it also has title to mineral rights on 7,301 acres of federal land acquired through a land exchange with the USFS where the company is exploring but not mining.

Oil & Gas
Say G’Day to 88 Energy
Australian firm explores the North Slope, but not ANWR
By Scott Rhode
Earth
W

estern Australia, the home of 88 Energy, is in some ways the antipodean Alaska. The state shares the distinction of being its country’s largest by area. Although not as thinly populated as Australia’s Northern Territory, most of its people are concentrated in a single city, Perth. It also has a Barrow Island, named after the same Sir John Barrow for whom Alaska’s northernmost point was named in 1826. And the state economy is dominated by oil and gas production, responsible for 61 percent of Australia’s total petroleum output.

Far from the oil fields at home, 88 Energy looks across the globe, describing itself as an “Alaskan-focused oil exploration and appraisal company.” Even for the North Slope, though, 88 Energy is oriented Down Under, working on units far to the south of most other operators. Its portfolio spans 440,000 net acres of the central North Slope region and into the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska (NPR-A), on land leased both from the state and federal governments.

Safety Corner
730
DAYS
WITHOUT A
WORKERS
COMP CLAIM
The Uncanny Ex-Mod
A single factor to control workers’ comp costs
By Sean Dewalt
W

orkers’ compensation has existed in Alaska since 1915, but it was not until 1946 that it became compulsory in the state. Workers’ compensation insurance generally gives employers immunity from lawsuits in exchange for covering their employees’ medical costs, missed work, and other expenses related to on-the-job injuries. The employee is not required to prove fault to collect. These no-fault social contracts made the employer liable for work-related injuries and disease regardless of fault.

Part of determining how much premium an insurance carrier will require for a workers’ comp policy is the Experience Rating Modification Factor, or Ex-Mod. Insurance carriers use Ex-Mod to describe both past injuries and future risk, which allows carriers to calculate premiums based not only on industry average experience but on each business’ unique operations. This mathematical equation is complicated and often misunderstood but can be best described using this formula: experience modification equals actual losses divided by expected losses.

MASTERFUL MANEUVERS

Serving Alaska’s marine transportation industry for more than 98 years.

Cook Intel Tug & Barge logo

www.CookInletTug.com | Phone: 907-277-7611 | Fax: 907-248-0087

Images by Waliszek.

Tug Boats
Silhouette of tug boat

Images by Waliszek.

Tug Boats
Silhouette of tug boat
Standout Advertising in an Outstanding Magazine
The Annual Top 49ers Edition of Alaska Business

By Janis Plume, Senior Account Manager

Time magazine has the “Person of the Year,” Fortune has the “Fortune 500,” and People magazine has “The Sexiest Man Alive.” These famous magazines roll out their versions of the “Best” each year. In 1985 Alaska Business featured the first cohort of the Top 49ers, the top forty-nine Alaska-operated businesses based on reported (gross) revenue.

Almost thirty-seven years later, Alaska’s premier business magazine consistently draws interest from readers month after month, but like any living entity, the publishing year has an ebb and flow. As we transition from a frantic period of summer activity to regroup in autumn, our readers’ interest seems to reach a zenith with our October issue. The Top 49ers issue is our biggest and most widely read edition of the year. Our advertisers can count on exceptional reach with their print ads in October. It’s not uncommon for our readership to exceed 50,000+ with the October issue. Further, the Top 49ers issue gets bonus distribution at business and industry events like the Alaska Miners Association convention, the RDC fall conference, and the AGC of Alaska annual convention. Your advertising stands out firmly in this outstanding issue with significant reach and added distribution.

Inside Alaska Business
ConocoPhillips Alaska
Production has begun at another satellite of ConocoPhillips’ Alpine field. The company announced in May that crude began flowing from Fiord West Kuparuk in the Colville River Unit on state land just east of the National Petroleum Reserve – Alaska. Doyon Drilling’s rig, nicknamed “The Beast,” set a record for extended-reach drilling of 35,526 feet when it drilled the well a month earlier. The company estimates peak output of 20,000 barrels per day.
alaska.conocophillips.com

Peach Holdings
A rendering illustration of Block 41, 4th Avenue in downtown Anchorage
Perkins&Will
Long-planned redevelopment for Block 41 in downtown Anchorage is underway. Peach Holdings, which owns the 4th Avenue Theater and most of the adjacent properties, obtained permits for demolition this summer. Plans call for a $200 million, multi-use complex. Peach Holdings pledges to reconstruct the historic exterior of the 4th Avenue Theater using modern materials while also preserving the interior artwork.

Economic Indicators

ANS Crude Oil Production

449,917 barrels
-7.2% change from previous month

6/30/2022
Source: Alaska Department of Natural Resources

ANS West Coast Crude Oil Prices

$113.96 per barrel
-7.7% change from previous month

7/1/2022
Source: Alaska Department of Natural Resources
Statewide Employment

362,600 Labor Force
4.7% Unemployment

5/1/2022. Adjusted seasonally.
Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics
Right Moves
Ukpeaġvik Iñupiat Corporation
A headshot portrait photograph of Dr. Pearl K. Brower smiling (President and CEO at Ukpeaġvik Iñupiat Corporation)
Brower

A board member of Ukpeaġvik Iñupiat Corporation (UIC) is promoted to President and CEO. Dr. Pearl K. Brower has served on the UIC board of directors since June 2021. She was also president of Iļisaġvik College for eight years between 2007 and 2020. Brower obtained a double bachelor’s degree in anthropology and Alaska Native studies, a master’s degree in Alaska Native and rural development, and a PhD in indigenous studies with an emphasis in indigenous leadership, all from UAF. She also received an associate of arts degree in Iñupiaq studies from Iļisaġvik College in 2018. Prior to this work, she ran her own consulting business focused on strategic planning and leadership development.

TOTE Maritime Alaska
A headshot portrait photograph of Art Dahlin smiling (Vice President and General Manager at TOTE Maritime Alaska)
Dahlin

TOTE Maritime Alaska has a new Vice President and General Manager. Art Dahlin is now responsible for the company’s Alaska-based operations, taking over for Alex Hofeling, who was promoted to company president last November. Dahlin comes from TOTE’s sister company, Foss Maritime, where he served as general manager in Portland, Oregon. Dahlin earned an MBA from the Foster School of Business at the University of Washington. His bachelor’s degree in logistics and intermodal transportation is from the US Merchant Marine Academy in 2007. He sailed as a relief captain until he was hired in 2013 by Saltchuk, the parent company of Foss and TOTE, as a senior financial analyst.

Alaska Trends

U

nion members are all around us. Us, meaning the staff of Alaska Business, since our offices are downstairs from a labor union, which happens to be our landlord. Every other Alaskan can look to their right, to their left, and in three other directions, and if they don’t see the union member standing next to them, then they probably are one.

That is, about one-sixth of wage and salary workers in Alaska are represented by a union, though that figure is going down.

According to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, the membership rate in 2021 was 15.8 percent, down from 17.7 percent in 2020. (The percentage of workers represented by unions, not just card-carrying, dues-paying members, dropped from 19.5 percent to 17.2 percent.) That’s still above the national average; Alaska has had higher unionization than average since the bureau began keeping records in 1989. Union affiliation peaked in 2002 at 24.4 percent and has dropped ever since.

At a Glance

What book is currently on your nightstand?
Extreme Ownership: How US Navy SEALs Lead and Win by Jocko Willink and Leif Babin.

What charity or cause are you passionate about?
Local food banks, Covenant House Alaska.

What vacation spot is on your bucket list?
Savannah, Georgia.

Dead or alive, who would you like to see perform live in concert?
Nirvana.

If you could domesticate a wild animal, what animal would it be?
A squirrel.

Mike Mortensen posing inside gym

At a Glance

What book is currently on your nightstand?
Extreme Ownership: How US Navy SEALs Lead and Win by Jocko Willink and Leif Babin.

What charity or cause are you passionate about?
Local food banks, Covenant House Alaska.

What vacation spot is on your bucket list?
Savannah, Georgia.

Dead or alive, who would you like to see perform live in concert?
Nirvana.

If you could domesticate a wild animal, what animal would it be?
A squirrel.

© Kerry Tasker

Off the Cuff

Mike Mortensen
A

dvancing from delivery driver to CEO might seem like a stretch, but then again, stretchy is Alaska Rubber Group’s middle name. Mike Mortensen started working for the Anchorage-based industrial supplier in 1994 during a break from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln—a break that became permanent when he decided to stay in Alaska for love.

From pulling hoses and building orders to flying out to the Bush to splice conveyor belts, Mortensen worked his way up to COO when the company expanded to Washington and Oregon in 2013, through the acquisition of Arctic Wire Rope & Supply in 2020. He became chief executive when longtime president and CEO Janeece Higgins retired in 2021.

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Thank You Alaska!

Thank you to our friends, neighbors, and valued customers for your ongoing support and partnership, and special thanks to each of our dedicated employees for their continued care, expertise, and ingenuity as we all work together to keep Alaska moving. We look forward to continuing to serve our communities by providing multi-modal transportation and logistics solutions across the entire state!

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Thanks for reading our August 2022 issue!