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Murkowski introduces code of conduct bill for Supreme Court

Sen. Lisa Murkowski and Sen. Angus King of Maine have introduced the Supreme Court Code of Conduct Act, requiring the Supreme Court to establish a code of conduct that would follow the same ethics guidelines as other federal judges.

The proposed bill would mandate that the Supreme Court create a code of conduct within one year from the date of enactment and appoint an official to handle any complaints of violations of the code. The official would accept information or complaints from the public alleging violations of the code by a Supreme Court justice, or violations of other federal laws. An annual report would be posted on the Court’s website, describing the information and complaints received, and the actions taken to address any issues.

“The Supreme Court must demonstrate independence and fairness as they rule on the laws of the land—and any cracks in the public’s confidence will have damaging repercussions for the state of our democracy,” Murkowski said.

“Americans have made clear their concerns with the transparency — or lack thereof — coming from the Supreme Court and its justices. It is critical the public has full faith that their institutions are functioning, including the judicial branch,” Murkowski said.

Throw in the towel: Alaska School Activities Association takes pass on trans-girls’ sports debate

The Alaska School Activities Association Board of Directors took no action on a proposed bylaw change prompted by a resolution passed unanimously by the State Board of Education, which addressed the protection for girl athletes from boys taking over their sports and winning medals that have been previously reserved for top-performing girl athletes.

The ASAA Board decided that until the Department of Education itself changes the current regulations, it would be premature to change the ASAA bylaw.

The ASAA met in Valdez this week to consider the resolution and other school athletic issues. Transgender activists testified against the proposal to put sideboards on when boys would be able to compete against girls. Conservatives testified against it.

The association said that the Department does not require Alaska school districts to join ASAA. Instead, existing state regulation authorizes districts to join and pay dues to ASAA or “any other voluntary, nonprofit association whose purpose is to administer and promote interscholastic activities in Alaska” so long as certain criteria are met.

The Board of Education’s resolution says the separation of males and females in sports is related to competitive fairness and promotion of broad and equal participation opportunities. The two-page resolution also says the gender policies in Alaska school athletics programs should be objective, workable, and practicable for all students who participate.

New poll says Rep. Mary Peltola could take Sen. Dan Sullivan in 2026

What would happen if Democrat Rep. Mary Peltola decided to challenge Republican Sen. Dan Sullivan in 2026?

Ivan Moore’s Alaska Survey Research conducted a poll April 21-25 with 1,261 likely Alaska voters and found that the positive-negative ratings for Peltola are strongly in her favor.

Peltola rated 53% positive, 28% negative, 13% no opinion, 6% never heard for a +25 rating.

Sullivan rated 45% positive, 41% negative, 12% no opinion and 1% never heard, for a +3 rating.

Looking forward three years, Moore asked likely voters, “If the 2026 general election for US Senate was held today and the candidates were as follows, for whom would you vote for Senate?” Of the choices he presented to likely voters, the result gave Peltola the edge:

  • Mary Peltola (D) 44%
  • Dan Sullivan (R) 41%
  • Undecided 15%

Peltola was elected in the first-ever open primary and ranked choice voting election in Alaska, beating out Republican Sarah Palin, Republican Nick Begich, and Libertarian Chris Bye in the general election. A hardline Democrat who votes with her party nearly 100% of the time, she has enjoyed favor from the legacy media and leftist writers.

During that same election, Sen. Lisa Murkowski beat Kelly Tshibaka and retained her Senate seat. Murkowski endorsed Peltola in that election.

Peltola has given no indication about her intent for 2026, but is running for reelection already for her seat representing Alaska in the U.S. House of Representatives in 2024, and the national Democrats have put her on the list for their rescue operation, since she is a hard Democrat running in a lean-Republican state.

Tim Barto: Time to draw the line for fairness for girls

By TIM BARTO

There comes a time with almost every major social movement when a line must be drawn; a line that says, “Enough is enough. If we don’t put an end to this creeping creepiness then it will continue to grow and fester and get out of control.” As far as the transwomen in sports movement goes, that time is now. 

The Alaska School Activities Association (ASAA) is holding its spring meeting in Valdez this week. The ASAA is an overseer of extracurricular educational activities.

As the backgrounders of ASAA’s board membership indicate, there’s an emphasis on sports, but the Association also governs diverse areas such as art, music, drama, debate, and student government. It’s a pretty safe bet that your average Alaskan isn’t too familiar with ASAA because unless you’re involved with extracurricular activities or (more likely) have a child who is involved, then you won’t have much interaction with them. 

The ASAA Board of Directors is an impressive group of people with multitudes of accomplishments and awards to their credit, due to decades of teaching, coaching, mentoring, and counseling.

And now those board members are attracting attention they have probably not experienced off the court or ballfield, and one gets a suspicion they would rather not be drawing such attention. But the crazy-headed-full-speed-towards-completely-insane world in which we live is drawing them in.

A couple months ago the Alaska State Board of Education recommended –- unanimously –- that ASAA address the issue of boys competing in girls’ sports by protecting girls’ sports; that is, keeping girls sports for biological girls. So, the ASAA Board took up the issue, with testimonies being heard on May 1st and 2nd.

How did it get to this point? Why couldn’t this action be taken in the legislature – you know, the governmental body that makes laws?

Well, Sen. Shelley Hughes of Palmer, a true conservative and a fighter for common sense who is standing with two other conservative senators (Mike Shower of Wasilla, and Robert Myers of North Pole) in a micro-caucus of three, introduced legislation to protect girls’ sports during the previous legislative session.

It went nowhere and received very little support from the general public.

Hughes wanted to introduce the bill again this session, but a deal was struck between both sides of the aisle that controversial social legislation would not be forwarded by either side. That deal was quickly broken when SB43 was introduced by Senator Elvi Gray-Jackson.

The bill, which is co-sponsored by fellow Anchorage Senators Loki Tobin and Forrest Dunbar, mandates sex education starting in kindergarten and is based on National Sex Education Standards that include teaching of gender, gender identity, gender expression, sexual orientation, and sexual identity.

This type of legislation obviously fits the definition of controversial social legislation, so Sen. Hughes wanted to get the ball rolling on her bill to save girls’ sports.  

Not so fast. The Senate, while made up of a majority of Republicans (11 of 20 members), is controlled by the left, with the Education Committee – where the bill would almost certainly be referred – particularly solid in its commitment to collectivism. Bottom line: the bill wouldn’t get anywhere in the Senate.

Over on the House side, Reps. Tom McKay of Anchorage and and Jamie Allard of Eagle River, respectively, would love to get the bill heard, but while they have hopes that it would survive a series of contentious hearings, they also know that it has no chance of getting through the liberal-irrespective-of-party-affiliation Senate.

So, here we are turning to ASAA for leadership and courage. And courage it will take because those opposing the measure are loud, fervent believers in their cause. The idea that a boy/man can simply choose to call himself a girl/woman and it magically becomes so, has become sacrosanct.

Never mind all that Title IX has accomplished for female athletes over the past 50 years. If a transwoman is a woman, as the screeching goes, then transwomen should get to compete with and against women, even if the athlete is biologically male. 

Tolerance and individual rights are often touted as reasons for allowing biological boys to play girls’ sports, but tolerance should not include unfairness, and the rights of one individual gaming the system should not strip away the rights of the other 99-plus-percent of girls participating in earnest. Title IX paved the way for female participation in sports. When passed into law in 1972, there were approximately 300,000 females participating in high school and college athletics. Today, that number is close to 4 million. 

But today, boys and men are being allowed to participate as girls and women based solely on their inner feelings that they are female.

One only needs to look at Lia Thomas, the University of Pennsylvania swimmer who was awarded the title of NCAA champion last year. Thomas, who swam for Penn as a male during the early part of his college career, moved up in the rankings from 65th as a man to 1st as a woman in the 500-yard freestyle, and from 554th as a man to 5th as a woman in the 200-yard freestyle. Thomas went through male puberty, and while he took medication that limits the amount of testosterone in his system, the fact is that he still went through male puberty.

Remember those East German women swimmers who looked masculine and dominated women’s international competitions in the 1970s? As masculine as they looked, their physiques pale in comparison to that of Lia Thomas.

It’s easy to find other instances of transgender females winning high school track meets, running over rugby opponents, or pummeling biological women in mixed martial arts competitions. It’s reached the level of absurdity, and it’s time to draw the line and now allow it to go any further. Alaska has a chance to be rational and realistic, and protect girls’ sports for girls. Please let your thoughts be known on this issue.  

The Alaska Family Council is leading a petition drive to encourage the ASAA Board to act appropriately and responsibly in protecting girls’ sports.  You can access it here:  Sign the petition today! GIRLS DESERVE FAIR PLAY! – Alaska Family Council (akfamily.org)

Tim Barto is Vice President at Alaska Family Council. He is baseball coach and the father of five grown children, including two who were competitive female athletes. 

Assemblyman Rivera and Constant testify in favor of discriminating against girls in sports

Anchorage Assemblymen Chris Constant and Felix Rivera don’t believe in girls and women’s sports teams. They testified by letter on Monday to the Alaska School Activities Association that boys who declare they are girls should be allowed to compete against girls in school sports.

The association, which met in Valdez this week, is considering a ban or some sort of limits on what is known as “transgenders” (males who believe they are females) competing against girls. Several people testified; as with other public events of this nature, the transgender activist community dominated the conversation.

Alaska Family Council Executive Director Jim Minnery also testified, but for the rights of girls and women to have their own competitive categories.

The two gay assemblymen’s letter to ASAA went the opposite way from Alaska Family Council and actually encouraged discrimination against girls, saying that such a ban on boys taking over girls’ teams would contradict Anchorage Municipal Code, specifically a part of municipal code that two men authored, which says the schools in Anchorage, as educational institutions, may not discriminate based on “sex and gender identity.”

The bylaws change that the activity association proposes would violate the rights of “trans female students,” the two wrote, using official letterhead of the Assembly. A trans female is a male with x and Y chromosomes who adapts feminine mannerisms and looks. Females have two X chromosomes.

The lawmaker men threatened that litigation would occur if the association revises its bylaws to protect girls.

“By refusing to allow trans female students to compete on a team consistent with their gender identity, while making such an allowance for trans male students. ASM’s proposed bylaw changes effectively deny them a benefit the bylaw changes confer on another group.
In addition. there is a strong argument that the mere classification based up-on gender at birth, in and of itself. will exacerbate already existing stigma associated with trans youth- In Brown v. Board of Education, the Supreme Court premised its decision striking down racially segregated education largely upon compelling evidence that, even if the services provided to every student are truly equal by every objective measure, ‘to separate them from others of similar age and qualifications solely because of their race generates a feeling of inferiority as to their status in the community that may affect their hearts and minds in a way unlikely ever to be undone.’ One can argue, quite persuasively, that the proposed classification scheme would create the same stamp of on trans youth that the Supreme Court sought to end in Brown,” the two men wrote.

“By forcing ASD to choose between violating Title 5, Equal Rights, and denying trans female students access to an ASAA sanctioned event or allowing their participation and being penalized by ASAA, these proposed bylaw changes put ASD in a legally precarious situation and open both ASD and ASAA up to serious litigation risk,” Constant and Rivera wrote.

Title 5 of Anchorage Municipal Code can be found at this link.

The two also wrote that the proposed bylaws changes would be in violation of Title IX, which is a federal law that gave girls and women equal athletic opportunity to boys and men.

“In order to remain compliant with Title IX then, ASAA would be forced to express what
substantial government interest is being advanced by these rule changes. Given that these rules are being proposed in an absence of an identified problem with the current language, ASAA would have a difficult argument to make. This is yet another example of the proposed bylaw changes putting ASAA in needless litigation risk, forcing ASD to consider leaving ASAA, and worst of all, increasing the harm to vulnerable youth who are simply attempting to participate in team sports in high school.”

The men, who are white and white-hispanic, then lectured the ASAA board for not being diverse enough.

“As an aside. we respectfully encourage ASAA to work towards a diversification of its board and staff in order to ensure adequate gender and viewpoint representation, which would assist you in making decisions that work for the entire community,” they closed.

Government’s top doctor declares loneliness an epidemic, wants to fix it

It’s official: On Tuesday, the U.S. Surgeon General declared loneliness as an epidemic in America.

Covid is so 2019. Loneliness is the new health concern.

“Our epidemic of loneliness and isolation has been an underappreciated public health crisis that has harmed individual and societal health. Our relationships are a source of healing and well-being hiding in plain sight – one that can help us live healthier, more fulfilled, and more productive lives,” Dr. Vivek Murthy said in a statement.

This is not new for Murthy, who has spoken to the topic before. In September, he also called loneliness an epidemic during remarks to management students at Yale University.

“Given the significant health consequences of loneliness and isolation, we must prioritize building social connection the same way we have prioritized other critical public health issues such as tobacco, obesity, and substance use disorders,” Murthy said. “Together, we can build a country that’s healthier, more resilient, less lonely, and more connected.”

“We expand circles of concern and advocacy by building relationships and getting to know people. That’s how we address deep inequities, pandemics, and poverty… We are talking fundamentally about the foundation of human society. It’s built on relationships, and that founding is eroding,” he said.

But Murthy is also talking about his own loneliness. In a column in the New York Times, he told the story of a patient who won the lottery and moved into a beautiful house in a gated community, only to be consumed with loneliness.

A patient of mine once shared with me a most unusual story. He had worked for years in the food industry with a modest salary and humble lifestyle. Then he won the lottery. Overnight, his life changed. He quit his job and moved into a large house in a gated community.

“Yet as he sat across from me, he sadly declared, ‘Winning the lottery was one of the worst things that ever happened to me.’ Wealthy but alone, this once vivacious, social man no longer knew his neighbors and had lost touch with his former co-workers. He soon developed high blood pressure and diabetes,” Murthy wrote.

“I thought about his story in 2017 when I found myself struggling with loneliness. My first stint as surgeon general had just ended. I was suddenly disconnected from the colleagues with whom I had spent most of my waking hours. It might not have been so bad had I not made a critical mistake: I had largely neglected my friendships during my tenure, convincing myself that I had to focus on work and I couldn’t do both,” he wrote in the New York Times.

“Even when I was physically with the people I loved, I wasn’t present — I was often checking the news and responding to messages in my inbox. After my job ended, I felt ashamed to reach out to friends I had ignored. I found myself increasingly lonely and isolated, and it felt as if I was the only one who felt that way. Loneliness — like depression, with which it can be associated — can chip away at your self-esteem and erode your sense of who you are. That’s what happened to me.”

Murthy, a doctor and vice admiral in the United States Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, has served as the 19th and 21st Surgeon General under Presidents Barack Obama, Donald Trump, and Joe Biden.

Senate passes $1,300 PFD

The Alaska State Senate passed Senate Bill 107 on Monday, which would drastically reduce the Permanent Fund dividends that Alaskans are set to receive this fall, in order to make more funds available for state spending. The amount for the dividend is $1,300 in SB 107.

Sponsored by Senate Finance Committee, SB 107 uses a “75-25” split, with 75% of the available Permanent Fund earnings going to pay for state government, and 25% leftovers appropriated for the PFDs.

The differences must now be ironed out with the House, which has proposed a $2,700 PFD, costing the budget some $1.7 billion and leave a budget shortfall of up to $800 million, which could be borrowed from the Constitutional Budget Reserve, if enough members of the House and Senate vote to allow it.

The House PFD formula is known as the “50-50 Plan,” because it splits available earnings from oil revenues half and half between the people of Alaska and the state government.

Senate leadership opposes the House’s plan, and the House majority opposes the 75-25 split. The governor has proposed a full statutory PFD of $3,400, which would eat up about $2.2 billion of the budget, but which follows the existing statutory formula.

The bill passed with 12 votes in favor, seven against, including four members of the majority joining with the three-member minority, made up of Senators Robert Myers, Shelley Hughes, and Mike Shower, in voting against. Sen. Scott Kawasaki was absent.

SB 107 does contain a clause that would allow a 50-50 dividend if the state gets $1.3 billion in new revenue (which would likely have to come through a tax on oil or on people) and if the Department of Revenue shows a balance of no less than $3.5 billion in the Constitution Budget Reserve, which is an account the Legislature can borrow from to balance the budget. The current balance in that account is $2.59 billion.

Sen. Myers tried to get approval of his amendment that said the PFD calculation would be sent to the people of Alaska for a vote, but his amendment failed. Sen. Jesse Kiehl, a Juneau Democrat, argued that it is inappropriate to delegate the Legislature’s authority to the people. Only Myers, Hughes, and Shower voted in favor of that amendment.

The Legislature is facing a deadline of May 17, the 121st day, when it must either gavel out or go into special session.

Nome school was on lockdown Monday after potential threat

Nome’s Beltz High School was put on lockdown after a concerning social media post was reported to the school’s administration.

Police were to detain the suspects responsible for the post, including an 18-year-old who was charged with terrorist threatening in the second degree, a class C felony. His social media post was on the SnapChat platform and had the words “Active Shooter,” and an image of a gun.

The 18-year-old was remanded to Mountain Correctional Center and charged with terroristic threatening in the second degree; he was held with no bail set.

A female juvenile was also taken into custody in the incident, said Police Chief Michael Heintzleman.

Last month, a middle-aged man in Juneau was arrested for planting cards around the community that appeared to be a threat against children. His case is still pending.

Alaska Airlines will allow male flight attendants to wear skirts and beards

Flyer beware: Alaska Airlines has made a huge concession in its ongoing legal battle involving the State of Washington and a male flight attendant who wanted to wear the female uniform for the flight attendance.

Justin Wetherell, a flight attendant and instructor at the airline, believes he is “nonbinary” and found it challenging to follow the airline’s uniform and grooming policies that are based on outdated sex stereotypes.

Nonbinary means the person does not believe there are only male and female mammals.

According to Wetherell and the ACLU, the company policy conflicts with the man’s nonbinary gender identity and “fluid gender expression,” which led to him being misgendered at work.

In the complaint filed by Wetherell, the ACLU, and Washington State Human Rights Commission against Alaska Airlines, it was argued that the airline’s gender-specific uniform policy violated the Washington State Law Against Discrimination. This law allows all employees to dress and groom in a way consistent with their gender identity and expression. In other words, a male flight attendant may wear a dress and also sport a beard or mustache if he chooses. He may also pair that beard with lipstick and makeup, as in he can come to work in drag.

Last week, a consent decree was issued after an agreement was reached between Alaska Airlines and the Washington State Attorney General’s Office. Alaska Airlines agreed to pay Wetherell $70,000 and separately pay the ACLU $40,000 for its legal fees.

As part of the settlement, the company will modify its uniform policy to remove all gender-based restrictions and language related to uniform pieces, facial hair, jewelry, and makeup.