Associated General
Contractors of Alaska
New Participants
is largest in Alaska but smallest
in company profile
8005 Schoon St.
Anchorage, AK 99518
907-561-5354
Fax: 907-562-6118
www.agcak.org
Contractor@agcak.org
Associated General Contractors of Alaska
Jenith Flynn
Davis Constructors & Engineers Inc.
David Haynes
First National Bank Alaska
Pearl-Grace Pantaleone
Cornerstone General Contractors
Gary Klebs
KLEBS Mechanical
Aspen Knight
Coldfoot Environmental
Alicia Siira
Associated General Contractors of Alaska
Christine A. White
R&M Consultants Inc.
Kathryn Mackenzie
Managing Editor
Rindi White
Editor
Monica Sterchi-Lowman
Art Director
Linda Shogren
Art Production
James K Brown
Graphic Designer
BUSINESS STAFF
Charles Bell
VP Sales & Marketing
257-2909 cbell@akbizmag.com
Janis J. Plume
Senior Account Manager
257-2917 janis@akbizmag.com
Christine Merki
Advertising Account Manager
257-2911 cmerki@akbizmag.com
501 W. Northern LIghts Blvd., Ste 100
Anchorage, AK 99503
The Alaska Contractor is published by Alaska Business Publishing Co. Inc. for the Associated General Contractors of Alaska. Contents of the magazine are not necessarily endorsed by AGC of Alaska or Alaska Business Publishing Co. All rights reserved. Copyright 2020 by the Associated General Contractors of Alaska. For information about articles in this edition or for permission to reproduce any portion of it, contact Alaska Business Publishing Co.
ASRC Construction
Cover: James K Brown
8005 Schoon St.
Anchorage, AK 99518
907-561-5354
Fax: 907-562-6118
www.agcak.org
Contractor@agcak.org
Associated General Contractors of Alaska
Jenith Flynn
Davis Constructors & Engineers Inc.
David Haynes
First National Bank Alaska
Pearl-Grace Pantaleone
Cornerstone General Contractors
Gary Klebs
KLEBS Mechanical
Aspen Knight
Coldfoot Environmental
Alicia Siira
Associated General Contractors of Alaska
Christine A. White
R&M Consultants Inc.
Kathryn Mackenzie
Managing Editor
Rindi White
Editor
Monica Sterchi-Lowman
Art Director
Linda Shogren
Art Production
James K Brown
Graphic Designer
BUSINESS STAFF
Charles Bell
VP Sales & Marketing
257-2909 cbell@akbizmag.com
Janis J. Plume
Senior Account Manager
257-2917 janis@akbizmag.com
Christine Merki
Advertising Account Manager
257-2911 cmerki@akbizmag.com
501 W. Northern LIghts Blvd., Ste 100
Anchorage, AK 99503
The Alaska Contractor is published by Alaska Business Publishing Co. Inc. for the Associated General Contractors of Alaska. Contents of the magazine are not necessarily endorsed by AGC of Alaska or Alaska Business Publishing Co. All rights reserved. Copyright 2020 by the Associated General Contractors of Alaska. For information about articles in this edition or for permission to reproduce any portion of it, contact Alaska Business Publishing Co.
ASRC Construction
Cover: James K Brown
- Source from projects advertised in the AGC of Alaska Bulletin
- Calculations based on date of bid
- Supply/Service: Non-Construction bid results are not always advertised in the bulletin
- RFP results are not always advertised in the bulletin
MESSAGE
ith everything happening in the world today, it’s easy to get dragged down in the negatives. I could sit here and type away at all the things that have gone wrong lately, but that’s not the kind of person I am. And, quite frankly, nobody wants to hear it.
They say it takes twenty-two days to change a habit. Well, this month marks just about a full year of living with COVID-19—and we’ve had plenty of time to adjust and adapt. But when we look back at this period in a few years, instead of simply reflecting on our struggles, wouldn’t it be great to be able to point to some positives that came from such adversity?
DIRECTOR’S MESSAGE
elieve it or not, we’re already a quarter into the new year. And with respect to the pandemic, things are finally beginning to look up. Not only are we seeing daily case numbers continue to fall, Alaska is leading the country in vaccination rates. The implications these factors have on our state’s economy can’t be understated—especially if the recently released 2021 Construction Spending Forecast is anything to go by.
The blow COVID-19 dealt Alaska’s economy in 2020 was always going to mean lower construction spending in 2021. But the report prepared by McKinley Research Group holds a variety of reasons to remain optimistic. The estimated $4.3 billion in total spending is shared almost equally between private and public construction projects. This shows that both our government and local businesses recognize the importance of this essential industry.
his year’s Associated General Contractors of Alaska networking opportunity looks much different than previous events. AGC has been hosting a networking event similar to a job fair for construction management students at the University of Alaska Anchorage for three years. The event has typically included speed-interviews, similar to speed-dating, giving potential employers a chance to meet several potential candidates.
For this spring’s event, students completed the speed-interviews virtually. Their resumes and interview videos are posted on AGC’s website, where potential employers can browse candidates from UAA. The webpage was promoted in AGC’s weekly e-newsletters to all membership, and on social media.
Kirk Zerkel, president
Travis Bailey, project engineer/manager
809 S Chugach St. #2
Palmer, AK 99645
Phone: 907-746-4505
Fax: 907-746-4506
kirk.zerkel@ak-gravel.com
travis.bailey@ak-gravel.com
www.ak-gravel.com
Mine development and infrastructure. Earth moving, roads, dams, and bridge construction. Liner installation and welding. Shotcrete and slurry. Structural steel, concrete structures and foundations; HDPE piping.
David Kane, owner
Manisha Kane, office manager
1301 W Mystery Ave., Ste. C
Wasilla, AK 99654
Phone: 907-841-3112
dkane@alaskadts.com
mkane@alaskadts.com
Commercial data and security services.
Chuck Huntley, president
Katia Larralde, business development
2401 Belmont Dr., #1377
Anchorage, AK 99517
Phone: 907-276-5747
chuntley@huntleyandassociates.com
klarralde@huntleyandassociates.com
www.huntleyandassociates.com
Manufacturing representative for Hitachi ABB, AZZ, Primax, and Kato Engineering.
Hydro Plant Power Output
This aerial photo shows the downstream face of the diversion concrete spillway on the right, sluice channel and instream flow water release at center and pipe intake below the excavator.
Photo courtesy of Alaska Energy Authority
ith the flip of a switch, a diverted glacier stream outside Homer began flowing into Bradley Lake’s hydroelectric plant last fall with the potential to increase the availability of low-cost power to customers as far away as Fairbanks.
This aerial photo shows the downstream face of the diversion concrete spillway on the right, sluice channel and instream flow water release at center and pipe intake below the excavator.
Photo courtesy of Alaska Energy Authority
ith the flip of a switch, a diverted glacier stream outside Homer began flowing into Bradley Lake’s hydroelectric plant last fall with the potential to increase the availability of low-cost power to customers as far away as Fairbanks.
Located 27 miles from Homer in the Kenai Mountains, the Bradley Lake Hydroelectric Plant provides some of the least expensive power in the state—approximately four cents per kilowatt hour—to utilities along the Railbelt electrical grid. Owned by the Alaska Energy Authority, or AEA, and operated by Homer Electric Association, the plant was energized in 1991 and began transmitting electricity to residents from Homer north to Fairbanks via two parallel 20-mile transmission lines that connect to a larger transmission system to move power north.
Diversion of the west fork of Upper Battle Creek into the lake enables the facility to increase its annual output by about 10 percent—enough power to light approximately 5,000 homes, according to AEA Executive Director Curtis W. Thayer.
rom start to finish and all points in between, ASRC Construction’s work and stature foster abundant personal and professional satisfaction.
“There are not many strangers in our company,” says Director of Operations Paul Kari. “A lot of ASRC shareholders are also employees. In other words, our owners also work for us, and they have real buy-in. They’re really participating in our success.”
ASRC Construction is one of Arctic Slope Regional Corporation’s, or ASRC’s, many subsidiaries. The parent company originated shortly after the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act of 1971. ASRC is Iñupiat-based and is the largest Alaska-owned and -operated business in the state.
to Connect
Photo courtesy of HC Contractors
Photo courtesy of HC Contractors
y the end of summer, North Pole Utility will be the permanent water source for the nearby community of Moose Creek. The two-year project is ahead of schedule, after a productive 2020 summer and fall, in which construction crews completed a chunk of work initially slated for spring 2021. When completed, the Moose Creek Water System Expansion Project will provide potable water to more than 200 properties affected by perfluorinated-chemicals, or PFCs, in the groundwater.
HC Contractor Project Manager Jordann Conlon says the project has gone smoothly despite the pandemic and unexpected environmental challenges that arose last year.
“We were fortunate that our vendors got materials to us on time, and we were able to bring more crews to work on the project,” she says.
Swalling General Contractors didn’t let that stop them. Typically a top contributor to the toy drive, Swalling employees gathered a truckload of toys–enough to help more than 500 children.
“I think every kid should have a present at Christmas and be able to enjoy the magic of that,” says Steve Rowe, an owner and operations and safety manager for Swalling General Contractors.
Swalling General Contractors didn’t let that stop them. Typically a top contributor to the toy drive, Swalling employees gathered a truckload of toys–enough to help more than 500 children.
“I think every kid should have a present at Christmas and be able to enjoy the magic of that,” says Steve Rowe, an owner and operations and safety manager for Swalling General Contractors.
All Going to
Be the Same”
extra monitor, tips for keeping
your workplace comfortable
Photo courtesy of Gray Services LLC
ecause many Alaskans have modified their lives to working from home during the pandemic, Elisa Hitchcock of Gray Services LLC says workstations have changed like never before.
“There have been times throughout the past year where people go between work and home. It is quite difficult because you end up with two workstations, or, you end up carrying your work things back and forth,” says Hitchcock. “(Now) so many people are in a home setting, doing the work that they used to do in the privacy and comfort of an office, where we weren’t interrupted fifteen times a day.”
Photo courtesy of Loken Construction, LLC
Photo courtesy of Loken Construction, LLC
yler Loken speaks about his ownership of Loken Construction, LLC with a humbleness rarely seen today. He takes every opportunity to acknowledge his employees’ hard work contributing to his success and to express gratitude for the lifelong journey into a rewarding construction career.
“I’ve had the privilege and honor to work with a lot of people who seem to make everything work,” says Loken.
By the time Loken started Loken Construction in 2003, he already had an in-depth knowledge of the industry obtained by growing up in it. Loken’s father owned a contracting business in Montana and South Dakota, and used it to teach his children the value of hard work and leadership by bringing them into the workforce.
After four decades of business in Alaska and the Lower 48 and a handful of names, the company decided on Kuna Engineering in 2018.
Photo courtesy of Kuna Engineering
After four decades of business in Alaska and the Lower 48 and a handful of names, the company decided on Kuna Engineering in 2018.
Photo courtesy of Kuna Engineering
he Iñupiaq values of honesty, integrity, commitment, and respect are how Kuna Engineering conducts business.
“We pride ourselves on building on the Native values,” says Suzanne Taylor, Kuna’s director of marketing and communications, who has been with the company for nearly two decades.
Kuna Engineering provides services ranging from water resources and rural development, architecture, commercial facilities engineering, surveying and geospatial services, civil engineering, and transportation and environmental services. In addition to civil, they also have environmental, mechanical, electrical, and structural engineers.
New AGC Participants
wenty Zoom meetings in two days sounds like a pandemic-style marathon. In 2021, it’s how lobbying is done.
Each year, several representatives from the Associated General Contractors of Alaska fly to Juneau to meet with legislators, share a meal or a drink, and advocate on behalf of the construction industry. But open meetings and shared meals with legislators are off the table during the 32nd Alaska State Legislature. Like most events, the legislative fly-in went virtual.
Brittany Hartmann, Associated General Contractors of Alaska’s Fairbanks branch manager and government relations liaison, said about twenty-four AGC of Alaska members participated in the event, held February 24 and 25. Typically, around twenty members fly to Juneau, she says.
Update
Photo courtesy of Jonathan Hornak, Cornerstone General Contractors, Inc.
Photo courtesy of Jonathan Hornak, Cornerstone General Contractors, Inc.
laska’s healthcare system took a positive step forward when Medline Industries, Inc. opened a new facility in South Anchorage last August.
As one of the nation’s largest distributors of medical supplies, Medline Industries tripled the space it was leasing in Anchorage when Cornerstone General Contractors completed a new 150,000-square-foot facility on King Street. The new distribution center features thirty-two loading bays, administration offices, two mezzanines, and state-of-the-art custom racking with automated stock-picking capabilities.
“We wanted to build a distribution center in Alaska that would not only be useful for today but also for the future as well,” says Medline Public Affairs Director Jesse Greenberg. “This is a medical-grade distribution center. There’s a lot of space and a lot of technology in there. We are very proud of the systems we have built.”
rice Equipment, under the Brice Incorporated umbrella, can be found in both Fairbanks and Deadhorse, and maybe even on the side of an Arctic ice road repairing a tire or two.
Brice Incorporated began in 1961, and is responsible for building some of the interior’s first roads and infrastructure, like Chena Hot Springs Road. The company was one of the original contractors of the trans-Alaska pipeline. In 2006, the company started Brice Equipment to provide construction support and equipment for the oil, gas and construction industry on Alaska’s North Slope. Brice Equipment now has a fleet of more than 300 pieces of equipment, ranging from heavy construction machinery to mobile support equipment.
“We saw a need for versatile equipment rental in Deadhorse,” says Christian Gou-Leonhardt, an operations manager with Brice Equipment. “Essentially, we’ve been growing since then.
CESCL Program
Goes Virtual
he Associated General Contractors of Alaska has organized a new, virtual CESCL (Alaska Certified Erosion and Sediment Control Lead) training program.
CESCL is aimed at enhancing the Department of Environmental Conservation construction general permit for stormwater discharge. Enrollees can take a two-day, sixteen-hour course, with renewal required every three years.
As of 2008, CESCL training is required for all contractors working on all US Army Corps of Engineers Alaska District projects, and on all Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities construction projects. But training in the midst of a global pandemic isn’t easy. Other states were also struggling to provide online training options for industry certifications; Alaska decided to build its own.
Update
Photo by Stephen Nowers/Cruz Construction
Photo by Stephen Nowers/Cruz Construction
evin Barnhart says there is a certain irony that his final project with Cruz Construction, Inc. before going into semi-retirement is on the same stretch of road where he started his career. The Tok Cutoff is no stranger to rehabilitation. Multiple crews have improved the 125-mile route over the years, most recently completing the stretch between mileposts 38-50.
“I’ve come full circle,” says Barnhart, Cruz’s construction manager for the most recent upgrades. “I first worked on this stretch of road back in the ‘80s with another company. I’ve grown up in the area, and I’m really familiar with this road.”
verett Wesley Casper, Jr., known to most as Pete Casper, died in his sleep from natural causes on December 22 at the age of 95. He was born in Chicago on August 11, 1925. Pete was well-known for his work in the Alaska construction industry—during the territorial days and after statehood—and was a notable figure in the construction of the trans-Alaska pipeline. He was a longtime Alaska resident, living mostly in Anchorage. He is survived by his wife, Sonja, of Tucson, Ariz., and his son and daughter-in-law, Chuck and Laurel Casper, of Anchorage.
During World War II, Pete was drafted into the Navy while he was in high school. He served on multiple ships, including in several major battles. After the war, he earned a civil engineering degree from Iowa State University, worked at the Iowa Highway Department, and became a registered professional civil engineer in Iowa and later in Alaska.
he construction industry leaves a huge footprint on Alaska’s overall economy.
When all job categories are included—direct, indirect, and induced—the Alaska construction industry affects 42,000 jobs and about $3.4 billion in wages.
Alaska’s construction economy accounts for nine percent of the jobs in the state and 10 percent of the economy, says McKinley Research Group, the research and consulting office that compiled the January 2021 Economic Benefits of Alaska’s Construction Industry and 2021 Construction Spending Forecast for Associated General Contractors of Alaska and the Construction Industry Progress Fund. The spending forecast was presented at a webinar January 28.
Geraghty
Rinker & Baker LLP
Cason
Rinker & Baker LLP
Rinker & Baker LLP
Rinker & Baker LLP
s the pandemic enters its second year, the increasing availability of COVID-19 vaccines appears to offer hope of an imminent return to normalcy. Alaska has led the nation in the early stages of vaccination—distributing more doses per capita than any other state, despite our geographically dispersed population.
As more people become eligible for the vaccine, however, the conversation around their distribution is likely to shift. Currently, the central question is: “Who should be allowed to get a vaccine?” However, once vaccine doses become more widely available, and are opened up to the general population, the central question will likely become: “Can someone be required to get a vaccine if they don’t want one?”
Alaska Executive Search and
Bradison Management Group, LLC.
Alaska Executive Search and
Bradison Management Group, LLC.
rofessionally and personally, 2020 has left its mark. Entering spring 2021, leadership continues to need business continuity planning and a more narrowed focus on well-being. No longer is there a separation between work and home life. We now experience both, at once, all day. This new professional environment has had some surprising results. According to Harvard Business Review, or HBR, the major tickers that affect the decline in workplace well-being are:
- Disengagement from work
- Lack of leadership support
- Job security concerns
- Existential concerns
Below are best practices and current research from The Society for Human Resource Management, or SHRM, Gallup, and HBR to empower leaders positively through uncertainty.
The Engagement Effect
The Engagement Effect
n January 21, President Joe Biden issued an executive order directing the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration, or OSHA, to consider workplace emergency temporary standards, or ETS, related to COVID-19.
The OSHA segment of the executive order, “Protecting Workers from COVID-19 Under the Occupational Safety and Health Act,” directs the secretary of labor to:
- issue, within two weeks of the date of this order and in conjunction or consultation with the heads of any other appropriate executive departments and agencies (agencies), revised guidance to employers on workplace safety during the COVID-19 pandemic;
1st Source Bank
& Contractors
1st Source Bank
& Contractors
t’s the question that every contractor asks themselves when acquiring equipment: Is it better to rent or buy?
The construction industry was thrown a curveball with the COVID-19 pandemic at the end of the first quarter of 2020. As a result, there was a considerable amount of economic uncertainty in the second and third quarters of 2020, which led to some lenders taking a more conservative underwriting approach. Many contractors also chose to be cautious, as they elected to rent equipment instead of financing, even with historically low interest rates.
and Safety Services
and Safety Services
andom testing has been a vital component of drug-free workplace programs for many years. Employers may be required to implement random testing programs in accordance with federal or Department of Transportation, or DOT, regulations, and all employers may choose to implement non-regulated random testing programs. Doing so can help secure a safe and drug-free workplace, but there are various components to consider to ensure the program is effective.
Coffman Engineers in February announced it donated $100,000 to American Red Cross, a gift continuing a strong, decade-old partnership between the two organizations.
Dave Ruff, Coffman’s chief executive officer and president, along with Coffman principals Craig Lee and Tom Arnold, presented the donation on February 3. Lee and Arnold have previously served on the board for the Greater Inland Northwest chapter of the American Red Cross.
“The American Red Cross mission and commitment to assist those in tragic situations, and just as importantly help avoid tragedy altogether, are values near and dear to Coffman and our employees. Especially after the challenges of last year and current weather events, we are grateful for the tireless work of the Red Cross organization and look forward to what our partnership can achieve this year,” says Ruff. The multi-disciplinary engineering consulting firm has 600 employees in 17 offices across the U.S. and internationally.
- Airport Equipment Rentals
- Alaska Mechanical Contractors Association, Inc.
- Alaska Railroad
- Alaska Roof Restorations
- Alaska Steel
- Alyeska Pipeline Service Co.
- American Marine / Penco
- Anchorage Sand & Gravel
- Bob’s Services, Inc.
- Builders First Source – Spenard Builders Supply
- Chugach Electric Association Inc.
- Coastal Transportation Inc.
- Construction Machinery Industrial (CMI)
- Cornerstone General Contractors
- Craig Taylor Equipment
- Crowley Fuels
- Cruz Companies
- Davis Block & Concrete
- Determine Design Architechture
- Equipment Sources, Inc.
- First National Bank Alaska
- Fountainhead Development
- Fullford Electric, Inc.
- GMG General
- Granite Construction
- Hamilton Construction Alaska
- HC Contractors
- Hector’s Welding
- HUB International
- Insulfoam
- JD Steel Co Inc.
- JEFFCO Inc.
- Klebs Mechanical
- Lynden, Inc.
- Mobile Concrete & Grout of Alaska
- N C Machinery
- NECA Alaska Chapter
- Nortech Environment & Engineering
- Northern Air Cargo
- Northwest Ironworks Employers Association
- Northwest Regional Council Carpenters
- Nu Flow Alaska
- Orion Marine Group
- Pacific Pile & Marine
- Parker Smith & Fleek
- PDC Engineers Inc.
- Personnel Plus Employment Agency
- PND Engineers, Inc.
- R & M Consultants, Inc.
- Rain Proof Roofing
- Ravn Alaska
- Ron Webb Paving, Inc.
- Rural Energy Enterprises
- SMS Equipment
- Span Alaska Transportation, LLC
- Swalling General Contractors, LLC
- TorcSill Foundations
- TOTE Maritime Alaska
- Tutka, LLC
- Yukon Equipment, Inc.