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Decades of inaction by Alaska's leadership is leaving kids with the bill. Why are we OK with that?

Decades of inaction by Alaska's leadership is leaving kids with the bill. Why are we OK with that?

Yahoo19-05-2025

A school bus drives in front of the Alaska State Capitol on Monday, Feb. 3, 2025. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)
For decades, our elected leadership at both the legislative and executive levels have neglected to look ahead and find ways to cement a sustainable future for Alaskans. Instead of working to establish and secure new revenue streams, we married ourselves to oil and mining companies that inexplicably continue to receive massive tax cuts, even as the returns of their industries decline. Instead of standing on issues like good schools, quality roads, and affordable energy, political debates are instead hogged by questions about how big of a Permanent Fund dividend one can expect.
In the sphere of Alaska's public education, this has all culminated in a way that is nothing short of a crisis. The state has not significantly increased the per-student dollar amount that goes to education since 2012, even though inflation has risen a whopping 40% since then. Make no mistake, flat funding in an era of 40% inflation is in fact a cut of 40%. Is it really so surprising that our declining test scores have mirrored that?
All the while, the state shuffles between excuses, claiming we can't afford to spend more on education (lack of revenue); blaming so-called 'special interest groups' (otherwise known as parents, and the teachers who spend 40 hours a week with your children); and insisting that more charter schools will solve all our problems.
Charters in Alaska are a wholly unsustainable model that is not expandable in any way, shape or form. To be clear, instead of addressing the declining enrollment and financial exigency that has led school districts across the state to shutter and consolidate neighborhood schools, the governor is literally proposing we open more schools. He has advocated making the application process easier and having the state take over the approval process, even though it's the local school district that would have to foot the bill in their budget. We can't even afford to run the schools we have. We can't open more.
What's more, it is imperative that Alaskans understand that every charter school is subsidized by hundreds and hundreds of hours of volunteer work — unpaid work donated by willing families. Charter schools in Alaska are public schools of choice, not neighborhood schools, meaning their enrollment is done by lottery. Families are often required to attend an information night and are asked to sign a document indicating they understand the special commitments associated with attending a charter before they are permitted to even enter the lottery. Those commitments include student transportation (not a single charter in the state is able to offer busing); supplying food (many charter buildings do not have kitchens and do not operate a food program for breakfast or lunch, and some are able to offer only cold lunch options); and volunteer hour quotas. Many charters do not have school nurses, PE teachers, libraries or librarians, music teachers, or counselors. Every family is expected to contribute significant time, labor, and/or money to the school to fill in the gaps.
On no planet is this a sustainable model. This magnitude of commitment is not possible for many, many families. Advocating for more charters is not a way forward; instead, it is the foremost example of the short-sighted leadership that has led Alaska down this devastating path. Public education is not supposed to be a caste system.
The governor is fond of claiming that charters are unilaterally responsible for superior academic performance. This is a spurious connection. Certain legislators are fond of impassioned speeches urging Alaska to prioritize charters because their constituents demand it. That does not legitimize continuing to grow an inequitable system.
What constituents are really demanding is a better education and better experience for their kids. Sadly, the last few decades of underfunding have taught us that such an experience may only be attainable through enrollment at a charter school. Charters are like splinter cells, able to write completely well-intentioned education philosophy into their Magna Carta, allowing them to prioritize small student bodies, low student-to-teacher ratio, alternative learning models that can suit different learners, and immersion into things like place-based learning, the arts, or languages. Our neighborhood schools don't get to do that, because they can't afford it. That's not a reason to put more kids into charters. That's a reason to demand our government do better.
You cannot blame parents and families. The short-sighted solution from the macro perspective is not short at all when you're on the ground as the parent of school-aged kids: that 'short' time is your kid's whole school career. As a friend recently observed, you can't begrudge people for simply utilizing an option that was made available to them at the time. You can't blame families for choosing what was best for their kids and sinking their hours into small schools of choice instead of lobbying for state-level structural changes that might take years, and generations of politicians, to come to fruition. Those improvements might be altogether too late.
The thing is, it was not the responsibility of families to 'zoom out' and understand the complexities at hand in the fight for quality education for all kids — that was on our lawmakers. In our current landscape, charters are seemingly the only option parents have to make a better educational experience for their kids, so you can't blame them for saying they want it. That's the kind of short-sightedness you're entitled to when you suddenly realize you don't want your 5-year-old going into a kindergarten class of 28 kids. One can, however, blame the state for enabling only that one choice — especially since it's not actually a choice for so many. We can demand they do better.
Thank you to Sen. Löki Tobin, Rep. Rebecca Himschoot and the other sitting and past legislators who have been education advocates. Now it's time for the rest of our elected leaders to pull up their bootstraps, look ahead, and get to the work of restoring public education so that it benefits all of Alaska's kids — not just the ones fortunate enough to attend charters.
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Behind the cameras: Gavel Alaska broadcasts the business of state government to Alaskans
Behind the cameras: Gavel Alaska broadcasts the business of state government to Alaskans

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Behind the cameras: Gavel Alaska broadcasts the business of state government to Alaskans

Tulio Fontanella, a first-year production technician with Gavel, controls the cameras at a Senate Finance Committee meeting on Feb. 13, 2025 (Photo by Corinne Smith/Alaska Beacon) Hours after a historic second veto of a bill to fund public education, Gov. Mike Dunleavy called a news conference on the governor's floor of the Alaska State Capitol. The shades were drawn, and a handful of reporters lined a long conference room table, as Dunleavy spoke and took questions for over an hour, explaining his criticisms and his veto. In offices throughout the rest of the building, legislators on all sides of the politically contentious debate on how to fund Alaska schools, watched from behind closed doors, as well as school district leaders, news outlets, and Alaskans across the state — live, via the cameras of Gavel Alaska. In the room, Gavel production crew Michael Penn operated a live camera broadcasting Dunleavy, with Tulio Fontanella sitting to the governor's right side, in a baseball cap, microphone in hand. During the May 19 news conference, Gavel Alaska was nearing the end of another legislative session. For nearly 30 years, Gavel has provided a free, public broadcast of the business of the state government to the rest of Alaska. A team of eight, mostly seasonal staff, operates cameras and broadcasts remotely from a ground floor production studio at KTOO Public Media, on Egan Drive along the waterfront of Juneau. 'It's kind of the C-SPAN of Alaska,' said executive producer Will Mader, referring to the nonprofit cable TV network that has streamed the U.S. government in Washington, D.C., since 1979. Above the chambers and committee rooms of the Alaska State Legislature, overlooking lawmakers' debates, governors' speeches, the prayers over floor sessions and the introductions of guests in the galleries, cameras and microphones capture the business of the State Capitol and Gavel broadcasts it live to Alaska. The team has just wrapped up covering another 120 day legislative session, with over 800 hours of live coverage broadcasting from the Capitol. The team of Gavel Alaska are used to dealing with technical problems, but now, they're facing a potential new hurdle of federal cuts. Gavel's crew finished the session at a sensitive time for public broadcasting. President Donald Trump has proposed large-scale cuts to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which provides a share of funding to KTOO and public media across the country and state. Looking closely at Gavel Alaska gives a sense of the work that goes into giving the public access to state government. 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In a small studio off the main production bay, Laurie wrapped up covering a committee meeting and had time to talk. 'I try to really listen closely to what is being said, so that I can make sure I get the right names up, the right explainers, and kind of follow the flow of what is going on in the room. It takes a lot of focus for me,' he said. Laurie first covered the Legislature as a young TV reporter, for a highly contentious session in 1981. 'The leadership in the House, it took them a long time to organize…before they had their 21 votes together,' he said, to form a majority caucus. 'We didn't have the, you know, 121 day sessions, and people were dissatisfied with nothing getting through. Things were held up.' He said he slept on someone's floor while covering the action. 'I was the first full-time television reporter from outside Juneau to cover the Legislature,' he said. 'My competition followed about three days later — three days after I got on the air.' 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CGC Asks Visiting U.S. Cabinet Officials To 'Work Together to Solve the Energy Crisis in Alaska and Beyond'
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CGC Asks Visiting U.S. Cabinet Officials To 'Work Together to Solve the Energy Crisis in Alaska and Beyond'

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AK lawmakers claim ‘victory' as feds begin reversal of ‘illegal' Biden rule restricting ANWR oil and gas
AK lawmakers claim ‘victory' as feds begin reversal of ‘illegal' Biden rule restricting ANWR oil and gas

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AK lawmakers claim ‘victory' as feds begin reversal of ‘illegal' Biden rule restricting ANWR oil and gas

Alaska's congressional delegation praised President Donald Trump and Interior Secretary Doug Burgum for starting the process of rescinding a Biden-era rule that restricted oil and gas exploration in the resource-rich Section 1002 of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR). Sen. Dan Sullivan said Burgum announced the move at a town hall in Utqiagvik (formerly Barrow) at the northern tip of the vast state, where local natives applauded because they "understand better than anyone" why responsible oil production is key to their communities' livelihood. Sullivan called the Biden-era rule "illegal" and said it turned vast swaths of an area originally intended for domestic energy production into "de facto wilderness." "Responsible resource development has transformed the lives of the Iñupiat people, supporting the construction of clinics, gymnasiums, water infrastructure—basic amenities most Americans take for granted," Sullivan said. Alaska Senator Literally Tears Up Biden's Energy Orders, Boosts Wh Efforts To Leverage Arctic Lng Asia Trade Burgum said his agency determined the 2024 rule exceeded the federal government's bounds under a 1976 petroleum reserve law and also creates "unnecessary barriers to responsible energy development in the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska." Read On The Fox News App "Congress was clear: the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska was set aside to support America's energy security through responsible development," he said, adding the prior rule "prioritized obstruction over production." Rep. Nick Begich III called the decision a "major victory" and said that he will work with Trump to ensure responsible resource development. Alaska Outraged At Federal Oil Lease Sale Setup As A 'Fitting Finale' For Fossil Fuel-averse Biden Presidency "This is a victory not only for those who support responsible development, but also those who believe in the rule of law," added Sen. Lisa Murkowski. "The 2024 management rule clearly violated the law, establishing restrictions and a presumption against development as part of the last administration's effort to turn the North Slope into one giant tract of federal wilderness," she continued. "Repealing the rule will not weaken our world-class environmental standards, but it will enable Alaska to produce more energy as Congress intended. The result will be good jobs for Alaskans, more affordable energy for America, and significant new revenues for government." In January, Gov. Mike Dunleavy told Fox News Digital that a final, congressionally-mandated sale of land for development in ANWR was set up to fail – characterizing it as a parting shot by the last administration toward the Last Frontier. "These leases should be executed in good faith along the established historical processes. And obviously, the Biden administration in the past four years has just been brutal on Alaska," he said at the time, envisioning that the Trump administration would do just as Burgum announced this week. At the time, Murkowski also said that a now-former Interior official "openly admitted" during a working group that the process with which the restrictions were set upon ANWR was done in a way to intentionally circumvent the Congressional Review Act. That law was what allowed other Senate Republicans to undo several Biden-era EPA actions last month with a simple floor article source: AK lawmakers claim 'victory' as feds begin reversal of 'illegal' Biden rule restricting ANWR oil and gas

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