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Adak Alaska
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Adak Alaska
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Location and ClimateAdak is located on Kuluk Bay on Adak Island. It lies 1,300 miles southwest of Anchorage and 350 miles west of Unalaska/Dutch Harbor, in the Aleutian Island Chain.
Flight time to Anchorage is three hours.
Adak is the southern-most community in Alaska, on the latitude of Vancouver Island in Canada.
The community lies at approximately 51.872500° North Latitude and -176.628610° (West) Longitude. (Sec. 10, T096S, R195W, Seward Meridian.) Adak is located in the Aleutian Islands Recording District.
The area encompasses 122.4 sq. miles of land and 4.9 sq. miles of water. Adak lies in the maritime climate zone, characterized by persistently overcast skies, high winds, and frequent cyclonic storms. Winter squalls produce wind gusts in excess of 100 knots.
During the summer, extensive fog forms over the Bering Sea and North Pacific.
Average temperatures range from 20 to 60 degrees Fahrenheit, but wind chill factors can be severe.
Total precipitation is 64 inches annually, with an average accumulated snowfall of 100 inches, primarily in the mountains
Organizations with Local Offices
Aleutian Region School District
P.O. Box 92230
Anchorage, AK 99509-
Phone 907-277-2648
Fax 907-277-2649
E-mail jbeckford@aleutregion.org
City - City of Adak
P.O. Box 2011
Adak, AK 99546
Phone 907-592-4513
Fax (907) 592-4262
E-mail adakcity@corecom.net
Regional Organizations
Regional Native Corporation - Aleut Corporation
4000 Old Seward Hwy., Suite 300
Anchorage, AK 99503
Phone 907-561-4300
Fax 907-563-4328
E-mail receptionist@aleutcorp.com
Web http://www.aleutcorp.com
Facilities, Utilities, Schools and Health Care
Water is derived from Lake Bonnie Rose, Lake De Marie and Nurses Creek, stored in any 7 water tanks throughout the community, and piped to facilities and housing units. The wastewater treatment system discharges through a marine outfall line to Kuluk Bay. There is a permitted landfill - Roberts Landfill is a Class 2 with balefill. Electricity is provided by City of Adak.
There is one school located in the community, attended by 18 students. Local hospitals or health clinics include Adak Medical Clinic (907-592-8383). Adak Medical Center is a qualified Emergency Care Center and Primary Health Care facility.
The clinic is staffed by a physician's assistant and provides emergency care, family practice and referral services. Lab, pharmacy, and public health services are available.
Adak is classified as an isolated town/sub-regional center, located in EMS Region 2H in the Aleutian/Pribilof Region. Emergency Services have coastal and airport access to Adak. Auxiliary health care is provided by Adak Volunteer Fire Dept./EMS (907-592-4145).
Economy and Transportation
A land exchange between Aleut Corp., the U.S. Navy, and the Department of the Interior has transferred most of the naval facilities to the Aleut Corp. A portion of the Island remains within the National Maritime National Wildlife Refuge, managed by U.S. Fish & Wildlife.
Adak currently provides a fueling port and crew transfer facility for foreign fishing fleets -- an airport, docks, housing facilities, restaurant, grocery and ship supply store are available.
Contractors are performing an environmental clean-up. Norquest-Adak Seafood Co. processes Pacific cod, pollock, mackerel, halibut, albacore and brown king crab. Four residents hold commercial fishing permits, primarily for groundfish.
Adak Airport has a control tower and two asphalt paved runways, one measures 7,790' long by 200' wide, the other runway measures 7,605' by 200'wide. Both are an eleavtion of 19'. Alaska Airlines operates passenger and cargo jet service.
There are three deep water docks and fueling facilities. The City has requested funds to greatly expand the Sweeper Cove small boat harbor, including new breakwaters, a 315-ft. dock and new moorage floats. There are approximately 16 miles of paved roads, and other gravel and dirt roads.
History, Culture and Demographics
The Aleutian Islands were historically occupied by the Unangas. The once heavily-populated island was eventually abandoned in the early 1800s as the Aleutian Island hunters followed the Russian fur trade eastward, and famine set in on the Andreanof Island group.
However, they continued to actively hunt and fish around the island over the years, until World War II broke out. Adak Army installations allowed U.S. forces to mount a successful offensive against the Japanese-held islands of Kiska and Attu.
After the War, Adak was developed as a Naval Air Station, playing an important role during the Cold War as a submarine surveillance center. Large earthquakes rocked the Island in 1957, 1964 and 1977. At its peak, the station housed 6,000 naval personnel and their families. In 1994, severe cut-backs occurred, and family housing and schools were closed.
The station officially closed on March 31, 1997, and currently houses civilians. The Aleut Corporation acquired Adak's facilities under a land transfer agreement, pending with the Department of the Interior and the U.S. Navy/Department of Defense.
Properties are currently under lease. About 30 families with children relocated to Adak in September 1998, most of them Aleut Corp. shareholders, and a school was reopened. Aleut Corp. is currently developing Adak as a commercial center. The community formed a Second Class City government in April 2001.
The population of the community consists of 37.3% Alaska Native or part Native. Since World War II, the U.S. Navy developed outstanding facilities and recreation opportunities at Adak. A movie theater, roller skating rink, swimming pools, ski lodge, bowling alleys, skeet range, auto hobby shop, photo lab, racquetball and tennis courts were developed.
A new $18-million hospital was built in 1990. As of March 2003, all of these facilities are closed except.
The Aleut Corporation will be the facility's new owner, and the City operates existing facilities. During the 2000 U.S. Census, total housing units numbered 884, and vacant housing units numbered 725. Vacant housing units used only seasonally numbered 7. U.S. Census data for Year 2000 showed 200 residents as employed.
The unemployment rate at that time was 7.55 percent, although 16.32 percent of all adults were not in the work force. The median household income was $52,727, per capita income was $31,747, and 4.66 percent of residents were living below the poverty level.
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