Friday, June 20, 2025

Alaska House Judiciary Committee Hearing on Alaska DOC Holding ICE Detainees










 Overview

Purpose of meeting:  Status of Immigration Detainees in custody of Department of Corrections through a contract with Immigration and Customs Enforcement By Department of Corrections; 

Witnesses:  Nicolas Olano,  Immigration Attorney, Nations Law Group; Cindy Woods, Alaska Civil Liberties Union; Civil Division, Department of Law; Sean Quirk, Kellogg Hansen

Judiciary Committee members present:  Andrew Gray, chair; Genevieve Mina; Ted Eischeid 

Other legislators who later sat with the panel and asked questions:  Donna Mears: Ky Holland, Andy Josephson

Commissioner of Correction (DOC), Jen Winkelman, testifying by video.  

You can listen to a recording of the meeting here.


  • The bulk of the meeting was the questioning of Department of Corrections Commissioner Jen Winkelman.  Commissioner Winkelman sounded quite forthcoming about what she knew and promised to follow up on issues that came up that were new to her.  
  • Though as the questioning went along, it appeared that there were a number of things that others brought up that she hadn't heard about.  The ICE detainees have only been at the Anchorage Correctional Complex (ACC) for ten days and she acknowledged that there has been a learning process, particularly dealing with rules and procedures governing ICE detainees.  
  • Concern was voiced that ICE detainees are NOT criminals and that it is inappropriate for them to be housed in a facility built for criminals.  
  • One person stated that Alaska was the only state housing ICE detainees in a state facility.  One reason, the Commissioner noted, was that Alaska, despite a large federal presence, has no federal prisons.  
  • Another key point was that Alaska has had a contract with the federal government since 2013 to house federal prisoners, usually until they can be shipped to another prison.  Alaska has temporarily housed ICE detainees, but not for more than 72 hours.  And that there was no new contract for these new detainees from out of state. The ICE agent for Alaska is also the ICE agent for the prison in Tacoma where this new group came from.  
  • Attorneys for ICE detainees in Alaska testified that many of the rules for ICE detainees have been violated.  
    • Attorney Quirk, testifying from Washington, DC said neither he nor his client got advance notice of the transfer.  In fact Quirk got no notice at all and attempts to contact his client in Tacoma led to his learning that he was no longer there.  Nor did anyone say where he'd gone.  Quirk thought he was deported possibly.  
    • And, also against regulations, his client's property was not given to him when he was transferred, including his passport, all his legal documentation including his contact information for his attorney.  
  • Toward the end, someone asked about a rumor that ICE was preparing a detention center in Adak.  The Commissioner said she'd only heard about it on social media.    

The National Detention Standards for Non-Dedicated Facilities (Revised 2019) were mentioned often and quoted from a number of times.  These are referenced occasionally as "the Trump guidelines."

The overview lists some of the highlights.  Below is my very rough transcript of the meeting. There's a lot missing, but it gives a sense of what was discussed.  I was a couple of minutes late (I thought it was 1:30pm and when I double checked, I had to hustle.)  The room was full and I had to sit on the floor.  The video screen only faced the panel.  Though I moved up to get a (bad) photo of one of the witnesses. The meeting was civil, even cordial, though serious concerns were raised.

Reps. Mears, Eischeid, Gray, and Mina (l-r)


Q, Gray:  Type of contract we have between DOC and Federal government - unusual?  

A, Winkelman:  Statute allows the commissioner to contract with other states or US to take prisoners.  Regard to US, we have agreements since we took federal prisoners because there is no federal prison in Alaska.

Q:  Describe the contract?

A:  Current contract in place since 2013.  Effective until terminated in writing.  I'll make sure committee has copy.  

Q:  How will Alaska be reimbursed?

A:  A daily bed rate for individuals in our custody, daily rate we bill federal government.

Q:  This decision to bring these people made through your leadership?

A:  Because contract, we have a good working relationship.  June 4 local ICE agent contacted staff and asked how many could Anchorage safely house.  We calculated that.  Anchorage is the only facility that could house for more than 72 hours.  Other prisons in Alaska cannot go over 72 hours.  Two big asks:

1.  Names and ?? of those coming and 2.  medical information.  They delivered.  We do not normally know who is coming in from any agency.  So this was hugely helpful to know who was coming.  ICE and DOC remarkable teamwork.  We knew who was coming.  Expecting 59, but only 41 came.  Two were picked up the next day and then 2 more.  35 now.

Q:  Was theree any public notice?

A:  Not from DOC. 

Q:  ??

A:  Longstanding process.  No public process, given our authority and statures.  Checks and balance falls on Legislative audit?  

Rep Eischeid Q:  ICE approached DOC?  A: Yes  They asked how many could DOC house?  Was there an answer?

A:  We agreed on 59 when ICE asked.  Our leadership checked available beds, staffing, etc.  we agreed on 59.

Q:  Requested on medical conditions.. How were detainees selected?

A:  Great questions.  Need to ask ICE.

Q:  How many transferred to Alaska 

A:  ??????  72 hour limit

Q:  Did DOC have to move anyone out of Anchorage facility?

A:  No.  We did move them..  Due to regional ???  We could have housed the extras without movement.  We decided to move some, to relieve burden on staffing.  Nothing different from normal.  We get heads up from local officials and move people out for med and safety reasons?

Q:  Cost to Alaska from moving detainees from Washington state to here

A:  Not that I know of.   ...  Daily costs covered by payments, food, clothing, staff, indirect costs

Q, Mina:  ????

A:  Per diem rate is $223.70 across the board.

Mina:  What about medical costs?  Per diem cover that?

A:  Covers onsite medical costs, anything offsite handled through ICE

Mina:  Training for staff AC  for longer than 72 hours prisoners?

A:  This is not unusual.  over 72 hours, it happens.  Staff trained to deal with that.  

,,,,  Moved here because of severe overcrowding in Tacoma

Q:  Orientation for trainees and staff.  

A:  Phones, immediately given food on arrival.  Following days, arrange for translation services for those with limited English.  How to use digital law library.  Answer questions.  Effort to orient everyone as we do with others.  Difference is how many came in at once.

[My note:  This all sounds fine in the abstract, but how do you practically tell detainees with limited English (in various languages) about how to get translation services, and then how do they understand all the other instructions.  This all depends on the sensitivity of the people doing this, and based on later testimony, there were lots of problems that this glosses over, or that Winkelman didn't know about.]

Q:  Do all detainees have ICE detainee handbook?

A:  I don't know

Q:  ICE rules, page 20,  say they need them. 

Q, Eischeid:  What Fed standards apply to detainees?  Are you using Fed standards?

A:  We are using Alaska State standards, we aim to achieve any national gold standard.  That said, my reasoning saying it was a question for ICE, they had to approve our standards.  They checked our policies and walked around our facilities and determined we have met their standards.  

[I would say this answer is a "NO".  There are specific standards in the Handbook which apply to ICE detainees, most of whom are not criminals, and have specific rights as detainees seeking legal decisions about their rights to stay in the US.  These are quite different from what a prison would have for criminal inmates who have been sentenced by a court.]

Q:  Can attorneys meet with detainees?

A:  Yes.  Bumpy at first.  We have people protesting every day.  Need to check if visits authorized.  We are adding additional rules, work with ICE on who is approved to visit detainees.  We have attorneys, family, and others trying to meet with inmates.  I would say yes.  

Q:  Do you have standards about seeing an attorney within 24 hours.  

... A: We do.  we saw new people coming in and out

Grey interrupting:  "New rules, p. 166, should permit visits 7 days a week including holiday.  p. 168 able to meet with prospective attorneys... Attorneys here not that aware.  It seems should be pretty open access.

National Detention Standards p. 166


A:  I will state my understanding.  That is why initial days, staff thought they had to go through vetting process, told that by ICE agent, but shown invalid.

Eischeid:  Seems from outside looking in, seems that since detainees from ICE but it's a facility that doesn't usually deal with detainees.  Not good?

A:  We have custody of both criminal and non-criminal detainees.  Difference was how many came in at once.  That caused the bumps

Q:  Previously, you said you got 2-3 detainees before?

A:  Didn't give a number, but yes,

Mina:  ICE decides who is approved for meetings with detainees?

A:  Our first understanding, but some of those restrictions have been lifted.

Mina:  For just legal or members of the public?

A:  Yes. 

Mina:  Immigration hearings - can they attend in a timely manner.  What happens if hearing is out of state, but they are here.  

A:  Yes.  ICE are the gatekeepers.  Their court dates are not something we are aware of.  ICE schedules that.  Need to ask ICE. 

Mina:  Process for detainee wanting to communicate with their counsel

A:  They have access to phone system and help on how to use it.

Gray:  P. 171 guidance - detainees MUST be advised.  Allowed to meet in a private room - none of that mentions phone meetings.  [Guidance here refers to National Detention Standards mentioned above.] [I think he meant p. 168.  Page 171 is about consular (not counselor) visits.  



Mina:  What's the process...

A:  ICE determines when ready for release.  We do not handle that paper work

Mina:  A lot of articles on conditions.  Access to go outside, exercise, religious services

A:  One hour outside daily.  Day room for exercise, religious.  DOC chaplain.  Dietary preferences, need to request for things not available.  Dietary - any special diets DOC provides.  Many special diet

[My comment:  These may be the rules, but how they are carried out is another story.  The attorney testimony below offers examples of the rules not being adhered to.]


Eischeid:  ???

A:  Don't know.  Part 2 - nothing brought to me that has been an issue.

Eischeid:  Problems with family requests?

A:  Not to my knowledge, hasn't been long enough to really know.  I know about legal rep, and we worked through that.  Haven't been doing this long enough - nothing has risen to my attention.  Only ten days so far.  

[My note:  'nothing has risen to my attention' is probably accurate, but allows for lots of problems that she doesn't know about.]

Eischeid:  Under what conditions handcuffed?

A:  Only time when being transported, other than ???, handcuffed in front. 

Eischeid:  Any use of force?

A:  Incident in unit where verbal demonstration, aggressively, did not want to lock down, No one was gassed, moved to rooms for lock down.  

Gray:  I believe that was June 12 afternoon.  What are reasons for lockdown.  How long?

A:  Happen routinely multiple times a day, or emergencies.  The incident in question, don't know if routine or emergency.

Gray:  P.3 of Trump guidance.  Any lockdown reported to ICE.  Was that done?

A:  I'm going to say yes.  I know we do that regularly, but I don't know that specific one.

Gray:  I heard about that incident from many people.  One detainee asking for access to his property so he could get contact info for his counsel, and then everyone was pepper sprayed.

A:  No one was pepper sprayed.  

Gray:  Rules - medical officials check on health issues before

A:  I don't know

Gray:  We do know that at least one was on a respiratory and others get sick

Mina:  Mental health services provided?  Paid by?

A:  Yes, both medical and mental health.  Cost of care.  In person in their module multiple times a  day, explaining how to request information.  Fill out form, triaged by nursing.  

Mina:  Law libraries.  How to get access to Anchorage libraries?

A:  Law library is not available.  Get info, working with someone getting translated.  Any other info is available.

Mina:  Turnaround time reaching out to ACC and making it happen.

A:  Wed June 4 and ???

Mina:  Current contract ...?

A:  Tough questions,  how many can we safely house.  This was not unusual, except for the # in one day.  We had a heads up.

Gray:  From several sources, two lockdowns, one pretty lengthy.

A:  Not aware, but knew lockdown on No Kings Day.

Gray:  Not allowed to shower of change clothes after pepper spray.  Wasn't able to change underwear for three days.  Guidance says one day.

A:  First I've heard about this.  I will look into that.

Gray:  Thanks.  Hope you can stay on as we get other expert testimony.


Woods, ACLU attorney:  experience 8 years on Mexican border.  These individuals are not incarcerated from criminal offense, just immigration issues.  Protected from harm, medical and mental health care.  Brothers, partners, fathers.  Some have been granted .... but being held in punitive conditions.  3 people per cell with one open toilet.  Two showers per week.  No spare clothing at all.  No windows.  Out of cell are shackled.  Been on a lot of lockdown.  Deprived of personal belongings, including contact info.  Only 4 telephones only 2-3 available.  Only two free phone calls. No international calls.  No way to buy phone accounts, others have others do that.  Pepper spray, lasers, isolation.  Very concerned about well being.  Struggling with punitive setting and isolation.   Access to religious materials gone unanswered. 

Concerned ability to deal with legal needs.  No access to immigration case law or ways to copy documents.  I have heard personally.  Does not comply with standards

Gray:  how many have you met with?  5 personally

Other experiences:  Family detention centers have different standards, Legal trailer, attorneys on the ground, detainees able to walk to trailer.  Also experience elsewhere, didn't have to prove my legal id.

Gray:  Different here?

A:  Very different from Tacoma and elsewhere.  In Tacoma they have tablets in cells to call family, no handcuffs, more outside, no strip search after speaking to legal counsel 

Gray:  Commissioner, is that your understanding?

A:  I will find out.  They will follow any protocol criminal detainees follow.



Gray:  Woods says they do not have access to property?

A:  I know there was delay.  Property an issue at the beginning.  I believe resolved.

Eischeid:  Trump guidance says, Before trainees transferred all items returned to detainees.  

Mina: 

Woods:  Complicated legal issues.  Type of immigration, entry location, asylum,  Some detainees are legal residents and have durable legal status to be in US

Gray:  We'll go to next witness .. Nicholas Olano

Olano:  Immigration attorney.  14 years in Alaska f5 years before that

Gray:  What do you do with Alaskans picked up?

Olano:  If arrested by ICE ...???

Gray:  How often held in Alaska.  A:  Normally 72 hours.  ICE would want to move them out of Alaska as fast as possible.  

Olono:  Designed as criminal setting.

Gray:  Still getting people sent to Tacoma?

Olano:  ?????

Gray:  Your experience that Alaska detainee could put up bond?

Olano:  Yes

Gray:  Compare to Florida experi3ence

Olano:  Very different.  Florida designed for this.  These individuals used to system and not prepared to be in criminal center.  

Gray:  What risks?

Olano:  Couldn't say?

Gray:  Anything wrong in being in criminal setting?

Olano:  Being held in punitive setting, not what  would happen elsewhere. 

Gray:  Commissioner Winkelman, do you know if they are being shackled when meeting with attorneys?

A:  No, but know that there are different requirements for prisoners.

Gray:  Protocol for shackling when meeting with legal - they aren't criminals.

Mina:  Do you know if detainees had opportunity to be released on bond?

Olano:  Some were elegible in Tacoma.  

Gray:  Final attorney Sean Quirk  

Quirk:  Sean Quirk, Washington DC.  5 years in Navy.  Briefly talk about what has happened with my client who was transferred to Alaska from Tacoma without explanation to him or me or prior notice.  Tried to contact him in Tacoma.  This Monday finally received answer we could contact him.  Then they said he wasn't here, they didn't know.  Thought he was deported.  No one contacted us he was transferred.  Happy to answer questions

Learning a lot from testimony today.  Communications hard from the beginning, and got passed off to others.  Took a while to get 30 minute call Wednesday.  First contact since transferred.  Client said they took away all his papers.  He hadn't memorized my phone number so couldn't call me.

Gray:  Commissioner can you speak to different phone time rules.

A:  Rec time is one hour per day.  Will follow up on discrepancies.

Gray:  One hour a day outside five days a week.  Seems they are getting that.  Trouble contacting attorneys via phone.  Why?

A:  I know at the beginning of transfer there were problems.  This is the first time I'm hearing about it.  I will be following up.  

Gray:  p.160 of guidance - facilities shall not restrict # of calls to reps.



Mina:  Attempts to contact your client?

Sean Quirk:  Everyone we contacted told us to contact someone else.  Emails.  Found out he was in Anchorage on Monday and took til Wednesday.  Time difference and language makes it harder.  8-4 Alaska time difficult.  

Mina:  Also looking at p 160 of Trump standards.  This pertains to emergency calls, staff should help has fast as possible.  Mon-Wed seems longer than the 8 hour ideal.  Question for Mr. Quirk.  Facilities should help making confidential call, staff should help them make the call confidentially.  Your client get this?

Quirk:  Once we did confirmed no one in the room with him.  I don't know about process.  He has not contacted me since Wednesday.  

Mina:  Staff made it possible to contact attorneys?

DOC:  Yes, aware of and working on it.  Challenge in this situation.  From out of state, language barriers.  I'm working on.  

Gray:  Situation Mr. Quirk described not learning about client transfer for a week.  Common?

Alano:  common

Wood:  There is a requirement that ICE notify you.

Alano:  In my client's case notice did not happen.

Quirk:  ICE has to notify 24 hours in advance.  Didn't happen

Eischeid:  Describe the papers that were lost

Quirk:  All his documents, passport and docs to prove his asylum case, and what we sent to him, engagement letter, and others.  All gone with transfer.  As far as I know from Wed.  he has not received them.  

Gray:  Open Questions to public.


Rep Mears:  I have concerns with what is happening with ICE.  2 big areas:  1  Elsewhere in ICE facilities and here we have criminal incarceration facilities.  2.  Alaska is far away.  No contact with family, friends, and other local sources.  Contracts .... Opportunity to ask questions.  Hope hearings lead to changes.

Gray:  p. 163  "To maintain detainee morale and family relationships encourage family visits"  How are family from Lower 48 encouraged to come.



DOC:  I don't know.  Treating like any other criminal or civil detainee.  Extremely hard when folks are far away.

Gray:  Have any family or friends had visits    

Reps. Gray, Mina, Holland, and Josephson (l-r)

Josephson:  Why are we investing energy and time treating guidance as advisory, not compulsory.  We are only being refunded for out costs.  Why are we doing this at all.

DOC:  Fair questions.  Because of military presence and us not having a federal detention center, we will continue to be a federal partner, and one of those partners is ICE.  Don't usually stay in Alaska more than 72 days.  Same ICE agent in that area is same as for Alaska.  Asked if we could we safely house detainees for 30 days.  We said yes.  That's where we are at.

Josephson:  Asked if contract requires us to cooperate?  Admin could have decided not to do this?

DOC:  That's fair to say.  Longstanding contract in place and we were asked how many we could safely house?  If we had been full, it could have been a different answer

Josephson:  You said deployed and then said not used.  If pepper spray was used, not directly against detainees?

DOC:  Used on the ground, not directly on detainees.  

[my short break]

Gray:  Change in per diem price change, related to new ICE detainees?

DOC:  Coincidental - old contract ended May 31.

Gray:  Were they able to bring medications with them  Enough supply?

DOC:  Yes, Yes.  One of our big asks, before they arrived  - that we had medical abstract for each detainee and their medication.

Rep. Holland:  Is there a duty or procedure at DOC to protect the rights of people held in custody to be sure not moved in way to disrupt their proceedings

DOC:  That is something we do for all incarcerated.  But ICE is responsible for who is moved and when.

Mina:  Alaskan ??    ICE

DOC:  Currently undergoing recertification

Mina:  Timeline for recertification?

DOC:  You need to ask ICE

Mina:  We heard 30 minute limite on phone call.  Is that enough time for translation services or legal advice?

DOC:  Fair question and I'll follow up on that.  

Mina:  3 people to a cell normal?

DOC:  Thanks for the question,  when it came up I wanted to comment.  There is enough room in the module, there is enough - we asked if they want to move to another cell, they have banded together and so despite having room to move out of three in a cell and many have chosen not to.

Mina:  to attorneys, do you agree with that?

Wood:  I haven't heard that people choose to stay in a cell with three.

Gray:  repeated q

DOC:  I asked before this hearing and was reassured that was their decisions.  

[Of course we don't know what the conditions of moving were that caused the detainees to stay put?  Into cell with people who don't speak their language?  Other issues?]

Mina:  30 days - ??

DOC:  When ICE contacted us, they contacted ACC knowing we could hold longer than 72 hours, need to stay for up to 30 days.  So, beyond that, I don't know their plan going forward.

Mina:  No restriction, right now DOC just waits to see what will happen?  

DOC:  Short answer is yes, but we are in regular contact with ICE agent to be in the mod once per week.  He has made frequent visits to the facility.  The idea that we are in constant communication on when individuals are moving out.  Six have already moved out.

[No one has asked who this ICE agent is for Alaska and Tacoma]

Mina:  Other states have overflow?

DOC:  I'm not aware and have a good working relationship with the ICE agent and he overseas Alaska and Tacoma and contacted us.  Unusual request and one we could meet

Mina:  To attorneys:  are you aware of other states?

Woods:  Others have federal detention facilities.  To our knowledge, Alaska is only state where detainees in State facilities.

Gray:  Some negotiations that facility in Adak being considered.

DOC:  I have not in any knowledge in my professional capacity, though I read in news article or on social media heard about it.

Olano:  Anchorage is already very far away.  We are not El Salvador.  How to get people there, This will cost Alaskans money.  Bad idea.  

Woods:  Practice to get them to facilities where it's hard to access and potential expansion to Guantanamo.  I haven't heard of it but will take it seriously.  

Escheid:  Anything that prohibits state legislators touring the ACC and seeing the conditions?

DOC:  Nothing and I would encourage it and welcome it.  

Gray:  Not an easy hearing from Commissioner Winkelman and appreciate you being here and responding.  

DOC:  I appreciate the comments.  Hard questions and not easy.  Ultimately at the end of the day. I have a passion for this work. Often difficult.  Two types of authority.  Encourage everyone to reach out and if there are things, let us know.  I want a better DOC.  Kudos for my staff for how they have handled this.  Increased pressure surrounding social unrest surrounding this issue.  I have phenomenal staff and couldn't do my job without them.  

Gray:  To media, pages 172-4 says media can schedule meetings with detainees.  Also like to thank Department of Law.  They chose to answer in writing and they are available on BASIS. You can see the letter here.  

Concludes hearing at 3:10 pm

Sunday, June 15, 2025

Anchorage NO KINGS - "So many problems, so little cardboard"

 Counting the crowd seemed impossible.  There wasn't a spot for me to get higher so I could see the whole gathering.  The May 1 rally had probably over 3000.  This seemed larger, but I couldn't really count.  There were people up on a parking garage nearby and I considered going over there, but instead stayed wandering through the crowd.  The Anchorage Daily News said "thousands" which isn't wrong.  

The crowd was seriously angry about what's happening to the US, but the mood among all these other people who felt the same was cheerful and friendly.  I didn't see any law enforcement uniforms.  I also didn't see a lot of non-white faces.  There were some, but it was pretty white crowd.  And dogs.  And a number of kids.  

These folks at Vet memorial.  On the right
"so many problems, so little cardboard"




The Vet Memorial is on the park strip, a few blocks from the main rally that was on L Street in front of the building houses the offices of our two US Senators.  

There were lots of people headed to L St. with signs as I biked there.  

Mostly I'll let the pictures do the talking.  





  
This one repeats the 'so little cardboard' sentiment, and how I feel.  The president (and his team) do so many impeachable acts, that they all become a blur.  And then someone says something like, "Well, different people have different numbers."  

Well, yeah, but the damning ones are right on the mark or close to it.  This president's done more things before lunch on any one day, that would have gotten any other president in serious trouble, if not impeached.  

So I like this sign - "Ugh! Where do I  Begin?"

On the back he did begin a list.  


I marked the approximate locations of the Anchorage offices of Alaska's two (GOP) Senators.  



It's Alaska, so we don't reject all kings.






That's a chain saw the guy with the clown nose is carrying



You can get a sense of how big the crowd is by looking at how close I am to that building.  The lots we were on were crammed with people, from here up to right in front of the building.  See the closer picture above with the Senators' offices marked on the picture.  















There's the parking garage where I could have gotten a better crowd size picture.  There were folks up there already.














The window washer was cleaning windows up above us and when I watched him, he was ignoring us and working busily.  















The green sign is the back side of "Ugh!  Where do I Begin?"

There are more photos, but you get the picture.  There were speakers, but unless you were on that block, you really couldn't hear them.  

When the hour or so was up, the crowd marched to the Park Strip and joined the folks at the Juneteenth celebration.  



Saturday, June 07, 2025

Trippy - A Well Written And Fascinating Look At Psychedelic Treatments

[You'll figure out pretty quickly, I think, that I enjoyed reading this book.  I wanted to read the next chapter as soon as I finished the previous one.  Aside from introducing people and situations outside my normal realm, Ernesto Londoño raises lots of interesting legal and ethical issues.] 


TRIPPY took me on a fascinating journey through Latin American ayahuasca [the pronunciation is pretty easy if you think of the h as a w] retreats and US psychedelic
retreats/treatment centers.  The focus is on psychedelics and their effect on people, mainly on people with serious hard-to-treat issues like depression, suicidal thoughts, trauma.  But this gets more complex as the author, Ernesto Londoño, pulls in a number of related issues such as the conflict between running a spiritual retreat and a for profit enterprise, the psychological impacts of war, the conflict (in the US) between religious freedom and drug laws, how black market (my term, not his) psychedelic treatments serve patients who find standard medical approaches to their problems ineffective, which raises serious questions about why the established field of medicine took so long to find better ways to treat PTSD and other mental problems.  

Before I go further, let's give a bit of background. 

"Ayahuasca is prepared by boiling crushed chunks of an Amazonian vine called Banisgeriopsis caapi -which wraps around trees in the rainforest in serpent like formations - with the leaves of a shrubby plant called Psychotria viridis, or chacruna.  The leaves contain the psychoactive compound, but when taken alone, an enzyme in the stomach neutralizes it.  The vine, however, inhibits that metabolic process, inducing dramatic alterations in perception and sensations." (page 66)

The author previously worked at the Washington Post reporting on local DC police and court issues and as a war correspondent in Iraq and Afghanistan, and then as an editorial writer for the New York Times.  The book  begins when he was the New York Times Brazil bureau chief.  So he's a serious reporter.  

In the book, he also tells us a lot about his own life issues.  His coverage of the ayahuasca retreats in the Amazon jungle to a ketamine clinic in San Diego includes his own drug experiences at the places he writes about.  I think that gives him deeper insights than had he merely played the objective observer.  He also is often the skeptic and raises issues with some of the places he visited and offers others' critical as well as positive reports.  He interviewed a lot of people, both practitioners and academics studying psychedelics.  (I know, 'a lot' is vague, but he's always stepping back to find out what others think as well as the what the owners, the employees, and participants have to say.)  He tells us that he always identifies himself as both a participant and a journalist.  

The book called out to me from the new books section at Loussac library.   And while I came of age in the 60s, I didn't experiment beyond pot.  Being a student in Germany for a year and after graduation a Peace Corps volunteer in Thailand was trippy enough for me.  I haven't read Michael Pollan's book that reviews say strongly advocates for psychedelic experiences.  So maybe this book would tell me what I need to know.  

The book was a wild and informative ride.  While the main vehicle was psychedelic experiences, those experiences lead us into lots of unexpected adventures with interesting people and interesting religious, legal, ethical issues not only of drugs, but also war and sexuality and trauma and medicine.  

 Most of the people Londoño describes come to these retreats to deal with depression, trauma, addiction and other mental disorders.  This includes the author who, as the NYT bureau chief in Brazil finds himself lonely and depressed and decides to report on an Amazonian retreat and to test the curing powers of ayahuasca.  In the posh Costa Rican retreat, much later in the book, a lot of the clientele are more well-to-do, but there's an emptiness in their lives.  [As I wrote that, I thought that 'but' might not be the right word.  Simple pursuit of wealth as Trump and Musk demonstrate, doesn't lead to happiness.  But (again) Musk is reported to be addicted to MDMA (which is looked at later in the book) and that clearly hasn't had a therapeutic, enlightening effect on him.]  We also get to USian retreats that incorporate as churches in hopes of avoiding the Drug Enforcement Administration and have focused on US veterans with PTSD and other war related traumas and who haven't found relief from nightmares and suicidal thoughts through VA psychiatrists or alcohol.  

Londoño also consults regularly with scholars - through their written works and through personal interview - and gives us threads throughout the book about the twists and turns of the legal landscape of medical psychedelic experimentation and research - most notably with Nixon's 1971 War on Drugs prohibition, which shut down a lot of promising research.   

There are also the discussions of how far back ayahuasca was used by Amazonian people - with claims ranging from thousands of years to hundreds.  

We learn about the people who run the retreats and clinics, the people who own them, and the clients.  It's not always pretty.  There are stories of sexual impropriety, of death, but mostly of profoundly changed clients.  Or is that positive response brought on by the group and organizer pressure to let go of one's doubts and embrace the ayahuasca so that one can get the full benefits?  Londoño always raises these questions.  

Are these really healing retreats or are these cults?  This question bothers him, but he seems to conclude that since people leave, they aren't cults, even though the requirements to trust the facilitators and the drugs seem to overlap with cult like instructions.  A question I had was about the people, the author included, who go to many retreats and keep imbibing the ayahuasca.  In the author's case, he tells us there are other buried issues to be explored.  (He also mentions that the concoction is foul to taste and usually induces vomiting, buckets provided.)

He talks about going to a gay only retreat and how that differed from the others.  And as he writes about the problems other retreaters hope to heal, Londoño writes about his own demons.  How he learned about mental health issues in his family growing up in Bogota, Columbia.  After writing about the war traumas of veterans, he begins to think about the traumas he brought back from Iraq and Afghanistan as a correspondent.  

The discussion of the veterans, fed up with the VA's inability to cure their PTSD, mentions at one point that it costs $230 billion a year for the Veterans Administration  to treat PTSD!  The vets he connected with did find a profound relief that the VA couldn't provide.  But in the MDMA experiment we only hear about Chris and not the others in the experiment.

That cost of PTSD treatment doesn't tend to be mentioned in defense budget debates or to recruits.  And that doesn't take into account the individual and cumulative costs to the individual veterans, and their families, whose lives are destroyed, even though their bodies work.  At some point he mentioned that more military die of suicide than they do in battle.  

Another telling comment came when interviewing Dr. Matthew Pava, who was in charge of research funding at the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency in the Defense Department.  And who approved a $27 million experiment that was searching for new compounds that change the brain without the hallucinogenic effects.  What he really needs is a drug that will allow him to get soldiers back into battle quickly, and that doesn't seem to be likely with psychedelics.  

"In recent years, he said, 28 percent of service members medically evacuated from frontline positions are sent home after being diagnosed with a mental health condition.  According to a 2021 study, roughy 23 percent of active-duty service members had been diagnosed with depressive disorder, a rate far higher than that of the civilian population."[page 264]

Yes, there are depressing issues (but there's a cure for that now) but also very heartwarming stories of people who have overcome debilitating mental problems.  The subtitle of the book - The Peril and Promise of Medicinal Psychedelics - is accurate.  

So maybe I do need to go back to Pollan's book to find out why someone without depression and suicidal thoughts should use psychedelics.  And I'd note, Londoño mentions a lot of other books on various aspects of psychedelic medicines.  

NOTE:  In the course of the book, we learn a lot about the author.  He feels almost like a friend.  And toward the end we learn that quit his job with the New York Times and he's moved in with his veterinarian boy friend in Minnesota to write the book and is unsure of what will happen next.  And I wanted to know how that turned out.  After I wrote this post, I googled Ernesto Londoño and found this New York Times article on today's LA  ICE raids and citizen protests.  The bio link says:  

"I’m a reporter for The New York Times based in Minnesota, covering news in the Midwest and keeping a close eye on drug use and counternarcotics policy."



Monday, June 02, 2025

Why Is Lake Otis Blocked Off Just South Of Tudor? [UPDATED]

[UPDATES is at the bottom]

Lake Otis Parkway was closed Saturday (May 30)  at 42nd Avenue, just south of where it crosses Tudor, one of the busiest intersections in Anchorage.  It's scheduled to stay that way for about ten days.  

I've watched the changes on 42nd Avenue over the last year or so because it's on one of my regular bike routes.  

Basically, there was a row of good sized cottonwood trees along this short dead-end part of 42nd.  They were to the south of the big medical building (Lake Otis Medical Plaza at 4100 Lake Otis), which they hid quite well.  Last fall, when they cut all the trees down, I looked through my old photos to see if I had a picture of it with the trees.  I couldn't find one.  Fortunately, Google Street View is a little out of date.  The picture to the left below shows the trees.  The picture to the right was taken in May this year.  It's the same view, but with a slightly different angle.  [For anyone wondering, my airdrop magically started working again.  I have no idea why.  Maybe a software update?  In any case, as long as it's working I can easily upload photos from my phone to my laptop.]

A                                                                                 B


This picture (C) was taken last September right after they cut all the trees down.  It's looking east, while the views above (A and B) are looking west from Lake Otis.  So the brick building on the left below is on the right above and the other building is switched over as well.  
C


I took these two pictures from the back (west) driveway into the parking lot of the medical building, the one above (C) looking east and the one below (D) looking west, beyond the driveway.  The area where the white truck in the background is, used to be a big wetlands area.  They 'mitigated' the wetlands quite a few years ago, when people in the surrounding neighborhoods had flooding issues.  


D

Below is 42nd and Lake Otis, which was totally blocked off Saturday.  (This is one of those times having a bike lets you avoid these car blockades.)


E


This is a Municipal project to improve streets (pavement is really bad on 42nd east of Lake Otis) as well as pedestrian use and replacing an old water main, which, I guess, is what we're seeing on the west side of Lake Otis.  As much as I hated seeing the cutting of the trees, I know that cottonwoods have active roots.  So, is the work west of Lake Otis going to eventually include a pipe?  Here's a link to the Municipal project website.
I've emailed the folks listed at the site with some questions and I'll add their responses when they come in.  
 
[UPDATE June 2, 2025  7pm]

I got a quick response from Justin Keene, PE, Principal/Civil Engineer, CRW Engineering Group, Inc.

The most interesting part was the ditch with the open waters "is the headwaters of Fish Creek."

Below are my questions (in black) and Justin's responses (in green)

1.  Water main - what all does that mean?  An existing cast iron water main is being replaced from Lake Otis Parkway to Piper Street along E. 42nd Avenue. I'm assuming this is wastewater, given that on the west side, it is open water.  Is that correct? No, they are two separate things. The ditch on the west side of Lake Otis Parkway is the headwaters of Fish Creek. A storm drain pipe outfalls into the ditch and our project replaced the three downstream culverts and regarded the ditch to facilitate a new storm drain outfall. The water main is as described above. Have there been problems or is this routine replacement? The water main has had leaks in the past and needs replacement.  How long has the water main been in? The water main was installed in 1967.  On the west side, will the waterway remain open or ??? The ditch will remain open.

 

2.  Will the short street on the west side get new pavement?   Sidewalks? No new pavement or sidewalks are proposed on E. 42nd Avenue west of Lake Otis Parkway.

 

3.  Will the addition of sidewalks on the east side mean encroaching on people's property?  (I assume you have easements.) No, we are installing the sidewalks in the MOA right-of-way.


Do you have any drawings of what the improvements will look like? The final drawings can be downloaded from MOA Purchasing website at this link: Download



The link takes you to a 142 page document with detail drawings of everything they could think of that they will have to do on this project.  While I don't understand all the details, these drawings do show you the amount of planning that goes into a job like this.  


I've copied one page to give you a sense.  I've saved it in high resolution, but you may have to go to the link to actually be able to read it.  This is just one drawing for one block.  There are additional drawings for each block focusing on the water mains and other features.  These are pretty amazing.  They've got plans for relocating mailboxes, fire hydrants, street lighting.  If I'm interpreting correctly, they have calculated space to allow snow to be plowed without burying the sidewalk.  But maybe wishful thinking was interpreting that drawing.  And I'm sure there will be unanticipated objects and obstacles.  



 

Friday, May 30, 2025

Actions Speak Louder Than Words . . .Why I Really Like tick tick BOOM

I had some kitchen tasks to do - preparing some meals, baking a bread - so I asked Netflix for music and they gave me tick tick Boom as the first choice.  I loved it when I first watched it; enough to watch it again.  And so I put it on a third time. It was still good.  Though I'm tempted to blame me not paying enough attention to the bread and screwing it up.    

So let me recommend it here for folks with Netflix.  

It's musical written by Jonathon Larson, about Jonathan Larson writing an earlier musical that never got performed.  It shows the artist with a vision in his head that's keeping him poor because it's taking him years to get it on paper.  He lives in a 5th floor walkup apartment in New York with his long time school friend,  an aspiring actor.  

The movie switches back and forth from Jonathon talking to an audience about the story and the actual events he's telling the audience.  Music is never more than a beat away.

Andrew Garfield is amazing as Larson.  

But more.  Jonathan Larson, if you don't know (I didn't) went on to write Rent next.  So we are essentially seeing the story of his struggle to survive in New York writing his musicals, waiting tables at a diner, until he makes it. All the while he thinks in music and lyrics. 

Inspiring for people who are feeling despair at today's political situation.  

But the music and the story are also captivating.  And the dancing.  

If you need more convincing, the movie was directed by Lin-Manual Miranda, the genius behind Hamilton!  Here's a trailer. 

Here are the lyrics of the song at the end of the trailer.


from:  https://genius.com/Jonathan-larson-why-lyrics

Actions speak louder than

(Louder than, louder than)

Words

What does it take

To wake up a generation?

[ALL]

How can you make someone

Take off and fly?

[JON]

If we don't wake up

And shake up the nation

We'll eat the dust

Of the world wondering why

[JON]

Why do we follow leaders who never lead?

[MICHAEL]

Why does it take catastrophe to start a revolution

[MICHAEL and SUSAN]

If we're so free?

Tell me why

[JON]

Someone tell me why

So many people bleed

[JON] [MICHAEL and SUSAN]

Cages or wings, Cages or wings

Which do you prefer?

Ask the birds Ah: