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Unalaska school board, superintendent push Alaska State Legislature for education funding increase

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Unalaska school board, superintendent push Alaska State Legislature for education funding increase


Unalaska City School District officials are advocating for more education funding during their annual visits to the Alaska State Legislature. A top priority is increasing the base student allocation, or BSA — that’s a number the state uses to determine how much funding each district receives per student. Members of the UCSD school board flew into Juneau over the weekend to speak with representatives and address the Legislature. Superintendent Kim Hanisch is also slated to visit the state capital in late March.

Hanisch told KUCB’s Andy Lusk why the island’s representatives want the BSA to grow, and about challenges in retaining teachers.

This conversation has been edited for clarity and length.

TRANSCRIPTION:

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Kim Hanisch: During [the Association of Alaska School Boards legislative fly-in, board members are] training, [in] conference[s], learning about the legislation that’s out there. They get to take some time to really fine-tune their talking points. They’ll practice when they go in to speak to one of our legislators, or when they testify. So they get practice and gain some confidence. And then Monday, our board has appointments to visit with our local legislators, so we’ll be seeing Rep. Edgemon and then Senator Hoffman and Senator Olson as well.

Andy Lusk: Who would the board members be training with?

Hanisch: They will have some of it just with the Alaska Association of School Board staff, and then usually they’ll get someone from AML — Alaska Municipal League — and talk a lot about…budget. They’ll probably bring in a couple of school board members that have been active over the years to talk to them about how they advocate. And I’ll be going back [for] the superintendent fly-in…at the very end of March.

Lusk: Will you be talking about the same priorities at these separate meetings?

Hanisch: Our priorities will likely stay the same. We might approach them differently depending on where the bills are and which ones are still active. And by that time, there’s probably going to be new things that are thrown into them. So that part of it will change, but our underlying message will stay the same.

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Lusk: And what is that message?

Hanisch: Increase the BSA.

Lusk: Describe what exactly the BSA is and why it matters.

Hanisch: BSA itself stands for base student allocation. It’s the amount of money the state allocates per student.

There’s a huge formula that the numbers go through. Say we have 331 students, which we do right now, that starts the formula — then cost of living for us is taken into consideration, number of Special Ed students, CTE — all these factors go in there, so that a student in Unalaska now has a value that’s going to be different than a student in Anchorage, because it costs more to educate them here.

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So if we increase the base student allocation from where it is right now — and what our ask is for the next coming year is a $1,000 increase — if we calculate that out…that would bring in approximately $900,000 that we don’t have right now.

Lusk: That’s a lot.

Hanisch: That’s a lot. And being in the BSA instead of one-time funding means next year it’s still that amount, and the next year after, it’s still that amount — or maybe more. That still doesn’t inflation-proof us at that point, after 13 years of flat funding, but it would take some pressure off.

Lusk: And that’s priority number one, so what are some of the [others]?

Hanisch: Out of the list really, for us, considering hiring as well as retention, the BSA is going to have the most dramatic impact on us being able to afford teachers that want to come here. And then there’s two sister bills that are regarding retirement benefits. And so again, for retention, the retirement benefits are pretty important.

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Lusk: That’s pensions, right?

Hanisch: Yeah, giving people at least a choice between defined contributions and defined benefits.

Lusk: What makes these such pressing matters right now? What’s changed recently?

Hanisch: I’d say more, what hasn’t changed over the last 13 years — that’s an increase in the BSA. So we’ve been flat funded. Put in another way, as the cost of living increases, we don’t get any more money to pay for those expenses in any of the school districts in Alaska. So that’s the pressing issue: districts, including us, we’re getting to the point of near panic over what we’re supposed to do if we do not get that increase.

Lusk: Let’s say a member of the general public hears this interview and they say, ‘Oh, I’m also passionate about those issues. How can they get looped into this?’

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Hanisch: You can always be writing letters to our legislators. Specifically, that would be Hoffman and Edgmon. And by the way, our legislators are very much supportive of education, so you’re not going in to fight them. You’re going to say, ‘Keep doing it. Keep doing it. Keep doing it.’

If you’re wanting to testify during a specific committee meeting that’s taking place, the easiest way to access that information is through Gavel Alaska. Just do a quick search on that. It’ll show you any live meetings that are taking place. And then there’ll be a number that you call in. I just did it yesterday, as a matter of fact. So you call in, they’re going to ask your name, which committee you want to go into, and then you’re on a waiting list, and you just listen to everybody else, and pretty soon your name gets called up, and you get between two and three minutes.

Lusk: A little bit like a city council meeting.

Hanisch: Yes.

Lusk: What would you like the general public to know about all of this that maybe we haven’t touched on yet?

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Hanisch: We want everyone that’s part of our school community to be inspired to navigate unique and personal journeys.

Well, as the cost of living is going up and no extra money is coming in, to be able to achieve that becomes impossible because we can’t broaden programs. The only thing we can do is narrow what we can offer. It starts cutting into programs that were already [there] because that does take staffing to offer different programs. It starts making us look at class sizes. Students don’t get as inspired in a class that’s really large, and they don’t feel seen.

Those are some big things to really be thinking about. If we don’t have this funding, what’s the risk that we’re losing? Also, without that funding to be competitive in the salary market, people aren’t flocking into Alaska in general. They’re definitely not looking at areas that they can’t afford. It gets disheartening when we know that we’re going to struggle, but we will find quality teachers. They’re out there, but we’re going to be digging. Increasing that BSA would sure help a lot.

Lusk: If we can do a thought experiment for just a moment, I don’t want to think about the next couple of weeks — I want to think about maybe five to 10 years from now. What would you like to see change within that timeline to bring more teachers onto the island?

Hanisch: Have a competitive salary that allows them to show up here and not spend the first year trying to get out of debt. And I think that goes with anyone that moves here. So it’s not just teachers — that’s everybody.

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Jesuits say goodbye to Alaska at Bethel ceremony

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Jesuits say goodbye to Alaska at Bethel ceremony


The first Jesuit missionaries in Alaska sailed up the Yukon River in 1887. By the turn of the 20th century, the religious order of the Catholic Church had as many as 50 Jesuits in the state.

Now, only two remain. And by the end of June, there will be none.

The Jesuits’ nearly 140 years in the state was honored at an event at Bethel’s Immaculate Conception Church on June 16. A procession of priests wearing long white gowns with red hems walked down the aisle to open the event. The Bishop of the Diocese of Fairbanks, Stephen Maekawa, thumped the ground with a shimmering silver staff known as a clozier as he approached the altar.

Bishop of the Diocese of Fairbanks, Steven Maekawa, walks toward the altar at the Immaculate Conception Church in Bethel.

“My brothers and sisters, we gather together to celebrate this wonderful and blessed occasion to acknowledge the love of God and the work of God through the 139 year mission of the Society of Jesus of the Jesuit fathers,” Maekawa said to open the event.

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A traditional Catholic mass followed, with readings in both English and Yup’ik. During the sermon, Maekawa acknowledged the vastness of the Fairbanks diocese, and the tremendous amount of work done by the Jesuits to establish it.

“All of the 46 churches of the Diocese of Fairbanks that we currently have were established by either the Jesuit fathers or by direction of a Jesuit bishop,” Maekawa said. “We have a long history of the Society of Jesus’ presence and ministry here in all of Alaska.”

The Jesuits are an order within the Catholic Church, akin to the Dominicans or Franciscans. They have a reputation for taking on some of the Catholic Church’s most remote assignments.

That missionary spirit brought the Jesuits to the Yukon River in 1887, where they built churches, schools, and ministries. Without their work, Catholicism may not have taken root in huge swaths of Alaska, particularly among Alaska Native communities.

The Immaculate Conception Church in Bethel.
The Immaculate Conception Church in Bethel.

But the Jesuits leave a complicated legacy. Their methods of converting Native people to the religion, particularly in the first half of the 20th century, created generational traumas still felt to this day.

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Fr. Sean Carroll is the provincial of the Jesuits West Province, which oversees Alaska and nine other states.

Father Sean Carroll, provincial of the Jesuits West Province, speaks at an event recognizing nearly 140 years of Jesuit service in Alaska.
Fr. Sean Carroll, provincial of the Jesuits West Province, speaks at an event recognizing nearly 140 years of Jesuit service in Alaska.

“Thank you for all that you have taught us about who Jesus is and how to love and serve Him wholeheartedly,” Carroll said. “I also thank you for your patience with us. For there have been times when we have sinned and when we have hurt you.”

Missionaries, including the Jesuits, forcefully converted and assimilated Alaska Native people into Western culture and religion. Students at Jesuit-run boarding schools were forced to abandon their Native languages and physically punished when caught speaking languages other than English. Native dancing and drumming were also banned.

The Jesuits West Province maintains a list of 150 Jesuits with credible claims of sexual abuse against minors or vulnerable adults. A quarter of the accused Jesuits served in Alaska at some point in time.

“I ask for your forgiveness for all that we have done that was not rooted in Christ and love for Him, and for when we did not value your culture nor recognize the presence of God in you,” Carroll said.

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Carroll gave the order to withdraw from the state last spring. A big issue was the recruitment of Jesuits willing to travel and serve in remote villages. He told the congregation that the Jesuits’ work would continue, just without a permanent presence.

Father Rich Magner, one of the two remaining Jesuit priests in Alaska, attends a ceremony in Bethel.
Fr. Rich Magner, one of the two remaining Jesuit priests in Alaska, attends a ceremony in Bethel.

Fr. Rich Magner is one of the two remaining Jesuit priests in Alaska. His last day serving Chevak, Hooper Bay, and Scammon Bay is June 30.

“We all always knew coming in, or should have known, that we’re not going to be here forever. It’s going to be mission accomplished at some point,” Magner said. “And then we hand it off to the diocese that we’ve helped create, and so that’s a good feeling.”

Magner’s next stop is a Clinical Pastoral Education residency in Tacoma, Washington.

The other remaining priest, Fr. Tom Provinsal, first came to Alaska in 1968 to teach. A fond memory, he said, was meeting Elders that practiced traditional subsistence lifestyles.

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“Some of the grandmothers, their fingers were just all bent with arthritis and stuff like that, you know, their whole lives they’ve been working out in the cold and the wet, doing food, sewing, all that kind of stuff,” Provinsal said. “I’d say I just feel very privileged to have come when I did come and to see that.”

Provinsal returned in 1975 as a priest and has served in the region ever since. After moving away, he plans to take a five month sabbatical. What happens next, he said, is in God’s hands.

Two lines formed in the aisle for communion at the end of the mass. After taking communion, Bethel’s Parish Administrator Susan Murphy gave a final thank you.

“It’s difficult to say goodbye to people who have been a part of our lives for so long,” Murphy said. “We know that you have done what was yours to do, and have taught us to do what is ours to do. We are grateful.”

Jesuit priests form a row along the altar of Bethel's Immaculate Conception Church as members of the congregation lift their arms and pray.
Jesuit priests form a row along the altar of Bethel’s Immaculate Conception Church as members of the congregation lift their arms and pray.

Dominic Hunt, a Yup’ik deacon that flew in from Emmonak for the event, led the congregation through a final prayer.

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“Bless them with your wisdom, that they may be a word of hope, a world in need. We ask this through Christ, our Lord. Amen,” Hunt said.

About 70 people posed for a photo on the altar – priests, deacons, parishioners, Elders and children — many of them smiling, some standing quietly.

The photo doesn’t tell the whole story. But it’s a moment when gratitude, grief, and memory all shared the same room.

Bishop of the Diocese of Fairbanks, Steven Maekawa, stands in the middle of a crowd waiting to take a photo at Bethel's Immaculate Conception Church.
Bishop of the Diocese of Fairbanks, Steven Maekawa, stands in the middle of a crowd waiting to take a photo at Bethel’s Immaculate Conception Church.





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Alaska Supreme Court to take up case on Dan J. Sullivan, decision expected by Tuesday

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Alaska Supreme Court to take up case on Dan J. Sullivan, decision expected by Tuesday


JUNEAU, Alaska (KTUU) – The Supreme Court of Alaska will be taking up the case of the State of Alaska, Division of Elections v. Daniel J. Sullivan, Jr.

The oral arguments will be held Monday at 10 a.m. via Zoom, according to an order and opening notice.

The document also specifies that a decision is expected to be made before noon on Tuesday.

According to documents from the Division of Elections, the state must start printing ballots at noon on the same day.

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This comes after an Anchorage Superior Court Judge ordered Dan J. Sullivan on to the ballot Friday.

See a spelling or grammar error? Report it to web@ktuu.com

Copyright 2026 KTUU. All rights reserved.



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Mat-Su Initial Attack Responding to Fire in Flat Lake

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Mat-Su Initial Attack Responding to Fire in Flat Lake


An engine and firefighters from the Division of Forestry & Fire Protection’s Mat-Su Area are responding to a fire near Flat Lake.

A caller reported a fire on an island in Flat Lake, with 2 foot flame lengths and structures near by.

The engine crew responding will be shuttled by boat to the fire. The fire is currently reported as .1 acre, creeping and smoldering.

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Additional updates will be shared as they become available.

‹ Pioneer Peak Hotshots, Gannett Glacier Crew Join Fight Against 2 Fires Near Ruby

Categories: Active Wildland Fire

Tags: #FireYear2026 #2026AKFIRESEASON, 2026 Alaska Fire Season



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