logo
Film spotlights infant learning program successes in Mat-Su — and potential cost of underfunding it

Film spotlights infant learning program successes in Mat-Su — and potential cost of underfunding it

Yahoo06-05-2025

Melissa Lewis holds her three-month-old baby Twila at a screening and event in support of Alaska infant learning programs at the Gold Town Theater in Juneau on Apr 29, 2025. She said while her baby is not showing signs of delays or needing intervention services, they attended the event to support the cause and more state funding and support for early childhood programs. (Photo by Corinne Smith/Alaska Beacon)
It was a pediatrician that first referred Laura Perez, now a mother of four, to an infant learning program in the Matanuska-Susitna Borough for her first son, who at almost 2 years old was showing some signs of developmental delays.
'It was more subtle with my oldest, but as it turned out, he was autistic, but he's smart as a whip,' she said. Not only was Perez able to receive support from a developmental specialist for him, but also to enroll his next three siblings at earlier ages, in the following years.
'They caught some of the social, emotional issues my oldest was having, and they caught some physical issues that with my second child, he's got wonky ankles, which was, causing him to be a lot more clumsy. And … you know, I'm not a medical person,' she said. 'It's done so much good. It helped catch so much more, so much faster, and the faster you can intervene, the better the outcomes are.'
Infant learning programs provide early intervention services for families and children, from infancy to age 3, who are experiencing developmental delays. Interventions can include play and movement therapies, as well as language stimulation techniques, for children. In addition, parents can receive education and training on child development.
An estimated 1,800 Alaskan families are served each year by 17 infant learning programs across the state, funded by the state of Alaska and federal Medicaid, at no cost to families.
Perez and her family received support with speech, physical and occupational therapies. She said her second child is now an active prekindergartner at Big Lake Elementary. 'He's doing math! He's throwing multiplication at us,' she said, laughing. 'I'm like, you just turned 5, sir.'
Perez joined a group of advocates in Juneau to meet with legislators and attend the debut of a new short film that shows a week in the life of the staff at the Mat-Su Services for Children and Adults Inc. infant learning program.
The April 29 screening drew a large crowd to the Gold Town Theater, including over a dozen lawmakers from Anchorage and the Mat-Su regions. Advocates are urging legislators to pass Senate Bill 178, to expand eligibility, and increase state general funds for these programs.
Yulia Smith, a developmental specialist with the Mat-Su Valley infant learning program, and subject of the short film about the program, is seen in a playroom with a young participant (Photo courtesy of Joshua Albeza Branstetter)
The film — made by filmmaker Joshua Albeza Branstetter — follows Yulia Smith, a developmental specialist making house calls in Mat-Su, sitting on floors with toddlers, and talking with mothers rocking infants. She discusses successes of early interventions, and ongoing challenges for the infant learning program.
'Really, the beauty of this work is we get to influence the life of a child in the very first few years of their life,' Smith said. 'There's so much we can do with early intervention to influence that further life of a child. … And it all starts from when you're born, really.'
Smith herself became a developmental specialist after receiving services from the Mat-Su program for her son, who was later diagnosed with autism. She wanted to become one of the specialists and supporters for families like hers. 'Because I had never known what autism was until then. And I was growing through quite a grieving process, in terms of what does that mean for my son and my family,' she said. 'Now looking back, I needed her as much as my son needed her. And I wanted to do that for other families.'
Under current state law, infants and toddlers must show a 50% delay to be eligible for infant learning programs. Smith describes how that forces the Mat-Su program to turn families away, telling them to come back in six months for reevaluation, sensitive weeks and months in a child's brain development.
Under the new proposed legislation, eligibility would be changed to a 25% delay, so that more children and families would be eligible for these types of interventions.
Laura Norton-Cruz is a social worker and executive producer of the film, which was funded by the Mat-Su Health Foundation. She said expanding eligibility would open services to families. It would also reinstate eligibility for babies born prematurely or with low birth weight, after the state changed the guidance to remove them last year.
'I witnessed that when we were filming. They went and visited a child in foster care who had been exposed to alcohol prenatally,' Norton-Cruz said, and he did not meet the 50% delay eligibility requirement at 1 year old. 'So he had to be un-enrolled from the services, despite the services having made a really significant difference in his first 12 months, because he had been enrolled out of the NICU (Neonatal Intensive Care Unit). So they helped him, and then they had to let him go. And a lot of those families who get un-enrolled come back, and they come back with more significant delays.'
The film also shows staff grappling with heavy case loads, back-to-back home visits, and discussion of the growing demand from families, as the Mat-Su has the fastest growing population in the state.
Advocates and families are urging lawmakers to increase state funding for infant learning programs, which is funded through the Alaska Department of Health at $7.4 million in state funding last year.
'It hasn't been increased in 11 years,' Norton-Cruz said. 'So the amount that the state provides has stayed the same, while costs have gone up. … In rural regions, airplane costs have gone up. Health insurance costs have gotten up. And the funding has remained flat.'
This year, the Alaska House added $5.7 million to early intervention and infant learning programs, but that addition was deleted by the Senate Finance Committee in its version of the operating budget. Committee leaders have said they are aiming to constrain spending in preparation for several financial challenges they expect the state to face over the next year.
Norton-Cruz said an increase to infant learning programs would be an essential investment that legislators should fight for this year on a final budget vote.
'If they continue to flat fund, it is a divestment, right, especially as federal funds disappear,' she said. '(It) is a divestment from children. And if you divest from children, things will get worse. Children will have worse outcomes in childhood, in adolescence and in adulthood, and that will be expensive … quality of life gets worse,' she added.
She said these interventions also help reduce the costs and children's need for services later in life, including hospitalizations and special education services in school.
In the final weeks of the legislative session, advocates are hoping to gather support for SB 178 to expand eligibility for children, which is currently being heard in the Senate Health and Social Services Committee.
SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

6 Senate Republicans who could hold up Trump's ‘big, beautiful bill'
6 Senate Republicans who could hold up Trump's ‘big, beautiful bill'

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

6 Senate Republicans who could hold up Trump's ‘big, beautiful bill'

Senate Republicans will take control of the party's mammoth tax and domestic policy bill when they return to Washington on Monday — and seek to win over a diverse group of GOP lawmakers agitating for changes to the legislation. Members are staring down a key four-week stretch to hammer out provisions of the bill, with their Fourth of July goal in sight and pressure mounting to complete President Trump's top domestic agenda priority. The bill narrowly passed the House last month after Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) struck a fragile compromise with different factions of his conference. But there are still Senate Republicans who could gum up the works as Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) works to shepherd the legislation through the upper chamber with only three votes to spare. Here's a look at a half-dozen of those lawmakers to watch in the coming weeks. Murkowski, one of the foremost Senate GOP moderates, is atop the list of the members Thune and his leadership team will have to win over, and she has already indicated she has a number of concerns. Although Murkowski voted for the Senate GOP's budget resolution — which served as the blueprint for the bill — in early April, she told reporters she was worried about three items. Among those is the impact of potential Medicaid work requirements, as she believes her state will have trouble implementing them due to its outdated payment systems for the program. 'There are provisions in there that are very, very, very challenging if not impossible for us to implement,' Murkowski said. She has also expressed worries about what the Medicaid changes could mean for tribal communities in her state, which are heavily reliant on Medicaid for health coverage. On top of that, she and three of her colleagues have expressed concerns with language in the House bill that would nix wind, solar and geothermal energy tax credits that were put in place by the Inflation Reduction Act. He's not a name that usually ends up on these lists, but Hawley has been perhaps the most vocal member of the Senate GOP conference about potential cuts to Medicaid benefits. He has maintained that the Medicaid cuts are a red line for him in backing the final package — even as conservatives in the House have shown an interest in taking a hatchet to the health care program. And he has a key player in the entire effort seemingly on his side. 'We ought to just do what the president says,' Hawley told reporters last month after the House passed the bill. Two days earlier, Trump had told House Republicans in a closed-door meeting to 'leave Medicaid alone.' Hawley added that he spoke with Trump about the state of play. 'His exact words were, 'Don't touch it, Josh,'' Hawley told reporters. 'I said, 'Hey, we're on the same page.'' Hawley has also shown a willingness to take that stand on the floor. During the chamber's first vote-a-rama in February, Hawley sided with Democrats on an amendment that would have prevented tax cuts for wealthy Americans if Medicaid funding is slashed. Any cuts to Medicaid beneficiaries would hit the Show Me State hard in particular given that 21 percent of Missourians rely on the program or the Children's Health Insurance Program, the companion insurance program for lower-income children. Collins stands out as one of only two Republicans — along with Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) — to vote against the party's budget resolution in April, though she is the far more likely of the two to vote 'aye' when push comes to shove on final passage. The Maine Republican has continuously expressed opposition to reductions in federal Medicaid funding and shifting costs to the states, sounding the alarm on the effect doing so would have on her state's rural hospitals. Maine's rural hospitals intensely rely on the health care program, and cuts could deal a crippling blow, she argues. Collins cited that issue in her vote against the budget blueprint, and she has kept up the drumbeat. 'Medicaid is a critically important program for Maine's health care system and a vital resource for many seniors, low-income families, disabled patients, and those who cannot work,' Collins said in a statement at the time. 'I cannot support proposals that would create more duress for our hospitals and providers that are already teetering on the edge of insolvency.' She said last week, on the eve of the House passing the measure, that 'we're still trying to figure out what the provider tax reforms are, but I'm very worried about our rural hospitals in Maine.' Collins was also the only other Senate Republican to vote with Hawley and Democrats for the vote-a-rama Medicaid amendment in February. Her up-in-the-air standing is nothing new for the GOP, especially on a single-party effort. Eight years ago, Collins was a split decision on the GOP's two reconciliation bills. She voted alongside Murkowski and the late Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) against the party's plan to repeal the Affordable Care Act. Months later, though, she backed the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. The GOP's current tax agenda would likely make those 2017 cuts permanent. If there's one Republican senator who is the most likely to oppose the package at the end of the day, it's Paul. The Kentucky Republican has been a loud critic of the bill over its inclusion of a debt ceiling hike and lack of deficit reduction. Paul has made clear that his red line for any bill is a debt ceiling increase. But Republicans on both sides of the Capitol are seemingly intent on following through on Trump's wishes to include it and help the party avoid giving Democratic concessions in any possible negotiation. This means that without any changes, Paul will be a 'no,' and Senate GOP leaders have less breathing room than they had hoped, capping their votes at 52 in the process. 'I've told them if they'll take the debt ceiling off of it, I'll consider voting for it,' Paul said last week after the House vote about his talks with GOP leadership. 'It's not conservative; I can't support it.' 'The spending reductions are imperfect, and I think wimpy, but I'd still vote for the package if I didn't have to vote to raise the debt ceiling,' he added. Senate GOP leaders have long had to worry about the concerns of moderates, but it's Johnson and his fellow conservatives who are making their complaints known over what they view as unacceptable levels of cuts. Johnson has not gone nearly as far as Paul in saying he is prepared to oppose a final bill, but he has hinted that conservatives may throw their weight around. 'We need to be responsible, and the first goal of our budget reconciliation process should be to reduce the deficit,' Johnson told CNN last weekend. 'This actually increases it.' 'I think we have enough [senators] to stop the process until the president gets serious about the spending reduction and reducing the deficit,' Johnson added. Johnson has been vocal about his desire to see greater spending reductions, pointing to the roughly $4 trillion the bill would add to the deficit in its current form. He has voiced a preference to move toward pre-COVID spending levels, arguing that this is the U.S.'s last chance to do so. Tillis, a moderate-leaning senator eyeing what could be a close reelection race in 2026, has aired multiple points of concern, headlined by the axing of energy tax incentives in the bill. He has told colleagues that the swift termination of the credits enacted by the Inflation Reduction Act will cause major harm to numerous companies in North Carolina and force them to scramble after years of planning. He pointed specifically to former President Biden's abrupt killing of the Keystone XL Pipeline four years ago and how it has left investors second-guessing whether to back similar projects. 'A wholesale repeal, or the termination of certain individual credits, would create uncertainty, jeopardizing capital allocation, long-term project planning, and job creation in the energy sector and across our broader economy,' Tillis, Murkowski and Sen. John Curtis (R-Utah) wrote to Thune back in early April. Adding to the drama for Tillis, he is staring down one of the two most contentious Senate races on the 2026 map, forcing him to shore up potential weak points as Democrats look to pounce — and giving leadership an incentive to hand him a win for his voters back home. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

1 dead, 1 injured in Seward Highway rollover near Girdwood
1 dead, 1 injured in Seward Highway rollover near Girdwood

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

1 dead, 1 injured in Seward Highway rollover near Girdwood

Jun. 1—One man died and another was injured in a Seward Highway single-vehicle rollover early Saturday west of Girdwood, Anchorage police said. Multiple people called police around 3:53 a.m. Saturday to report the crash, which occurred around Mile 92.5 of the highway between Bird Point and Girdwood, the department said in a later update to a post on its website. Callers told police that "a sedan was overturned and resting on the railroad tracks," according to the department. Police and emergency responders found two men inside the vehicle when they arrived at the site of the crash, the department said. The passenger was pronounced dead at the scene, police said, while the driver was taken to a hospital for treatment of injuries that police described as not life-threatening. The crash closed the highway in both directions for several hours Saturday morning as police processed the scene. The Anchorage Police Department said the investigation into the crash is ongoing.

Woman seriously injured by vehicle in Midtown hit-and-run, Anchorage police say
Woman seriously injured by vehicle in Midtown hit-and-run, Anchorage police say

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

Woman seriously injured by vehicle in Midtown hit-and-run, Anchorage police say

Jun. 1—A vehicle struck a woman in a hit-and-run early Saturday in Midtown Anchorage, sending her to the hospital with serious injuries, police said. Multiple people called police around 3:04 a.m. Saturday to report a woman who was lying in the road near the Seward Highway and East Benson Boulevard, the Anchorage Police Department said in a later update to a post on its website. "Witnesses stated that the adult female had been struck by a vehicle, which then fled the scene," police said in the update. The woman was taken to the hospital with injuries that police described as life-threatening. The northbound lanes of the Seward Highway between East 36th Avenue and Benson were closed for several hours Saturday as police processed the scene. Police said the investigation into the incident is ongoing.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store