The Alaska Legislative Council will take up its stalled plan to move the Capitol’s mailroom out of the downtown Juneau building at its Aug. 27 meeting.
The project was approved by the council in December as a security measure, with the goal of having the offsite mailroom in place before the 2026 legislative session. But the relocation has been on hold since lawmakers failed to secure funding in this year’s budget.
In a memo to council members, Legislative Affairs Agency Director Jessica Geary noted that about $30,000 has already been spent preparing the new space, but the Senate Finance Committee cut the operating budget increments needed to fully staff and maintain the facility. The funding was not restored in the final budget.
The project would have added about $324,000 annually, including administrative services and rent. Without those increments, work was halted, leaving the partially prepared site unfinished.
The Legislative Council, which manages internal legislative operations between sessions, is now being asked to decide whether to continue pursuing the relocation or to keep mail operations inside the Capitol.
According to the memo, if the council wants to proceed, one option would be to redirect unspent legislative funds that lapse each year, rather than seek new appropriations. If the council decides the relocation is no longer a security priority, mail services will remain in the Capitol, while offsite spaces already secured will be used solely for storage.
A confidential December 2024 memo outlining the original security rationale for moving the mailroom will be reviewed during the council’s executive session on Wednesday.