San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Ferry workers strike tangles tourist season

- By Becky Bohrer

JUNEAU, Alaska — The first strike by Alaska ferry workers in over 40 years has snarled travel plans for thousands of people during the busy tourist and fishing season, leaving some stranded.

Members of the Inlandboat­men’s Union of the Pacific went on strike Wednesday after failing to reach agreement with the state on contract terms, bringing Alaska’s ferry system to a halt.

State transporta­tion Commission­er John MacKinnon said the department had canceled reservatio­ns for more than 3,000 travelers and refunded more than $1 million in fares.

About 225 passengers and about 90 vehicles have been stranded in ports that aren’t their final destinatio­n, he said. He noted this is a peak travel time and that other options, including barges for vehicles and planes, have limited space.

A tweet Friday from former Vice President Joe Biden, who is seeking the Democratic nomination for president, calls on Republican Gov. Mike Dunleavy to restore full funding to the system, which lawmakers this year cut by more than $40 million. The cut was seen by some as a compromise with the Dunleavy administra­tion, which initially proposed a deeper cut and has said it wants to find ways to reduce the cost of the system to the state.

The ferries, an important transporta­tion link for many small communitie­s not connected to Alaska’s road system, run along 3,500 miles of coast from Bellingham, Wash., through south

eastern Alaska and the Gulf of Alaska to the Aleutian island chain. Some communitie­s are only accessible by air or water, and even those options can be limited.

The last strike by ferry workers occurred in 1977 and lasted 20 days, said Meadow Bailey, communicat­ions director for the transporta­tion department. She said the department is letting stranded passengers in Ketchikan with no other lodging options stay on board an idled ferry that had been bound for Bellingham until they can make alternate arrangemen­ts.

Becky Bohrer is an Associated Press writer.

 ?? Dustin Safranek / Ketchikan (Alaska) Daily News ?? Jay Beasley (left) and Jeff Chapman join striking ferry workers Wednesday in Ketchikan, Alaska.
Dustin Safranek / Ketchikan (Alaska) Daily News Jay Beasley (left) and Jeff Chapman join striking ferry workers Wednesday in Ketchikan, Alaska.

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