Karl Amylon History Story
Looking back at a long reign
Amylon led city government
For more than a quarter century
In the world of municipal management former longtime Ketchikan city manager Karl Amylon was a unicorn.
The International City/County
Management Association estimates that the average city manager stays in
one job for between three to five years. In more than 40 years as a
municipal manager, Amylon basically only had two jobs.
Amylon
was fresh out of Bucknell University in 1978. when he was hired to be
confidential assistant to the city manager of Watertown, New York, By
1982 he was the acting city manager and then became assistant city
manager in January 1983. Eleven months later he was appointed full time
Watertown city manager. Watertown is about 160 miles north of Corning,
New York, where Amylon grew up.
At the time, Amylon,
28, was one of the youngest municipal managers in the country. He would
hold that job for the next 11 years before resigning in 1994. In 1995,
he would be named city manager in Ketchikan, a job he would hold for 26
years before resigning at the end August of 2021, just about a year
ago.
Amylon then died of cancer in September of 2021.
When Amylon
passed away in 2021, the current Watertown city manager, Kenneth Mix,
spoke about him in an article in the Watertown Daily Times.
"Karl was a very intelligent person" who knew how to get things done, Mix told the Daily Times, noting that he had worked with Amylon back in the 1990s. He said among Amylon's
major accomplishments in Watertown was negotiating a power purchase
agreement between the city and Niagara Mohawk that decades later still
provides the city with millions of dollars of revenue each year.
But Mix also noted that Amylon
was forced to leave Watertown because of a pair of controversies
involving the Watertown police department. First, in 1986, he was
criticized for naming Michael Hennegan of the Niagara Falls police
department to head the Watertown department in 1986. Several years
later, a lieutenant with the police department was accused of a serious
crime and, according to the Daily Times, Amylon publicly said the officer would be found guilty. When that didn't happen the city council forced Amylon's resignation.
"We lost him, and he went to
Alaska, but I think he found a good place, he was in Alaska for 26
years," Mix told the Watertown newspaper.
Amylon
was born in Corning, New York in 1956. After growing up in Corning, he
attended Bucknell University, graduating with a degree in political
science. He later received a master's degree in public administration
from Syracuse University.
When he arrived in Ketchikan, it
was not without some controversy. He took over for a long-time assistant
city manager who was one of the candidates for the full-time position
and the city council received more than a little grief for not "hiring
local."
Also, in 1999, the city council
decided to add the management of Ketchikan Public Utilities to the city
manager's portfolio after having separate utility and city government
managers for many years. The idea was to limit what had become numerous
skirmishes between the city and utility managers in recent years.
There were many major projects during Amylon's two decades at the head of Ketchikan city government.
On the city side there was the $50
million renovation of the medical center, the construction of the new
downtown fire station and the new city library in Bear Valley. The
centennial building and the Tongass Historical Museum were remodeled.
There were also several city hall remodeling projects, and upgrades to
Bayview Cemetery and the city landfill.
Roads were a major issue and Amylon
oversaw the reconstruction of Water Street Trestle and the work on
numerous other city roads, as well as a few state ones in the city.
There were also public-private projects and Amylon promoted the city interests in the private company building of Berth 4 and the expansion of the Ketchikan Shipyard.
Perhaps, the biggest change to the
city was creation of the port facility downtown with nearly $100
million going into the establishment and improvements of Berth's One,
Two and Three and the Waterfront Promenade as well as upland
developments to handle a cruise industry that went from 200,000 visitors
in Amylon's first year to more than 1.3 million by 2019.
There were also major changes at KPU when Amylon was in charge.
The water disinfection facility
was built, the Whitman Lake Hydro Dam was built. A $15 million subsea
fiber optic cable was built to Prince Rupert. The Bethe Electrical
Substation was built and the city negotiated the transfer of
responsibility for operating the Swan Lake hydro operation from the city
to the SEAPA.
All told, Amylon
helped lead the city through more than $300 million in new construction
projects in his two decades, besides implementing combined city and KPU
budgets of more than $100 million yearly.
Another area where Amylon
was involved was in the transfer of the city's responsibility for
operating Gateway Center for Human Services to the State of Alaska.
Politically, the city responded to
the potential loss of sales tax dollars by annexing the Shoreline
Service Area where Walmart would be located.
After retiring, Amylon received several posthumous awards.
The Alaska Municipal League gave
him the Vic Fischer Local Government Award in 2021. Southeast
Conference named him the 2021 Southeast Alaska Person of the Year and
the Ketchikan Chamber of Commerce gave him the 2021 Lifetime Achievement
Award.
And the Ketchikan City Council renamed city hall, the Karl R. Amylon City Hall.
When Amylon was first hired, several letters to the editor of the Daily News predicted he wouldn't last very long in the community.
He proved them wrong.
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