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Pentagon to take ‘sledgehammer’ to contracting program central to many Alaska Native corporations
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said the Pentagon will take aim at a contracting program that’s become a critical part of the business portfolios for many Alaska Native corporations.
“We’re actually taking a sledgehammer to the oldest DEI program in the federal government,” Hegseth said in a video posted to social media on Jan. 16, referring to diversity, equity and inclusion policies the Trump administration and its allies have attacked extensively.
He was referring to the 8(a) Business Development Program, overseen by the Small Business Administration. Established during the Civil Rights era, 8(a) is a “federal contracting and training program for experienced small business owners who are socially and economically disadvantaged,” according to the SBA.
The program has created substantial opportunities and benefits for Alaska Native corporations, the regional and village entities established under the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act to benefit tribal members holding shares in the companies. The most lucrative of those benefits is access to no-bid federal contracts, with none of the dollar limits that many other 8(a)-eligible companies are subject to, and fewer restrictions on subsidiary activities.
The head of the Native American Contractors Association, a group representing Indigenous-owned companies dealing with federal contracts, said the organization is willing to work with the Pentagon on improving the 8(a) program, but disputed the assertion it is a “DEI program.”
Members of Alaska’s congressional delegation say they support the program, and are working with the Trump administration on the issue.
Speaking in general terms, Hegseth said the program’s stated goals are “laudable,” but that 8(a) had morphed into “swamp code words for DEI race-based contracting.”
Hegseth said that effective immediately, the Pentagon would review all sole-source 8(a) contracts worth more than $20 million.
“If a contract doesn’t make us more lethal, it’s gone. We have no room in our budget for wasteful DEI contracts that don’t help us win wars,” he said in the video. “Second, we’re doing away with these pass-through schemes. We’ll make sure that every small business getting a contract is the one actually doing the work.”
The defense budget for 2026 is $901 billion, according to the Associated Press, which reported that earlier this month President Donald Trump demanded the 2027 military budget increase to $1.5 trillion.
Hegseth framed the move as part of the Pentagon’s broader “effort to transform our acquisition infrastructure” in ways that do not “line the pockets of Beltway fraudsters” or “advance the agendas of DEI apologists.”
The message added a culture war framing to an issue that, over the years, has drawn criticism from across the political spectrum. But members of the Trump administration, as well as some of its Republican allies, have stepped up their attacks on 8(a) over the previous few months.
Last June, the Justice Department announced guilty pleas from four men in a bribery scheme dating back to 2013 that involved unlawfully steering $550 million in federal contracts, enriching themselves in the process. Two of the four individuals had small businesses that were certified under the 8(a) program.
That case was held up as an example by U.S. Small Business Administrator Kelly Loeffler last summer, used as a justification for launching a “full-scale audit” of the 8(a) program.
“In recent years, SBA’s 8(a) Business Development Program has seen rampant fraud — and increasingly egregious instances of abuse,” Loeffler said in a prepared statement from June. “We must hold both contracting officers and 8(a) participants accountable — and start rewarding merit instead of those who game the system.”
In December, Republican Sen. Joni Ernst of Iowa sent letters to several government agencies flagging instances of contract awards that appear to violate federal laws.
“Unfortunately, the 8(a) program’s no-bid, unlimited sole-source contracts are a fraud magnet,” Ernst wrote to Interior Secretary Doug Burgum. “While there’s no doubt that the Biden Administration’s indifference toward 8(a) program integrity enabled swindlers and fraudsters to treat federal contracting programs like personal piggy banks, 8(a) program flaws have raised alarm bells for decades.”
Ernst cited four different Alaska Native corporations in her letters. The infractions alleged are violations related to SBA rules barring an 8(a) company from operating multiple subsidiaries working in overlapping industries at the same time.
In her letter to Hegseth, Ernst wrote that the “Pentagon awarded approximately $8.5 billion through the 8(a) program, including $6.5 billion in total 8(a) sole-source dollars and $2 billion in total 8(a) set-aside dollars.”
It’s not clear how many of those Defense appropriations, or similar ones from other government agencies, were paid to Alaska Native corporations. Tracking expenditures related to 8(a) is notoriously tricky, in part because the program is ingrained in so many separate federal entities and administered through dozens of regional SBA offices with no centralized data tracking, according to a 2016 Government Accountability Office report that looked specifically at Alaska Native corporations.
“Unlike most other 8(a) small businesses, ANC-owned firms receive an exclusion from affiliation with their larger parent corporation and therefore can be subsidiaries in large corporations that may have worldwide operation, annually generate revenues in the hundreds of millions of dollars, and provide a range of goods and services to federal procuring agencies,” the GAO authors wrote.
The report estimated that in 2014, the 8(a) program committed $4 billion worth of federal contracts to some 344 companies owned by Alaska Native corporations.
Critics, though, have long alleged that the preferential access to lucrative federal business under 8(a) has not translated to profitable dividend payments to Indigenous shareholders or improved circumstances at the community level in Alaska. A series of articles by the investigative outlet ProPublica published in 2010 and 2011 documented the rise in 8(a) contracts among Alaska Native corporations, which drastically outpaced increases among other eligible constituencies like Lower 48 tribes.
“While contracting dollars to 8(a) firms grew nearly fivefold from 2000 to 2009, money to ANC companies in the program increased more than twentyfold — from $280 million to $5.7 billion — thanks to a rule that allows them to obtain no-bid contracts of unlimited size,” ProPublica reporter Michael Grabell wrote in one of the series’ stories.
Quinton Carroll, executive director of the Native American Contractors Association, wrote in a statement that the organization is committed to preventing waste and fraud. He disputed the thesis of Hegseth’s remarks.
“Native participation in the SBA 8(a) Program is not a DEI initiative. It is grounded in the unique political and legal status of Tribal Nations under U.S. law and fulfills longstanding federal trust and treaty obligations to Tribes, Alaska Native Corporations, and Native Hawaiian Organizations,” Carroll wrote in an email Thursday.
He added that the 8(a) program had eliminated racial preference in awards as of 2023.
“As this process moves forward, it is critical that oversight efforts preserve a program that has proven its value — strengthening national security, reinforcing the defense industrial base, and supporting economic growth in Native and surrounding communities,” Carroll said.
Besides audits and reviews, it’s not clear what permanent or legislative actions Hegseth and other agencies will take.
In the meantime, Alaska’s three Republican members of Congress say they remain staunch supporters of the 8(a) program.
“My office is actively working with the Administration, Alaska Native Corporations, and their trade organizations to ensure Washington fully understands the unique history of Alaskan participation in the 8(a) program,” Rep. Nick Begich wrote in an email Tuesday. “I am committed to continue engaging directly with Administration officials to ensure that any reforms strengthen the mission and economic opportunities that 8(a) has long provided for Alaska and the nation.”
A spokesperson for Sen. Dan Sullivan said the senator had used his position on the Senate Armed Services Committee to get commitments from Pentagon appointees “affirming that they would work to strengthen the (Department of War’s) work with 8(a) firms.”
“The senator had a productive conversation with Secretary Hegseth on these issues this weekend and will continue direct engagement with the secretary and other senior DOW officials as they look to review the 8(a) program,” said Amanda Coyne, Sullivan’s communications director, on Tuesday.
Sen. Lisa Murkowski said that overall, the 8(a) program “promotes economic self-sufficiency in some of the most geographically and economically isolated communities across the nation.”
She added that she’d received clarification from the Small Business Administration that Executive Order 14151 — Trump’s day-one policy on “Ending Radical and Wasteful Government DEI Programs and Preferencing” — doesn’t apply to the activities or businesses of Alaska Natives or American Indians.
“Oversight of all federal programs is necessary but it should not undermine lawful participation in a program that delivers high quality services to the federal government and that supports Native communities,” Murkowski said Thursday.
Alaska
Rare earths and geopolitics: Why Trump wants Greenland and what it means for Alaska
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) — President Donald Trump said Wednesday he has “formed the framework of a future deal” on Greenland following meetings with NATO leadership, while also ruling out military force to acquire the Danish territory. The announcement signals a strategic shift in his approach, even as tensions with U.S. Arctic allies remain strained over his aggressive pursuit of control over the resource-rich island.
Speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Trump doubled down on his interest in Greenland as part of broader Arctic security strategy, though he acknowledged the long-term nature of any potential agreement.
“It’s a long-term deal. It’s the ultimate long-term deal, and I think it puts everybody in a really good position, especially as it pertains to security and minerals and everything else,” Trump said.
De-escalation after heated rhetoric
Trump’s announcement that he would roll back threatened tariffs on NATO countries that opposed his Greenland ambitions represents a significant cooling of rhetoric that has dominated discussion for weeks, according to security experts.
Cameron Carlson, dean of the College of Business and Security Management at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, characterized the shift as a necessary step toward restoring international relationships damaged by the president’s aggressive posture.
“I think it’s a signaling to the recognition that President Trump has been able to bring things to a very heated boil,” Carlson said. “Having the rhetoric basically start to cool down, that we will not take military action as he indicated while he was there in Davos, is a tremendous step forward in the relations that we have with our fellow Arctic countries.”
Carlson cautioned that damage to diplomatic relationships with Europe and NATO remains significant.
“I think it’s globally important as well that this starts to basically de-escalate to the point where more focused discussions can take place in terms of how we actually can work with Greenland,” he said.
The Strategic Interest: Rare Earth Minerals and Security
While Trump has emphasized security concerns in Greenland, Carlson said the economic dimension—particularly access to rare earth minerals—appears to be the real driving force behind U.S. interest.
“From an economic perspective, it clearly blunts our ability to partner with countries that are in the region, not just Greenland, but Denmark as well,” Carlson said. “There is a real spillover potential for Alaska in terms of defense spending.”
The Trump administration’s focus on rare earths reflects broader geopolitical competition with China, which currently dominates the global market for these critical minerals essential to modern technology. Carlson explained the stakes.
“Everything that we have come to depend on today, whether it is our cell phone, our computer, our televisions, our automobiles, everything is highly dependent upon our ability to access rare earths.”
Unlike precious metals with concentrated deposits, rare earths require extensive extraction and processing across large areas to yield relatively small amounts of usable material—a process that can take decades and carries significant environmental consequences.
Alaska’s Role and the Golden Dome
Carlson stressed that what makes the United States an Arctic actor is not Washington, but Alaska’s geographic position.
“While that may seem very commonsensical to individuals that live here in Alaska, if you were to look at the lower 48, some individuals would probably say, ‘I failed to see what the real interests of the United States are,’” he said.
Alaska’s strategic importance stems from its vast territory, proximity to Russia, and control over shipping through the Bering Strait—factors that could position the state as a hub for Arctic security infrastructure.
This context makes the “Golden Dome,” a $175 billion missile defense system sponsored by Alaska Sen. Dan Sullivan, a potential “win” for the Trump administration that would also benefit Alaska, according to Carlson.
“Having infrastructure developed here would be a win for the Trump Administration,” Carlson said. “It would likewise be a big win for us in a security context as well, nationally, as it would be for our allies within NATO and our Arctic partners.”
Carlson suggested the Golden Dome represents an alternative pathway forward, noting that, “Alaska is going to be a key component of what we do or what we end up doing when it comes to the Golden Dome,” and could serve as “an off ramp to this where we realize some of the benefit of what will happen in that economic development.”
The Greenland Sovereignty Question
The people of Greenland complicated the rare earth equation when they voted against a mining project in recent elections, signaling their preference for environmental protection over resource extraction. Greenland is not for sale, both the territory and its parent country Denmark have made clear.
Carlson acknowledged this reality.
“They are a sovereign nation, and they have the ability, as they should, for self-determination,” he said. “They have made it very, very clear that that is not for sale, that they want to determine what is going to be in the best interest of them and the territory that they are on over the long term.”
Even if the Trump administration views a dramatic deal as a win, Carlson says any path forward requires carefully navigating partnership with Greenland’s citizens.
“They’re going to have to very carefully navigate that process of taking a look at what it takes to basically partner with the citizens of Greenland if they really want to extract these rare earths and get access to this over the long term,” Carlson said.
A Path Forward
Carlson outlined what he sees as the best outcome: restoration of civil discourse and partnership with NATO, Denmark, and Greenland to develop resource-sharing arrangements that benefit all parties—though perhaps not in the near term.
“I think the easy win that the president could basically determine from this point is that he looks at Arctic security and reinvests in what some of the capabilities are that would provide that umbrella of Arctic security, not only within Greenland, but here in Alaska as well,” Carlson said.
Editor’s note: The Associated Press contributed to this report
Copyright 2026 KTUU. All rights reserved.
Alaska
The technologies modernizing Alaska’s avalanche management | StateScoop
In Alaska, state officials responsible for keeping the public safe from avalanches are increasingly looking to use commercial products, such as drones, roadside sensors and digital maps to reduce their reliance on military technologies. Timothy Glassett, Alaska’s statewide avalanche and artillery program manager, says on the Priorities Podcast that the system currently used to spur “preventative” avalanches — “We try not to use the word controlled because we can’t really control nature,” he says — is an M101A1 howitzer that fires 105mm rounds. He says it was designed and built in 1928. Drones and other commercial products, along with alternative “exploder systems,” he says, are a welcome addition to a state trying to transition away from technology nearly one century old.
This week’s top stories:
The Minnesota Department of Human Services last week distributed data breach notification letters disclosing that the demographic records of nearly 304,000 people had been compromised last fall. An unauthorized user also accessed more detailed information — including Medicaid ID numbers and partial Social Security numbers — of more than 1,200 people.
California is not required to turn over its full voter registration list to the federal government, after a federal judge last week granted a motion to dismiss a Department of Justice lawsuit filed last September. District judge David O. Carter said he was unpersuaded by the DOJ’s attempts to use provisions of the Help America Vote Act and the Civil Rights Act to force the state to share entire unredacted voter rolls containing the sensitive personal information of millions of residents.
The Illinois Accountability Commission last week made it easier for residents to share information about possible misconduct by federal agents with the launch of a web form that allows people to submit videos, written accounts or other information. The effort comes after a recent Department of Homeland Security operation in Chicago known as Operation Midway Blitz, aimed at arresting illegal immigrants and cracking down on sanctuary cities.
New episodes of StateScoop’s Priorities Podcast are posted each Wednesday. For more of the latest news and trends across the state and local government technology community, subscribe to the Priorities Podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts,Soundcloud or Spotify.
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