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Anchorage demonstrators join 'Hands Off!' rally, part of national protests
Anchorage demonstrators join 'Hands Off!' rally, part of national protests

Yahoo

time06-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Anchorage demonstrators join 'Hands Off!' rally, part of national protests

Apr. 5—More than 1,000 people marched through downtown Anchorage on Saturday, carrying signs and rallying against actions taken by President Donald Trump and tech billionaire Elon Musk to reshape the federal government. The gathering was part of the nationwide Hands Off! demonstrations, which were organized in more than 1,200 locations in all 50 states. The protesters in Anchorage gathered at Town Square Park shortly before noon, and marched five blocks to the offices of Alaska's congressional delegation. Passing vehicles honked enthusiastically as sign-waving crowds filled both sides of L Street outside the offices of U.S. Sens. Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan. Demonstrators were pushing back on the Trump administration for all kinds of reasons, including the president's sweeping tariffs, cuts to the federal workforce and slashed federal grant funding, with impacts continuing to ripple through the state. People were still arriving from Town Square at 1 p.m. as some of the first demonstrators to arrive began to leave the area. [Alaska Department of Health eliminates 30 positions, dissolves a public health program after federal funding cuts] [Alaska's US senators split on Canada tariffs with Murkowski opposed, Sullivan in support] [Alaska elections chief 'reviewing' Trump order that clashes with state voting deadlines]

Alaska Department of Health eliminates 30 positions, dissolves a public health program after federal funding cuts
Alaska Department of Health eliminates 30 positions, dissolves a public health program after federal funding cuts

Yahoo

time05-04-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Alaska Department of Health eliminates 30 positions, dissolves a public health program after federal funding cuts

Apr. 4—The Alaska Department of Health is cutting 30 positions and shuttering a program meant to improve public health access across the state after the Trump administration cut more than $50 million in previously awarded federal funding. A dozen federal grants to the Alaska Department of Health were terminated effective March 24 amid broad funding cuts, department spokesperson Shirley Sakaye confirmed Thursday, including funds awarded in response to the COVID-19 pandemic that were set to expire by 2027. "Funds were utilized for time-limited projects that increased public health infrastructure and capacity," Sakaye said by email. As a result of the cuts, the department is dissolving the Healthy and Equitable Communities unit, which was launched in 2021 in response to health access and outcome disparities across the state that came into sharp relief during the pandemic. The unit focused on "creating partnerships across Alaska to ensure that the conditions in which Alaskans live, work and play support opportunities to lead healthy lives," according to a department webpage that was removed earlier this week. The program had staff in Anchorage, the Mat-Su region, Fairbanks, Bethel, Nome, Homer, Kodiak, Juneau and Ketchikan. Now, partnerships established by the department are set to be abruptly discontinued, leading to what could be significant impacts, including in rural communities where access to health services is limited. The 12 canceled grants originally amounted to more than $185 million, of which $135 million had already been expended, according to a list of canceled grants maintained by the federal Department of Health and Human Services. The state lost out on $50 million in future funding, but because of the sudden cancellation of the grants, the state may also lose out on improvements it was planning to make through previous expenditures because projects will be abandoned midway. Among the terminated grants was a $96 million award toward improving epidemiology and laboratory capacity for preventing and controlling emerging infectious diseases. More than $24 million from that grant had yet to be spent and was canceled. The cancellation also impacted a $40 million award for immunization and vaccines for children, of which $16 million had not yet been spent when the grants were canceled. Alaska has seen a drop in vaccination rates among children in recent years. For example, a decade ago, about 94% of kindergartners were vaccinated against measles, mumps and rubella. As of last year, that rate had dropped to 84%, according to data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The grant cancellations also impacted more than $7 million for a "national initiative to address COVID-19 health disparities among populations at high-risk and underserved, including racial and ethnic minority populations and rural communities," administered by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. More than $1 million out of a $4.7 million grant to address substance use was canceled. Roughly $700,000 in mental health grant funding was canceled. Julie Cleaton, policy committee chair for the Alaska Public Health Association, said the association opposes the cuts to public health funding. "We've always been underfunded, and this will not help. The state is already feeling the impact of these federal cuts," Cleaton said in an interview Thursday. Cleaton works for the state Department of Health as a data analyst for the Alaska Cancer Registry but was not speaking on behalf of the state, she said. "The COVID-19 pandemic made it clear to a lot of people in government that we weren't well-prepared. We're not working off of a healthy baseline population, and there are a lot of improvements to be made there. So there was some funding that went out because of COVID-19, but a lot of it was to prevent future outbreaks, to improve our systems and to get everyone healthier, not just specifically for COVID-19, but for everything," Cleaton said. Cleaton said that the Healthy and Equitable Communities unit — now disbanded — had been "positioned in several communities across the state to try and get to more rural locations that don't usually see enough public services." "We've been trying to work to help everyone get on a more even footing, health-wise, and this will just be a setback to that," she said. Ingrid Stevens, former president of the Alaska Public Health Association, said that Alaska will also be impacted by other cuts to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. "A primary concern is the supply of data," she said. Stevens, who works in the Alaska tribal health system, said that Alaska could lose critical data that the federal government collects and shares with states through surveys, including ones pertaining to mental health and substance abuse. "Those national bodies are the ones that give us guidance. They do all the research and they relay that down to the states so states can implement that research to help improve public health," said Cleaton. "If we don't have that national guidance, who's going to do that research?" Cleaton said that impacts of the loss of public health programming may not be felt immediately, but their long-term effects could be significant. "We've been seeing declining vaccination rates for several years — and now we're getting measles outbreaks. So it may take time to really feel the impact, but it will hurt what we do," Cleaton said. A federal judge on Thursday temporarily barred the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services from terminating certain funding streams, after a coalition of Democrat-led states sued to restore the grants they had been awarded. Asked why Alaska Attorney General Treg Taylor had not signed on to the case, state Department of Law spokesperson Patty Sullivan said that the federal funding — much of it not set to expire until 2027 — "was always only temporary in nature." "The ultimate outcome of the case is uncertain, and Alaska, like other states around the country, does not have state funds to fill the gap caused by the federal cuts," Sullivan wrote. 'A general sense of anxiety' Broad cuts to federal spending — led by tech billionaire Elon Musk — are set to have a disproportionate impact on Alaska, which receives a large share of federal funding per capita, economists, union leaders and nonprofit leaders have said. Already, 230 Alaskans in the federal workforce had filed for unemployment insurance since February, when mass firings began, according to Alaska's Director of Employment and Training Services Paloma Harbour. But this is likely the first time that Alaska state employees have lost their jobs due to federal funding cuts under the current Trump administration, according to Heidi Drygas, director of the Alaska State Employees Association, a union representing most state employees, who said the terminations impacted both permanent and non-permanent positions. Department of Health staff were laid off in communities including Anchorage, Juneau, Wasilla, Fairbanks, Homer, Valdez and Petersburg, she said. Drygas said the Department of Health was proactive in involving the Alaska Department of Labor and Workforce Development to help impacted employees find other jobs with the state, which has a high vacancy rate across departments. The Department of Health — which has around 1,300 employees — had a 12.5% vacancy rate as of last month, a spokesperson said. But Drygas said that state employees are anxious — not just about layoffs that occurred this week but about potential imminent impacts of federal funding cuts, including future layoffs. "There is a general sense of anxiety," said Drygas. "Especially with employees that work under federal grants or they have federal counterparts that they work with on a daily basis." "What we're worried about is what comes next," she added. "It's just a really difficult time for state employees." Drygas said she anticipates future impacts, and hopes Alaska's congressional delegation will do "whatever they can to protect our federal funding." Alaska's two Republican U.S. senators said earlier this week that they were in touch with the Trump administration over the funding cuts to the Department of Health. U.S. Sen. Dan Sullivan has been "working with state health officials to gather more information about how these reorganization efforts impact Alaska," spokesperson Amanda Coyne said Wednesday. Coyne said that Sullivan had "an extended phone call" with Trump's Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., which "focused on extending some of the grants at issue, and on larger solutions as part of HHS's reorganization efforts that would address Alaska's unique health care needs and challenges." None of the canceled grants have since been reinstated, the Alaska Department of Health confirmed late Thursday. U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski is "tracking the grant funding cuts, and her office is engaging with the administration," spokesperson Joe Plesha said. "The sudden loss of funding and the loss of these positions will make a real impact in Alaska, and the Senator is focused on finding solutions to continue the progress that has been made with these funds." The office of U.S. Rep. Nick Begich III "is monitoring these funding cuts and the direct impacts on Alaskans," spokesperson Silver Prout said in a written statement.

Alaska lays off 30 public health workers as Trump cuts ripple through state government
Alaska lays off 30 public health workers as Trump cuts ripple through state government

Yahoo

time04-04-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Alaska lays off 30 public health workers as Trump cuts ripple through state government

The offices of the Alaska Department of Health and Social Services are seen in Juneau on Friday, July 1, 2022. (Photo by Lisa Phu/Alaska Beacon) The Alaska Department of Health abruptly laid off 30 public health employees this week after the federal government canceled a series of grants unexpectedly early. 'Their last day of employment is today, and they found out — I believe — earlier this week. So it is very abrupt,' said Heidi Drygas, director of the Alaska State Employees Association, the union that represents 22 of the 30 laid-off employees. The layoffs are believed to be the first round of significant Alaska state-government job losses caused by President Donald Trump and the arm of the White House named the 'Department of Government Efficiency,' coordinated by Elon Musk. Trump-ordered cuts have already had significant effects on federal government programs and nongovernmental organizations that rely on federal grants, but until now, state-government jobs had been relatively protected. 'I fear that there are more (layoffs) coming,' Drygas said. 'I'm worried that this is the tip of the iceberg, and this rapidly evolving news story … is causing a lot of anxiety for our members, many of whom work under federal grants, or they work on a daily basis with their federal counterparts. It's hugely disruptive.' Alex Huseman, a spokesperson for the Alaska Department of Health, said the federal government brought an early end to two major COVID-19 response grants. Those grants had been expected to expire no later than 2027. The state's current operating budget and Gov. Mike Dunleavy's proposal for the coming year list millions of dollars in expected grant spending. 'The amended notice of awards for the impacted grants now reflect an end date of March 24, 2025,' Huseman wrote by email. 'The reductions in federal funding had an impact on 30 employees. The DOH is working with the Division of Personnel and the Rapid Response Team from the Department of Labor and Workforce Development, in accordance with the respective union contracts and regulations, to assist affected employees.' Drygas said the affected positions are spread across the state, and that as with any job losses, these cuts will have ripple effects in the local communities, since state salaries lead to local spending. 'In some of these smaller communities, there's not that many jobs, and so it could have a huge impact, or a disproportionate impact,' she said. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

Alaska Department of Health cuts 30 positions, dissolves a public health program after federal funding cuts
Alaska Department of Health cuts 30 positions, dissolves a public health program after federal funding cuts

Yahoo

time04-04-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Alaska Department of Health cuts 30 positions, dissolves a public health program after federal funding cuts

Apr. 4—The Alaska Department of Health is cutting 30 positions and shuttering a program meant to improve public health access across the state after the Trump administration cut more than $50 million in previously awarded federal funding. A dozen federal grants to the Alaska Department of Health were terminated effective March 24 amid broad funding cuts, department spokesperson Shirley Sakaye confirmed Thursday, including funds awarded in response to the COVID-19 pandemic that were set to expire by 2027. "Funds were utilized for time-limited projects that increased public health infrastructure and capacity," Sakaye said by email. As a result of the cuts, the department is dissolving the Healthy and Equitable Communities unit, which was launched in 2021 in response to health access and outcome disparities across the state that came into sharp relief during the pandemic. The unit focused on "creating partnerships across Alaska to ensure that the conditions in which Alaskans live, work and play support opportunities to lead healthy lives," according to a department webpage that was removed earlier this week. The program had staff in Anchorage, the Mat-Su region, Fairbanks, Bethel, Nome, Homer, Kodiak, Juneau and Ketchikan. Now, partnerships established by the department are set to be abruptly discontinued, leading to what could be significant impacts, including in rural communities where access to health services is limited. The 12 canceled grants originally amounted to more than $185 million, of which $135 million had already been expended, according to a list of canceled grants maintained by the federal Department of Health and Human Services. The state lost out on $50 million in future funding, but because of the sudden cancellation of the grants, the state may also lose out on improvements it was planning to make through previous expenditures because projects will be abandoned midway. Among the terminated grants was a $96 million award toward improving epidemiology and laboratory capacity for preventing and controlling emerging infectious diseases. More than $24 million from that grant had yet to be spent and was canceled. The cancellation also impacted a $40 million award for immunization and vaccines for children, of which $16 million had not yet been spent when the grants were canceled. Alaska has seen a drop in vaccination rates among children in recent years. For example, a decade ago, about 94% of kindergartners were vaccinated against measles, mumps and rubella. As of last year, that rate had dropped to 84%, according to data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The grant cancellations also impacted more than $7 million for a "national initiative to address COVID-19 health disparities among populations at high-risk and underserved, including racial and ethnic minority populations and rural communities," administered by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. More than $1 million out of a $4.7 million grant to address substance use was canceled. Roughly $700,000 in mental health grant funding was canceled. Julie Cleaton, policy committee chair for the Alaska Public Health Association, said the association opposes the cuts to public health funding. "We've always been underfunded, and this will not help. The state is already feeling the impact of these federal cuts," Cleaton said in an interview Thursday. Cleaton works for the state Department of Health as a data analyst for the Alaska Cancer Registry but was not speaking on behalf of the state, she said. "The COVID-19 pandemic made it clear to a lot of people in government that we weren't well-prepared. We're not working off of a healthy baseline population, and there are a lot of improvements to be made there. So there was some funding that went out because of COVID-19, but a lot of it was to prevent future outbreaks, to improve our systems and to get everyone healthier, not just specifically for COVID-19, but for everything," Cleaton said. Cleaton said that the Healthy and Equitable Communities unit — now disbanded — had been "positioned in several communities across the state to try and get to more rural locations that don't usually see enough public services." "We've been trying to work to help everyone get on a more even footing, health-wise, and this will just be a setback to that," she said. Ingrid Stevens, former president of the Alaska Public Health Association, said that Alaska will also be impacted by other cuts to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. "A primary concern is the supply of data," she said. Stevens, who works in the Alaska tribal health system, said that Alaska could lose critical data that the federal government collects and shares with states through surveys, including ones pertaining to mental health and substance abuse. "Those national bodies are the ones that give us guidance. They do all the research and they relay that down to the states so states can implement that research to help improve public health," said Cleaton. "If we don't have that national guidance, who's going to do that research?" Cleaton said that impacts of the loss of public health programming may not be felt immediately, but their long-term effects could be significant. "We've been seeing declining vaccination rates for several years — and now we're getting measles outbreaks. So it may take time to really feel the impact, but it will hurt what we do," Cleaton said. 'A general sense of anxiety' Broad cuts to federal spending — led by tech billionaire Elon Musk — are set to have a disproportionate impact on Alaska, which receives a large share of federal funding per capita, economists, union leaders and nonprofit leaders have said. Already, 230 Alaskans in the federal workforce had filed for unemployment insurance since February, when mass firings began, according to Alaska's Director of Employment and Training Services Paloma Harbour. But this is likely the first time that Alaska state employees have lost their jobs due to federal funding cuts under the current Trump administration, according to Heidi Drygas, director of the Alaska State Employees Association, a union representing most state employees, who said the terminations impacted both permanent and non-permanent positions. Department of Health staff were laid off in communities including Anchorage, Juneau, Wasilla, Fairbanks, Homer, Valdez and Petersburg, she said. Drygas said the Department of Health was proactive in involving the Alaska Department of Labor and Workforce Development to help impacted employees find other jobs with the state, which has a high vacancy rate across departments. But Drygas said that state employees are anxious — not just about layoffs that occurred this week but about potential imminent impacts of federal funding cuts, including future layoffs. "There is a general sense of anxiety," said Drygas. "Especially with employees that work under federal grants or they have federal counterparts that they work with on a daily basis." "What we're worried about is what comes next," she added. "It's just a really difficult time for state employees." Drygas said she anticipates future impacts, and hopes Alaska's congressional delegation will do "whatever they can to protect our federal funding." Alaska's two Republican U.S. senators said earlier this week that they were in touch with the Trump administration over the funding cuts to the Department of Health. U.S. Sen. Dan Sullivan has been "working with state health officials to gather more information about how these reorganization efforts impact Alaska," spokesperson Amanda Coyne said Wednesday. Coyne said that Sullivan had "an extended phone call" with Trump's Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., which "focused on extending some of the grants at issue, and on larger solutions as part of HHS's reorganization efforts that would address Alaska's unique health care needs and challenges." None of the canceled grants have since been reinstated, the Alaska Department of Health confirmed late Thursday. U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski is "tracking the grant funding cuts, and her office is engaging with the administration," spokesperson Joe Plesha said. "The sudden loss of funding and the loss of these positions will make a real impact in Alaska, and the Senator is focused on finding solutions to continue the progress that has been made with these funds." The office of U.S. Rep. Nick Begich III "is monitoring these funding cuts and the direct impacts on Alaskans," spokesperson Silver Prout said in a written statement.

Alaska records spike in rates of rare but severe complications from gonorrhea
Alaska records spike in rates of rare but severe complications from gonorrhea

Yahoo

time27-03-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Alaska records spike in rates of rare but severe complications from gonorrhea

A flier posted on a bulletin board at the University of Alaska Anchorage on April 20, 2024, gives information about tests for sexually transmitted infections. In the past two years, more Alaskans have been afflicted by medical problems caused by infections of the joints, heart and other body parts not usually affected by the pathogen that causes gonorrhea. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon) Alaska has long had the distinction of having the nation's highest or nearly highest rates of gonorrhea. Now there is another troublesome trend among those who contract the sexually transmitted infection. Cases of a rare but severe complication of gonorrhea have spiked in Alaska for reasons that are not yet fully understood, according to state health officials. The Alaska Department of Health received 27 reports of patients with what is known as 'disseminated gonococcal infection' last year, said a bulletin released by the department's epidemiology section. Those are infections in which the pathogen that causes gonorrhea passes beyond normally infected sites – the genital, rectal or mouth areas — into the bloodstream and other parts of the body. Disseminated gonococcal infection, or DGI, can harm joints, tendons or body organs. The most serious potential effects, according to the bulletin, include endocarditis, a life-threatening infection of the heart's inner linings and valves, and meningitis, a potentially fatal inflammation of the brain and spinal cord. The 27 cases of DGC reported last year represented 1.3% of the 2,079 reported cases of gonorrhea in Alaska in 2024, the bulletin said. That percentage is more than triple the rate in 2023, when eight DGI cases were reported among the 2,289 reported gonorrhea cases, and it is 10 times the rate in 2022, when only three DGI cases were reported out of the 2,304 reported gonorrhea cases that year, resulting in a rate of 0.13%, the bulletin said. Additionally, Alaska's rate of DGI is far higher than the most recently reported national rates, the bulletin said. While Alaska's rates of gonorrhea are high, that does not account for the increasing rates of the serious infections that go beyond the parts of the body usually infected by the disease, said Julia Rogers, an epidemiologist who co-authored the new bulletin. The number of gonorrhea cases in Alaska actually decreased in recent years, dropping from 2,304 cases in 2022 to 2,079 last year, Rogers pointed out. Rather, what might be happening is that a particular type of gonorrhea that makes patients more prone to these severe complications is spreading in Alaska, she said. 'Though the exact reason for this increase in disseminated cases is unclear at this time, several factors are likely contributing to the increase, including that certain characteristics of the new gonorrhea sequence types circulating in Alaska's population are more likely to result in disseminated infection and more likely to be asymptomatic upon initial infection (meaning they aren't detected and treated in a timely manner, allowing for severe manifestations like DGI in patients),' she said by email. Sequences in epidemiology terms refer to genetic patterns, and different strains of pathogens have their own genetic sequences. State health officials have been working since last fall to boost monitoring and have looked for a possible link between these cases, but they have not identified one yet, the bulletin said. Of the 35 DGI patients identified in 2023 and 2024, most were in Anchorage, according to the epidemiology bulletin. The most common medical complication was septic arthritis, an infection of joint fluids and joint tissues, the bulletin said. Thirty-one patients were hospitalized, and most of those had to have invasive treatments, including two valve replacements, the bulletin said. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

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