Las Vegas Review-Journal

Alaska students protest veto

Walkouts are held at schools over failed education legislatio­n

- By Becky Bohrer

JUNEAU, Alaska — Students in Alaska’s capital walked out of school Thursday and marched through the halls of the statehouse to protest Republican Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s latest education veto and the Legislatur­e’s failure to override it.

The walkout was part of a protest organized by the executive board of the Alaska Associatio­n of Student Government­s, said Felix Myers, a student organizer from Sitka. Plans called for 40-minute walkouts at schools across Alaska, with 40 representi­ng the number of votes lawmakers needed to override the veto. Lawmakers fell one vote short in their override attempt last month. The walkout was planned for around 11 a.m., a time chosen in part to minimize disruption­s, he said.

“We’ve tried to be heard, we’ve tried to be listened to and we’ve been ignored, and that’s why we’ve gotten to this point,” he said in a phone interview from Anchorage. Myers is a student adviser to the state board of education but said he was not speaking or acting in that capacity concerning the walkout.

Dunleavy in March made good on a threat to veto a package overwhelmi­ng passed by lawmakers that called for a $175 million increase in aid to districts through a school funding formula. He complained the measure lacked provisions he supported, including a three-year program offering annual bonuses of up to $15,000 as a way to attract and keep teachers and changes to the applicatio­n process for charter schools aimed at promoting those schools.

But those items lacked broad support among lawmakers, who questioned the effectiven­ess and cost of the untested teacher retention plan and expressed concern that allowing the state education board — whose members are appointed by the governor — to directly approve charters would erode local control.

After vetoing the package, Dunleavy said he was moving on to other issues, such as energy, but in a later statement said: “As the conversati­on around education continues, I will work with every member of the legislatur­e to pass an increase in funding and needed reforms.” He has not specified what increase in funding he would support.

School leaders and advocates urged a roughly $360 million increase in aid — but nonetheles­s supported the package passed by lawmakers as a positive step. School officials have cited the toll of inflation, along with high energy and insurance costs, as they struggle in some cases with multimilli­on-dollar deficits and teacher shortages.

They also said unpredicta­ble levels of state support make long-term planning difficult. Lawmakers last year approved a one-time, $175-million funding boost but Dunleavy vetoed half that sum. Lawmakers could not muster sufficient support to override that veto, either.

School funding is expected to remain a closely watched issue the remainder of this session.

During the walkout Thursday, students from Juneau-douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé and supporters — including some legislator­s — marched roughly a mile to the state Capitol, with some carrying handmade signs and chanting slogans, such as “fund our future.” They chanted loudly in the Capitol halls, including on the third floor, where the governor’s offices are, though Dunleavy was not in Juneau on Thursday.

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