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Michael Tavoliero: Power of the governor to enforce Alaska’s Constitution

By MICHAEL TAVOLIERO

Article VII, Section 1 of the Alaska State Constitution states, “Schools and institutions so established shall be free from sectarian control.”

This provision is aimed at ensuring that Alaska’s public education system, which includes its university system, remains impartial and free from influence or control by any particular religious or ideological group. It underscores the importance of maintaining neutrality and inclusivity within the state’s educational institutions.

If you agree with my constitutional reading, then how can this best be approached by our state government? 

The National Education Association-Alaska has over 12,000 members. It is obligated to represent its members. However, its ideological control over the Alaska education system is considered ubiquitous and multilayered in local school districts, our state bureaucracy and our tripartite government, the executive, legislative and judicial branches, and the federal government. 

In a seismic legal upheaval, Alaska’s educational landscape is in tumult, with the future of homeschooling hanging in the balance. Recent judicial action has delivered a stunning blow by striking down laws supporting the state’s correspondence education program, citing them as unconstitutional.

The reverberations of this decision are felt across the state, as over 20,000 homeschool students face uncertainty, and public-school districts are thrust into chaos, tasked with integrating these displaced students back into traditional classrooms. With the Alaska Department of Education and Early Development now at the center of this urgent crisis, the need for a swift resolution looms large. 

It’s baffling to witness our state government hesitating, caught in indecision over the crucial next steps: Do we pursue a legislative remedy or take the matter to the Supreme Court? The urgency of this issue cannot be overstated, yet inexplicably, the government remains on the defensive, failing to seize the initiative. Let’s be clear: This is not just about politics or legal wrangling. It’s about the very future of our children, the very future of our state. The time for action is now.

To address the issue of NEA-Alaska violating Article VII, Section 1, the governor of Alaska holds significant authority and avenues for action.

Firstly, under the state constitution’s Article III, Section 16, the governor has the authority to ensure the faithful execution of the laws, including constitutional mandates such as sectarian control in education. This authority empowers the governor to take appropriate legal action to enforce compliance with constitutional provisions and legislative mandates, as well as to restrain any violation of constitutional or legislative powers, duties, or rights by state officers, departments, or agencies.

Additionally, Article III, Section 23 grants the governor the authority to make changes in the organization of the executive branch or in the assignment of functions among its units for efficient administration. These changes, when requiring the force of law, are set forth in executive orders. The legislature has a specified period to disapprove these orders, after which they become effective. The governor also has administrative order authority which can be solidified into regulations without legislative review.

Moreover, the governor’s oath of office, as mandated by Article XII, Section 5, requires the Governor to uphold the U.S. and Alaska constitutions. This oath underscores the governor’s commitment to respecting and adhering to constitutional principles, including those related to education policy and sectarian control.

The governor and all members of the state legislature are required to comply with Article XII, Section 5. Additionally, every public official and employee of the state before entering upon the duties of office are required by AS 39.05.040 and AS 39.05.045 to take and sign an oath which includes supporting and defending both the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of the State of Alaska.

Do the members of the NEA-Alaska support this when teachers have also taken an oath? The oath is same per 4 AAC18.010(a)(5) and AS 39.05.045 so all contracts for teachers and administrators must include in this all Alaska public school contracts.

This brings into question the practical application of the state’s Legislative Ethics Act, specifically Section AS 24.60.010, and the role of the Ethics Committee when the governor identifies a constitutional violation.

If you agree with my constitutional reading, how can any of our state government and our teachers support the continuation of NEA-Alaska’s sectarian control of education in the light of the oaths taken?

In practical terms, the Governor can utilize legal mechanisms such as executive orders or administrative orders to address concerns regarding sectarian control in education. These orders could outline specific actions or directives aimed at ensuring that schools and institutions remain free from sectarian influence or control. Additionally, the governor may use this opportunity to reign in the NEA-Alaska’s unconstitutional behavior through regulation.

Furthermore, the attorney general, as the legal advisor for the state, can work with the governor to assess the legal basis for any actions taken against NEA-Alaska or other entities perceived to violate constitutional provisions.

Regarding campaign donations to members of the legislature, the constitutional mandate for schools to be free from sectarian control may influence donor behavior and legislative decisions. Donations from organizations like NEA-Alaska may face greater scrutiny, and legislators receiving such contributions may be questioned about their commitment to upholding constitutional principles as well as their oath of office.

Will such a declaration of unconstitutionality by the governor trigger the Alaska Public Offices Commission to investigate every donation which supports this unconstitutionality? The governor certainly has the authority to demand this.

Ultimately, the governor’s authority, combined with legal and ethical considerations, provides avenues for addressing concerns related to sectarian control in education and ensuring adherence to constitutional mandates.

If the governor determines that NEA-Alaska has violated Article VII, Section 1 of the Alaska State Constitution, specifically regarding the freedom of schools and institutions from sectarian control, he has the authority to act, including addressing public education union contracts through administrative orders immediately. 

Administrative orders issued by the governor typically pertain to the organization and functions of the executive branch. If the governor declares unconstitutionality, the structural components of NEA-Alaska may be challenged. The governor could also take indirect actions within the scope of his authority to address concerns related to sectarian control in education.

For example, the governor could utilize administrative orders to initiate investigations or audits into public education union activities to determine compliance with constitutional mandates. If violations are found, the governor could work with relevant state agencies to enforce corrective measures or impose penalties as allowed by law.

Additionally, the governor may leverage his authority to influence legislative action or budgetary decisions that impact public education union contracts. By working with the state legislature and other stakeholders, the governor could advocate for policy changes or funding allocations aimed at addressing issues related to sectarian control in education.

Ultimately, any actions taken by the governor must adhere to constitutional principles, respect the rights of all parties involved, and comply with applicable laws and legal procedures. The governor must carefully consider the legal and practical implications of his actions and ensure that they align with the broader goals of promoting impartiality and inclusivity in Alaska’s public education system.

But the fact remains as open as the air we breathe, in Alaska, the education system is controlled by one entity, and one entity alone, and that is NEA-Alaska.

Michael Tavoliero writes for Must Read Alaska.

Transfixed: Democrats desperate for boys to compete against girl athletes try to run out the clock in Alaska House

The Alaska House on Saturday ran a marathon session, forced by the minority Democrats, who moved amendment after amendment on a bill that is designed to protect female competitive athletes in Alaska’s public schools and universities.

The Democrats made 88 amendments in all, carefully coordinated in caucus and designed to delay the passage of House Bill 183. Each amendment had at least six Democrats standing to speak in support of it to wear out the Republican majority. The amendment sponsor had three minutes to present, and three minutes to wrap up, and each member who rose had one minute to argue.

Even with that structure, it was going to take all day, and lawmakers were cranky.

One amendment was to exempt competitive chess tournaments from the proposed law that would protect girls in sports. Then came the amendment to exempt synchronized swimming teams from the protections for girl athletes.

On the chess amendment, Rep. Rebecca Himschoot of Sitka said she would vote for the bill because she had seen the movie, “The Queen’s Gambit,” on Netflix, and it made her realize how important chess is. Himschoot was a public school teacher in Sitka and Hawaii, teaching science.

On the synchronized swimming amendment, Rep. Donna Mears said she was a synchronized swimmer once and she got a concussion from the sport. But despite the brain injury, she supports males being able to be on these competitive teams with females.

One amendment was to create a “transgender awareness day” in schools and force a curriculum addition on notable transgenders in history.

Another amendment addressed “hate crimes” against transgenders.

Yet another amendment would have made the NCAA policy the standard by which Alaska schools would follow. The NCAA policy is being challenged in court by former NCAA champion swimmer Riley Gaines, who now fights for the rights of women athletes.

House members had gathered for the day’s session at 10 a.m. and were stuck in the chambers until past 10 pm, through Amendment 88, in which Rep. Andy Josephson argued that everyone should get to participate on any team they want to play on.

At one point in the proceedings, House Minority Leader Calvin Schrage threatened House Speaker Cathy Tilton, saying she would reap the consequences for years to come. After an extended at-ease, he apologized for the threat.

Also acting out in the House was Rep. Zack Fields, who petulantly broke the rules by interrupting the House Speaker, speaking on and on after he was past time, continuing to argue even though his mic had been shut off, and showing other disrespect to the institution by reading passages without first asking permission from the Speaker.

Rep. Daniel Ortiz, who is not an admitted Democrat but has only caucused with the Democrats since taking office, stood to ask for an indefinite delay of the bill. He said that if the House got through all its other business it could return to the topic. It was a lie perhaps he hoped tired Republicans would fall for, but Rep. David Eastman called him out on it, saying that by the rules, an indefinite postponement meant the bill could not be brought back up. That amendment, like all the others, failed.

While some Democrats pointed out that House Bill 183, sponsored by Rep. Jamie Allard, was a solution in search of a problem, Rep. Josephson admitted on the floor that a transgender track runner in Haines competed competitively in the girls’ division, the one instance in state history where he said this issue mattered. That occurred in 2016. Since it was the only case Josephson knew of, he stated it was the only instance, and therefore the bill is unnecessary.

However, with increasing frequency transgenders have started taking away medals from women on the national level in swimming, track and field, cyclocross, tennis, skiing, and a growing list of sports, as boys and men who cannot win in their own category switch to the female roster, even after they have gone through male puberty and have the musculature to prove it. In Alaska, the Alaska School Activities Association at first left the matter up the the schools, but now even the ASAA and the Alaska School Board have had to set boundaries in order to protect girls from boys who covet their medals and scholarships.

Although these are policies and regulations, the Democrats in the House don’t want the protections for girls to be in statute, and fought through the day and late into the night against the rights of girls.

The matter was finally referred to Sunday’s House calendar for a third reading and vote. Both sides — Democrats and Republicans — were worn out by the end of the debate.

But what Republicans got was hours and hours of Democrats on tape saying what they really think, such as Rep. Andrew Gray insisting that “trans girls are girls,” and Rep. Genevieve Mina suggesting that mixed martial arts should be co-ed if the athletes are of the same weight.

Rep. Sara Hannan, a former Juneau teacher, authoritatively talked about zygotes, and how all humans start out as females for the first several weeks before the testosterone turns some into males.

“The question is are we all transgender or just the men?” Hannan asked the body.

Rep. Himschoot and Rep. Fields falsely said the bill would force teachers to do genital inspections.

“I would be very uncomfortable doing a genital inspection,” said Himschoot.

Rep. Jennie Armstrong said transgenderism is an immutable characteristic, but later Rep. Mina said that children explore their gender identity.

At times the Democrats referred to girls as girls, and at other times they used the slur “cisgender girls.” It’s all on record for posterity — and election cycles to come.

Chugach Electric having a big electric vehicle show, but only some people get to comment

Chugach Electric Association is having an electric vehicle show during its annual membership appreciation day, where attendees can see a Ford F150-Lightning, a Tesla, an Audi E-Tron and more.

But Chugach Electric Association doesn’t want you to say anything snarky about the car show. The co-op closed the comment section on Facebook. It “limited” who can comment on the announcement.

The event, along with the final results of the Chugach Electric Board Association elections, take place Friday, May 17, from 3-6 p.m. at Changeling Alaska, 6689 Changepoint Drive, in Anchorage.

More information about the annual meeting is at this Chugach Electric link.

Democrats melt down over bill that protects girl athletes, House minority leader threatens speaker

The Alaska House minority caucus melted down on Saturday, causing chaos in the House Chambers. House Minority leader Calvin Schrage threatened the House Speaker on the floor of the House and some Democrats refused to vote.

After Rep. Zack Fields talked over House Speaker Cathy Tilton repeatedly and some Democrats refused to vote at all on an amendment to House Bill 183, which is a bill to protect girls and women, Rep. Schrage stood up and told Speaker Tilton that if she proceeded with her ruling on a procedural vote, there would be consequences for her for years to come.

That is a threat of implied action that could be seen as personal, political, or both; it clearly contained an “if, then” clause in the statement of threat.

The Democrats in the House don’t want HB 183 to pass, because they seek to protect boys and men who want to compete against women and girls in public schools and universities in Alaska.

The threat came up during the “Chess Amendment,” a delay-tactic amendment that would be one of over 100 to be offered by Democrats. The amendment says that chess tournaments are exempted from HB 183.

Do a deeper dive into this bill with this earlier story:

This story is developing.

Biden arrives in Seattle, dotes on county executive’s young daughter, hints at White House spot for Inslee

President Joe Biden flew into Seattle for a series of campaign fundraisers on Friday evening, with campaign fundraising events continuing on Saturday. Greeting the president at Sea-Tac airport were the state’s top Democrat politicians, including Gov. Gov. Jay Inslee, U.S. Rep. Pramila Jayapal, Seattle Mayor Bruce Harrell, and King County Executive Dow Constantine. 

“Inslee got the first handshake as Biden made his way down the line, but Biden may have spent the most time saying hello to Constantine’s young daughter, Sabrina,” wrote the Seattle Times, which evidently thought the attention was notable enough to carry it in the second paragraph of its story.

The Biden Victory Fund sent invitations for an event, with amounts starting at $500 and going up to $25,000. The downtown area near the Westin Hotel has been blocked off, and a temporary flight restriction for the region by the Federal Aviation Administration is in effect until 6 pm Pacific Time on Saturday.

Traffic has been impacted by the president’s motorcade, which was made up of over 100 vehicles. The Post Millennial reports that not a single vehicle was electric.

Biden was introduced by Gov. Jay Inslee on Friday at the Lotte Hotel and said he will be remembered for his work on climate change. Biden said twice that Inslee will have a place in his administration; Inslee is not running for reelection in Washington State.

“When we win, he ain’t staying in Washington state,” Biden said during his speech. “I’m not joking. Jay, there’s no place to hide.”

If Biden wins, it will be without the voters in the UW Liberated Zone, where protesters are occupying the University of Washington and protesting Biden policies in the Israel war on terror.

On Saturday, a pro-Hamas rally will take place in downtown Seattle near WestLake Park, and more demonstrations, which involve Antifa, are expected at the university.

On Sunday, visitors to downtown Seattle can expect a pro-Israel “United for Israel” prayer gathering and a march that may go through the middle of the UW pro-Hamas group. The University of Washington has asked the Hamas group to vacate the campus, where Frontlines reporter Jonathan Choe was attacked last week.

Choe reported that “Students leaving the Charlie Kirk event in Seattle were greeted by a mob of Antifa lunatics who flooded the Quad. They carried weapons and started numerous fights.”

“It will be like the Super Bowl for far-left activists. National media coming into Seattle for this on Mother’s Day. Absolutely insane,” Choe reported.



Tim Murtaugh: News media that botched huge stories appoint themselves arbiters of truth again

By TIM MURTAUGH

We are less than six months away from the presidential election, which means that certain members of the news media will soon appoint themselves the arbiters of truth. They’ll do this even though so many got things wrong over the last half a decade (about Russian collusion with the 2016 Trump campaign, about COVID-19 and about Hunter Biden’s laptop, to name a few).

It appears, however, that some journalists aren’t as concerned about the actual truth as they are about what they desire to be true based on their own leftist views. And some will take orders directly from President Biden as they plan their coverage. 

That’s all bad news as we look ahead to Election Day, and the signs are there.

The Washington Post’s Taylor Lorenz, one of the cringiest journalists on social media, joined former CNN host Don Lemon on his online show, and let’s say you wouldn’t even want to take travel advice from her.

Mr. Lemon noted that members of “marginalized groups” who would likely be persecuted in the Gaza Strip are nonetheless demonstrating on American college campuses in support of the Palestinians who live in Gaza.

“Taylor, how do you reconcile the way marginalized groups — many of the people in these marginalized groups, they are fighting for Palestine, for the Palestinians, for what’s happening in Gaza. But yet, in Gaza, they would not have any freedom,” Mr. Lemon prompted.

This drew a scornful laugh from Ms. Lorenz.

“They don’t have freedoms in Texas and Florida,” she said, slandering two conservative states without evidence to support her claim. “Does that mean we should carpet bomb Texas?”

“Taylor, I’m a member of the LGBTQ community. If I go to Texas, they’re not going to throw me off a roof,” Mr. Lemon replied.

If even leftist Don Lemon thinks you’re too far out on a limb, maybe you shouldn’t be masquerading as a truth-seeking journalist.

In New York magazine’s Intelligencer, there was a revealing anecdote about the Daily Beast’s new chief creative and content officer, Joanna Coles. A friend had told her that Barron Trump, the former president’s youngest son, plans to attend New York University after high school.

She ordered her staff to confirm it with other sources, but they could not. Undaunted, Ms. Coles forged ahead and directed that an article making that claim be published anyway — without a byline.

“Let’s hope it’s true,” she said.

In these two examples, we have one reporter expressing opinions based on facts she merely wishes were true and a news executive whose journalistic code requires her only to hope that a story is accurate.

Is there any chance that these journalists will dedicate themselves to factual precision above their own biases and beliefs? Don’t bet on it.

No doubt, though, some reporters have been planning to be objective, and it was to them that President Biden was speaking when he addressed this year’s White House Correspondents’ Association dinner.

Mr. Biden told the assembled media that he expected them to skewer former President Donald Trump in their coverage between now and November.

“I’m sincerely not asking you to take sides,” he said before asking them to do so. “Move past the horse-race numbers and the gotcha moments and the distractions, the sideshows that have come to dominate and sensationalize our politics and focus on what’s actually at stake. I think, in your hearts, you know what’s at stake.”

It didn’t take long for the media to obey.

The very next day, George Stephanopoulos told his Sunday morning audience on ABC’s “This Week” that the “scale of abnormality” of the 2024 campaign is “staggering.”

This former adviser to former President Bill Clinton, who now regards himself as a trusted journalist, listed the lawfare cases being pursued against Mr. Trump by Democratic prosecutors and declared it a crisis of a kind unseen since the Civil War.

“It’s all too easy to fall into reflexive habits, to treat this as a normal campaign,” he said, telegraphing that he will indeed regard one candidate as good and the other one as evil, just as Mr. Biden instructed.

A hopelessly unfair media is a serious problem, but at least we can appreciate their brazenness. While they don’t usually show awareness of their biases, their unshakable confidence in their own righteousness is a warning sign for the rest of us.

Remember, as a whole, the news media rank about as low as halitosis in public opinion polls. And if their recent blatherings are any indication, they’re about to find out just how much worse their reputation can get.

• Tim Murtaugh is a Washington Times columnist, a communications consultant, a co-host of the “Line Drive Podcast” and the author of the Amazon bestselling book “Swing Hard in Case You Hit It: My Escape From Addiction and Shot at Redemption on the Trump Campaign.” Copyright © 2024 The Washington Times, LLC, used with permission.

Watch video: Black bear puts the ‘bear’ in JBER

A black bear scaling the fence at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage was caught in the act by a passerby with a video camera, who posted the evidence on social media of the trespassing bear scaling the fence and then tightrope walking on the barbed wire. Check it out:

$7.9 million and 85 burned Catholic Churches later, no unmarked graves found at Indian residential school ‘mass graves’ site in Kamloops, BC

By MADALAINE ELHABBAL | CATHOLIC VOTE

According to the Department of Crown-Indigenous Relations in Canada, no human remains have been discovered at the site of an alleged “mass grave” at the Indian Residential School in Kamloops in British Columbia. 

Kamloops is about a 14-hour car drive southeast from Hyder, its closest community to Alaska.

On May 27, 2021, the Tkʼemlúps te Secwepemc First Nation claimed they had discovered the “heartbreaking truth” regarding the Catholic-run residential school after a ground-penetrating radar allegedly uncovered a mass grave of 215 children.

Three years, $7.9 million, and at least 85 destroyed historic Catholic churches later, no human remains have been discovered, according to a May 9 report from Western Standard. 

Department spokesperson Carolane Gratton stated in the report that the department had allocated the $7.9 million to uncovering the bodies, and confirmed that no progress had been made. 

Both Gratton and the First Nation tribe have declined to disclose how the funds were spent. 

“The discovery of 215 children’s graves at the Kamloops Residential School site in 2021 prompted an international outcry. However, no remains have been recovered since then. In response, the government lowered the Peace Tower flag for 161 days, allocated $3.1 million for a national Residential Schools Student Death Register, and earmarked $238.8 million for a Residential Schools Missing Children Community Support Fund, expiring in 2025,” the Western Standard reported.

In an op-ed published in The Federalist on May 10, John Daniel Davidson described the situation as “a hoax” and “a modern-day libel against Christians” that resulted in the widespread destruction of historic Catholic churches across Canada. 

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says, however, that “What happened decades ago isn’t part of our history, it is an irrefutable part of our present.”

Read the story at Catholic Vote.

Read the story at the Western Standard.

Similarly last year, after extensive excavation, no evidence of human remains were found on the grounds of a Manitoba residential school for Indians that had been run by Catholic nuns.

Deeper dive:

Listicle: Which bills have passed the Alaska Legislature so far in 2024?

In the second regular session of the 33rd Alaska Legislature, 14 bills and just as many resolutions have passed both House and Senate, as of Friday.

May 15 marks the 121st day of the session, when the 60 legislators must cease work or call a special session. Special sessions may be called by the governor or by the Legislature and are limited to 30 calendar days.

The House and Senate will meet in separate sessions on Saturday to consider a handful of legislation, including the House continuing to consider HB 183, the bill that makes it clear that women’s athletic competitions are limited to women, not men, in Alaska public high schools and state-funded colleges. Read more about that bill here:

Here are the bills and resolutions that have been voted on by both bodies so far, including veto override votes. Aside from committee bills or bills from the governor, the bills total eight from Republicans and eight from Democrats:

SB 127TAXATION: VEHICLE RENTALS, SUBPOENASSEN. MATT CLAMANRTN TO (S) GOV NEXT05/10/2024
SB 129MATT GLOVER BIKE PATHSEN. ROBB MYERSRTN TO (S) GOV NEXT05/02/2024
SB 140EDUCATION: INTERNET/CHARTER/TRANSP./FUNDING/BSASEN. LYMAN HOFFMANVETOED BY GOV03/18/2024
SB 159ALASKA VETERANS’ POPPY DAYSEN. FORREST DUNBARRTN TO (S) GOV NEXT04/26/2024
SB 174HONOR & REMEMBER/HONOR & SACRIFICE FLAGSSEN. JESSE BJORKMANRTN TO (S) GOV NEXT05/10/2024
SB 187APPROP: CAP; REAPPROP; SUPP; FUNDS; AMENDSENATE RULES BY REQUEST OF THE GOVERNOR (S) CONCURRED(H) AM05/10/2024
SB 93FISHERMEN’S FUND: VESSEL OWNER CLAIMSSENATE LABOR & COMMERCE BY REQUESTCHAPTER 3 SLA 2404/23/2024
SB 45DIRECT HEALTH AGREEMENT: NOT INSURANCESEN. DAVID WILSONAWAIT TRANSMIT GOV04/11/2024
SB 46BRAIN INJURY AWARENESS MONTHSEN. LOKI TOBINCHAPTER 2 SLA 2404/23/2024
HB 193INTERNET FOR SCHOOLSHOUSE FINANCECHAPTER 1 SLA 2403/27/2024
HB 228MENTAL HEALTH/PSYCHEDELIC MEDICAL TASK FORCEREP. JENNIE ARMSTRONGRTN TO (H) GOV NEXT05/10/2024
HB 237TEMPORARY PERMIT FOR LAPSED NURSE LICENSEREP. MIKE PRAXRTN TO (H) GOV NEXT05/10/2024
HB 26OFFICIAL LANGUAGES; COUNCIL FOR ALASKA NATIVE LANGREP. ANDI STORY(H) CONCURRED(S) AM05/10/2024
HB 39APPROPRIATION: OPERATING BUDGET; CAPITAL; SUPPLEMENTALHOUSE RULES BY REQUEST OF THE GOVERNOR (VETO OVERRIDE VOTE, BUT VETO SUSTAINED)CHAPTER 1 FSSLA 2302/28/2024
HCR 4SUSPEND UNIFORM RULES FOR SB 140HOUSE FINANCETRANSM TO GOVERNOR02/28/2024
HCR 8HONORING VIETNAM WAR VETERANSREP. LADDIE SHAWRTN TO (H) GOV NEXT04/19/2024
HCR 13RECOGNIZING NCSL ON 50TH ANNIVERSARYREP. DAN SADDLERRTN TO (H) GOV NEXT05/06/2024
HCR 15MENTAL HEALTH MONTH; TARDIVE DYSK WEEKHOUSE HEALTH & SOCIAL SERVICESRTN TO (H) GOV NEXT05/03/2024
HCR 16CRIME VICTIMS’ RIGHTS WEEKHOUSE RULESRTN TO (H) GOV NEXT04/24/2024
HCR 17SUSPEND UNIFORM RULES FOR SJR 14HOUSE RULESRTN TO (H) GOV NEXT05/03/2024
HJR 17SUPPORT FED TRUTH AND HEALING COMMISSIONREP. CJ MCCORMICKRTN TO (H) GOV NEXT05/10/2024
HJR 20NAT’L PETROLEUM RESERVE IN ALASKAREP. THOMAS BAKERTRANSM TO GOVERNOR03/18/2024
SCR 9MENTAL HEALTH/SUBSTANCE ASSISTANCE PARITYSEN. FORREST DUNBARRTN TO (S) GOV NEXT04/29/2024
SCR 11SUSPEND UNIFORM RULES FOR HB 26SENATE FINANCERTN TO (S) GOV NEXT05/10/2024
SJR 13AMEND ALASKA NATIVE CLAIMS SETTLEMENT ACTSEN. FORREST DUNBARRTN TO (S) GOV NEXT05/09/2024
SJR 14SUPPORT STATE SEAFOOD INDUSTRYSEN. CLICK BISHOP(S) CONCURRED(H) AM05/03/2024
SJR 20WEATHER OBSERVING SYSTEM STATION OUTAGESSENATE COMMUNITY & REGIONAL AFFAIRSRTN TO (S) GOV NEXT05/06/2024
SR 3CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE AWARENESS MONTHSEN. ELVI GRAY-JACKSONSENATE RESOLVE 203/12/2024

Early in the session, the joint Senate and House did not approve a number of executive orders relating to the dismantling of a number of boards and commissions:

SSCR 1DISAPPROVE EO 124SENATE RULESTRANSM TO GOVERNOR03/26/2024
SSCR 3DISAPPROVE EO 126SENATE RULESTRANSM TO GOVERNOR03/26/2024
SSCR 4DISAPPROVE EO 127SENATE RULESTRANSM TO GOVERNOR03/26/2024
SSCR 5DISAPPROVE EO 128SENATE RULESTRANSM TO GOVERNOR03/26/2024
SSCR 6DISAPPROVE EO 129SENATE RULESTRANSM TO GOVERNOR03/26/2024
SSCR 7DISAPPROVE EO 130SENATE RULESTRANSM TO GOVERNOR03/26/2024
SSCR 8DISAPPROVE EO 131SENATE RULESTRANSM TO GOVERNOR03/26/2024
SSCR 9DISAPPROVE EO 132SENATE RULESTRANSM TO GOVERNOR03/26/2024