National Fallen Firefighters Memorial Weekend
National Fallen Firefighters Memorial Weekend.
DEATH OF SENATOR LINDSEY GRAHAM
No fresh official-source confirmation is available. Check the linked federal or state authority before acting.
Search past Alaska flag-lowering orders by person, event, or effective date.
National Fallen Firefighters Memorial Weekend.
Check the location, authority, and end time before changing a flag. A federal order and a Alaska order can apply to different places for different periods.
A notice from the governor may cover all government facilities, only the capitol or central offices, selected counties or cities, or another named location. Follow the scope written in the current order.
A presidential order can apply nationwide while a governor's order applies within Alaska. This page tracks both so a local order is not mistaken for a national one.
Do not assume every notice lasts all day. The order may end at sunset, noon, interment, or another stated time. Use the “Ends” field above.
The governor can issue a jurisdiction-specific order for an official, service member, first responder, tragedy, or remembrance. That order may apply in Alaska even when no federal order is active.
Read the order’s scope. Government notices commonly direct publicly owned facilities and may invite residents, businesses, and local governments to participate. Do not treat an invitation as a requirement or expand a limited order beyond its named area.
Check both. A federal order and a governor's order can overlap, and their locations or end times can differ. The current answer above shows the controlling known order and keeps the second status visible.
They describe the same mourning display in everyday searches. In U.S. usage, “half-staff” is the standard term for flags on land, while “half-mast” is traditionally used aboard ships and at naval stations.
Use the Alaska history search above. Enter a person or event, or choose a date range, to find normalized orders and their original sources.
A presidential order and a governor's order can have different scopes and dates. This page gives the Alaska answer first and keeps the federal status visible as a secondary notice.