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Get ready to vote on October 4!
Polls will be open at City Hall from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m on Election Day, October 4.
Starting September 14, early and absentee voting is available in person at City Hall, Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. up until Election Day.
You can also vote by mail, email or fax if you apply with the City Clerk. If you vote by mail, applications are due September 26; applications to vote by email or fax are due before noon October 3.
If you can’t vote it in person October 4, due to illness or physical disability, you can appoint a representative to pick up a ballot for you.
For more information, call the City Clerk at 907-581-1251.
Here’s what’s on the ballot:
Unalaskans will vote for Mayor, two City Council seats, and two school board seats.
Voter sentiment towards Democrats is shifting in the run-up to the midterm election
With the midterm election two months away, NPR's Scott Simon talks with political analyst and editor Amy Walter about voter sentiment and which races she's watching.
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4:50
A new mental health hotline is focusing on providing support to farmers and ranchers
NPR's Scott Simon speaks with Tara Haskins, health director at the healthcare-focused nonprofit AgriSafe, about a new suicide prevention hotline aimed to help agricultural workers.
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5:29
Roxy Music's Phil Manzanera on the band's 50th anniversary and upcoming world tour
NPR's Scott Simon speaks with Phil Manzanera, the lead guitarist of Roxy Music, about the influential band's 50th anniversary and upcoming world tour.
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•
8:14
Week in politics: Mar-a-Lago filings; Steve Bannon indicted; midterm voter sentiment
The political ramifications of the court filings for a special master to review government documents seized at Mar-a-Lago. Also, signs the economy may work to the Democrats' advantage in November.
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•
4:35
The top U.S. military officer discusses Ukraine's renewed efforts to push Russia out
NPR's Steve Inskeep talks to Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, about Ukraine's counteroffensive against Russian troops at the Dnipro River, and the long game in the war.
Listen
•
6:23
Kentucky's flooding victims face years of rebuilding efforts
After record flooding at the end of July in eastern Kentucky, residents reported more than 10,000 homes damaged or destroyed. Many residents remain in housing limbo as they apply for aid and rebuild.
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•
3:33
A remembrance of Sept. 11 from a person working that day at the Pentagon
A mother tells her daughter what it was like being at the Pentagon when a jet tore through the building on Sept. 11, 2001.
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3:11
FBI finds information about a foreign country's nuclear program in Mar-a-Lago search
NPR's A Martinez talks to former CIA officer David Priess about reports that some of America's most closely guarded secrets were among documents seized from Donald Trump's Florida estate.
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5:23
A need for bus drivers forces school districts to be creative
A nationwide shortage of school bus drivers means some districts are turning to creative solutions to get students to school safely. One of them involves escorting kids to school — on foot.
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4:15
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