ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – The last night of 2024 and the first day of 2025 will raise money for youth in the community by way of donations to Covenant House Alaska via the upcoming Kaladi Brothers Coffee Dale Tran’s Day of Giving on Jan. 1.
A collaboration between Kaladi Brothers Coffee and Covenant House, as well as Rustic Goat, will celebrate the new year by bringing in donations for youth experiencing homelessness or trafficking. On New Year’s Eve, Rustic Goat is hosting a five-course meal, including wine pairings; and on New Year’s Day, 100% of Kaladi Brothers Coffee cafe drink sales – at stores in Anchorage, Wasilla and Soldotna – will be given to Covenant House Alaska.
The gifts to Covenant House are part of an annual tradition started by Dale Tran of Kaladi Brothers Coffee, Dale Tran’s New Year’s Day of Giving.
“He wanted the company to have a place in social impact, and so, they came up with the term ‘Catalyst for community’ early on,” said Joe Hemphill, Chief of Development and External Affairs for Covenant House Alaska. “They started to engage with non-profits whenever they could. Bring a coffee cart, for example, to a non-profit event. And they would serve free coffee drinks. That was a very small but meaningful way that they could help non-profits.”
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Starting Dec. 28, Kaladi Brothers will also donate 50% of online coffee bean sales until Jan. 1.
Hemphill said Kaladi Brothers partners with Covenant House because of its work with youth specifically.
“If you think about the demographics of many of our barista friends, they are adolescents,” he explained. “Some are still in high school, many are post-high school.”
The partnership has resulted in substantial donations in the past. According to Hemphill, last year’s event raised about $100,000.
“We could break it down into the number of meals that serves or pairs of socks that provides, but more significantly, $100,000 pays for a manager of a program for a year,” Hemphill said. “So, if you think about what we pay them and their salary and all their benefits, $100,000 pays for our whole human, and that is something that I think that the community can really, really be proud of.”
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Hemphill said the event is an easy way to start the new year positively.
“People also are always thinking about vulnerable populations, whether it’s puppy dogs or or adolescent kids,” he said. “And they want to know how they can help.”
He said a purchase most might already plan on making will go toward youth in the community, which is, “one of the easiest ways to help people feel like they have made an impact that I’ve ever seen.”
Hemphill challenged the Anchorage community to get out and help on NYE and NYD.
“We are Alaskans, and we get out and help every chance we get,” he said. “We dig big cars out of ditches, we go and help people paint their houses.
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“We are gritty,” he continued. “So this is this is a challenge for you to get up out of your house on New Year’s Day for one hour or less and drive to your closest coffee shop.”
Tickets for dinner at Rustic Goat are $125 a person, and can be reserved over the phone or in person.
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Sen. Löki Tobin, D-Anchorage, talks with colleagues on the Senate floor on Jan. 22, 2025. (Marc Lester / ADN)
JUNEAU — The Alaska Senate Education Committee on Monday replaced a school funding bill introduced in March with a new version that strips out a controversial overhaul of publicly funded homeschooling programs.
The new version instead would require more legislative oversight over Alaska’s correspondenceeducation programs, and removes additional correspondence funding in favor of broader one-time education funding measures.
The bill now includes a $58 million one-time school energy relief payment to offset high fuel prices, and a bump to student transportation funding. It still includes incentive grants for districts where students improve reading proficiency under the Alaska Reads Act.
Sen. Löki Tobin, an Anchorage Democrat and chair of the Senate Education Committee that sponsored the bill, said that removing the most controversial parts of the bill — how correspondence programs are funded — makes the bill more straightforward.
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“I think the part that was most infuriating was the mis- and disinformation that was promulgated by certain entities that the outreach we received would talk to components or pieces that weren’t in the legislation at all, or the legislation didn’t do what they were claiming it did,” she said in an interview Tuesday.
She said the “deep trove of mal-information” created a response and pushback she “was unwilling to continue to bear.”
The bill originally sought to funnel funding for homeschoolers through the school districts in which they reside, potentially with significant impacts tolarge correspondence programs that are administered by rural school districts. That funding change came alongside a 10% increase in per-student funding for correspondence students overall. Both of those elements are removed from the new version of the bill.
There are over 30 correspondence programs enrolling more than 24,000 students across Alaska, as of last year. More than half of those students were enrolled in correspondence programs administered by districts outside of the district where they reside.
That includes programs like IDEA, run by the Galena City School District, the state’s largest correspondence program. IDEA serves over 7,000 students statewide.
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Superintendents and families of correspondence students pushed back against the original bill, saying that it represented an existential threat to correspondence programs. The bill received hundreds of letters and public testimony opposing the changes to correspondence funding.
The new version of the bill removes some of the bill’s most controversial aspects.
Jason Johnson, the superintendent of the Galena City School District, sent an email to IDEA families prior to the bill’s first hearing urging them to contact their representatives to oppose the bill and asserting that under the bill as written, correspondence programs would receive zero state funding.
Tobin said in an interview in March following the influx of opposition that the bill would not have diverted all state funding away from correspondence programs.
Johnson said as of Tuesday morning, he had not yet reviewed the new version of the bill.
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Homeschool reporting requirements
The new version of the bill requires thatAlaska school districts provide an annual report to the Legislature with details on the correspondence programs they operate, including how much money the district provides to students in the programs, how many students are in the programs, where those students live, what the allotments are used for, and more.
The new reporting requirements mirror those included in a 2024 bill that called for a one-time report to the Legislature on correspondence allotment spending.
At the time, state spending on homeschooled students was scrutinized following litigation challenging a practice by some Alaska families — including that of former Attorney General Treg Taylor — to subsidize tuition in private Christian schools using public correspondence school allotments.
Tobin said last year that the 2024 report revealed there is “just a lot we don’t know about how public dollars are being used.”
A much larger percentage of students in non-correspondence schools take AK STAR state standardized tests compared to those in correspondence programs. Correspondence programs often see lower graduation rates than standard public schools in Alaska.
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Families whose students are enrolled in IDEA, for example, receive an allotment of $2,700 per student per year, according to IDEA’s website. There is little clarity or government oversight on how that money can be spent. A pending lawsuit will answer whether or not correspondence allotments can cover the cost of tuition at a private school.
Tobin says these discrepancies and outstanding questions call for more state oversight on correspondence programs.
“We’re asking for all that information because it’s difficult, as we’ve learned, to create good public policy that helps support our correspondence students, if we don’t have the information that is needed to inform how that policy is created,” Tobin said.
Education funding prospects
The committee substitute to the Senate bill also cuts the $125 increase to the state’s annual per-student formula funding, intended as inflation-proofing in the bill’s original version, which would have raised the Base Student Allocation from $6,660 to roughly $6,785.
Tobin said removing the increase to annual per-student funding in favor of a one-time payment is more politically feasible in the Legislature this session.
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“Whether it’s inflationary or it’s additional funds for this year, there is a disinterest in increasing the Base Student Allocation this cycle, and so we’re trying to figure out other ways that we can target funding and support students and communities and schools,” Tobin said Tuesday. It is unlikely that the Legislature can muster the votes needed to override a governor’s veto of additional education funding, she said.
Tobin also said she thinks one-time funding is more likely to get the governor’s signature. The Legislature narrowly voted last session to override Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s veto of an increase in the Base Student Allocation.
But Alaska’s publicschools still say they don’t have the money they need, with districts such as the Anchorage School District voting to close schools and reducing staff positions and programs to mitigate severe deficits.
The latest version of the Senate bill is in conflict with a spending plan adopted by the House this week.
The House operating budget calls for adding $147 million in one-time funding for K-12 school operations along with nearly $11 million in new funding for student transportation. The House figure, majority members say, is needed to make up for years of inflation.
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That funding in the operating budget was included to guarantee some additional education funding this year. During debates on the House floor, members of the Republican minority repeatedly spoke out against one-time spending on education, including arguments that they wanted a more specific plan for how the funds would be used and that it could lead districts to expect funding to continue at that level in future years.
The Senate bill proposes to increase student transportation funding by roughly $15 million, distribute just under $59 million in energy relief payments to K-12 schools, and spend around $22 million on incentive payments for reading improvement.
All told, the Senate proposal calls for close to $100 million in new education spending, far below the amount identified by the House.
Daily News reporter Iris Samuels contributed to this report.
Last month, Alaska Attorney General Stephen J. Cox announced that his office entered into a settlement with a group of Swickard car dealerships, resolving false advertising allegations against the dealers. As part of the settlement, the dealers agree to pay a civil penalty of $800,000.
The Alaska AG alleged that the dealers engaged in bait and switch advertising by promoting vehicles that were not actually available for purchase in order to draw customers to its lots. The AG also alleged that the dealers refused to honor advertised prices, requiring customers to purchase expensive dealer add-ons.
In announcing the settlement, Cox said, “Car dealers don’t get to advertise one price and charge another—or advertise cars that aren’t really there. That’s a bait-and-switch, and it’s unlawful. Alaskans already face higher costs than most—this settlement holds Swickard accountable and reinforces that the price you see should be the price you pay.”
Interestingly, the consent decree includes a provision that says that if the dealers engage “in a reckless violation or persistent violations” of Alaska’s consumer protection laws in the future, the court may impose an additional penalty of up to $200,000.
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This enforcement action is yet another example of the heightened scrutiny that car dealer advertising is under right now. Earlier this month, the Federal Trade Commission settled a similar action. And, in March, the FTC sent warning letters to nearly 100 car dealers.
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – Palmer’s Colony High School Northern Knights Robotics won the First Robotics Competition (FRC) regional championship on April 4, becoming the first team from Alaska to win the title.
The Northern Knights’ business manager, sophomore Carter Fickes, said that the FRC is one of the most prestigious robotics competitions in the world.
“The game elements are a lot bigger,” he said.
“There’s a lot of more coding challenges as well, because you have what is called an autonomous period where your robot’s running strictly on code, and then you have a teleop period where it’s driver controlled.”
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According to Fickes, the regional competition in Minneapolis saw the team paired with and against groups from Minnesota, Illinois, the Czech Republic, Japan, and China.
Teams were required to make “alliances” with each other, before competing together in the quarterfinals.
“Being collaborative with other teams and being open to their strategy is great.” he said.
“We were telling them our main marketing strategy was ‘we’re flexible, and if you want us to do something, we can do it.’”
Fickes told Alaska’s News Source that the competition required teams to program and direct their robots to shoot balls towards targets in order to score points.
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The Northern Knights programmed their 85-pound robot to focus on defense, blocking shots from the opposing team.
“Our alliance partners had semi-automatic turrets that could shoot like hundreds of balls in a minute,” he said.
“We were blocking the other robots from getting on the other side and scoring fuel.”
Fickes said this was the first year that their team was selected to be a part of an alliance.
After the quarterfinals, the Northern Knights went on to dominate the rest of the competition.
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“We were untouched,” he said.
“We were outscoring them by 200 points, and then the finals matches, I think it ended up being like 400 to 200 or 300.”
By winning both the finals match, as well as the Rookie Team of the Year award, the Northern Knights earned themselves a ticket to the FRC Worlds Competition in Texas beginning on April 29.
“Our mentality is kind of like, ‘we’ve made it this far, so why not try our best?’” he said.
“If we don’t win the whole competition, it’s not the end of the world. A team from Alaska has never done this before, and if we like our goal is to win and to qualify and do good.”
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Unlike many other robotics teams across the country, Ficker said the Northern Knights are entirely funded through private donations.
“We built our robot in our team captain’s basement. He let us use his house, and we spent hours upon hours upon hours in his basement building and testing.”
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