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35th Anniversary of the Prinsendam, Part 2: The Response

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The liner was sailing through the Gulf of Alaska, approximately 120 miles south of Yakutat, Alaska, at midnight on October 4, 1980, when a fire broke out in the engine room.  After all passengers and crew were rescued, the vessel sank a week later. (Photo courtesy of the Alaska State Library)

The liner was sailing through the Gulf of Alaska, approximately 120 miles south of Yakutat, Alaska, at midnight on October 4, 1980, when a fire broke out in the engine room. After all passengers and crew were rescued, the vessel sank a week later. (Photo courtesy of the Alaska State Library)

35 years ago this month, the Coast Guard carried out one of the most dramatic rescues in its history. On October 4 and 5, 1980, more than 500 passengers and crew from the Prinsendam were pulled out of lifeboats in the Gulf of Alaska as the cruise ship burned and sank. By sunrise October 5 everyone was safe and accounted for.

But as the Coast Guard’s job ended, Sitka’s began. Survivors, with nothing but the clothes on their backs, began arriving in Sitka by plane from Yakutat and from the Coast Guard Cutter Boutwell.

KCAW’s Rich McClear was about to leave KTOO in Juneau to found Sitka’s public radio station. In Part 2 of our series on the 35th anniversary of the Prinsendam rescue, McClear meets with some of the people who lent a hand – and much more – to the Prinsendam survivors.

Downloadable audio.

Holland America laid off of all its Alaska employees at the end of September, 1980,  so there were no staff in Sitka. The line instead called John Litten, manager of Sitka Tours, and asked him to make arrangements for survivors.

John Litten: We realized immediately, ‘Oh man, have we got something on our hands.’  There were close to 200 people. They were coming off wearing garbage bags, night gowns, some of them were wrapped up in curtains that they ripped down off the walls of the ship…it was just crazy, watching them walk down the long gangway. I started thinking, ‘Okay, here we have all of these elderly people, they’ve come off the ship with virtually nothing. Many of them are going to need medications and they are going to need toiletries.’ Not until I saw them coming down the gangway did I think about clothing.

So Litten called several shopkeepers and asked them to open their stores. He told them to run a tab. They would figure out payment later.

Bonnie Brenner ran a women’s clothing store.  She said, “All of these ladies were in there. They didn’t have underwear ‘cause they had left the ship in whatever they were wearing. And so we clothed them. I’ve never seen anything like it. We just kept selling everything.”

Shirley Robards, who worked at John McDonalds men’s store, recalled, “We didn’t have enough stuff for that influx of people. It was a lot of people.  They cleaned us out.  I forget what we did, it was $41,000 or something.  So, poor Prinsendam.”

Jill Scheidt owned Vi’s Apparel. She said, “Back then it was the wealthier people who cruised. It wasn’t yet into middle America cruising.” Many of the survivors were placed in the Sheffield House, now the Totem Square Inn. Vi’s was a first stop for women off the ship without any clothes.

Scheidt: They came into the store in their nightgowns with mink coats on and so forth.  Some with shoes, some without.

McClear: What types of things did they buy?

Scheidt: They bought mostly clothing that they could wear when they were planning to leave the next day on an airplane.

McClear: Did they pay or did the line pick it up?

Scheidt: The Line picked it up and said, ‘Go ahead and just create a charge account and we will make sure it gets to the right people and you’ll get paid.  And it did, and very rapidly actually.

McClear: With the line picking it up did some people clean you out?

Scheidt: They really didn’t, they got what then needed. No one seemed to be excessive.

But there always a few in every crowd, like the guy Shirley Robards encountered. She remembered, There was one gentleman out of all of them I remember, and I think he was really quite well to do. He wanted the pants shortened and he wanted this and he wanted that and he was the only one who ended up with more than what he needed just to get home. I don’t think a thousand dollars was very much to him.”

But a bigger problem was medications. Many of the passengers were elderly and on maintenance drugs. Litten recalled, “Paul Lunas had a medical office practice right across from the bookstore, upstairs. He came down. So did Ed and Mary Spenser. Their practice was just out Halibut Point Road.  And they came into the hotel and they sat down. They just had people walk up and say what medications were you taking, what were the dosages. And they, without any kind of physical exam, just started writing them scripts.

And they went across the street to Harry Race Pharmacy, which had opened for the occasion.  Harry Race also sold out of toothbrushes and other toiletries.

Throughout the rescue Sitkans contributed their own blankets and other goods, and some offered home cooked dinners. “The townspeople poured out,” said Litten. “When they heard that these people came out without clothing, people were bringing donations into the Sheffield. It was just incredible.”

Because of the weather, most passengers stayed in Sitka for two nights. Some stayed a few days longer recovering in the hospital.

The first survivors arrived in Sitka on Saturday afternoon, October 4. On the following Friday, October 10, the Sentinel announced ‘Last Out.’  On Saturday, October 11 the Prinsendam, still on fire and under tow to a shipyard in Portland, sank off of Cape Edgecumbe in 9,000 feet of water.

In Part 3 of this series, McClear discusses some of his own memories of the Prinsendam disaster, and the challenges of reporting on a high seas rescue before the internet, digital photography, or satellite communications. Listen to Part 1: The Rescue.

Click here for more historic photographs of the Prinsendam sinking, courtesy of the Alaska State Library.


35th Anniversary of the Prinsendam, Part 3: The Reporting

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KCAW’s Rich McClear said Prinsendam is a great triumph for local reporting. The front page of the Sitka Sentinel on the Monday after the rescue. (Photo courtesy of Newspapers.com)

When the cruise ship Prinsendam burned and sank off of Cape Edgecumbe 35 years ago, it brought an amazing story to an end. But, like all great tales, there is a story within a story.

Reporters in 1980 used typewriters. Fax machines were a novelty. Kodachrome photographs had to be shipped out of state for processing. Covering the rescue of 500 people from a burning cruise ship in the Gulf of Alaska was a huge challenge for Southeast media organizations — but they succeeded. Just as the Prinsendam is one of the greatest rescue stories of all time, it is also one of greatest achievements of regional journalism.

In the third-and-final part of our series on the 35th anniversary of the Prinsendam rescue, KCAW’s Robert Woolsey spoke with Rich McClear about how the men and women of Southeast media delivered the story.

Downloadable audio.

Rich McClear was the radio manager at KTOO-FM in Juneau in 1980. The city was in the middle of its centennial celebration, and every Coast Guardsman had been recalled to duty aboard the cutter Boutwell. McClear said, “Everyone else in Juneau was awaked by the blast from the Boutwell, but I slept right through it, even though I could see it from my window.”

Just as we do now, reporters called the Coast Guard District 17 headquarters for a lead on what was happening. But the similarities end there.

The Heroes

KCAW’s Rich McClear gathered interviews for this series during a reunion of Prinsendam survivors and rescue crew in Seattle. (Rich McClear/KCAW photo)

McClear’s news director was named Jim Gordon. Without really understanding what was going on, Gordon asked McClear if he could get a plane — an incredible expense for a public radio station at the time.

“[Gordon] and Dave Carpenter from the Anchorage Times were able to charter a plane,” said McClear. “They called CNN to see if they could sell some video, to help cover the costs of the plane. And CNN said, ‘If you’ve got video, we’ll buy it.’ That was a good thing because when my boss, the general manager of KTOO, heard out about it he was upset that we had expended the money to rent the plane.”

Sitka Sentinel Front Page, Oct. 6, 1980

Sitka Sentinel Page 6, Oct. 6, 1980

But it didn’t take long for word of the Prinsendam to reach the big, lower-48 news bureaus. Without a satellite uplink, McClear says the locals weren’t able to get their film to CNN before the networks began running their own footage.

They came up with another idea. Because of fog in Juneau, the KTOO plane flew over the Prinsendam, but then had to land in Sitka. That’s where most of the survivors were headed.

Rich McClear: Jim and Dave wrote a boilerplate story, and then interviewed people coming off. In the boiler plate they put a paragraph about someone locally. Then they went to Kettleson Library and got a directory of papers. They called weeklies in New Jersey and Iowa, places like that, and said, We’ve got an exclusive story about your survivor off the Prinsendam! There were fax machines then. So they were able to fax the story, and that’s how we partially paid for the airplane.

Autographed Prinsendam Life Vest

A life vest autographed by rescuers, at the 35th Anniversary of the Prinsendam sinking in Seattle. (Rich McClear/KCAW photo)

Nevertheless, their eyewitness account of the ship, combined with their connections in the Coast Guard and with other sources on the ground, gave the local news organizations an advantage in reporting the story. McClear says KTOO, the Juneau Empire, and the Sitka Sentinel ran an amazing week of coverage — the Empire even put out an extra edition.

Some network reporters, meanwhile, were just learning that you couldn’t rent a car in Juneau and drive to Sitka or Yakutat.

McClear says there are two main differences between how the story was covered in 1980, and how it would be covered today. First, the ships have grown dramatically. Instead of 500 passengers, some ships in the Gulf now carry more than 3,000 passengers, and 1,500 crew. A Prinsendam-style airlift would be extraordinarily difficult, even in the best of conditions.
And, of course, the news would spread instantly.

Rich McClear: Reporters could virtually cover it. As soon as video came into Sitka the whole world could see it, because it would go out via the internet. There would be high-quality interviews instead of raspy phone interviews we took from Juneau to Sitka. And a lot of the coverage could be done remotely because there’s high-quality audio and video conferencing, through Skype and things like that. It would have been covered much more quickly, but I’m not sure we would have had the same happy outcome because of the larger ships. There are still only three helicopters in Sitka.

Even though the Prinsendam eventually did make worldwide headlines, McClear says the story never achieved epic status. Many people may be only hearing the name Prinsendam for the first time in this retrospective, while the Exxon Valdez is a cultural icon. Part of the problem might be that the Coast Guard was just too good.

McClear remembers discussing the event with an editor at one national network who wanted the story — but only if someone died. And that kind of notoriety — unfortunately — might be one thing that has not changed in news over the last 35 years.

This story is Part 3 in a series to commemorate the 35th Anniversary of the Prinsendam Rescue. Here is Part 1 and Part 2.

Reunion Cake

McClear speculates that if another cruise ship were to catch fire off the coast of Alaska in today’s times, “[The news] would have been covered much more quickly, but I’m not sure we would have had the same happy outcome because of the larger cruise ships.” (Rich McClear/KCAW photo)

Full audio: Listening to Yellow Cedar

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IMG_4249 (1)Kimi Eisele is a Writer in Residence here at the Island Institute. Her radio essay, “Listening to Yellow Cedar,” aired on Raven Radio Sunday, Oct. 25th. This personal investigation looks at the yellow cedar tree and its importance culturally, economically and as part of the temperate rain forest ecosystem. Find out how climate change is affecting yellow cedar, and what this means for culture bearers, scientists, forest managers, artists and others.

Download Audio 

Listen Here: 2015 Live Radio Theater!

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Photo by James Poulson/Sitka Sentinel

In November 20, 2015, a host of talented Sitkans with the GSAC Sitka Community Theater put on a production of four live radio dramas at the Sitka Performing Arts Center.

Included in the production are two original plays by Zachary Desmond, “Milktown 1999,” and Rebecca Poulson “A Fairy Tale,” a re-telling of the classic “Pride and Prejudice,” directed by Stefanie Ask, and a romantic comedy with a twist, “For Business Reasons,” directed by Shira Kahan. Sound effects were designed by Marybeth Palof, Dan Palof, Jessica Menary, and Angelo Cannizzaro. So, pull up a chair, a cup of hot cocoa, and tune in to something other than Netflix on a cold December night.

A recording of this performance will air on December 15, 2015 – at 7PM on KCAW Sitka. Tune 104.7 FM or 90.1 FM, or stream live here

EACH OF THE FOUR PLAYS:

For Business Reasons, from the series “Romance,” aired Jan. 1, 1949

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Downloadable audio.

Starring William E. Davis, Peter Apathy, Emily Kwong, Marcy Drake, Hilloah Courtney, Ayla McNeilley. Music by Greta Healy. Directed by Shira Kahan.

A Fairy Tale, written and directed by Rebecca Poulson

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Photo by James Poulson/Sitka Sentinel

Downloadable audio.

Starring Tamie Parker Song and Christian Litten. Directed by Rebecca Poulson.

Milk Town 1999, written and directed by Zachary Desmond

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Photo by James Poulson/Sitka Sentinel

Downloadable audio.

Starring Seaton Bryan, Rhiannon Guevin, Tamie Parker Song, and Andrew Marius. Music by Sarah Swong and Stacy Evans. Directed by Zachary Desmond. 

Pride and Prejudice, from the series “Romance,” aired May 28, 1947

Photo by James Poulson/Sitka Sentinel

Photo by James Poulson/Sitka Sentinel

Downloadable audio.

Starring Jude Reis, Sotera Perez, John Stein, Brielle Schaeffer, Christian Litten, Adam Litten, Blossom Twitchell, and Mary Barrett. Directed by Stefanie Ask. 

This performance was organized by Sitka Community Theater, a project of the Greater Sitka Arts Council, with sponsorship from the Sitka Fine Arts Camp, Alaskan Dream Cruises, and Raven Radio.

Sound Effects by Marybeth Palof, Dan Palof, Jessica Menary, and Angelo Cannizzaro

Directed by Shira Kahan, Rebecca Poulson, Zachary Desmond, and Stefanie Ask

Production and lights by Shannon Haugland

Technical direction, lighting design, and visual effects by J Bradley

Sound by Max Kritzer

Stage Managment by Tom Hesse

Video by Lucy Poulson and J Bradley

KCAW Radio Production by Rebecca Danon

UAA’s Alaska Budget Breakdown

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Over the past year, Gunnar Knapp, Director and Professor of Economics at UAA has been traveling around the state,  talking with many organizations about the fiscal challenge Alaska is facing. Click the link below to view the full report of his findings.

An Introduction to Alaska Fiscal Facts and Choices

LISTEN: What to keep, what to cut in Sitka’s Schools?

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The Sitka School District budget is $1.6-million dollars short next year. While it’s not exactly a crisis, there are no obvious, easy cuts — and no last-minute bail outs. Sitka School Board Members Tim Fulton (president) and Tom Conley, and district superintendent Mary Wegner and business manager Cassee Olin took public comment for 90-minutes during a live KCAW Call-In Special on Monday, March 7, 2016.

Listen to Part 1.

Downloadable audio.

Listen to Part 2

Downloadable audio.

View district finances here:

Sitka School District Preliminary 2017 Budget

2017ExpenseAssumptions 2017RevenueAssumptions 2017Summary

LISTEN: All About the Grand Bargain

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The budget deficit for the City and Borough of Sitka is estimated to be $900,000 this year. And as oil prices drop, Sitka is unlikely to receive much state funding. How will Sitka make due? The Assembly appointed a Citizens’ Task Force to tackle the problem and the group is ready to unveil their solution: “The Grand Bargain”

Tune in Monday (03-21-16) at 10 a.m. for a half-hour special with Rob Allen, Cindy Gibson, and Hugh Bevan, three members of the Task Force to talk about the “Grand Bargain.” Full audio here. 

Downloadable audio.

This multi-tier proposal recommends raising the cap on property taxes by two mils. In exchange, the Task Force proposes eliminating the sales tax on groceries and subsidizing the electric fund, to keep rates from increasing beyond 5% this year.

Draft of the Grand Bargain spreadsheet

Core Services Worksheet

Website for the Citizens’ Task Force

The Citizens’ Task Force will host a town hall meeting on Monday (03-21-16) at 6 p.m. in room 229 of the University of Alaska to present the Grand Bargain to the public. Raven Radio will not be broadcasting the meeting live, but will provide full coverage in local news.

Special Coverage: Solar Eclipse

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To celebrate the solar eclipse on Monday, Raven Radio will broadcast live special coverage from NPR. Join hosts Robin Young and Meghna Chakrabarti from 9:00am to 11:00am as they hear from eclipse chasers, scientists, first time observers and reporters across the nation.

If it’s clear, Sitkans can experience a partial solar eclipse beginning at 8:16am and ending at 10:23am, with the maximum eclipse of 60% coverage occurring at 9:17am. NASA will be offering a live video feed of the eclipse, which will be shown at the Sitka Public Library and the Sitka National Historical Park Visitor’s Center. The park will also distribute free safety viewing glasses and Eclipse Junior Ranger activity books for any kids or adults seeking to earn a unique Eclipse Jr. Ranger badge.


WANTED: Live audience for our assembly candidate forum!

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The seven people who sit on the Sitka assembly are the most important policy makers in our lives. They set rates for services, protect our safety, fund our schools, and will decide the future of Sitka’s hospital.

This year there are seven candidates for three seats on the assembly; only one of them is an incumbent.

You are invited to join the audience for a live candidate forum Tuesday, September 19, at 6:30 p.m. at Harrigan Centennial Hall and ask a question of the assembly candidates in person. It’s a rare opportunity to see the candidates in action, under pressure, in the building where three of them will help chart the course of Sitka’s future.

Or — as always — listen to the forum over the air and submit your question via email to news@kcaw.org, or post a question on the forum thread on the Raven Radio Facebook page.

YOUR questions wanted for Sitka School Board forum

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Sitka’s two candidates for School Board, Dionne Brady-Howard and Elias Erickson, will take your questions 6:30 – 8 p.m. Thursday, September 21, in a live special election forum on Raven Radio. Listeners can call during the forum, 747-5877, email a question to news@kcaw.org, or post a comment on the forum thread on Raven Radio’s Facebook page.

The School Board recently has been a low-profile elected office, but Alaska’s budget problems could throw many school districts — including Sitka’s — into crisis. The School Board prioritizes programs within the district, and decides what to keep and what to cut when funding is limited. Although there are only two candidates running for the two seats, there is no better time to communicate your ideas and interests to future board members than during election season. Please join the conversation this Thursday evening!





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