Alaska
Peltola challenges Sullivan in Alaska
Democrats are going after Alaska’s Senate race this year, and they’ve landed probably the only candidate that can make it competitive: Mary Peltola.
The former congresswoman on Monday jumped into the race against GOP Sen. Dan Sullivan, adding yet another hard-fought campaign to what Democrats hope is shaping up to be a wave year that could carry them in red states like Alaska.
Peltola certainly doesn’t sound like a typical Democratic candidate as she starts her bid: She’s proposing term limits, is campaigning on “fish, family and freedom,” and has already name-dropped former Republican officials in her state multiple times.
“Ted Stevens and Don Young ignored lower 48 partisanship to fight for things like public media and disaster relief because Alaska depends on them,” Peltola says in her launch video, referencing the former GOP senator and House member, respectively.
“DC people will be pissed that I’m focusing on their self-dealing, and sharing what I’ve seen firsthand. They’re going to complain that I’m proposing term limits. But it’s time,” she says.
Peltola is clearly appealing to the state’s ranked choice voting system and its unique electorate, which elevated moderate Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, over a candidate supported by President Donald Trump. The last Democrat to win an Alaska Senate race was Mark Begich in 2008, though Peltola won the state’s at-large seat twice — even defeating former Gov. Sarah Palin.
Sullivan defeated Begich in 2014, followed by independent Al Gross in 2020; Sullivan also recently voted to extend expired health care subsidies, a sign of the state’s independent streak.
Alaska
US Senate confirms Aaron Peterson as Alaska’s newest federal judge
One of Alaska’s two federal judge vacancies has been filled.
The U.S. Senate voted 58-39 on Wednesday to confirm state natural resources attorney Aaron Peterson to serve as the state’s newest federal judge. In a legal notice published soon after the vote, Peterson said he would be resigning immediately from the Alaska Department of Law.
Alaska has three federal judgeships but has had only one sitting judge since Joshua Kindred resigned in July 2024 amid a misconduct scandal.
Peterson, a registered Republican, will replace Judge Tim Burgess, who retired on the last day of 2021. That vacancy was one of the oldest unfilled seats in the entire U.S. federal court system.
With only one full-time judge on staff, Alaska’s federal court has relied on judges from other states and semi-retired judges on senior status.
The margin on Peterson’s confirmation was unusually bipartisan, with six Democrats joining most of the Senate’s Republicans in favor. All 39 “no” votes were from Democrats, and three senators did not vote.
Among the Democrats voting “yes” was Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, the ranking opposition member on the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Durbin’s office did not respond to a question asking why he voted to confirm.
Last year, answering questions proffered by Durbin, Peterson declined to say President Donald Trump lost the 2020 election and declined to opine on the legality of the Jan. 6, 2021 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, saying the issue could come before him as a judge.
Carl Tobias, Williams Chair in Law at the University of Richmond School of Law, has been following Peterson’s confirmation process.
“It wasn’t a party line vote. And so I think that means that some of the Democrats are signaling that if a person looks like he’s going to be competent, as I think Peterson will be, then they’re going to move forward and vote for that person,” he said.
Sen. Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska, organized a committee that examined Peterson’s judicial application and forwarded it to President Donald Trump for official nomination. The committee bypassed the usual procedure, which relies on advice from the Alaska Bar Association.
“I’m confident that he will be a great federal judge for our state,” he said in a prepared written statement.
In an application reviewed by the Senate’s judiciary committee, Peterson said he applied for the job after a member of Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s federal transition team encouraged him to do so.
That team was formed during the changeover between President Joe Biden and President Donald Trump.
According to the information Peterson submitted to the U.S. Senate’s judiciary committee, he was born in Anchorage in 1981 and served in the U.S. Air Force from 2000 to 2003 before attending the University of Alaska Anchorage, graduating in 2007. He attended Gonzaga University School of Law and graduated in 2010. He was admitted to the Alaska bar that year.
He returned to Alaska after graduation, serving first as a clerk to Judge Michael Spaan of the Anchorage Superior Court, then as a prosecutor with the Municipality of Anchorage.
Peterson worked in the Anchorage District Attorney’s office starting in 2012, including on violent felonies, such as murder and sexual assault. He moved to the Department of Law’s office of special prosecutions in 2015 before beginning work with the Department of Law’s natural resources section in 2019.
“Throughout his career, which includes military service, Aaron has demonstrated a commitment to the rule of law and federalism. Aaron is a lifelong Alaskan and knows and understands our great state and the unique federal laws that impact us,” Sullivan said.
Tobias watched Peterson’s confirmation hearings from Virginia.
“Watching his hearings and the discussion of him, it seems like —especially in Alaska — he does have that expertise on natural resource issues from pretty long experience, and so it seems like that’s a good match,” he said.
U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, didn’t participate in Peterson’s application process but offered her support after Trump nominated Peterson and voted for his confirmation on Wednesday.
“I look forward to Mr. Peterson hitting the ground running to help an overworked court, while working to address and reform the culture of abuse and low morale that has permeated the District Court in recent years,” Murkowski said in a prepared written statement. “Mr. Peterson is a born-and-raised Alaskan with a strong record of legal practice in our state, including in natural resources and criminal and civil law, and his leadership will be invaluable to Alaska. We now turn our focus to filling the remaining vacancy as soon as possible.”
Originally published by the Alaska Beacon, an independent, nonpartisan news organization that covers Alaska state government.
Alaska
Deaf and Hard of Hearing Children’s Bill of Rights Advances to Alaska Senate
JUNEAU, Alaska — House Bill 39, known as the Deaf and Hard of Hearing Children’s Bill of Rights, by Rep. Jamie Allard, R-Eagle River, passed the House of Representatives in a 40-0 vote Tuesday.
The legislation addresses language acquisition, parental choice and appropriate accommodation in public schools. Parents select the most suitable method of communication for their child whether that’s American Sign Language (ASL), spoken English with support or another modality. School districts would be required to deliver educational services using the parent’s chosen method.
“Deaf children are born with the same ability to acquire language as their hearing peers,” Rep. Allard said. “They have the right and capacity to be educated, graduate from high school, obtain further education and pursue meaningful careers.”
Central to HB 39 is the recognition that communication and language acquisition must be treated as a priority to prevent the devastating effects of inadequate access in the classroom, which can result in missed information during lectures and discussions, lower academic achievement and delayed language development.
Under the proposed law, children who are deaf or hard of hearing would have the right to accommodation and full access to academic instruction, school services and extracurricular activities in their primary language. This ensures that they can fully benefit from all school programs and participate meaningfully in education and society.
Recognizing Alaska’s unique rural geography, HB 39 acknowledges that some deaf or hard of hearing students may require residential services as part of their educational program to receive appropriate support.
Key provisions of House Bill 39 include:
* The right to an individualized education program (IEP) tailored to the child’s needs.
* Parental choice in determining the most appropriate method of communication.
* Identification of the child’s primary language in the IEP.
* Consideration of the prognosis for hearing loss.
* Instruction provided in the child’s primary language.
* Provision of necessary assistive devices, services and qualified personnel.
* Appropriate and timely assessments conducted in the child’s primary language.
Twenty states have already enacted similar Deaf and Hard of Hearing Children’s Bills of Rights, setting a strong precedent for protecting the educational rights of these students.
“HB 39 ensures that no child in Alaska is left behind due to barriers in communication,” Rep. Allard said. “By centering parental choice and language access, we are affirming the fundamental rights of deaf and hard of hearing children to thrive academically and socially.”
The federal law – Individuals with Disabilities Education Act – does not adequately address parental rights. HB 39 fills the gap.
Click here to watch Rep. Allard’s floor speech.
Alaska
In a tenuous time for distance mushing, Yukon Quest Alaska takes a new path
The popularity of long-distance mushing has been waning in recent years, a trend propelled by rising costs and a fading appetite for racing long, unsupported stretches through Alaska wilderness.
But the Yukon Quest Alaska is taking a new path, both literally and figuratively.
The Yukon Quest International Sled Dog Race was traditionally among the toughest in mushing, a 1,000-mile trek between Fairbanks and Whitehorse, Yukon. But the race splintered in 2022, with two shorter races being operated separately in Alaska and Canada. Last month, the Canadian Yukon Quest announced it isn’t running this year.
Yukon Quest Alaska race marshal John Schandelmeier, himself a notable distance musher with two wins at the Quest, has developed an approximately 800-mile route for the 2026 race that starts and ends in Fairbanks.
“I’ve been pushing this route for several years, knowing that we were never going to get back with the Whitehorse operation and making a thousand-mile race,” Schandelmeier said. “Plus the thought that there’s not that many people capable of doing a thousand-mile race anymore. There used to be, but there’s not anymore.”
The race starts at 11 a.m. Saturday at the Morris Thompson Cultural Center in Fairbanks.
While centering the race around Fairbanks is not novel, the trail passes through a number of communities that have never hosted checkpoints at a major race.
After heading northeast from Fairbanks, the race wheels north out of Circle to Fort Yukon before bending down southwest along the Yukon River.
It passes through Beaver, Stevens Village and Rampart before heading east at Tanana. Mushers will head to Nenana before a final sprint north back to Fairbanks.
Before the route was solidified, Schandelmeier made some initial outreaches to the villages to gauge interest.
“They’re all very excited about having a race come through,” he said. “Fort Yukon, Beaver, Rampart have never had a race come through there.”
After weeks of work breaking and prepping the trail, Schandelmeier said, the route is ready. And after billing the race at 750 miles in the lead-up, he said the actual distance is 803 miles.
On top of the distance and typical frigid Interior conditions, the race is expected to add layers of difficulty with changes of elevation and some tough runs between checkpoints.
“It’s considerably different than running the Iditarod,” Schandelmeier said. “We cross two summits, two that are wind-blown and need tripods (as markers), not just stakes. That run from Tanana to Manley is not flat. Even the Yukon (River) will be challenging.”
In total, there are seven mushers taking on the longer distance, but Schandelmeier believes it could be maintained as the standard going forward.
“I think the race we’re doing is the Quest of the future,” he said. “And I think we’ll get more participation after this year. The first year is always a little tough.”
With no signs of the Whitehorse race returning, it’s possible that Yukon Quest Alaska could draw more Canadian mushers in the near future.
And with a guaranteed purse of $35,000 for this year’s race, Schandelmeier expects it to continue to grow in popularity with Interior mushers, especially those with smaller dog yards.
“With a start and finish in Fairbanks, the city has really come on board and will continue to as it grows,” he said. “We have a ton of local sponsors jumping in and doing what they can.”
The 800-mile race will be the closest to the original distance that has existed since the 2022 split. But Schandelmeier doesn’t believe it’ll grow to its previous distance.
“I don’t know how much interest there is in a thousand-mile race anymore,” he said. “There’s a couple long runs in the Quest. And the last time I was a trail coordinator on that race, I talked to mushers, and they said, ‘Man, too long of runs, cold and dark, you never see anybody.’ ”
Jeff Deeter, Jason Mackey and Keaton Loebrich, all out of Fairbanks, are registered for the distance race. All three were 2025 Iditarod mushers with experience in longer distances.
The same is true for Two Rivers musher Josi Shelley, who raced the Iditarod in 2024.
Schandelmeier said the enthusiasm among the villages that haven’t hosted a checkpoint is high. And while races have not run through those areas, there is a deep history of running dogs in the area.
“All these villages have their own little races in the spring,” he said. “So this is just another race.”
There is also an 80-mile fun run included under the Yukon Quest Alaska banner. While Schandelmeier doesn’t have much involvement, he said it’s vital for musher development.
“It’s a very important race, and it’s a good thing,” he said. “It costs little to nothing to get in it and it’s very well-supported.”
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