Alaska
The time has come to end Big Tech’s rule
The web has opened doorways and pathways to greater than we may have ever imagined simply a few many years in the past. It has turn out to be exhausting to think about our lives with out firms like Google, Amazon, Fb, or Apple, and the conveniences and connections they carry us. Nonetheless, as we’ve come to be increasingly reliant on their services, these Massive Tech giants have been quietly constructing dominance over the net market, sustaining energy and wealth on the expense of small companies, client, and staff.
As we strategy the congressional August recess, the hope is that the bipartisan American Innovation and Alternative On-line Act (S. 2992) will come to the Senate ground for a vote. If handed by Congress and signed into legislation, S.2992 will prohibit tech platforms from “favoring their very own services or products, disadvantaging rivals, or discriminating amongst companies that use their platforms in a fashion that might materially hurt competitors on the platform.” It will additionally forbid dominant platforms from stopping interoperability with different companies and from leveraging one other firm’s information on the platform to compete towards them. In different phrases, it ranges the enjoying area between these tech behemoths and the small companies promoting items and companies on their platforms. When monopolies are damaged down, innovation thrives.
In Alaska, small companies play a essential and indispensable position in our financial system. In keeping with the newest statists from the U.S. Small Enterprise Administration, there are 73,981 small companies in Alaska, which make up 99.1% of all Alaska companies. These small companies make use of 136,455 individuals, or 52.3% of the non-public workforce. As each Senator Lisa Murkowski (R – Alaska) and Senator Dan Sullivan (R – Alaska) have been champions for the small enterprise communities, we want their help now to move this laws, and make it simpler for Alaska small companies to thrive within the on-line market.
Presently, an organization like Amazon, for instance, amasses troves of knowledge primarily based on gross sales from impartial sellers. They’ll then use that info to develop competing merchandise, manipulate search outcomes to prioritize their merchandise, and develop favorable algorithms. This creates an setting the place it’s almost inconceivable for small companies to compete. It’s compounded by the truth that Amazon has turn out to be so massive that small companies have few choices however to work with them as a vendor. The American Innovation and Alternative On-line Act would stop Amazon from favoring its personal merchandise over others, leading to a extra truthful and balanced platform for individuals who help themselves and their households by means of the sale of products on-line.
We regularly joke that politics is Alaska’s state sport; if that’s the case this yr is our Tremendous Bowl. With the passing of Congressman Don Younger and the introduction of ranked selection voting, we’re working by means of unprecedented occasions, all whereas our political variations are constantly beneath a microscope. However regardless of which facet of the political spectrum you might be on, this bipartisan laws proves that we will nonetheless discover widespread floor. All of us wish to see our Alaskan communities thrive and all of us desire a robust financial system. Encouraging innovation and entrepreneurship whereas supporting our native small companies is how we can assist make that occur.
Massive Tech is profitable the battle towards entrepreneurs, shoppers, and staff. The present actions of those companies are destroying the aggressive and open market whereas stifling the flexibility of companies to develop their buyer base and create extra jobs. A stage enjoying area is required and now’s the time for this variation.
The American Innovation and Alternative On-line Act (S. 2992) lastly permits us to curtail the numerous dangerous deeds of Massive Tech companies who’ve taken small companies hostage and exploited client information. It isn’t a daring or unfeasible invoice. That is the kind of bipartisan, commonsense laws that ought to have been applied years in the past. Please encourage Senator Murkowski and Senator Sullivan to vote sure on S. 2992.
The time has come to finish Massive Tech’s rule.
Senator Josh Revak (R – Anchorage) represents District M in South Anchorage.
Alaska
Rural Alaska schools face funding shortfall after U.S. House fails to pass bipartisan bill • Alaska Beacon
Rural schools, mostly in Southeast Alaska, are facing a major funding shortfall this year after the U.S. House of Representatives failed to reauthorize a bill aimed at funding communities alongside national forests and lands.
The bipartisan Secure Rural Schools and Community Self-Determination Act was first passed in 2000, and enacted to assist communities impacted by the declining timber industry. It provided funds for schools, as well as for roads, emergency services and wildfire prevention. The award varies each year depending on federal land use and revenues. The legislation is intended to help communities located near federal forests and lands pay for essential services. In 2023, the law awarded over $250 million nationwide, and over $12.6 million to Alaska.
But this year, the bill passed the Senate, but stalled in the House of Representatives amid partisan negotiations around the stopgap spending bill to keep the government open until March. House Republicans decided not to vote on the bill amid a dispute around health care funding, a spokesperson for the bill’s sponsor, Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden, told the Oregon Capital Chronicle, which first reported the story.
Eleven boroughs, as well as unincorporated areas, in the Tongass and Chugach national forests have typically received this funding, awarded through local municipalities. According to 2023 U.S. Forest Service data, some of the districts who received the largest awards, and now face that shortfall, include Ketchikan, Wrangell, Petersburg, Sitka and Yakutat, as well as the unincorporated areas.
“We’re already at our bottom,” said Superintendent Carol Pate of the Yakutat School District, which received over $700,000 in funding, one of the largest budget sources for its 81 students.
“We are already down to one administrator with six certified teachers,” Pate said in a phone interview Thursday. “We have a small CTE (career and technical education) program. We don’t have any art, we don’t have any music. We have limited travel. Anything that we lose means we lose instruction, and our goal is for the success of our students.”
Yakatat is facing a $126,000 deficit this year, a large sum for their $2.3 million budget, Pate said. “So that’s a pretty significant deficit for us. We do our best to be very conservative during the school year to make up that deficit. So wherever we can save money, we do.”
The school has strong support from the borough, Pate said. However, last year they were forced to cut funding for one teacher and a significant blow for the school, she said.
“We’re trying very hard to break the cycle, but it’s a continuing cycle,” she said. “Every time we lose something, we lose kids because of it, and the more kids we lose, the more programs we lose.”
In the southern Tongass National Forest community of Wrangell, the school district received over $1 million in funds last year, and Superintendent Bill Burr said the federal funding loss is dramatic.
“It’s pretty devastating from a community standpoint,” Burr said in a phone interview. “Because that is very connected to the amount of local contribution that we get from our local borough, it has a dramatic effect on the school district, so I’m disappointed.”
“As these cuts continue to happen, there’s less and less that we’re able to do,” he said. “School districts are cut pretty much as thin as they can. So when these things happen, with no real explanation, the impact for districts that do receive secure schools funding is even more dramatic.”
Whether and how the funding loss will impact the district has yet to be determined, as budgets for next year are still in development, Burr said, but it could mean cuts to matching state grants, facilities projects, or staff salaries. He said most non-state money for the district comes from the federal program.
“Part of our funding does come from sales tax, but a majority of it comes from the secure rural schools (grant),” he said. “So without increases in other areas, the amount of money that can come to the schools is going to be injured.”
“We do have contracts, and a majority of our money is paid in personnel. So we would have those contracts to fill, regardless of the funding, until the end of the year. A major reduction really will affect our ability to provide school services and personnel, so it could have a massive impact on next year’s, the fiscal ‘26 year, budget,” he said.
The district is facing an over $500,000 budget deficit this year, Burr said, and so the loss puts further pressure on the district.
“So we’re continuing to find areas that we can cut back but still provide the same service. But that’s getting harder and harder,” he said.
The schools in unincorporated areas known as regional educational attendance areas, received over $6 million in funding through the program.
Alaska Sens. Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan supported the bill through the Senate.
Murkowski was disappointed that the bill was not reauthorized, a spokesperson for the senator said.
“As a longtime advocate for this program, she recognizes its critical role in funding schools and essential services in rural communities,” said Joe Plesha, in a text Friday. “She is actively working to ensure its renewal so that states like Alaska are not disadvantaged.”
Former Alaska Rep. Mary Peltola also supported the funding.
Alaska’s school funding formula is complex, and takes into account the local tax base, municipalities’ ability to fund schools, and other factors. With the loss of funding for the local borough’s portion, whether the Legislature will increase funding on the state’s side is to be determined.
The Department of Education and Early Development did not respond to requests for comment on Friday.
Superintendents Burr and Pate described hope for the upcoming legislative session, and an increase in per-pupil spending. “The loss of secure rural schools funding makes it even more difficult to continue with the static funding that education in the state has received,” Burr said.
“I really have high hopes for this legislative season. I think that the people that we’ve elected recognize the need to put funding towards education,” Pate said.
The funding could be restored, if the legislation is reintroduced and passed by Congress. Both Oregon Democratic Sen. Wyden and Idaho Republican Sen. Mike Crapo have said they support passing the funding this year.
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Alaska
Raised In Alaska Spotting Moose And Grizzly On Trail Cameras
We’re sharing some of the Last Frontier adventures of the popular YouTube account Raised In Alaska. This week: Moose and grizzly trail camera shots.
Subscribe to Raised In Alaska on YouTube. Follow on X, formerly known as Twitter (@akkingon).
Alaska
Fatal vehicle collision left one dead, two injured at mile 91 of Seward Highway, APD says
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – On Thursday, a vehicle collision at mile 91 of the Seward Highway left one dead and two injured, according to an update from APD.
The collision involved two vehicles — a semi-truck and a passenger vehicle.
The Girdwood Fire Department responded at about 8:41 p.m. and pronounced the male driver of the vehicle dead at the scene.
APD says a male and female were transported to the hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.
At the time of publication, the southbound and northbound lanes of the Seward Highway remain closed.
APD is currently investigating the circumstances of the collision and the victim’s identity will be released once they have completed next-of-kin procedures.
Original Story: An incident involving two vehicles at mile 91 of Seward Highway leaves two injured, according to Anchorage Police Department (APD).
APD is responding to the scene and travelers should expect closures at mile 91 for both northbound and southbound lanes of the Seward Highway for at least the next 3 to 4 hours.
Updates will be made as they become available.
See a spelling or grammar error? Report it to web@ktuu.com
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