Sunday, May 3, 2026
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Ramping up fight against Covid, Dunleavy orders licenses for health care workers expedited to get more resources in hospitals

Governor Mike Dunleavy urged Alaskans to take immediate action on their own to combat the Covid-19 virus as the state remains in the “red zone,” at the highest alert level. The current statewide alert is over 450 cases per 100,000 people.

The Delta variant of Covid-19 is more contagious and spreading widely throughout the nation, including in Alaska. Dr. Anne Zink, the state’s chief medical officer, said 127 people are in the hospital with Covid-19, with 16 of them on ventilators. 13 percent of hospital stays are for Covid cases, she said.

She said the Delta virus moves quickly. One person can easily spread it to five people.

Because of this, it is highly likely that nearly everyone will be exposed to the virus, the Alaska Department of Health and Social Services said on Thursday.

“We all have to choose if we want to be exposed to the virus with the protection of a vaccination or without โ€“ and we know the chance of getting infected and becoming severely ill, needing hospitalization or dying are significantly reduced for those who choose vaccination,” the department told Must Read Alaska.

The Dunleavy Administration is urging people get get vaccinated. 60 percent of Alaskans are already vaccinated.

According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, the number of people who are set against getting a Covid-19 vaccine has remained relatively steady.

Governor Dunleavy directed the Department of Health and Social Services, Department of Military and Veterans Affairs and Department of Commerce, Community and Economic Development, and the Department of Law to work with the hospitals to address the hospital capacity constraints.

These efforts include:

  • DCCED is expediting the process for licensed healthcare providers to work in licensed facilities. At the same time, DHSS is implementing an expedited background check process and waiver for licensed providers who are seeking to work in certain licensed facilities in Alaska, such as hospitals. This will aid in decreasing the time it takes to get new health care employees working in our communities.
  • This may mean that nurses and aides from overseas, particularly the Philippines, may be brought into the state to help staff hospitals, Must Read Alaska has learned. They would need to have their licensing fast-tracked. Other workers may be previously retired health care workers.
  • DHSS and DCCED are assessing General Services Administration staffing contracts to temporarily support hospitals. This will aid in increasing staffing levels in our hospitals to care for all patients.
  • DHSS and the Department of Law are evaluating the authorities in the public health order and seeking amendments as needed to support hospitals, including working with them on CMS 1135 waivers that allow for certain Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA) flexibilities to expedite additional staffing at Alaskaโ€™s health care facilities. This would allow alternative care sites, urgent care sites and other areas of healthcare delivery to be more efficiently used to relieve pressure on the hospitals while still providing care.
  • DHSS is procuring medical supplies to support hospitals that are unable to purchase items due to supply chain constraints. The state can bulk purchase and share the resources with the hospitals as well as support movement of supplies and medications around the state as needed.

The state is also hearing about drug shortages, according to state officials, who are working on solutions, including bulk drug purchases.

โ€œHospitalizations are reaching critical levels of capacity and I have directed my administration to immediately address those needs,โ€ย said Governor Dunleavy.ย โ€œTo stop the surge of COVID-19 and to ensure the safety of our friends and families, Iโ€™m asking the entire state to work together to protect Alaska and Alaskans.โ€

Anchorage Assembly hires hard-left librarian for its ‘legislative liaison’

Clare Ross, who is a senior administrator for the Anchorage library system, is the Assembly’s newly minted legislative liaison. The Assembly authorized hiring its own legislative liaison, a new position, last month.

“The Assembly Leadership is pleased to have selected a candidate with extensive Municipal, managerial, and public policy experience.ย  Clare has an outstanding educational background for this position, recently receiving a Masterโ€™s in Organizational Development and Leadership,” said Assembly Chair Suzanne LaFrance, who will supervise Ross.

Ross ran for Alaska Senate against Sen. Mia Costello in 2014. A Democrat, she lost in that Republican-leaning district.

Ross had been working for Grant Aviation when she was hired into senior management at the municipal library, where she’s served as the Assistant Director for Strategy and Development since 2016. She also worked for the Alaska Center for the Environment in recent years.

In 2019, she signed the recall petition for the Recall Dunleavy Committee.

In other words, she is a perfect fit for the Assembly, which is run by a leftist group.

“As you all know, in the last few years the workload on the Assembly has increased, and last year the Assembly received repeated requests from members of the public for more accessible information about ordinances and policies. Some ordinances, like the one addressing cell phones in school zones, need quite a bit of outreach and communication with the public to successfully implement. The Assembly created this position to better server the public and we are excited that Clare will be helping the Assembly meet the goal of improved constituent service,” LaFrance wrote in a memo to the Assembly.

At the same time the Assembly had hired Ross, after just hiring an equity officer for the city, Assemblyman Forrest Dunbar took to social media and criticized Mayor Bronson for adding a new position of “policy director” to his office:

Assembly to hold special meeting to set date for Zaletel recall election

The Anchorage Assembly will meet at 11 am on Friday in a special meeting to set a recall election date for one of its members: Meg Zaletel, who represents District 4, Midtown.

The Assembly will decide if the special election for that district will be held Nov. 2 or Nov. 9.

Zaletel is one of the members of the leftist group controlling the Assembly.

Although the charges against her are narrow — breaking the executive order during meetings last summer by allowing more people in the Assembly chambers than were allowed, she has drawn the ire of many for her government-knows-best approach to Covid and homelessness and her repeated opposition to Mayor Bronson; Zaletel worked on the Forrest Dunbar for Mayor campaign.

Biden’s watch: Suicide bombing takes at least 12 Americans at Kabul airport gate

US MILITARY SHARED NAMES OF AMERICANS AND ALLIES WITH TALIBAN, HOPING FOR HELP

The situation at the Kabul Airport turned from a disaster to a human catastrophe that continues to unfold on Thursday, as at least 12 American military members were killed in a suicide bombing, along with scores of Afghans. The attacks at the Hamid Karzai International Airport and a hotel adjacent to the airport came in a series of about seven bombs that exploded, after increased warnings from sources about an impending terrorist strike from the Islamic State, or ISIS.

The military members are said to be 11 Marines and one Navy medic.

But desperate Afghans trying to escape the Taliban remained at the gate, hoping to get out of the country. For many of them, staying in Afghanistan would mean certain death at the hands of the brutal new regime, which President Joe Biden has allowed to take control. An unknown number of Afghans are being executed by the Taliban in the streets of Kabul, and reports have been rampant of Afghan women being raped and taken as sex slaves in Kabul and other places around the country.

The withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan has left behind over 75,000 military vehicles, thousands of weapons, dozens of planes and drones, and, at this point, the U.S. appears to have abandoned 1,000 Americans as the gates of the Kabul airport are being welded shut, according to reports.

“The loss of US service members in Kabul is heartbreaking,” said Congressman Don Young in a statement. “These brave heroes laid down their lives defending the most vulnerable. As we learn more, join me in praying for members of our military, their families, and the innocent Afghans caught in the path of unspeakable evil.”

“Let today be a reminder that our military risk their lives every day so we may remain free. They are the best of what America has to offer and they are the first to sacrifice the most. May God bless them and their families, and keep watch over those still in harmโ€™s way,” said Kelly Tshibaka, candidate for U.S. Senate.

โ€œRose and I pray for the families of the service members killed in Afghanistan, and ask all Alaskans to pray with us. The loss of any life in the service of country is heavy. Alaskans know this with having more veterans per capita than anywhere else in America,” said Gov. Mike Dunleavy.

โ€œThe manner in which American forces have been removed from Afghanistan is an unmitigated disaster. I call upon President Biden and his administration to do absolutely everything within their power to safely bring home our men and women in uniform, our American citizens still in Afghanistan, and to help the many Afghani men and women who for twenty years supported our country and are now at risk of losing their lives,โ€ Dunleavy said.

โ€œOur deepest prayers and condolences are with the families of those brave, dedicated U.S. service members we lost today in Afghanistan,” said Sen. Dan Sullivan. “As Iโ€™ve repeatedly stated, in spite of the horribly-executed withdrawal plan and the recent violent developments, the members of our military must be given the time and the resources to complete their dangerous and noble mission: safely evacuating every American citizen in Afghanistan who wants to leave. To do otherwise will cause an irrevocable breaking of faith and trust with the American people. If this means going beyond the unwise, self-imposed deadline of August 31 to bring every American home, so be it. The Taliban cannot be allowed to dictate whether and how we save, protect, and keep faith with our own citizens.”

Anchorage Mayor Dave Bronson said, ” Deb and I are heartbroken by the news coming out of Afghanistan. The loss of U.S. Marines and at least one Navy corpsman weighs heavily on us all and we want to share with our military community that Anchorage has your back: we support you, we pray with you, and we grieve with you.

“So much can be said about the failure in leadership currently on display in the withdrawal from Afghanistan, but today we honor the sacrifice of these American heroes and pay gratitude to our military service members still risking their lives in Afghanistan to get our American citizens and allies out of harmโ€™s way,” Bronson said.

Politico reported that U.S. officials have given the Taliban a list of names of American citizens, green card holders, and Afghan nationals who are allies of the U.S., with the purpose of asking the Taliban to allow those people to make their way tot he airport.

โ€œBasically, they just put all those Afghans on a kill list,โ€ said one defense official, according to Politico. โ€œItโ€™s just appalling and shocking and makes you feel unclean.โ€

According to a press release said to be from the Islamic State, 160 were killed and wounded “among the American forces and their spies in a martyrdom operation against a gathering of them in the periphery of Kabul airport.

“By granting of success from God Almighty, the martyrdom operative brother Abd al-Rahman al-Lughari (may God Almighty accept him) managed to penetrate the security checkpoints imposed by the Crusaders and apostates around Kabul airport, as he plunged into a great gathering of the American forces and the translators and the spies cooperating with them at the Baran camp in the periphery of Kabul airport. Then he detonated his explosive belt on them, which resulted in up to 160 killed and wounded, among them more than 20 personnel from the American forces, and praise be to God for His granting of success.

“This is so and let the Crusaders and their agents know that the soldiers of the Caliphate will continue to fight them until God judges a matter that has been done.”

The U.S. suffered more casualties today in Afghanistan than it has over the past two years. Meanwhile, four hours after the attack, the White House had only put out a proclamation notifying Americans that it is Women’s Equality day:


Former President Donald and former First Lady Melania Trump issued a statement of condolences for the families of the victims of the attack.

“We are praying for the families and loved ones of the Marine heroes killed in Kabul and for everyone who is suffering during this difficult time,” Melania Trump said in a separate statement.

But Speaker Nancy Pelosi issued a series of statements on Women’s Equality Day:

“Today, and every day, let us summon the suffragistsโ€™ spirit of hope and strive to lift up the voices of women across the nation โ€“ because we know this truth: when women succeed, America succeeds,” Pelosi tweeted at noon on Thursday. 

“Despite progress, women across the nation still face barriers to full equality: from shameful pay disparities to the unfair economic impacts of the pandemic to the brazen assault on the right to vote. At this moment, Democrats are committed to Building Back Better with Women,” she continued.

The State Department issued a statement: “We can confirm that a number of U.S. Service members were killed in todayโ€™s complex attack at the Kabul airport. A number of others are being treated for wounds. We also know that a number of Afghans fell victim to this heinous attack. Our thoughts and prayers go out to the loved ones and teammates of all those killed or injured.”

Dunleavy launches podcast, warns of hospitals being overworked by Covid’s virulent variant, plus the usual patients

In a new podcast that Gov. Mike Dunleavy launched on Wednesday, he warned Alaskans to do what they can to avoid getting sick or hurt, because Alaska’s hospitals are getting maxed out.

“If you get hurt or you get sick and you would normally go to the hospital expecting a certain level of care, you may not get it,” Dunleavy said. Hospital workers are getting burned out, and some are quitting the field. Waiting times can be long and at times people may find they are simply turned away because the wait times are so long.

His message to Alaskans is to play it safe, and to also consider getting the Covid-19 vaccine, if they haven’t already.

“With this Delta variant that has been ripping across the world and has found its way to Alaska,” more people with the virulent variant are ending up in the hospital, and that is adding to the usual things that send people, such as broken bones and injuries from activities like four-wheeling.”

You can listen to the governor’s podcast, which is about five minutes long, at this link, or below:

https://soundcloud.com/user-50733543/covid-update

Jay McDonald: Freedom can be easily lost, and we see that happening all around us

By JAY MCDONALD

A great threat has arrived in our homes. I am a combat veteran. I spent two years in Afghanistan and I earned the Bronze Star for valor under fire. I do not say this lightly, but what I am seeing today in our homeland scares me.

Our government officials and politicians are implementing strict control measures and mandates using the justification that, without these strict measures, your actions as a free individual will endanger the safety of our community. But the rules they make don’t always apply to them.

If Anchorage Assemblyman Forrest Dunbar really believes that the government should have the power to put you under house arrest and close your business when you are sick, then why did he show up to the Covid-19 working group meeting last week while he was sick with a respiratory infection? Why didnโ€™t the CDC experts and doctors who were at the meeting with him say anything as he was hacking and coughing so loudly that they had to raise their voices to speak over him?

If the local Democrat politicians, like the ones who run the Anchorage Assembly and our Legislature, believe that doctors, employers, and businesses have a right to blacklist patients, employees, and customers who decline to receive the Covid-19 vaccine, then why have liberal politicians been working behind the scenes to decriminalize the intentional spread of HIV? California Democrat legislators made it legal to intentionally infect others with HIV without disclosing your HIV status to your victim.

The former executive director of the Alaska Democratic party, Jay Parmley, was accused of infecting a woman with HIV. He resigned his party post in North Carolina and relocated to Alaska and the Democrat State Central committee voted to hire him here, without pause.

I attended local Democrat meetings in 2014-2016 where their activists and community organizers discussed the ways that they were attempting to eliminated HIV screening at the blood bank, because they felt like those policies discriminate against the gay community. This type of behavior, among other things, gave me the push I needed to leave the Democrat Party.

These are the same people who are posing as โ€œpublic healthโ€ experts while they craft covid legislation.

If masks are so essential that we must force young, developing children to wear them at school even when they are playing sports, then why do teachers post photos and videos to social media on a daily basis showing each other socializing in classrooms with no masks? Why did the teachers have the dance party together in the high school theater just before school started? Why did Nancy Pelosi attend that large fundraiser with elderly (high risk) patrons, an event during which only the servers wore masks? Why didnโ€™t anyone wear masks to Obamaโ€™s birthday bash?ย 

If these unprecedented and intrusive mandates are being made for our own good, why canโ€™t the experts show us the data that demonstrates how effective lockdowns and mandatory masking are? We have nearly two years worth of data and studies now. Iโ€™ve read the clinical studies that are out there, and they do not support the lockdowns and masking.

In fact why are decades old studies showing the importance of facial recognition during child development being quietly deleted and de-listed from government sources, as our children are systematically masked?

The most recent study I read about childhood Covid-19 risk assessment put the child mortality rate at 2 per 1,000,000. That study included children with obesity, diabetes, cystic fibrosis, and all other co-morbidities, and the risk was still that low. The childhood suicide rate has grown at a rate five times that amount since lockdowns began.

Our politicians and our media say that the threat your civil rights pose to the community is so great, that you must forfeit your civil rights for the โ€œgreater good.โ€ If you believe that argument, then you must surrender control of your life over to unnamed and unelected government experts. Who are the experts that will control your life? Who will hold them accountable? What limits are there on their power? To us, this is unprecedented. But that is because we are young and we live in America.

I am only 33, my parents are only just hitting their 60s. America has always been free in our living memory, but if you pick up a world history book you can see that these ideas and these policies are not new. This path has been traveled many times before. For people who allow these ideas to take root, the result has been the same every single time.

The Republican Party must stand for freedom. We must work together, and we must hold our Republican representatives accountable. We cannot tolerate Republican leadership that is weak at heart or unwilling to fight for freedom. The stakes are too great. If we do not stand for liberty, then no one will and we will lose it. \

Freedom can be lost easily, but to earn it back the cost is great. We cannot allow that to happen.

Jay McDonald is a U.S. Army veteran and political activist in Anchorage.

Meltdown in Juneau Town: Governor tells legislators he has expended funds; liberals thought they had the money for spending

Today in the Legislature, the House was not able to muster a quorum to conduct business, leaving HB 3003 stranded and leaving the liberal majority scrambling for members.

The conservative caucus wasn’t going to budge and allow the cut-and-run liberals to force through an $1,100 Permanent Fund dividend.

Speaker Stutes had told the members she wanted the entire bill passed by Tuesday night.

Democrats milled around the House floor midday, waiting for something to happen. Finally, the session was “delayed to the call of the chair.” And then there was a “technical session,” a full admission that the House is in disorder.

Without the Minority, there was no Majority. Rep. Sara Rasmussen, who is a caucus of one, said she would get herself on a plane to Juneau right away. Rep. Chris Tuck has been working out in rural Alaska.

HB 3003 is the bill that has the unfinished work of the Legislature in it, including the Permanent Fund Dividend, which was once again set by the House Finance Committee at $1,100, less than one-third the statutory amount and less than half of what Gov. Mike Dunleavy had proposed with his 50-50 plan — $2,350.

But then, as the liberal majority caucused privately (minus a couple of members such as Rep. Chris Tuck and Rep. Geran Tarr, both who are somewhat on “the outs” with their caucus), a Dunleavy bomb dropped into the middle of the bill.

Gov. Mike Dunleavy announced that, subsequent to a judge’s decision on the Power Cost Equalization Fund being considered a protected endowment, all other funds that were considered appropriated before June 30 are being enacted by his administration.

That means the Houston Middle School, West Su road project, scholarships, and the WWAMI program to get more doctors educated are now funded and the agencies in charge of those projects may expend those funds.

The Dunleavy Administration made the decision based on the court’s Power Cost Equalization Fund decision and some budgeting nuances: All appropriations not vetoed before July 1 are valid appropriations and shall be implemented. Dunleavy instructed his staff to begin the process now.

โ€œAlaskaโ€™s students who worked hard and excelled and chose to stay in Alaska deserve stability in their university education. Performance scholarship recipients and WWAMI students can rest assured the funding for their secondary education is secure,โ€ said Dunleavy, in a statement.

Although much of this is in the budget weeds for Alaskans, the governor’s letter is good news for students and Alaskans because it removes all of the MatSu Valley projects, which were being held hostage by the liberal majority, from the equation.

And it also robs the liberal majority from some of its funding machinations for HB 3003. It’s going to have to go back to the drawing board.

Speaker Stutes cannot disagree with the governor without contradicting herself. She sent the governor a letter last week in which she said the appropriations should be implemented.

Now, the governor has taken her up on the offer.

The House Finance version of HB 3003 is far from acceptable to the conservative House Minority, which wants at least the 50-50 plan, if not the entire PFD, for Alaskans.

Good riddance

By ANCHORAGE DAILY PLANET

The moribund Recall Dunleavy effort is closing up shop as of today. Or so says the campaignโ€™s chairwoman, Meda DeWitt, in op-ed pieces in the Anchorage Daily News and Cordova Times.

While there was a media frenzy when the effort to unseat Gov. Mike Dunleavy got off the ground on Aug. 1, 2019, there has been little media mention of the fizzling campaignโ€™s long-overdue demise, other than DeWittโ€™s pieces.

The campaign to get Dunleavy โ€“ and that is exactly what it was โ€“ got underway within weeks of his being elected. Dunleavy was sworn into office Dec. 3, 2018. The Recall Dunleavy domain was registered Feb. 2, 2019, only 62 days into Dunleavyโ€™s term. The ink on his oath of office barely was dry.

Dunleavy did not release his โ€œausterity budgetโ€ until Feb. 13, 2019, and his veto of $444 million from the already-trimmed operating budget approved by the Legislature, which caused big-government advocates to melt down, did not occur until months later, at the end of June.

It appears somebody was engineering the recall effort even before Dunleavyโ€™s budget cut and vetoes โ€” planning it before he had done much of anything.

What never has been revealed to Alaskans is who paid for the two-year effort to recall Dunleavy for offenses mostly imagined. As of this past weekend, a little more than two years after it got underway, the effort had gathered 62,373 of the 71,252 signatures needed to force a special recall election. Who picked up the tab? Unions? Outside billionaires? Other usual leftist suspects? Who knows?

State law inexplicably shielded donors to the Recall Dunleavy, which could collect and spend money from anybody, except foreign interests, and โ€“ unlike political campaigns โ€“ not reveal where it came from or went, at least until the effort gathered enough signatures to win a spot on the ballot.

Only if any signature-gathering money eventually were plowed into a recall election campaign would backers be forced to report every penny collected and spent since the effortโ€™s start. If none of the signature-gathering money ever ended up in the election campaign, its source would remain secret.

Then, the money gathered from who-knows-where to Recall Dunleavy can go just about anyplace without Alaskans or the Alaska Public Offices Commission having any idea where it went.

There are those who believe that was the real intent of the recall campaign, to gather a treasure trove of information about those who signed petitions and, along the way, gather money from secret sources that can be used later for other leftist causes. If it could destroy Dunleavy along the way, so much the better.

Alaskans likely never will know who paid the bill for this political hit job. The good news is that the campaign is closing up shop โ€“ and good riddance.

Read more at the Anchorage Daily Planet.

Recall Zaletel signatures valid, and this means Assembly must set special election

The Anchorage Municipal Clerk has verified the signatures on the recall petition for removing Assemblywoman Meg Zaletel.

Clerk Barbara Jones said that at least 2,468 signatures of voters living in District 4, Midtown, were valid, and the petition will be submitted to the next regular or special Assembly meeting, which is required to approve a recall election within 75 days.

Zaletel can add more delay to the process, which she has delayed for a year already through prior legal challenges. She can appeal the Clerk’s decision on the signatures within 30 days, which would push the election into the late fall.

Zaletel no longer has the political protection she enjoyed under the Berkowitz Administration, which helped her avoid facing the wrath of voters, however. It’s unlikely the municipality will continue to help her, as it did under Mayor Ethan Berkowitz and Acting Mayor Austin Quinn-Davidson.

Russell Biggs, who has been the prime mover behind the recall attempt of Zaletel, said he had hired someone to independently verify the signatures on the petition, and so he is confident that they will hold up against another legal maneuver by Zaletel.