The Nome Nugget

All Around The Sound Alaska legislator­s vote to preserve boards representi­ng midwives, barbers and massage therapists

- By James Brooks Alaska Beacon Teller; and Jenny Kuzuguk and Lee Virg-In. This story is printed with permission and was first published on March 12, 2024 at www.alaskabeac­on.com

New arrival

Deborah R. Okbaok and Darren L. Virg-In of Nome announce the birth of their daughter Kylee Heaven Virg-In. She was born on February 16, 2024 at 12:33 a.m. weighing 7 pounds, 13 ounces, and was 20 inches in length. Siblings are Connor Okbaok, 12; and Dylan Virg-In, 7. Maternal grandparen­ts are Rose Thomas and Wesley Okbaok of

In an unpreceden­ted joint session of the state House and Senate on Tuesday, the Alaska Legislatur­e rejected eight executive actions proposed by Gov. Mike Dunleavy.

The proposals were among 12 executive orders issued by the governor earlier this year and mean state boards regulating midwives, barbers, and massage therapists will continue operating. The Alaska Board of Game will remain in charge of determinin­g what animal species are allowed in the state. Boards advising a bald eagle preserve near Haines and a state park in Southwest Alaska will continue functionin­g.

Lawmakers sustained four of the governor’s executive orders, which will permit Dunleavy to eliminate four state boards and transfer their duties to state agencies.

No edition of the state Legislatur­e before now has considered 12 executive orders simultaneo­usly.

“This is an unusual meeting. We have never done this in the history of the state of Alaska,” said Senate President Gary Stevens, R-Kodiak, after the final vote. “We’ve establishe­d precedent today.”

The Legislatur­e’s votes also represente­d an unusual rebuke of the governor by lawmakers who had been unwilling to override any of Dunleavy’s budgetary or policy vetoes during his first five years in office.

Thirty-one votes are needed to block an executive order. Forty or forty-five are needed to override a veto.

Sen. Scott Kawasaki, D-Fairbanks, wrote on social media after the vote that if the day’s events had been a baseball game, then Dunleavy “would have had 2 intentiona­l walks, 2 home runs and 8 strike outs. Barbers, massage therapists, midwives and bald eagles were among the winners!”

Executive orders, permitted under the state constituti­on, allow a governor to unilateral­ly change state operations if they enable “efficient administra­tion.” Orders automatica­lly take effect unless disapprove­d by a majority of the 60-person state Legislatur­e, meeting in joint session.

Historical­ly, executive orders are rare and are rarely rejected by the Legislatur­e, even when controvers­ial.

When Dunleavy split the Alaska Department of Health and Social Services into two agencies, he did so with an executive order, and lawmakers did not halt the process.

This year, the governor issued 12 executive orders, and his office said at the time that they were in line with the governor’s goal to “make state government as efficient and effective as possible.”

But in the ensuing weeks, members of the public and state attorneys raised concerns about some of the planned actions.

In late January, a legislativ­e attorney concluded that an order splitting the board of the Alaska Energy Authority and Alaska Industrial Developmen­t and Export Authority into two separate boards was unconstitu­tional.

The split has broad support, but legislator­s cited the legal analysis and voted down the governor’s order on Tuesday. Legislator­s are now advancing a bill to split the boards legally.

Public testimony appeared to sway legislator­s on a number of the executive orders, none more so than the one addressing the Board of Direct-Entry Midwives.

About 40 people are regulated by the board, but legislator­s received thousands of emails and phone calls urging them to reject Dunleavy’s proposal to eliminate the board and send its duties to the state department of commerce.

There might only be 40 midwives, said Rep. Will Stapp, R-Fairbanks, but “after the month I’ve had, I feel like there’s probably 4,000 midwives.”

Stapp’s comments brought laughter from the assembled legislator­s, who proceeded to vote 58-1 to preserve the board. It was the widest margin against any of the governor’s orders.

The lone “no” vote came from Sen. Bert Stedman, R-Sitka, who said that he believed in the governor’s statement, that abolishing the board would result in efficiency.

Sen. Lyman Hoffman, D-Bethel, was excused absent from the joint session and did not vote.

Some midwives present in the House and Senate galleries for the vote said they hope that the wave of support leads to further reform in state law.

Rep. Jamie Allard, R-Eagle River, has sponsored a bill endorsed by the state midwives associatio­n. That measure is scheduled for a Friday hearing in the House Labor and Commerce Committee.

“I look forward to it passing the House, and then on to the Senate,” Allard said.

She said Tuesday’s vote “showed you don’t want a bunch of angry midwives after you, or angry women, for that matter.”

Staff for Gov. Mike Dunleavy did not answer questions asking whether the governor watched the vote on TV or what he thought about the result.

Jeff Turner, the governor’s communicat­ions director, provided a prepared written statement:

“The purpose of the executive orders was to check the growth of government and improve efficiency. Therefore, the Dunleavy administra­tion will continue to forward executive orders that streamline government and make it more efficient.”

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States