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Perhaps it’s time to look more closely at mid-career retraining for productive workers or even opportunities to rehire seniors and end-of-career workers.
I agree strongly with the editorial board that posting public notices in the local paper(s) should continue.
If you’re going to invoke Scandinavia, you also have to understand fully why these countries succeed.
As a lifelong Republican, I see now that “GOP,” which used to stand for Grand Old Party, now stands for Goons of Putin.
I wonder what Franklin would think of the politicians in Washington, D.C. who are refusing to provide aid to Ukraine in its time of need
I ask Assembly members to not spend any city or state dollars on this project.
What will happen with K-12 education funding, including the Base Student Allocation (BSA)? How about classroom sizes?
Attorney General Treg Taylor acts not as the attorney for Alaskans, but as the governor’s Roy Cohn to do his bidding.
How much will SeaShare be paid for “administrative fees?” I hope Alaska fishers will pose these questions to their state legislators.
The state should not exacerbate the misuse of public funds for correspondence schools by misusing more public funds for legal fees to appeal a sound decision.
Alaskans should welcome the result of the present lawsuit, albeit a decade late.
To be clear, I do not support and have never supported public funds intended for public education to go private and religious schools.
Joining the Nurse Licensure Compact is smoke and mirrors, disguising dangerous working conditions and calling it a workforce shortage.
The total annual health care spending is more than $3.6 trillion annually. Administrative costs make up 73% of that total.
Is there a statewide plan for emergency response to restore critical communications? The simple answer is no.
There’s a reason our state is falling apart, and that reason is Dunleavy.
Perhaps the governor and the state want to maintain control of charter schools so they can approve the ones that cater to their special interests.
Ms. LaFrance’s ‘authoritarian tendencies,’ as described by the writer, actually helped save lives in Anchorage, for which we should all be grateful.
We can all look forward to a spring with less plastic pollution and hopes for cleaner drinking water.
The current system of sharing the authority for charter school approvals has worked well and provides a balance of local and statewide perspectives.
I would like to see a simplified and well-publicized report of AIDEA projects going back beyond the “barley” and “coal dust” fiascos of yesteryear.
Is there a humanitarian line between forced hospitalization/ medication and people on the street hallucinating, unable to care for themselves and becoming victims of the elements and violence?