The Fairbanks legislators, with two exceptions, took a reasonable position and voted to override the governor's vetoes, but it was to no avail.
Read MoreIn another piece of bad news for higher education in Alaska, the state has suspended scholarship programs for students.
Read MoreThe Dunleavy attack on higher education, if not overturned by the Alaska Legislature, will do permanent damage to Alaska.
Read MoreThe high-priced expert is to deliver “A global roadmap that redesigns the Medicaid and public assistance system at a lower cost.” That means cutting health care for poor people.
Read MoreLt. Gov. Kevin Meyer took time out from guarding the state seal to have someone on the state payroll create a fairy tale about the Dunleavy campaign.
Read MoreDoes he want to close the Anchorage campus? The Fairbanks campus? What programs would he eliminate? He wants to dismantle the system, but he won’t take any responsibility and he hides behind his surrogates.
Read More“Alaska faces a bleak future if Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s vetoes become law.” The Daily News-Miner editorial is right.
Read MoreAn independent review of Dunleavy’s vetoes says to expect the elimination of about 4,200 Alaska jobs in the short term. But the losses could be a lot worse over the long term and it will take years to see the full impact, according to a new study by two Alaska economists.
Read MoreThe Dunleavy administration and its apologists continue to try to downplay the impact of a 40 percent cut in state funding to the University of Alaska, claiming it is only 17 percent, repeating an inaccurate statement from temporary budget director Donna Arduin.
Read MoreThe University of Alaska estimates that the total cost of the Dunleavy veto, if the Legislature does not find the 45 votes to override, will be close to $250 million, with the expected loss in tuition revenue and federal grants.
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