Mendenhall Glacier will see a few less visitors now that tourist season is over. (Vivian Mork Yéilk’ | For The Capital City Weekly)

Mendenhall Glacier will see a few less visitors now that tourist season is over. (Vivian Mork Yéilk’ | For The Capital City Weekly)

Planet Alaska: Welcome to Alaska, now please go home

Welcome to Alaska, now please go home.

One of many Alaskans’ favorite times of year is finally upon us: the end of tourist season! We finally get our towns back, our streets back, our stores back (except the ones that shut down for locals and open for visitors). We get our favorite restaurants back, our favorite beaches, our favorite trails, and we get back our favorite places to play outside. We get Alaska back. We can finally walk downtown again. The flow of our towns return to normal. This is the time of year when we are not inundated with questions such as “What elevation are we at? Do you know Sarah Palin? Can you see Russia from here? When do they wash the glaciers off? Are the bears dangerous? But doesn’t the government pay you to live here? Where are the real Native Americans?” Alaskans are back to passing each other on the street and saying hello, giving the head nod, and waving again. We can finally drive through town without people with cameras stepping out in front of our cars. The end of tourist season is great.

As someone who works as a guide in Alaska, I’m all too aware of the complexities of our love/hate relationship with this industry. As Alaskans building an ever-changing tourism industry, we need to ask ourselves hard questions. Tourism is our fastest growing industry and a renewable resource. It can be sustainable in a way that provides a decent quality life for Alaskans and a quality experience for our visitors. Tourism employs almost 40,000 people and brings in around $4 billion dollars in Alaska. A recent article put out by leaders in the tourism industry in Alaska claim the number of visitors may grow by 25 percent next year. Wow! That’s a lot. Are we ready?

Are we ready for rapid growth?

Do we want tourism to grow to that extent?

What should that growth look like?

How does the growing tourism industry positively affect Alaska and Alaskans?

How does the growing tourism industry negatively affect Alaska and Alaskans?

How will this impact our environment?

How will this impact our ocean, our fish, and our whales?

How will this impact our forests?

How will this impact our bears?

What kind of positive and negative repercussions will this have on our Native people?

What ramifications will this have on our water supplies if we continue to have droughts in our rainforest?

How many Alaskans own the businesses related to the tourism industry?

How many Alaskans are employed by the tourism industry?

How many Alaskans employed in tourism were born and raised here?

What non-Alaskan owned tourism companies are growing? How are they growing, and who are they employing?

How many tourists can visit the Mendenhall Glacier in a day and still have it be a pleasant experience?

How many tourists can we have on our downtown streets in a day?

Do we have enough small boat tours to accommodate visitors and how many small boat tours are too much for locals to deal with on our ocean?

Do we have local Alaskan companies who can better train guides within Alaska so inaccurate information is not shared as frequently as it is now?

Can on-ship training and community introductions for visitors better inform pedestrians of sidewalk and crosswalk use? Should it be mandatory for all visitors before disembarking into our communities?

How can cruise ships warn people about Indian celery? It’d make our jobs a lot easier.

How can we make sure cruise ships give the visitors bear safety 101 before they visit even one place in Alaska?

We have lots of questions and Alaskans should have more community input about how this industry develops and grows.

This summer many of us watched the videos of the cruise ships discharging contaminated water while tied up to the docks here. Just because it’s been legal for the last few years but this doesn’t mean it’s OK for our ocean and beaches that we live off of. This summer we experienced some exceptionally large ships with large numbers of people. Those were some interesting days in our communities for sure. Many of us saw the video of the man approaching the bears in the Katmai National Park for a selfie. Unfortunately, he was not the first nor will he be the last visitor to do something as dumb. This summer, in many areas of Alaska, we’ve experienced record lows levels of king salmon and sockeye returns and we’ve seen our halibut decreasing as well. The increase in charter fishing also seems to be something we need to be talking about in our communities even more now.

Many of our communities in Southeast Alaska have inadequate infrastructure for a huge jump in the number of visitors projected in the upcoming years. We are about to be overcrowded more than we already are. We will experience increased visitor fatigue. A larger concern is also the safety of our visitors. This should be addressed as soon as possible before visitors arrive next season. An increase in visitors means a greater impact on our environment. Also, as our off the beaten path travelers, who tend to stay longer, increase, locals access to affordable housing decreases. Everything will be affected in Alaska, in both positive and negative ways, and we need to be constantly weighing up the pros and cons in our communities.

Cruise ship destinations around the world have been addressing these concerns by capping the number of visitors they’ll allow in certain locations. The leaders in Alaska’s tourism industry have ideas about how many more visitors they’d like to see visiting Alaska, but what do Alaskans who aren’t in the tourism industry feel about this increase? What number of visitors to your community is too many?

People have asked me many questions about tourism and there isn’t one right answer to most of those questions. It’s a complex industry that’ll take complex solutions and constant conversations. Alaska’s tourism industry should be an industry that’s good for Alaskans economically, environmentally, culturally and socially. The tourism industry isn’t just about profit. More is not always better. Sometimes too much too quickly is not the best situation. In this case that includes not only Alaskans, but the visitors’ experiences, too.

We Alaskans are now back to passing each other on the street and saying hello, giving the head nod, and waving at one other again. We can finally drive through town without people with cameras stepping out in front of our cars. Yes, we love our visitors, but it’s the end of the year so I’m often thinking to myself “welcome to Alaska, now please go home.”


• Wrangell writer and artist Vivian Faith Prescott writes “Planet Alaska: Sharing our Stories” with her daughter, Vivian Mork Yéilk’.


More in Home

Pauline Plumb and Penny Saddler carry vegetables grown by fellow gardeners during the 29th Annual Juneau Community Garden Harvest Fair on Saturday, Aug. 19, 2023. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire file photo)
Dunleavy says he plans to reestablish state Department of Agriculture via executive order

Demoted to division status after statehood, governor says revival will improve food production policies.

The U.S. Capitol in Washington, Dec. 18, 2024. The Senate passed bipartisan legislation early Saturday that would give full Social Security benefits to a group of public sector retirees who currently receive them at a reduced level, sending the bill to President JOE Biden. (Kenny Holston/The New York Times)
Congress OKs full Social Security benefits for public sector retirees, including 15,000 in Alaska

Biden expected to sign bill that eliminates government pension offset from benefits.

Alan Steffert, a project engineer for the City and Borough of Juneau, explains alternatives considered when assessing infrastructure improvements including utilities upgrades during a meeting to discuss a proposed fee increase Thursday night at Thunder Mountain Middle School. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Hike of more than 60% in water rates, 80% in sewer over next five years proposed by CBJ utilities

Increase needed due to rates not keeping up with inflation, officials say; Assembly will need to OK plan.

Gov. Mike Dunleavy and President-elect Donald Trump (left) will be working as chief executives at opposite ends of the U.S. next year, a face constructed of rocks on Sandy Beach is seen among snow in November (center), and KINY’s prize patrol van (right) flashes its colors outside the station this summer. (Photos, from left to right, from Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s office, Elliot Welch via Juneau Parks and Recreation, and Mark Sabbatini via the Juneau Empire)
Juneau’s 10 strangest news stories of 2024

Governor’s captivating journey to nowhere, woman who won’t leave the beach among those making waves.

The Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé Crimson Bears boys basketball team pose in the bleachers at Durango High School in Las Vegas during the Tarkanian Classic Tournament. (Photo courtesy JDHS Crimson Bears)
JDHS boys earn win at Tarkanian Classic tournament

Crimson Bears find defensive “science” in crucial second half swing.

The Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé Crimson Bears girls basketball team pose at the Ceasar’s Palace fountain in Las Vegas during the Tarkanian Classic Tournament. (Photo courtesy JDHS Crimson Bears)
Crimson Bears girls win second in a row at Tarkanian Classic

JDHS continues to impress at prestigious Las Vegas tournament.

Bartlett Regional Hospital, along with Juneau’s police and fire departments, are partnering in a new behavioral health crisis response program announced Thursday. (Bartlett Regional Hospital photo)
New local behavioral health crisis program using hospital, fire and police officials debuts

Mobile crisis team of responders forms five months after hospital ends crisis stabilization program.

The cover image from Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s “Alaska Priorities For Federal Transition” report. (Office of the Governor)
Loch Ness ducks or ‘vampire grebes’? Alaska governor report for Trump comes with AI hallucinations

A ChatGPT-generated image of Alaska included some strange-looking waterfowl.

Rep. Alyse Galvin, an Anchorage independent, takes a photo with Meadow Stanley, a senior at Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé on April before they took part in a march protesting education funding from the school to the Alaska State Capitol. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Drops in Alaska’s student test scores and education funding follow similar paths past 20 years, study claims

Fourth graders now are a year behind their 2007 peers in reading and math, author of report asserts.

Most Read