Tuesday, June 2, 2026
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Dunbar, Bronson head to runoff, while Felix Rivera hangs onto Assembly seat

LIBERALS HAVE STRONG SHOWING IN SCHOOL BOARD RACES

Although the counting isn’t over, Forrest Dunbar is leading in the race for Anchorage mayor, with 13,711 votes, while Dave Bronson has 12,986. That’s with 41,198 votes counted in the election that ended April 6.

Third-place finisher Bill Falsey will not proceed to the runoff ballot in May, but won 5,312 votes so far, enough to build his name recognition for a future political race. Coming in fourth was Bill Evans, with 3,871 votes. Mike Robbins trailed.

About 58,000 ballots had been sorted by the Division of Elections at the Muni, and that means there are at least 16,800 votes in hand that are yet to be counted, and an unknown number that are in the mail, but not yet arrived.

With that, it’s evident that Assemblyman Felix Rivera will escape being recalled from his midtown Assembly seat. There are 6,582 votes already tallied in that district, and he is being retained 3,821 to 2,761, so far. The delta is considerable and not something that can probably be closed by remaining votes. Rivera is a far-left liberal who chairs the Assembly.

It appears that the liberal candidates have also retained and even strengthened their stronghold on the school board in Anchorage, with conservative candidates splitting the votes and falling behind.

In School Board Seat B, a one-year term to replace retired member Starr Marsett, Kelly Lessens has a lead over Judy Norton Eledge, 14,494 to 13,588.

In School Board Seat E, Pat Higgins has a solid lead over Sami Graham, 12,549 to 11,326.

In School Board Seat F, Dora Wilson outpaces Kim Paulsen, 16,491 to 11,769.

Conservative Elise Vakalis has been ousted by liberal Carl Jacobs, 18,161 to 16,914 for School Board Seat G.

These numbers will change as more votes are counted. They are unofficial and preliminary.

All results to date can be seen at this link.

Check back, as this story will be updated.

Survey: Alaska is least financially literate state

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With April being National Financial Literacy Month, WalletHub released its report on 2021’s Most & Least Financially Literate States.

The study uses 17 metrics, including the results of WalletHub’s WalletLiteracy Survey, which range from high-school financial literacy to share of adults with a rainy-day fund. Here’s the list, with Alaska at the 51st position:

Most Financially Literate StatesLeast Financially Literate States
1. Virginia42. Rhode Island
2. Utah43. District of Columbia
3. Colorado44. West Virginia
4. New Hampshire45. Oklahoma
5. New Jersey46. South Dakota
6. Maine47. New Mexico
7. Minnesota48. Mississippi
8. Iowa49. Arkansas
9. Washington50. Louisiana
10. North Carolina51. Alaska

Party Capitol: Beer pong, leg wrestling, and a terse memo from Legislative Affairs

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Legislators brought in some of their friends to the Capitol’s Terry Miller Building last week after hours, for a raucous game of ping pong, beer pong, leg wrestling, and general frat-party stuff.

All of it was against the rules for the Capitol, which does not allow alcohol on campus. Nor are members of the public allowed in the Capitol’s three buildings — the Capitol itself, the Thomas Stewart Building, and the Terry Miller Building. They shut to the public due to Covid.

The party came to light after janitors arrived on the scene to find a beer-y mess, salsa spilled around, and asked Capitol Security to review the security tapes to see who had left the room in that condition.

Said to be on the tape in the party were Rep. Sara Rasmussen, Rep. Kelly Merrick, Rep. Zack Fields, along with Hilcorp Legislative Liaison Luke Miller, Dunleavy Deputy Chief of Staff Tyson Gallagher, House Majority Press Secretary Austin Baird, and blogger Jeff Landfield. There may have been others. Some legislators have requested to see copies of the tape, but building security generally does not allow it.

There are problems with this scene, Capitol observers say: Members of the public are locked out of the building, but some members, including a Hilcorp executive, were allowed in for the purpose of partying.

Another problem is that the Terry Miller Building has been set up for business, a place where meetings could be conducted if the Capitol had to socially distance due to Covid.

“Alaskans’ Capitol is not open to Alaskans but this kind of bullsh*t is happening? Not cool,” said one Capitol observer.

A memo was then issued on Thursday by Legislative Affairs Executive Director Jessica Geary restating the rules for the Terry Miller Building:

Muni blunders its way to the end of Election Day, hands out wrong sample ballot to dozens

With long lines of voters and not enough staff, people waiting in line at the Loussac Library were being handed sample ballots on Tuesday by election workers making the effort to help them get educated on the ballot they would face once they got inside the voting area.

The sample ballot was a generic version that did not contain the “Recall Rivera” question. The Municipality only printed one sample ballot for Anchorage.

Assemblyman Felix Rivera is facing recall in the midtown area of Anchorage.

10,000 people voted in District 4 in the last election out of the approximately 50,000 who could vote. Anyone in line from that district would not know they did not have the correct ballot, unless they were already familiar with the question.

“If the only ballot being handed out doesn’t have the recall question on it, how is that right? You’re disenfranchising people,” said Russell Biggs, one of the Recall Rivera organizers. “District 4 voters deserve a correct sample ballot.”

Also, dozens of people in line at the Loussac Library said they had not been mailed a ballot to their home.

Enthusiasm high, lines long, and not enough staff-per-voter on Anchorage Election Day

Over 100 voters were in line at the Loussac Library in Anchorage today, as people poured into vote before the 8 pm deadline. Some people reported they stood in line for an hour, although one person said they had been waiting for an hour and a half.

A few people left the Loussac and headed to City Hall downtown because the lines were shorter, only about six people deep.

At one point, workers at the election desks at the Loussac called for reinforcements from the municipal Election Division to help process voters faster. There were only about eight voting stations open, but just five of them were being used at any time because of the slow processing time.

As for who is voting, conservative voters were coming out in droves as of Monday’s count. Over 43,000 people had voted by Monday night and the Republican-leaning votes had a 8.1 percent advantage over Democrat-leaning votes, according to the Must Read Alaska Election Integrity Desk. In recent days, the conservative votes have roared ahead, according to our statistician.

Voters in Anchorage are choosing a new mayor out of 15 candidates, and are picking four school board members. Some voters in Anchorage will be deciding whether to kick Assemblyman Felix Rivera off the Assembly through a recall question. There are bond measures, too, to decide.

After the polls close, Must Read Alaska will continue reporting results with a live blog throughout the evening. Check back for more.

Kenai news: Dunleavy commits funding for next year for pass winter road maintenance

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Gov. Mike Dunleavy said today he will continue to support future funding for the Silvertip Maintenance Station on the Kenai Peninsula during next year’s FY23 budget cycle.

The Governor’s Office of Management and Budget will allocate Federal Highway Administration funding from the Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations Act to the station.

Silvertip is located at Mile 60 Seward Highway, three miles north of the Hope Junction, and keeps the mountain pass open between Turnagain Arm and Sterling during the winter months.

“Kenai area residents can rest assured that winter maintenance in the Turnagain Pass area of the Seward Highway will be in place for years to come,”  Dunleavy said. “The safety of Alaskans and their families driving that section of the highway in winter is of the utmost importance for me and my administration.”

Dunleavy previously allocated federal funds to the Silvertip Station earlier this year for this winter and next winter. Today’s announcement means funding will be in place through the spring of 2024.

Breaking: New commissioner of Public Safety is James Cockrell

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Former Alaska State Trooper James Cockrell is returning to state service as the commissioner of Public Safety. Gov. Mike Dunleavy made the announcement today in Kenai at the Kenai Chamber of Commerce and Visitor Center.

Cockrell had been named head of the Troopers in 2014 and had served with the state on and off for decades, retiring in 2004, and then again in 2007, and most recently retiring in 2017. Cockrell worked as a Fish and Wildlife officer, and as head of Alaska Wildlife Troopers.

Recently, he was working for Marathon at the Kenai, Alaska refinery as their site security supervisor.

Former Commissioner of Public Safety Amanda Price had leaked the information out four days earlier on Facebook.

Voting Day: Anchorage has until 8 pm Tuesday to choose its destiny

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Tuesday, April 6 is Anchorage’s last chance to change the direction of Alaska’s largest city, or to keep it going on the same path. Voters have until 8 pm to drop their ballots in a drop box, scattered in 18 places around the city. They may also vote in person at one of three locations. Mailed ballots must have today’s postmark on them, so you’ll need to have them hand-cancelled to be certain they are counted. That means just dropping them in a mailbox is not a guarantee.

On the ballot there is a chance to pick new leadership in a mayor, and there are 15 on the ballot. Voters in one part of Anchorage will have the chance to recall Anchorage Assembly chairman Felix Rivera. Voters can also change the direction of the school district by voting in four school board members. And there’s the borrowing question: How much will the bonds cost residents of Anchorage in their property tax (and therefore their rent) bills?

Vote In Person at an Anchorage Vote Center

If you did not receive a ballot or if you simply prefer to vote in person, bring your ID with you to one of the voting centers until 8 pm:   

City Hall,  632 West 6th Avenue, Room #155

All Municipal ballots will be available at this location.

Eagle River Town Center, 12001 Business Boulevard, Community Room #170 (same building as the library)

Only Eagle River-Chugiak ballots will be at this location.

Loussac Library, 3600 Denali Street, 1st Floor, Assembly Chambers

All Municipal ballots will be available at this location.

Vote by fax or email:  This option is no longer available, as the deadline was Monday to request the ballot.

Vote a Special Needs Ballot:  Voters who are elderly, have a disability, are hospitalized, are sick, or have a positive Covid-19 test, may vote a Special Needs Ballot. Voters should call the Voter Hotline at 907-243-8683 to request a Special Needs Ballot to be delivered to them and Election Officials will deliver a ballot to the voter, allow the voter to vote in privacy, and return the ballot to the Election Center. 

Secure Ballot Drop Boxes: These are open until 8 pm on Election Day. Voters in line at a secure drop box by 8 pm will be allowed to drop off their ballots. Voters can call the Voter Hotline at 907-243-8683 or search the online map of Secure Ballot Drop Box and Anchorage Vote Center Locations to find the location of the closest secure drop box.  

Voter Questions:  Get help with voting questions by visiting muni.org/elections, or calling the Voter Hotline at 907-243-8683.

Confused by your ballot? Civic leader Bernadette Wilson explains in this video how she voted and why, going through every question on the ballot.

Why time didn’t begin on Wednesday, but still has a chance this June

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By TIM BARTO

Last Wednesday was opening day of the Major League Baseball season.  In years past, I would have secretly listened to my team’s first game during work hours, then turned on the MLB Network to capture the highlights that evening.

From 1969 until 2019, opening day had a magical quality about it for me and millions of other baseball fans who had the fortune of growing up when baseball was mostly about competition and entertainment. Baseball author Thomas Boswell wrote a book called Why Time Begins On Opening Day, and the title made perfect sense to people like me. 

If you haven’t sensed it already, I’m a baseball geek.  Baseball was my first true love, something my wife has understood for almost 31 years now.  Borrowing from the movie “Diner,” my bride-to-be had to pass a baseball trivia quiz before we could start ordering bouquets and booking a minister.  

Seriously.  

The only World Series I missed occurred in 1982, and that’s because I was in Marine Corps boot camp at the time.  Knowing the Fall Classic was occurring without me, and desperate for news of it, I took the rather courageous but idiotic chance of inquiring of my Senior Drill Instructor what the situation was with the Series.

“Sir, Private Barto requests permission to speak to Senior Drill Instructor Staff Sergeant James, Sir.”

“What is it, Barton.”

“Sir, Private Barto would like to know what is happening in the World Series, Sir.”

“How did you know I liked baseball, Bartaloo?”

“Sir, Barto, Sir.  The private did not know this information, Sir.”

“Hell yeah, Barrett. I pitched in the minor leagues.  Would’ve made it to the big leagues if I hadn’t injured my arm.”

“Sir, that was certainly a bad break, Sir, and the private is truly saddened to hear about it.  But the Series, Sir—”

“Had a helluva curve.  Probably what did my arm in.  But the Marines took me in.  Aren’t you happy the Marines took me in, Baratta?”

“Sir, of course, Sir.  About the Series, though, what—” 

“Don’t have time to watch baseball while I’m trying to make Marines out of you useless . . .”

At this point the conversation devolved into a bunch of yelling and cursing, and push-ups and bend-and-thrusts.  I was clear my dredging up memories of lost glory on the baseball diamond had hit a nerve with the Senior DI. 

But such has been my obsession with the national pastime.

So, why then, did this lifelong fan of the game not care to tune in this past Wednesday?  Why hadn’t I done the usual poring over baseball magazines, analyzing each team and making predictions for how they would perform?    

Because in 2020, MLB opted to align their multi-billion dollar business with the self-proclaimed social activists who spent the summer burning buildings, looting businesses, and maligning police officers.  

MLB didn’t just allow kneeling during the National Anthem, they encouraged it; and they replied with harsh, self-righteous indignation to those of us who tried to inform them they were losing lifelong fans as a result.

So, unless MLB gets out of the social activism business and stops honoring those who dishonor the flag that many of us hold dear and have had the honor of presenting to families of fallen service members, then I am done with them.  

And it breaks my heart.  And MLB doesn’t care.

But there is other baseball that will satisfy my addiction.  The five-team Alaska Baseball League (ABL) is scheduled to open the first week of June and play through the first week of August.  

The ABL has a long history of being one of the best summer collegiate programs in the nation. Hall-of-Famers Tom Seaver, Dave Winfield, and Randy Johnson spent summers playing ball up here, as have dozens of other players who went on to garner my envy and actually get paid to play the game.

Covid killed the 2020 season, but the 2021 rosters are already pretty much set for each team.  Still, there are some issues that have to be dealt with in order for the crack of the bat (it is a genuine wood bat league, after all) to be heard come June.  

The number one obstacle is the Municipality of Anchorage.  The same restrictive measures that closed businesses, killed jobs, and devastated our local economy, now threaten good, clean, family fun at the ballpark.  

Social distancing guidelines, concession sale restrictions, required proof of Covid tests and/or vaccinations, and a general opposition, if not outright contempt, for sports activities in Anchorage are putting the season at risk.

The Mat-Su Miners and Peninsula Oilers are good to go, but the three teams within the Anchorage Municipality – the Bucs, Pilots, and Chinooks – cannot play if the Municipality continues putting up obstacles.  That would mean a second consecutive year without baseball in Alaska and, many of us fear, it will put in jeopardy the future of our historic league.

Please, Anchorage, care enough to do the right thing and clear the way for the 2021 ABL season to happen. 

Tim Barto is a VP with the Alaska Policy Forum, and President of the Chugiak-Eagle River Chinooks Booster Club.  His wife, by the way, aced that pre-nuptial baseball quiz.