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New director of Alaska Wildlife Troopers Division named

Alaska Department of Public Safety Commissioner James Cockrell has appointed Bernard Chastain as the director of the Alaska Wildlife Troopers Division. Colonel Chastain has been with the Department of Public Safety since September 1998 and has worked across the state in multiple locations as an Alaska Wildlife Trooper.  

“I have worked with Bernard Chastain throughout my 30-year career with DPS, and know that he will excel at leading the Alaska Wildlife Troopers as their new director,” said  Alaska Department of Public Safety Commissioner James Cockrell. “I know Bernard will continue to drive the positive momentum that was started by retired Colonel Doug Massie for the Alaska Wildlife Troopers and will be an exceptional leader for our fish and wildlife enforcement division.”   

Colonel Chastain worked as an Alaska Wildlife Trooper in Soldotna and Glennallen before being promoted to Sergeant of the Ketchikan Alaska Wildlife Troopers Post. He later supervised the AWT Wildlife Investigations Unit, the major crimes investigation arm of the Alaska Wildlife Troopers and was promoted to the AWT operations captain in Anchorage.

Since 2015 Chastain has worked as both a major (deputy director) in the Alaska Wildlife Troopers and the Alaska State Troopers, overseeing the DPS Aircraft Section and other significant programs and projects within DPS.

Chastain graduated from the Northwestern University School of Police Staff and Command, the North America Conservation Law Enforcement Leadership Academy and is the 2010 recipient of the Shikar Safari International Award; an award that recognizes significant achievement in resource law enforcement. 

“I am deeply honored to have the privilege to lead the Alaska Wildlife Troopers and help support the incredible men and women that drive this mission across the state every day,” Chastain said. “As AWT begins its 51st year of service to Alaska I know that our division will continue to protect Alaska’s vast fishing and game resources for the benefit of all Alaskans and hold those that flaunt Alaska’s regulations and laws accountable for their actions.” 

Pre-filed bills released and there are big ones: Repealing Ballot Measure 2, gold and silver as legal tender, and more

The first release of bills is now available for the public to see in advance of the Legislature, which convenes next week in Juneau. The list includes all manner of legislation, from making gold and silver coins acceptable as legal tender in Alaska, to prohibiting discrimination against Israel in state contracts, to making gay marriage legally recognized through a constitutional amendment, and moving the legislative session to the road system.

Two bills in the House would repeal 2020’s Ballot Measure 2, which dismantled the normal primary voting in Alaska and enacted ranked choice voting in the general election, leading to the lowest voter turnout in decades in Alaska. Reps. George Rauscher of Sutton and Sarah Vance of Homer offered similar bills, here and here. Sen. Mike Shower introduced a similar bill in the Senate.

Democrat Rep. Andy Josephson has a joint resolution, HJR 1, proposing voters be given the chance to repeal Article I, sec. 25, of the Alaska Constitution. Section 25 was added by voters in 1998 and says that same-sex marriages are not recognized by the State.

Sen. David Wilson has filed SB 8, a bill to remove the “certificate of need” clause from law, which inhibits competition in health care in Alaska. Certificates of need prevent hospitals and clinics from providing care.

SB 19 by Sen. Scott Kawasaki of Fairbanks would move Alaska to a mail-in election system. Kawasaki has another bill, SB 17, that would limit campaign contributions to certain political entities to $700 a year.

SJR 1 by Sen. Bill Wielechowski would ask voters if they want to put the Permanent Fund dividend in the Alaska Constitution under one of the Constitution’s guaranteed rights.

SJR 2 by Sen. Shelley Hughes would ask voters to make it clear that they don’t want the state paying for abortions: “To protect human life, nothing in this constitution may be construed to secure or protect a right to an abortion or require the State to fund an abortion.”

Check back at Must Read Alaska for stories about these bills and others in coming days.

Other bills filed:

HB 1REPEAL BALLOT MEASURE 2 VOTING CHGSREPRESENTATIVE RAUSCHER
HB 2CONTRACTS: PROHIBIT ISRAEL DISCRIMINATIONREPRESENTATIVE VANCE
HB 3GOLD AND SILVER SPECIE AS LEGAL TENDERREPRESENTATIVE MCCABE
HB 4ELECTIONS: REPEAL BALLOT MEASURE 2REPRESENTATIVE VANCE
HB 5HOLD LEGISLATIVE SESSIONS IN ANCHORAGEREPRESENTATIVE RAUSCHER
HB 6PUBLIC SCHOOLS; OPIOID AWARENESS PROGRAMREPRESENTATIVE RAUSCHER
HB 7OFFICE OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGSREPRESENTATIVE HANNAN
HB 8ELECTRIC-ASSISTED BICYCLESREPRESENTATIVE CARRICK
HB 9ADD FACULTY MEMBER UNIV BOARD OF REGENTSREPRESENTATIVE CARRICK
HB 10UNIVERSITY: TEXTBOOKS/MATERIALS COSTREPRESENTATIVE CARRICK
HB 11CRIME: ASSAULT IN THE PRESENCE OF A CHILDREPRESENTATIVE JOSEPHSON
HB 12MUNICIPAL REGULATION OF TRAPPINGREPRESENTATIVE JOSEPHSON
HB 13APPLICABILITY OF HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSIONREPRESENTATIVE JOSEPHSON
HB 14AGGRAVATING FACTORS AT SENTENCINGREPRESENTATIVE JOSEPHSON
HB 15PEER SUPPORT COUNSELING PROGRAMREPRESENTATIVE JOSEPHSON
HB 16MEDICAID OPTIONAL SVCS & COST CONTAINMENTREPRESENTATIVE JOSEPHSON
HB 17CONTRACEPTIVES COVERAGE:INSURE;MED ASSISTREPRESENTATIVE CARRICK
HB 18FISHERY DEVELOPMENT ASSOC.; ASSESSMENTSREPRESENTATIVE STUTES
HB 19REGISTRATION OF BOATS: EXEMPTIONREPRESENTATIVE STUTES
HB 20CONFLICT OF INTEREST: BD FISHERIES/GAMEREPRESENTATIVE STUTES
HB 21SCHOOL/UNIVERSITY EMPLOYEE HEALTH INSURREPRESENTATIVE VANCE
HB 22PEACE OFFICER/FIREFIGHTER RETIRE BENEFITSREPRESENTATIVE JOSEPHSON
HB 23FILIPINO AMERICAN HISTORY MONTHREPRESENTATIVE MINA
HB 24GOV APPOINT BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF AK BARREPRESENTATIVE RAUSCHER
HB 25PFD ELIGIBILITY UNIFORMED SERVICESREPRESENTATIVE STORY
HB 26COUNCIL FOR ALASKA NATIVE LANGUAGESREPRESENTATIVE STORY
HB 27DESIGNATE SEX FOR SCHOOL-SPONSORED SPORTSREPRESENTATIVE MCKAY
HB 28ACCESS TO MARIJUANA CONVICTION RECORDSREPRESENTATIVE WRIGHT
HB 29INSURANCE DISCRIMINATIONREPRESENTATIVE MCCABE
HB 30OBSERVE DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME ALL YEARREPRESENTATIVE ORTIZ
HB 31AK PERFORMANCE SCHOLARSHIP; ELIGIBILITYREPRESENTATIVE STORY
HB 32OIL & GAS WORKING GROUP; APPEALSREPRESENTATIVE MCKAY
HB 33OIL SPILLS/POLLUTION:PENALTIES;PREVENTIONREPRESENTATIVE JOSEPHSON
HJR 1CONST. AM: REPEAL MARRIAGE SECTIONREPRESENTATIVE JOSEPHSON
SB 1ELECTIONS: BALLOT, VOTING, SECURITYSENATOR SHOWER
SB 2REPEAL BALLOT MEASURE 2 VOTING CHGSSENATOR SHOWER
SB 3HEALTH INS. INFO.; INCENTIVES/AGREEMENTSSENATOR HUGHES
SB 4LEGISLATIVE ETHICS: BINDING VOTESSENATOR SHOWER
SB 5VOTER REGISTRATIONSENATOR SHOWER
SB 6VOTING MACHINES AND VOTE TALLY SYSTEMSSENATOR SHOWER
SB 7ELECTION INTERFERENCE, FRAUD, MISCONDUCTSENATOR SHOWER
SB 8REPEAL CERTIFICATE OF NEED PROGRAMSENATOR WILSON
SB 9ALASKA SUNSET COMMISSIONSENATOR HUGHES
SB 10HUNTING/TRAPPING/FISHING: DISABLED VETSSENATOR KIEHL
SB 11TEACHERS & PUB EMPLOYEE RETIREMENT PLANSSENATOR KIEHL
SB 12ADDRESS CONFIDENTIALITY PROGRAMSENATOR KIEHL
SB 13UNIVERSITY: TEXTBOOKS/MATERIALS COSTSENATOR MYERS
SB 14RIP FOR PUBLIC EMPLOYEES/TEACHERSSENATOR KAWASAKI
SB 15PERSONAL USE FISHING PRIORITYSENATOR KAWASAKI
SB 16AK COMMUNITY HEALTH AIDE APPRECIATION DAYSENATOR KAWASAKI
SB 17CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTIONSSENATOR KAWASAKI
SB 18ALLOW ELECTRONIC DRIVERS’ LICENSES AND IDSENATOR KAWASAKI
SB 19ELECTIONS; BALLOTSSENATOR KAWASAKI
SB 20APPROPRIATION LIMIT; GOV BUDGETSENATOR KAUFMAN
SB 21STRATEGIC PLANS FOR STATE AGENCIESSENATOR KAUFMAN
SB 22PROCLAIM JUNETEENTH DAY A HOLIDAYSENATOR GRAY-JACKSON
SB 23LAW ENFORCEMENT: REGISTRY; USE OF FORCESENATOR GRAY-JACKSON BY REQUEST
SB 24PUBLIC SCHOOLS: MENTAL HEALTH EDUCATIONSENATOR GRAY-JACKSON
SB 25REPEALING FUNDS, ACCOUNTS, AND PROGRAMSSENATOR KAUFMAN
SB 26LICENSE PLATES: FALLEN PEACE OFFICERSSENATOR KAUFMAN
SB 27CONTRACEPTIVES COVERAGE:INSURE;MED ASSISTSENATOR CLAMAN
SB 28WORKPLACE VIOLENCE PROTECTIVE ORDERSSENATOR CLAMAN
SB 29CIVICS EDUCATION; EST AK CVCS ED COMMSENATOR STEVENS
SB 30FILIPINO AMERICAN HISTORY MONTHSENATOR GRAY-JACKSON
SJR 1CONST AM: GUARANTEE PERM FUND DIVIDENDSENATOR WIELECHOWSKI
SJR 2CONST. AM: ABORTION/FUNDINGSENATOR HUGHES
SJR 3CONST. AM: APPROP LIMITSENATOR MYERS
SJR 4CONST. AM: APPROP LIMITSENATOR KAUFMAN

Dunleavy appoints Brett Huber to chair of Alaska Oil and Gas Conservation Commission

Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy announced the appointment of Brett Huber as the Chair of the Alaska Oil and Gas Conservation Commission. Huber has nearly 30 years of public policy and oil and gas industry experience and will occupy the public seat.

“With Mr. Huber’s vast knowledge and background in resource development in Alaska, I am proud to appoint him in this role,” said Gov. Dunleavy. “I look forward to watching his efforts to protect public interest and do what’s best for Alaska and her people.”

Huber moved to Alaska in 1984 from Colorado. Among many positions in his early career, he used to design and install geomembranes for Alaska oil and gas operations on the North Slope and Kenai Peninsula.

He has three decades’ worth of experience in public policy with a focus on natural resources, specifically oil and gas. Previously, he held various leadership positions in the Alaska Legislature, with a focus on oil and gas, land, fish, and wildlife issues. Later on, under the Dunleavy Administration, he served as the governor’s senior policy advisor and communications director. He was the campaign manager for Dunleavy’s first run for office in 2018 and was involved with a campaign independent group that supported Dunleavy’s successful bid for reelection.

“I am humbled and excited to be appointed by Governor Dunleavy to this important role as the chair,” Huber said.  “I look forward to furthering the public interest in exploring and developing Alaska’s valuable oil, gas, and geothermal resources while protecting the Alaska we love.”

AOGCC is an independent, quasi-judicial agency of the State of Alaska. The commission oversees oil and gas drilling, development and production, reservoir depletion, and metering operations on all lands subject to the state’s police powers. Their mission is to protect the public interest in exploration and development of Alaska’s resources, through the application of conservation practices designed to ensure greater ultimate recovery and the protection of health, safety, fresh ground waters and the rights of all owners to recover their share of the resource.

AOGCC is one of over 30 states that have such commissions that are members of the Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Commission.

Mr. Huber starts the position today, Jan. 9, 2023.

War on gas stoves heats up as fad-following regulators take fresh aim at banning them everywhere in America

U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commissioner Richard Trumka Jr. has said the agency will take action against household gas stoves, which he says are linked to asthma and other respiratory issues.

Trumka made the statement to a Bloomberg reporter for a report published Monday.

But it’s not the first time in recent weeks he has talked about banning gas cooking appliances. Sanctions against gas stoves are very likely to all-out bans on them, he said in December.

“We need to be talking about regulating gas stoves, whether that’s drastically improving emissions or banning gas stoves entirely. And I think we ought to keep that possibility of a ban in mind, because it’s a powerful tool in our tool belt and it’s a real possibility here,” he told the Public Interest Research Group network in a press availability with the group held online.

For over two years, the environmentalist-driven campaign against gas stoves has increased. As of Jan. 1, 2023, Los Angeles has banned gas stoves in new residential and commercial buildings. There are now more than 50 cities with similar bans or tight regulations, such as Seattle and San Francisco.

Chefs — professional and home — say they prefer gas stovetops because they get more precise control over the temperature of their dishes. And cooking and eating at home is traditionally at the heart of a strong family life, as Americans know it.

But the war on natural gas, which started with Democrats and environmental NGOs and their push for a no-fossil-fuel future, has now found a new ally: children’s health experts, who link natural gas stoves to childhood asthma. According to the Energy Information Agency, about 38% of homes use gas for cooking, but in states such as New Jersey, gas heats up 69% of stoves.

“Berkeley was the pilot light of this movement. The city was the first to ban gas connections in new buildings in 2019, something the California Restaurant Association is still fighting in court. The speed at which other municipalities followed, from Seattle to New York to other cities across California, only underscores how the culture of lawmaking often is the culture of fads,” wrote Judson Berger in the National Review in 2021.

But what about the people who love to cook with gas, especially Latinos and those who cook Asian dishes in woks?

“Ironically, these measures — being driven by progressives in Democrat-run cities to fight climate change — will end up disproportionately disadvantaging minority communities, namely immigrant communities whose cooking cultures are far less compatible with electric stoves,” Berger wrote. “SFWeekly, covering last year’s debate in San Francisco, drew attention to this disparate impact, focusing again on the art of the wok while noting how Latin American cooking likewise relies on flame.”

Democrat Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey and other Democrats in December implored the agency to take action against gas stoves in a letter that called the emissions a “cumulative burden” on black, Latino and lower-income Americans. The letter was co-signed by Democrat Sen. Patty Murray of Washington and socialist Bernie Sanders of Vermont, among others, including Senators Dianne Feinstein (D-CA), Martin Heinrich (D-NM), Ed Markey (D-MA), Jeff Merkley (D-OR), and Elizabeth Warren (D-MA).

From the House, the letter is co-signed by Representatives Jared Huffman (D-CA), Shontel M. Brown (D-OH), Mark Takano (D-CA), Alan S. Lowenthal (D-CA), Ted Lieu (D-CA), André Carson (D-IN), Barbara Lee (D-CA), Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC), Gwen S. Moore (D-WI), Stephen F. Lynch (D-MA), and Katie Porter (D-CA).

The lawmakers’ letter is at this link.

With Democrats and environmentalists declaring a coordinated war on gas stoves, at least some are pushing back.

The California Restaurant Association is one of those. It says that a much-cited Sierra Club/UCLA study of effects of residual gas appliances on public health are misleading and the science behind the study is not valid. UCLA inflated the risk of using gas stoves by using incorrect and misleading comparisons of emissions to established air quality standards.

“California chefs rely on gas stoves to grill vegetables, sear meats and create meals of all kinds inspired by cuisines from all over the world,” said Jot Condie, President of the California Restaurant Association. “We are concerned that misleading health claims could lead to the loss of flame cooking, which would dramatically impact restaurants and the work of chefs and cooks, all of whom have endured enough during COVID-19. The CRA believes policy and regulatory decisions should be based on accurate and sound science.”

“In order to make informed decisions, policymakers and regulators must have the most accurate information available to them,” said Dan Tormey, president of Catalyst Environmental Solutions and chief author of the report. “The UCLA study mischaracterizes emissions from gas stoves while advocating for an expensive and burdensome transition to all-electric.”

Gov. Abbott serves Biden letter during El Paso trip: ‘even the city you visit has been sanitized of migrant camps’

By BETHANY BLANKLEY | THE CENTER SQUARE

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott on Sunday urged President Joe Biden to implement five policies to help secure the U.S. southern border, hand delivering him a letter after the president landed at the El Paso International Airport for his first visit to the border since he took office.

“Thousands of Texans have lost their lives,” Abbott told reporters, saying he told the president that the chaos at the border was a result of the president’s “refusal to enforce immigration law” already passed by Congress.

He said the president’s visit was “two years and $20 billion too late” and argued Biden avoided crisis areas and meeting with Texas property owners whose lives were being “destroyed” by his policies.

Biden didn’t speak publicly or field questions from the media during his visit Sunday.

In his letter, Abbott told the president, “even the city you visit has been sanitized of the migrant camps which have overrun downtown El Paso because your administration wants to shield you from the chaos that Texans experience on a daily basis,” which is a direct result “of your failure to enforce the immigration laws that Congress enacted.”

While illegal immigration slowed under the Trump administration, Abbott said, under Biden’s watch, “America is suffering the worst illegal immigration in the history of our country.”

He said he told the president, “Your open-border policies have emboldened the cartels, who grow wealthy by trafficking deadly fentanyl and even human beings. Texans are paying an especially high price for your failure, sometimes with their very lives, as local leaders from your own party will tell you if given the chance.”

“All of this is happening,” he said, because the president has violated his “constitutional obligation to defend the states against invasion through faithful execution of federal laws.”

Abbott said he welcomed the president to the southern border. After Biden was finished with “photo-ops in a carefully stage-managed version of El Paso,” Abbott said, he “must” implement the policies he suggested. They include complying with federal law requiring detention and deportation of those in the U.S. illegally, fully complying with court orders to implement Remain in Mexico and Title 42 policies, finishing building the border wall in Texas, and designating Mexican drug cartels as foreign terrorist organizations.

The first proposal, requiring illegal foreign nationals to be detained to “end the practice of unlawfully paroling aliens en masse,” the Biden administration is currently fighting in court in a lawsuit filed by Florida. A trial begins Monday in that lawsuit.

The second, to “stop sandbagging the implementation of the Remain in Mexico policy and Title 42 expulsions, and fully enforce those measures as the federal courts have ordered you to do,” is also being fought in court by the Biden administration in a lawsuit brought by Texas and Missouri. Arizona, Texas and 17 other states sued over Title 42, and have so far prevailed in the courts to halt it from being terminated.

The third, to “aggressively prosecute illegal entry between ports of entry and allow ICE to remove illegal immigrants in accordance with federal laws,” the Biden administration is also fighting in court. Nineteen attorneys general filed a brief with the Supreme Court in attempt to get the administration to comply with federal deportation requirements.

The fourth, to “immediately resume construction of the border wall” in Texas, is something the administration has vowed not to do after it halted construction shortly after the president took office. In the federal government’s absence, Abbott was the first governor to build a wall on Texas soil, which broke ground in December 2021.

The fifth was a continued call by the governor requesting the president to designate cartels as FTOs. 

Abbott told reporters on Sunday that Biden’s response was “cordial” and that the president said he “wanted to work with Republicans.”

Abbott also said the president “has never called me to discuss” the “chaos at the border.” He said, “I’ve provided him with real solutions” and “I expect him to call me.”

Of the policies proposed by Biden and Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas last week, Abbott said, “they will do nothing more than entice more illegal immigration.”

He also said that “Texas desperately needs more money” after having already spent $4 billion of Texas taxpayer money on border security efforts. The Texas Legislature, which convenes on Tuesday, will be committing at least another $4 billion to ongoing border security efforts, he said.

He also said U.S. House Republicans have committed to border security measures and he expects the federal government to reimburse Texas. Its border security mission, as of Jan. 6 and since March 2021, has led to the apprehension of more than 340,000 illegal foreign nationals and criminal arrests of over 23,000 people with over 21,000 felony charges reported. They’ve also seized over 355 million lethal doses of fentanyl.

Abbott pointed to Democratic Colorado Gov. Jared Polis sending busloads of people to Chicago and New York because “we don’t have the capability to cover them,” but “self-described sanctuary cities have the capacity to deal with this.”

Texas has bused over 9,100 people to Washington, D.C., since April, over 4,900 to New York City and over 1,500 to Chicago since August, and over 840 to Philadelphia since November, his office said.

Anchorage Assembly keeps interviews of five candidates for vacancy out of public reach

Although the Anchorage Assembly held interviews of the five candidates for an open East Anchorage seat in public on Friday, and while the interviews were live on YouTube, they have been not posted for the general members of the public who were not able to watch them during a meeting that occurred during the workday.

Thus, the public knows who won the vote — Stephen “Joey” Sweet — but doesn’t know what questions were asked of candidates or how they answered them.

The Municipal Clerk’s Office was supposed to post the interviews, but only posted the actual vote on the replacement for Forrest Dunbar, who left the Assembly to serve in the Alaska Senate.

Normally, live broadcasts go dark and are reposted on YouTube the following day. In this instance, the interview process went dark, and never came back, at least not as of Sunday afternoon, which means the public doesn’t have access to what should be an open meeting covered by the Open Meetings Act. Several readers have asked for the link to those interviews, which led to the vote for Sweet to serve out the remainder of Dunbar’s term. The public is especially interested in the questions asked of the applicants, since the Assembly has another vacancy to fill this month, this time for Eagle River.

No explanation has been given for blacking out the interviews. The voting for Sweet occurred after the interviews on Jan. 6, and was posted normally:

Anchorage Muni clerk posts which seats are open for April 4 election, along with filing materials

It’s election season in Anchorage. The annual Anchorage municipal elections will start with candidates filing for office at the end of this week and the season will finish up on April 4, the last day that voters can choose between the candidates who appear on ballots in their mailboxes.

Anchorage votes with mail-in or drop-off ballots primarily, with no usual precinct voting available to residents during the local elections, which are run by the municipal clerk, who reports to the Assembly, which dictated vote-at-home through an ordinance in 2017. Cost of elections have more than doubled since the Assembly passed the ordinance.

Ballots are mailed to qualified voters about 21 days before the April 4 end of the voting period, which means on March 14 ballots will be in the mail.

Filing for the open Assembly, School Board, and service area seats takes place in a short window from Jan. 13-17 at the Clerk’s Office. Propositions that will appear on the ballot will be posted in mid-February. To be eligible to vote in this election, you must be registered with the state Division of Elections no later than 30 days before Election Day, with an Anchorage address.

A candidate for municipal office must be:

  • a resident of the Municipality of Anchorage, and
  • a qualified voter of the Municipality of Anchorage and the State of Alaska,
  • among other specific qualifications.

Municipal and state requirements for filing for Municipal office are detailed below:

Seats that will be on the April 4 ballot include:

​​​​Anchorage Assembly Candidates​​​​

  • District 1 – Seat ​B – North Anchorage. This is the seat currently held by Chris Constant.
  • District 2 – Seat C – Chugiak, Eagle River, JBER. This is the seat currently held by outgoing member Jamie Allard. The Assembly will appoint a temporary member to fill the vacancy until April 25.
  • District 3 – Seat E – West Anchorage. This is the seat currently held by Austin Quinn-Davidson, who has said she will retire.
  • District 4 – Seat G – Midtown Anchorage. This is the seat held by Felix Rivera.
  • District 5 – Seat H – East Anchorage (2-Year Term). This is the seat formerly held by Forrest Dunbar, now temporarily held by Joey Sweet.
  • ​District 5 – S​eat I – East Anchorage. This is the seat held by Pete Petersen, who is term-limited and cannot run.
  • District 6 – Seat K – South Anchorage, Girdwood, Turnagain Arm​​. This is the seat held by Assembly Chair Suzanne LaFrance.

Anchorage School Board Candidates

  • School Board – Seat C. This is the seat held by Dave Donley.
  • School Board – Seat D​​. This is the seat held by Andy Holleman.

Service Area Board of Supervisors​​

  • Bear Valley LRSA – Seat A
  • Birch Tree/Elmore LRSA – Seat A
  • Birch Tree/Elmore LRSA – Seat D​
  • Birch Tree/Elmore LRSA – Seat E
  • Chugiak Fire Service Area – Seat A​
  • Girdwood Valley Service Area – Seat D
  • Girdwood Valley Service Area – Seat E
  • Glen Alps Service Area – Seat A
  • Glen Alps Service Area – Seat B
  • Homestead LRSA – Seat A
  • Lakehill LRSA – Seat C
  • Mt. Park Estates LRSA – Seat B
  • Mt. Park/Robin Hill RRSA – Seat C
  • Mt. Park/Robin Hill RRSA – Seat D
  • Paradise Valley South LRSA – Seat B
  • Rabbit Creek View/Heights LRSA – Seat B​
  • Raven Woods/Bubbling Brook LRSA – Seat B 
  • Rockhill LRSA – Seat B
  • Section 6/Campbell Airstrip Road LRSA – Seat A
  • Sequoia Estates LRSA – Seat A
  • Sequoia Estates LRSA – Seat B
  • Skyranch Estates LRSA – Seat B
  • South Goldenview RRSA – Seat A
  • SRW Homeowner’s LRSA – Seat C
  • Talus West LRSA – Seat A
  • Totem LRSA – Seat B
  • Upper Grover LRSA – Seat B
  • Upper O’Malley LRSA – Seat A
  • Valli Vue Estates LRSA – Seat B
  • Valli Vue Estates LRSA – Seat E
  • Villages Scenic Parkway LRSA – Seat A

Sen. Dan Sullivan, on eve of president’s long-awaited visit to border, says crisis is dereliction of duty by Biden

By BETHANY BLANKLEY | THE CENTER SQUARE | AND MUST READ ALASKA

Ahead of President Joe Biden’s visit to El Paso on Sunday, the city on the border with Mexico began clearing the sidewalks of homeless migrants, online video from the city shows.

A local border security group organized by a Border Patrol agent’s wife plans a protest during Biden’s visit.

Biden’s trip is his first to the southern border since he’s been president. His visit is to a sector where Border Patrol agents say they are overwhelmed with an influx of people. A border agent was shot there Thursday.

A humanitarian crisis developed in the city over the past few months, El Paso Mayor Oscar Leeser says. The city began busing thousands out last year but as numbers reached historic levels last month, Leeser declared a state of emergency. 

On Dec. 6, Biden said he wasn’t visiting the border because he had “more important things to do.”

Nearly one month later to the day, he reversed course and on Thursday, said he was going to El Paso because the city “needed help.” He also announced he was expanding the parole process to release more people into the U.S., a policy over which he’s already been sued for allegedly violating federal law.

Sen. Dan Sullivan of Alaska said, “While I’m glad to see President Biden finally visit the border, it is unfathomable that he has not done so yet as president  – or apparently ever – especially when considering the crises that have unfolded under his watch. The humanitarian crisis, the national security crisis, and the health care crisis transpiring right now on our southern border is a tragedy of immense proportions and furthermore, a dereliction of duty that this president and his administration continue to turn a blind eye to and, at times, appears to deliberately worsen.”

Sullivan said the Biden Administration has underfunded the Border Patrol and “stopped construction of the border wall, halted deportations, and suspended the successful ‘remain in Mexico’ policy. The result? Since President Biden took office, there have been more than 4.3 million illegal crossings at the southern border.”

Alaska is not a border state, Sullivan noted, but the crisis has reached Alaska “like every other, including our most rural communities, every day. Alaska experienced the largest percent increase in drug overdose deaths in 2021 of any state. Nationally, drug overdose deaths over the last two years – largely driven by fentanyl – have become the leading cause of death for adults ages 18-45 years old. In 2022, over 14,000 pounds of fentanyl was seized at the border – a new record high. This is enough to kill the entire U.S. population 9 times.”

Sullivan said it’s past time President Biden accept responsibility for this self-made disaster and start enforcing the nation’s immigration laws. “The successful ‘remain in Mexico’ program needs to be kept and our southern border wall needs to be completed,” he said.

Irene Armendariz-Jackson, president of a Border Security Coalition and wife of a Border Patrol agent, has been posting videos online of the streets of El Paso before and after Biden’s announcement. One video posted Jan. 1 shows people lying on the ground next to each other wrapped in blankets.

It may be a new year but it’s the same border crisis,” she said. “Here are some videos of El Paso just yesterday. A humanitarian nightmare is unfolding.”

On Jan. 3, local writer Ivan Pierre Aguirre posted video of people lying on the sidewalk in near freezing temperatures.

“With near freezing temperatures in El Paso early (6:45 am) this morning a group of migrants who stayed the night outside use the heat coming from the engine of a parked bus to try to keep warm,” he said. “When asked if they care about standing near the fumes they said they risk to try to stay warm.”

Lt. Gov. Nancy Dahlstrom retains chief of staff, scheduler, and hires special assistant

Alaska Lt. Gov. Nancy Dahlstrom announced she retained Josh Applebee as her chief of staff. Applebee served as the chief of staff to former Lt. Gov. Kevin Meyer.

Dahlstrom retained Kim Griffith as her scheduler, and hired Kelly Howell as her special assistant.

Howell is the only new addition to the office, but she is not new to state service. A lifelong Alaskan, Howell was born in Fairbanks and is the daughter of a retired Alaska State Trooper. She was raised in Fairbanks, Nome, and Anchorage, and started working for the State of Alaska in 1996 with the Department of Health and Social Services. She spent the past 18 years working for the Department of Public Safety, where she held several different positions, including administrative services director and, most recently, legislative liaison and special assistant to the commissioner.

“As we enter a new term, I am grateful to have Kelly join our office,” said Lt. Gov. Dahlstrom. “I have had the privilege of getting to know and work with Kelly over the years. I am confident our office will greatly benefit from her robust experience in the Department of Public Safety and the Department of Health.”

Applebee worked in the Parnell Administration as deputy director of health care policy, and was chief of staff to Sen. Kevin Meyer before Meyer was elected to the office of lieutenant governor.