Beth Weldon is pictured in August 2012 after retiring from a 20-plus year career from Capital City Fire/Rescue.

Beth Weldon is pictured in August 2012 after retiring from a 20-plus year career from Capital City Fire/Rescue.

This ‘fourth generation Douglasite’ is running for an Assembly seat

The candidate-filing period for Juneau’s next municipal election won’t be open for another two months, but that hasn’t stopped one resident from announcing an Assembly run.

Former firefighter and Glacier Auto Parts owner Beth Weldon has declared her candidacy for an Assembly seat, but she doesn’t yet know which.

Come October, three seats will be open: one in District 1, another in District 2 and a third area-wide seat. Weldon lives in District 2, which means she can run for the seat in her district — currently held by Jamie Bursell — or the area-wide seat, which Kate Troll holds.

“I am running for either Assembly seat, and Juneau residents can be assured that I bring a community-wide perspective to the position,” Weldon wrote in a press release announcing her candidacy Monday. “Over a lifetime in Juneau, I have lived in Auke Bay, North Douglas, Douglas, and the valley. I know our community inside and out.”

[First female career fire officer Beth Weldon retires after 22 years.]

Which seat she runs for depends largely on who runs for the other seats, she told the Empire in a phone interview Tuesday. She’s not interested in running a contested race if nobody throws in for the other seat, she said.

Troll told the Empire Tuesday that she isn’t sure whether she will run again. Bursell, who was appointed to the Assembly in early February, did not respond to Empire inquiries regrading whether she will run this fall by day’s end.

Weldon has been toying with the idea of running for the past couple years, but she’s been considering it seriously for a couple months. She filed her letter of intent with the Alaska Public Offices Commission on April 29, allowing her to begin fundraising.

On June 1, Weldon held an “organizational meeting” to see where she stood. About 30 people came out, which Weldon saw as a good start.

“I’m pretty excited,” she said. “I’ve been very. very pleased with the support I’ve already gotten. It’s pretty overwhelming, the support that’s out there for people willing to run.”

In her press release, Weldon said her top priorities are “the local economy, housing and keeping the capital in Juneau.”

She expounded on those points with the Empire Tuesday, saying that she hopes to promote the growth of new businesses in town and diversify the city’s economy.

Weldon is a lifelong Juneau resident and a “fourth generation Douglasite” — though she now lives in the Mendenhall Valley. She serves on the city’s Aquatics Board and volunteers at Juneau-Douglas High School, where her two children go to school. She is also an independent contractor who works with the Empire to deliver the Capital City Weekly, the Empire’s sister publication.

For her first official campaign event, Weldon will be holding a meet-and-greet at Louie’s on June 16 from 4:30–6:30 p.m.

“That’s when we’re really going to see how much support is out there,” Weldon said.

• Contact reporter Sam DeGrave at 523-2279 or at sam.degrave@juneauempire.com.

Related stories:

Assembly considers making sales tax permanent, talks marijuana tax

Grand SLAM: New state museum opens

Senate votes to halve dividend, spend Permanent Fund earnings on state operations

More in News

The emergency cold-weather warming shelter is seen in Thane on Thursday, April 10, 2025. (Jasz Garrett / Juneau Empire file photo)
Man charged for alleged rape at warming shelter

Staff have increased the frequency of safety rounds, and are discussing potential policy changes.

Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon 
Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy speaks during a news conference in Juneau on Thursday, April 27, 2023. To his side is a screen displaying significant budget deficits and exhausted savings accounts if oil prices perform as expected.
Disasters, dividends and deficit: Alaska governor unveils first-draft state budget

In his final year, Gov. Dunleavy again proposes to spend from savings in order to pay a larger Permanent Fund dividend

Eaglecrest Ski Area as seen in a photo posted to the hill’s Facebook page on Tuesday, Dec. 11, 2025. (Eaglecrest Ski Area photo)
Eaglecrest boots up for a limitted opening this weekend

15 degree highs usher in the hill’s 50th season.

Sen. Jesse Bjorkman, R-Nikiski, speaks Wednesday, April 23, 2025, on the floor of the Alaska Senate. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)
State senators express skepticism about proposed Juneau ferry terminal backed by Dunleavy

In a Friday hearing, members of the Alaska Senate spoke critically about… Continue reading

SouthEast Alaska Regional Health Consortium is one of the primary health care providers in Juneau, accepting most major public and private insurance plans. (Mari Kanagy / Juneau Empire)
Marketplace health premiums set to rise in 2026

Here’s what you need to know about how coverage is changing, and for whom.

Capital City Fire/Rescue completes last season’s ice break rescue training at the float pond near Juneau International Airport. (photo courtesy of Capital City Fire/Rescue)
On thin ice: Fire department responds to season’s first rescue at Mendenhall Lake

This week’s single digit temperatures have prompted dangerous ice ventures.

Brenda Schwartz-Yeager gestures to her artwork on display at Annie Kaill’s Gallery Gifts and Framing during the 2025 Gallery Walk on Friday, Dec. 5. (Mari Kanagy / Juneau Empire)
Alaska artist splashes nautical charts with sea life

Gallery Walk draws crowds to downtown studios and shops.

A totem pole, one of 13 on downtown’s Totem Pole Trail in Juneau, Alaska, Nov. 27, 2024. (Christopher S. Miller/The New York Times)

Most Read