Dennis Davis serves Shishmaref as Ryan Air’s village agent, but his role extends far beyond cargo handling
Dennis Davis was watching the livestreams when Typhoon Halong slammed into Western Alaska’s Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta in October 2025. People were broadcasting as water surged toward their homes, as structures began drifting away, as entire communities faced catastrophic flooding.
“You’re seeing actual water coming all the way up, almost into houses. Houses floating by, and it’s not supposed to be floating,” Dennis recalled.
From Shishmaref, a barrier island village of 600 on Alaska’s northwest coast, Dennis knew his community had narrowly escaped. The storm had tracked just slightly left.
“It could have easily been us,” he said.
But proximity meant responsibility. As the Ryan Air village agent for Shishmaref and a coordinator for KUUK water—a nonprofit improving water access across rural Alaska—Dennis immediately began orchestrating response operations. The flooding had displaced more than 1,500 people. Some villages saw 90% of structures damaged. And in the chaos, one critical need rose above the rest: clean water.
“That was a no-brainer,” Dennis said. “We’re gonna need to get water out there.”

When Typhoon Halong hit, Dennis called Ryan Air immediately. The airline responded without hesitation.

