Inletkeeper Blog

Take Action: Wild Salmon Need Water

Take Action: Wild Salmon Need Water

Wild salmon define who we are as Alaskans; they shape our cultures, they feed our families and they support our local economies.  Yet today, Alaska’s laws and rules contain few hard and fast safeguards to protect the water and other habitat salmon need to thrive. More...

Warm Winters bring Unwelcomed Aphids

Warm Winters bring Unwelcomed Aphids

As our third mild winter in a row brightens into spring in southcentral Alaska, we are seeing a new indicator of our changing climate: spruce aphid. Originally from Europe, spruce aphid has become established along the Pacific west coast infesting spruce trees...

Fracking Opens Dangerous Door in Cook Inlet

Fracking Opens Dangerous Door in Cook Inlet

Hydraulic fracturing—or “fracking”—has jumped into the American lexicon in the past decade, largely due to the advent of directional drilling technology targeting shallow shale gas plays in the Lower 48, and the drinking and groundwater contamination threats they...

ACF Ted Smith Conservation Intern

ACF Ted Smith Conservation Intern

This summer I have been granted an amazing opportunity to work with Cook Inletkeeper as the ACF Ted Smith Conservation Intern in Homer, AK. I am currently a junior at the University of Hawaii at Hilo, studying Environmental Studies, a major that I have found much...

Salmon Are More Than Food & Money

Salmon Are More Than Food & Money

By Maya Goodini, Inletkeeper Intern, Summer 2016 The rich salmon-filled streams of Cook Inlet are a crucial part of what gives this region a sense of place, an identity. Salmon fisheries and canaries have played a significant role in shaping the history of Cook Inlet....

The Mining Industry Wants it Both Ways

The Mining Industry Wants it Both Ways

The Pebble Partnership has grabbed headlines recently by attacking an EPA scientist and claiming EPA somehow violated federal law by communicating with Alaskans. It’s all a phony story, of course, to pump up fear around the bogey man of “federal overreach.” But...

Shape the Future of Kachemak Bay

Shape the Future of Kachemak Bay

What’s Happening: The Alaska Department of Fish & Game (ADFG) is revising the management plan for Kachemak Bay and Fox River Flats Critical Habitat Areas.  This process is now in the “scoping phase,” which means ADFG is looking for the issues it should address in...

AOGCC Fracking Hearing – March 23, 2017

AOGCC Fracking Hearing – March 23, 2017

The Issue: Current rules do not allow Alaskans to review and comment on applications for oil & gas hydraulic fracturing (fracking) operations near their homes and communities.  In September 2016, Inletkeeper petitioned the Alaska Oil & Gas Conservation...