Alaska
Help with paying utility bills listed among top requests from Alaska 211

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – Workers at United Way’s statewide 211 line said Thursday that Alaskans asking for help to pay their utility bills is one of the top requests.
According to United Way data from 2023, utility assistance continues to be one of the top four unmet needs in Alaska, with that list rounded out by requests for help with housing, transportation, and food.
In the case of utility bills, United Way’s Chief Operating Officer Sue Brogan said the agency has a database with as many as 70 partners around the state that can provide some sort of energy assistance. That database features nonprofits, city and state programs, and tribal and non-tribal entities.
Brogan said trained navigators can help people find programs for which they might be eligible. The database also keeps track of which programs are currently accepting clients and have funding available and which ones don’t. The State of Alaska, for example, reports a backlog on processing applications for heating assistance programs.
Some of the money available includes a recent $50,000 donation from Enstar, which Brogan said is designed to help Southcentral Alaskans who are struggling to pay their heating bills.
“All of that information is in the database,” Brogan said, “and so, when somebody calls in for help, the resource call specialist can take that person through all of those qualifications to make sure we are making a good referral.”
In addition to calling, Brogan said people can go directly to the Alaska 211 website to research various programs themselves, though she said calling or emailing the call center has the advantage of getting personalized help.
“Where do you start, what’s the eligibility, what do I have to bring to my appointment?” Brogan said. “We can help you with that; we can help you navigate that. And that is one of the greatest things about 211, is that we have staff that are here that can help you with that step.”
Alaskans can call 211 or (800) 478-2221, visit the website at Alaska211.org, or email Alaska211@ak.org.
The call center is open Monday through Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Callers can leave messages after hours.
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Copyright 2025 KTUU. All rights reserved.

Alaska
Alaska predator control deemed unconstitutional – The Wildlife Society

The Alaska DNR killed about 200 bears to boost a struggling caribou herd
An Anchorage Superior Court judge recently ruled that the Alaska Department of Fish and Game’s program to kill nearly 200 brown bears to boost a caribou herd was unconstitutional. The agency originally developed the program to kill wolves (Canis lupus) and increase their prey species. The department expanded the program in 2022 to include brown bears (Ursus arctos), which prey on the Machatna caribou (Machatna caribou) herd, which has been struggling. The herd, which once numbered about 200,000 in 1997, has declined to about 13,000. Judge Andrew Guidi’s recent ruling, citing a lack of due process and adequate public notice of the program, means, at least temporarily, the Alaska DNR must end the brown bear control program.
Read more in the Alaska Beacon.
Alaska
Fueling the ‘world’s best-trained workforce’: ASYMCA feeds military families free of charge

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – The Armed Services YMCA of Alaska Marketplace Food Assistance Program is fueling service members and their families across the Last Frontier, free of charge.
“If we can help offset budgets and they’re able to shop here and get what they need and then take that money that they would have spent and apply it somewhere else, then that’s really what it’s for,” ASYMCA of Alaska Executive Director Sarah Riffer said. “It’s just another way to help our Alaska-based military community feel welcomed in the state, feel appreciated in our state, and to make sure that they have what they need in order to stay mission-focused.”
The ASYMCA of Alaska operates Marketplaces on JBER, Fort Wainwright, and Eielson Air Force Base. They provide groceries, personal care products, and other household goods to service members and their families.
Riffer explained that the marketplace aims to strengthen the military community as a whole.
“We know that strong communities start with strong families, and we know from that we’ll have strong kids and so on,” she explained. “[This program] is just a really easy thing for us to provide and to offer to help with that ultimate goal of having a really strong military community.”
The ASYMCA of Alaska recently received a $15,000 grant from the Kroger Company Zero Hunger | Zero Waste Foundation and Fred Meyer to continue providing essential goods at its three marketplace installations.
Donations like these are what keep the marketplaces operational, Riffer said, helping the nonprofit live up to its mission of providing services to ensure service members have “great Alaskan experiences.”
“I think it’s our job as a community to make sure that we are able to provide every piece of support that our military members need while they’re stationed here,” Riffer explained, adding that all active-duty and reserve service members can receive support from the ASYMCA of Alaska, no matter where they are located in the state.
“We are a moment’s notice away,” she said. “All they have to do is reach out.”
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Copyright 2025 KTUU. All rights reserved.
Alaska
Alaska House approves cut in draft budget for gender dysphoria treatments, but impacts remain unclear

JUNEAU — The Alaska House this week amended its draft budget to cut Medicaid funding for so-called optional treatments for gender dysphoria.
Multiple lawmakers said if the proposed cut is ultimately approved by the Legislature, it would likely not cut health care for transgender Alaskans. But that remains unclear.
Additionally, the Legislature’s attorneys warned the proposed cut to gender dysphoria care could be unconstitutional and unenforceable.
Rep. Sarah Vance, R-Homer, noted that the Alaska State Medical Board urged the Legislature in March to ban hormonal and surgical treatments for minors seeking to transition from one gender to another.
She said the cut would ensure taxpayer-funded coverage for gender dysphoria treatments are limited to only what is “medically necessary” and required by the courts.
In 2021, the state settled a class-action lawsuit that challenged the legality of excluding transgender Alaskans from health coverage related to their gender transitions. Now, that coverage through Medicaid is required.
Jennifer Martinez, a spokesperson for Planned Parenthood Great Northwest, said the organization believed that the proposed cut would likely not result in reduced Medicaid coverage for transgender Alaskans.
But if the cut is ultimately approved by the Legislature, Martinez said that Alaska’s Medicaid office would determine which treatments to cover. That could impact what she called “edge” treatments, such as follow-up surgeries for transgender Alaskans, Martinez said, but it remained unclear.
The intended cut to gender dysphoria treatments was approved on a 21-19 vote. Two Republican members of the Democrat-dominated majority — Reps. Chuck Kopp and Louise Stutes — joined the 19-member, all-Republican minority to approve the cut in the draft budget. All other members of the majority voted no.
Kopp amended the bill to state that optional psychiatric coverage would still be funded for children under age 18 who are experiencing gender dysphoria. He said those services could help “interdict” a child before they made “a life-altering, permanent medical decision.”
Anchorage independent Rep. Alyse Galvin, the mother of a transgender daughter, called the vote largely “political.” She said it would make transgender Alaskans feel “othered and hated.”
The amendment prompted passionate debate on the House floor.
Anchorage Democratic Rep. Andrew Gray, the first openly gay man to serve in the Alaska Legislature, opposed cutting Medicaid funding for transgender Alaskans, who he said are “one of the most marginalized, powerless minorities in our country.”
“I know what it was like to be a 16-year-old whose mother told you that you were wrong, that you were a mistake,” he added.
In response, Vance said the cut was about reducing the deficit. She told the House that it was not intended to suggest transgender children are “broken.”
“God doesn’t make mistakes,” Vance said on the House floor.
In 2021, the state estimated it would cost $28,000 per year to extend Medicaid coverage in Alaska for gender dysphoria treatments, Alaska Public Media reported.
Vance asserted on the House floor that gender dysphoria coverage through Medicaid costs the state $338,000 per year. But she didn’t know how much the state spends on treatments that are required by court order.
That dollar figure was shared with Vance’s office from the Alaska Division of Health Care Services. It represents Medicaid claims since July last year with a primary diagnosis indicating gender dysphoria, Vance’s staff said. But the $338,000 in Medicaid coverage includes funding from both federal and state sources, Vance’s staff added.
Ruth Botstein, the ACLU of Alaska’s legal director, opposed the amendment. She said medical decisions should be made by doctors, patients, and parents in cases involving minor children — not the Alaska Legislature.
”The American Medical Association, together with all other major medical organizations in the United States, supports gender-affirming care because it is medically necessary, evidence-based health care that is crucial to the health and well-being of people suffering from gender dysphoria and gender incongruence,” she said.
Rose O’Hara-Jolley, Alaska state director of Planned Parenthood Alliance Advocates, said the organization is “deeply disappointed” that the House approved “a harmful, performative amendment attacking gender affirming health care.”
“This amendment is rooted in bad faith. It aims to stir confusion, spread misinformation, and fuel fear within Alaska’s LGBTQ+ community,” O’Hara-Jolley said in a prepared statement. “We urge lawmakers to reject this amendment in the final version of the budget. All Alaskans — no matter their income or gender identity — deserve dignity, respect, and access to the care they need.”
Last year, the prior Republican-led majority spent days debating a transgender sports ban bill. But the measure was rejected by the Senate. In 2023, the Alaska School Activities Association banned transgender girls from competing on girls’ teams in high school sports.
Minority House Republicans separately tried to cut Medicaid funding in Alaska for abortions. But the minority’s proposal was rejected on a 20-20 vote. Stutes joined her colleagues in the Democrat-dominated majority to block the proposed cut.
Monday’s vote was the latest in a yearslong series of attempts by Alaska legislators to cancel public funding for abortion services. Prior votes have had little effect.
The Alaska Supreme Court has repeatedly ruled that the right to an abortion is protected by the state’s constitutional right to privacy. Additionally, the court ruled in 2001 that the state would violate the constitution’s equal protection clause and discriminate against poor women if it denied abortion services under Medicaid.
Budget amendment debates continued in the House on Tuesday. Once it is approved by the House, the operating budget next heads to the Senate for its consideration.
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