Alaska ignored budget crisis signs. Now, it doesn't have money to fix schools [View all]
INVESTIGATIONS
Alaska ignored budget crisis signs. Now, it doesn't have money to fix schools
AUGUST 1, 2025 5:00 AM ET
KYUK Service
By Emily Schwing

Kids play on old playground equipment during recess in Sleetmute, Alaska. The Legislature has largely ignored rural school districts' repair requests.
Emily Schwing/KYUK
When Alaska House Speaker Bryce Edgmon toured the public school in Sleetmute last fall, he called the building "the poster child" for what's wrong with the way the state pays to build and maintain schools. The tiny community 240 miles west of Anchorage had begged Alaska's education department for nearly two decades for money to repair a leaky roof that over time had left part of the school on the verge of collapse.
Seated at a cafeteria table after the tour, Edgmon, a veteran independent lawmaker, told a Yup'ik elder he planned to "start raising a little bit of Cain" when he returned to the Capitol in Juneau for the 2025 legislative session.
Other lawmakers said similar things after an investigation by KYUK Public Media, NPR and ProPublica earlier this year found that the state has largely ignored hundreds of requests from rural school districts to fix deteriorating buildings, including the Sleetmute school. Because of the funding failures, students and teachers in some of Alaska's most remote villages face serious health and safety risks, the news organizations found.
State Sen. Elvi Gray-Jackson, an Anchorage Democrat, called the investigation's findings "heartbreaking" and said in an email during the legislative session earlier this year that "the current state of these schools is unacceptable." State Sen. Scott Kawasaki, a Fairbanks Democrat, wrote to say that the "responsibility lies squarely on the Legislature" and acknowledged "we do not do enough." Alaska Senate Majority Leader Cathy Giessel, a Republican from Fairbanks, wrote, "We are working to right the ship!"
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