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Alaska Senate committee advances draft capital budget, boosting funds for school maintenance

By: Corinne Smith, Alaska Beacon

Sen. Lyman Hoffman, D-Bethel, is seen in the Senate Finance Committee on Tuesday, April 25, 2023. A co-chair of the Senate Finance Committee, Hoffman is in charge of the state’s capital budget. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)

The Alaska Senate Finance committee advanced a draft capital budget on Tuesday that would put nearly $250 million toward state facilities and maintenance projects next year.

The draft budget adds $88 million to Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s proposed capital budget of $159 million, with the largest additions going toward K-12 schools and university facilities maintenance. 

That was a focused effort by the finance committee, said co-chair Sen. Bert Stedman, R-Sitka, who called funding for education facilities maintenance a “heavy concentration” on Wednesday. 

Earlier this year, students and school officials testified to lawmakers that decades of deferred maintenance has reached crisis levels — with many rural school districts in particular grappling with deteriorating facilities, failing water and sewer systems — which they say is degrading student and staff morale. Lawmakers have expressed support and increased funding in recent years, but point to Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s history of vetoes as a roadblock for funding education.  

The Senate draft includes $57.8 million in additional funding toward K-12 school maintenance through the Alaska Department of Education and Early Development and $17 million toward the University of Alaska. It also includes $5.7 million for the Alaska Court System’s facilities and $8 million for community infrastructure and workforce development programs through the Alaska Department of Commerce, Community, and Economic Development. 

The Legislature relies on state ranked lists to prioritize where to direct funding to capital projects for K-12 schools, the university system and the court system. 

For K-12 schools, the state’s current major maintenance list totals over $400 million needed for 103 school projects and repairs. Stedman said he recognized this year’s capital budget will only fund a fraction of those.

“Hopefully we get a quarter of it done, or something like that, but it’d be nice to retire the entire list,” Stedman said. 

The draft budget would fund the top 15 school projects on the list, plus funds for three other schools in need of emergency fuel tank repairs. The top projects range from roof and boiler replacements to septic systems, fire suppression and safety upgrades in schools from Fairbanks to the Aleutian Islands. 

In order to distribute funds more widely, members of the finance committee reduced funding for one project in Galena, in the Western Interior of Alaska, from roughly $35 million to $5 million for renovations to the Sydney C. Huntington Elementary and High Schools. They also allocated $17 million towards rebuilding the school in Stebbins in Western Alaska, after it burned down in 2024.

Mt. Edgecumbe High School student housing in Sitka is seen on Oct. 6, 2025 (Photo by Corinne Smith/Alaska Beacon)
Mt. Edgecumbe High School student housing in Sitka is seen on Oct. 6, 2025. (Photo by Corinne Smith/Alaska Beacon)

The Senate draft also adds nearly $14 million in funding for the state-run Mt. Edgecumbe High School, which has been the focus of public attention and concern after a quarter of students disenrolled this year. The additional facilities dollars include $10 million to remodel the dining hall, $3.1 million to replace dorm windows, $460,000 to replace dorm furniture, $50,000 to replace mattresses and $125,000 to replace aging laundry machines. 

Finance members added $17 million to fund the top nine projects across the University of Alaska system — three projects each within the three major campuses. 

Sen. Jesse Kiehl, D-Juneau, serves on the finance committee and his district includes University of Alaska Southeast. He described the proposed funds as a “nickel” compared to the “colossal” deferred maintenance needs of the university system. 

“That’s been built by Legislatures and Boards of Regents for 40 years,” he said on Wednesday, adding that it is a shared responsibility to put funding towards repairs and upgrades.

“The Constitution makes them a separate body within the executive branch that puts a lot of responsibility on them, too, more than the general state government,” he said “So university major maintenance is its own huge problem.”

The draft budget also includes $5.7 million for upgrades to state court facilities, mostly targeted to Anchorage and Sitka. It contains nearly $10 million for workforce development programs geared at the construction and oil and gas sectors, including for the Fairbanks Pipeline Training Center and Alaska Vocational Technical Center in Seward. 

An amendment to add $25 million to the draft budget for the Port of Anchorage, sponsored by Sen. Kelly Merrick, R-Eagle River, was voted down on Tuesday by a 5 to 2 vote. 

Before voting against the proposal, finance co-chair Sen. Lyman Hoffman, D-Bethel, said during committee deliberations the priority this year is to fund as many school maintenance projects on the list as possible, saying “schools are falling apart” and must be maintained to prevent further deterioration.

“Students that are trying to learn deserve better,” Hoffman said. “And if we are not able to provide this major maintenance, we are going to see these schools continue to crumble, and the financial burden to the state of Alaska will be hundreds of millions of dollars to rebuild schools.”

More funding for school maintenance and other capital projects could be added by the Alaska House of Representatives, who will take up the draft budget bill after it’s approved by the Senate in the coming weeks.

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Entertainment

Meghan Trainor Abruptly Cancels Tour, Claims It’s For Her Family (But Not Everyone …

Reading Time: 3 minutes

She’s getting out of her Get In Girl tour.

With less than two months’ notice, Meghan Trainor has canceled her 2026 tour.

She claims that this is about being “present” for her family.

But folks on social media are floating another theory about the controversial singer.

Meghan Trainor on Drew Barrymore.
Singer Meghan Trainor chats with Drew Barrymore on CBS. (Image Credit: CBS)

The ‘Get in Girl’ tour isn’t happening! Not this year, anyway

On Thursday, April 16, Trainor took to her Instagram Story to share her updated 2026 plans.

“After a lot of reflection and some really tough conversations, I’ve made the difficult decision to cancel the ‘Get in Girl’ tour,” she began.

“Balancing the release of a new album, preparing for a nationwide tour,” she explained.

Trainor continued: “And welcoming our new baby girl to our growing family of five has just been more than I can take on right now.”

As we reported in January, the singer welcomed her third child via gestational carrier (surrogate).

A screenshot of Meghan Trainor's April 16 2026 Instagram Story canceling her tour.
This Instagram Story from Meghan Trainor was surely a disappointment to some of her fans. (Image Credit: Instagram)

“I know this will come as a disappointment to my fans,” Trainor acknowledged.

“And,” she expressed, “I am so sorry to let you down.”

Trainor then affirmed: “But I know this is the right decision for my family and me right now.” That is now a family of five.

“I promise I’ll be back soon,” she vowed. “And I can’t wait for you to hear this new record.”

Trainor concluded: “I’m so proud of it and I’m endlessly grateful for your love and support always.”

Meghan Trainor ET interview screenshot
During an interview with Entertainment Tonight, Meghan Trainor shows off her new body. (Image Credit: Entertainment Tonight/YouTube)

On social media, some suggest an alternative explanation

She’s 32 and has three young children.

That might be enough to make anyone change their summer plans.

But having a child isn’t exactly something that happens overnight. The pregnancy alone lasts for most of a year.

And, in Trainor’s case, they welcomed Baby #3 via gestational carrier.

That involves a whole other person, not to mention doctors and IVF treatments. Becoming a family of five didn’t happen by accident or suddenly, so why plan this and the tour?

Some seriously, some snarkily, folks on social media are suggesting that Trainor is doing this to save face.

The belief is that Trainor’s ticket sales did not meet expectations for two months away from the start of her tour.

Touring is expensive and time-consuming. And appearing on a stage before a mostly vacant crowd is humiliating.

(Just ask JD Vance.)

Obviously, we do not have access to Trainor’s ticket sales — or to what expectations were before launching the tour. But it’s a solid theory, however unproven.

She’s been shedding fans in recent years

Trainor’s use of GLP-1 medication for luxury weight loss has made headlines and elicited controversy.

She even went so far as to change the lyrics to “All About That Bass” to match her new, ultra-slender body. That went about as well as you’d expect.

As we at THG have emphasized before, going into someone’s reply to shame or “express concern” about a celebrity is very unlikely to prompt any changes.

Everyone deserves to have the body that they most desire. But people are right to have ethical concerns and reasonable to express long-term health worries about people buying into medicalized starvation as a weight-loss solution.

Maybe Trainor isn’t able to fill seats anymore. She’s married to a Spy Kids star and has three beautiful kids. She’s arguably still winning. We just hope that she doesn’t come to regret some of her incendiary choices.

Meghan Trainor Abruptly Cancels Tour, Claims It’s For Her Family (But Not Everyone … was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Alaska News

Far North Fashion Show celebrates Alaska cultures

A model is silhouetted as she prepares to strut on the catwalk at the Far North Fashion Show, held April 15,, 2026, at the Anchorage Museum. The fashion show is part of the annual Arctic Encounter Summit.. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

A model is silhouetted as she prepares to strut on the catwalk at the Far North Fashion Show, held April 15,, 2026, at the Anchorage Museum. The fashion show is part of the annual Arctic Encounter Summit. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

A model poses on the catwalk at the Far North Fashion Show, held April 15,, 2026, at the Anchorage Museum. The dress she is wearing features red handprints on the collar, symbols of missing and murdered Indigenous people. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)<br />Arctic Encounter Summit Far North Fashion Show at the Anchorage Museum, April 15, 2026. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
A model poses on the catwalk at the Far North Fashion Show, held April 15, 2026, at the Anchorage Museum. The dress she is wearing features red handprints on the collar, symbols of missing and murdered Indigenous people. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

Attendees of the Arctic Encounter Summit, held this week in Anchorage, took a break from heavy discussions about climate change, national security, shipping safety and other pressing concerns on Wednesday night to enjoy something more fun: high fashion.

Crystal Toolie of Nome and St. Lawrence Island, Cathy Apatiki of Gamble wait backstage wguke wearing traditional designs that they would later display on the catwalk at the Far North Fashion Show, held April 15. 2026, at the Anchorage Museum. Looking on is designer Marisa Taylor of Savoonga and, also wearing one of Taylor's designs, Mary Abraham of Toksook Bay. The Far North Fashion Show, in its seventh year, is part of the annual Arctic Encounter Symposium. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
Crystal Toolie of Nome and St. Lawrence Island, Cathy Apatiki of Gamble wait backstage wearing traditional designs that they would later display on the catwalk at the Far North Fashion Show, held April 15. 2026, at the Anchorage Museum. Looking on is designer Marisa Taylor of Savoonga and, also wearing one of Taylor’s designs, Mary Abraham of Toksook Bay. The Far North Fashion Show, in its seventh year, is part of the annual Arctic Encounter Symposium. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

The Far North Fashion Show, now in its seventh year, showcased the work of Indigenous designers from around Alaska.

“To be honest, the Far North Fashion Show is the highlight of so many attendees’ experiences, myself included,” Rachel Kallander, Arctic Encounter’s founder, said in brief remarks at the start of the show.

The celebration, which featured a catwalk bathed in pastel lights, pulsing music and refreshments, required a lot of work to pull together, Kallander told the audience.

“We have designers and models who have put in hundreds and hundreds of hours into what you are about to see,” she said.

A model walks on the catwalk at the Far North Fashion Show, held April 15, 2026, at the Anchorage Museum. The fashion show is part of the annual Arctic Encounter Summit.. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
A model walks on the catwalk at the Far North Fashion Show, held April 15, 2026, at the Anchorage Museum. The fashion show is part of the annual Arctic Encounter Summit.. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

A sparkly boot worn by a model catches the light at the Far North Fashion Show, held April 15, 2026, at the Anchorage Museum. The fashion show is part of the annual Arctic Encounter Symposium. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
A sparkly boot worn by a model catches the light at the Far North Fashion Show, held April 15, 2026, at the Anchorage Museum. The fashion show is part of the annual Arctic Encounter Symposium. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

Beyond their good looks, the clothing on display incorporated messages. Many were about traditions. Some were inspired by the animals that are important to different Indigenous Alaska cultures. A dress designed by Jackie Qataliña Schaefer, who is Inupiaq and originally from Kotzebue, paid homage to the caribou, for example. Another dress was designed with a train that resembled a whale fluke. And models, as they took their turns on the catwalk, sometimes made moves that are part of traditional Native dances.

Some of the works shown at the event had a more somber message. They incorporated the red handprint that symbolizes missing and murdered Indigenous people.

Attendees sitting by the catwalk, including some elders, watch and photograph models at the Far North Fashion Show, held April 15, 2026, at the Anchorage Museum. The fashion show is part of the annual Arctic Encounter Summit.(Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
Attendees sitting by the catwalk, including some elders, watch and photograph models at the Far North Fashion Show, held April 15, 2026, at the Anchorage Museum. The fashion show is part of the annual Arctic Encounter Summit.(Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

Designers and models were from Inupiaq, Athabascan, Tlingit, Yup’ik and Aleut cultures, among others.

Along with Schaeffer, who is director of climate initiatives at the Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium in addition to being an artist, the designers whose works were shown were Maria Shaa Tlaa Williams of Southeast Alaska, Marisa Taylor of St. Lawrence Island, Carlene Thayer of Unalaska, Alana Moses of Fairbanks, Reine Pavlik of Yakutat, Jeremiah James of Yakutat and Christina Waska, originally from Newtok.

The Arctic Encounter Symposium, which opened on Wednesday, runs through Friday. It has attracted attendees from 30 countries, Kallander said.

A model poses on the catwalk at the Far North Fashion Show, held April 15, 2026, at the Anchorage Museum. The fashion show is part of the annual Arctic Encounter Summit.. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
A model poses on the catwalk at the Far North Fashion Show, held April 15, 2026, at the Anchorage Museum. The fashion show is part of the annual Arctic Encounter Summit. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
A model poses on the catwalk at the Far North Fashion Show, held April 15, 2026, at the Anchorage Museum. The fashion show is part of the annual Arctic Encounter Summit.. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
A model poses on the catwalk at the Far North Fashion Show, held April 15, 2026, at the Anchorage Museum. The fashion show is part of the annual Arctic Encounter Summit. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
Martin Paul, a University of Alaska Fairbanks student from Kalskag and Kipnuk, makes traditional dance moves on the catwalk at the seventh annual Far North Fashion Show, held on April 15. 2026, at the Anchorage Museum. Paul's outfit incorportes the red handprint that symbolizes missing and murdered Indigenous people. The fashion show is a highlight of the annual Arctic Encounter Summit. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
Martin Paul, a University of Alaska Fairbanks student from Kalskag and Kipnuk, makes traditional dance moves on the catwalk at the seventh annual Far North Fashion Show, held on April 15. 2026, at the Anchorage Museum. Paul’s outfit incorportes the red handprint that symbolizes missing and murdered Indigenous people. The fashion show is a highlight of the annual Arctic Encounter Summit. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

 

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Uncategorized

Why the future of marijuana legalization remains hazy despite high public support

Cannabis plants are seen at Harborside Oakland Dispensary on Aug. 11, 2025, in Oakland, Calif. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Thousands of Americans will soon gather to celebrate April 20 – or “4/20” – the most important day of the year for cannabis enthusiasts.

But this year, a cloud of uncertainty will hang over these celebrations. After years of success, the movement to legalize recreational and medical cannabis has stalled.

It’s a moment unlike any that I have seen in the 12 years that I’ve been researching cannabis legalization as part of my broader interest in U.S. drug policy.

Not so long ago, the movement had so much momentum that nationwide cannabis legalization felt virtually inevitable. That momentum is now gone.

The strategy to legalize cannabis through ballot initiatives is no longer working. The coalition of supporters that made this strategy work has frayed, and new research is raising concerns about the health impact of regular cannabis use. All of this constitutes the most significant challenge to the movement since it went mainstream in the 21st century.

Years of success

As a social movement, cannabis legalization has been extremely successful. Since 2012, 24 states and Washington have legalized recreational cannabis use. Forty-nine states and Washington have legalized medical cannabis use, though programs vary from state to state.

While cannabis remains illegal at the federal level, changes have happened there, too.

The 2018 Farm Bill, for instance, legalized hemp, a non-psychoactive derivative of the cannabis plant used to make textiles, rope and other consumer goods. While it wasn’t lawmakers’ intent, entrepreneurs figured out how to make products from hemp that contain enough of the chemical compound tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, to be psychoactive. This fueled growth of the hemp market, which in 2023 was valued at US$1.63 billion.

Additionally, the Biden administration in 2024 began the process of rescheduling cannabis under the Controlled Substances Act. It’s a course that has continued under the second Trump administration.

The scheduling system classifies substances based on accepted medical use and potential for abuse. Federal rescheduling would not legalize cannabis, but it would move it from the most restrictive Schedule I – which includes substances like heroin and LSD – to Schedule III, with substances like anabolic steroids, ketamine and codeine. It would recognize cannabis as having medical use.

A man in a cannabis store attends to a customer.
A budtender helps customers purchase marijuana at California Street Cannabis Company on Aug. 11, 2025, in San Francisco.
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Challenges emerge

With rescheduling still underway, it may seem odd to say that the legalization movement has stalled. But a closer look reveals significant challenges.

The biggest challenge can be found at the ballot box. The 2024 election was the legalization movement’s worst showing in years.

All three recreational legalization ballot measures failed. Only Nebraska’s medical legalization measures passed, but it has yet to be fully implemented due to ongoing political and legal challenges.

Then there’s the 2025 tax and spending package approved by Congress. When its new provisions go into effect later this year, they will dramatically alter the hemp market.

Many hemp products currently on shelves, like THC-infused beverages and gummies, will become illegal. Many businesses currently selling these products will be forced to close.

Some of this is already happening, as states like Tennessee and Iowa rush to pass restrictions on hemp products.

For instance, the dispensary closest to my university in Iowa has just closed. Once a growing business that employed 30 people, it was forced to shut down after new state laws significantly limited what they could sell. This crackdown on the hemp market is particularly significant in states like Iowa that have no legal market for recreational marijuana use and only a limited medical marijuana market.

No single reason for current slump

Several factors are driving these changes.

One is politics. While the vast majority of Americans support marijuana legalization, the approval is much higher among Democrats and independents than it is among Republicans.

Of the 26 states where recreational marijuana has not been legalized, 20 of them have state governments that are under total Republican control. Another four have Republican-controlled legislatures. Pennsylvania’s legislature is split between Republicans and Democrats. Only Hawaii has a Democrat-controlled state government that has not legalized recreational cannabis.

A man sitting at a desk is surrounded by people wearing white medical coats.
President Donald Trump speaks in the Oval Office on Dec. 18, 2025, before signing an executive order easing restrictions on marijuana.
Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images

Then there is the health issue. A growing body of evidence is raising concerns about the negative impact of regular cannabis use that includes the risk of cannabis addiction, psychosis, anxiety and depression.

Researchers are also questioning cannabis’ efficacy as medicine. Several recent reviews have concluded that there is insufficient scientific evidence to support the therapeutic use of cannabis for most of the conditions for which it is consumed, such as insomnia and acute pain. A review of cannabis’s use for treating mental health conditions came to a similar conclusion.

Citing such evidence, The New York Times editorial board recently recanted some of its earlier support for legalization. The newspaper wrote, “The unfortunate truth is that the loosening of marijuana policies … has led to worse outcomes than many Americans expected,” adding, “It is time to acknowledge reality and change course.”

The coalition of supporters frays

Still another issue is conflict within the legalization movement itself, particularly between the business and activist wings.

The tension between these groups is long-standing, with activists often accusing members of industry of being more focused on money than justice. And as the cannabis industry has grown, these tensions have become more acute.

In 2022, for example, the pro-cannabis organization True Social Equity in Cannabis sued three Illinois cannabis companies for engaging in coordinated anticompetitive practices and violating federal antitrust laws. In court documents, they called the three companies the “Chicago cartel,” before voluntarily dismissing the case.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis used a similar strategy in 2024 in his successful campaign against the legalization of marijuana for recreational use in the state. He consistently criticized “corporate cannabis,” a catchall phrase often used by critics to describe the large cannabis companies that increasingly dominate state markets. He warned voters that the law would create a “weed cartel.”

Prominent cannabis activists like former Massachusetts regulator Shaleen Title have also called out corporate cannabis in their accounts of what’s wrong with the legalization movement.

In many ways, these challenges are the result of the movement’s earlier success. Making marijuana legal has meant more people trying it, more people studying it and more people making money from it.

The insights from the past 12 years could help inform whatever comes next. The fact that public support for legalization remains high suggests that a return to the days of blanket prohibition is unlikely.

Still, as the history of cannabis law and policy has shown, there are no guarantees.

The Conversation

William Garriott’s work has been supported by the Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research.

​Politics + Society – The Conversation

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Music

[EXCLUSIVE] Zach Top Met George Strait – His Reaction Is So Real

Imagine meeting your idol and feeling like a kid again—Zach Top shares that unforgettable moment with George Strait. Continue reading…​The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs

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Music

[EXCLUSIVE] Zach Top Met George Strait – His Reaction Is So Real

Imagine meeting your idol and feeling like a kid again—Zach Top shares that unforgettable moment with George Strait. Continue reading…​Country Music News – Taste of Country

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Alaska News

Alaska Senate committee advances draft capital budget, boosting funds for school maintenance

Sen. Lyman Hoffman, D-Bethel, is seen in the Senate Finance Committee on Tuesday, April 25, 2023. A co-chair of the Senate Finance Committee, Hoffman is in charge of the state’s capital budget. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)

The Alaska Senate Finance committee advanced a draft capital budget on Tuesday that would put nearly $250 million toward state facilities and maintenance projects next year.

The draft budget adds $88 million to Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s proposed capital budget of $159 million, with the largest additions going toward K-12 schools and university facilities maintenance. 

That was a focused effort by the finance committee, said co-chair Sen. Bert Stedman, R-Sitka, who called funding for education facilities maintenance a “heavy concentration” on Wednesday. 

Earlier this year, students and school officials testified to lawmakers that decades of deferred maintenance has reached crisis levels — with many rural school districts in particular grappling with deteriorating facilities, failing water and sewer systems — which they say is degrading student and staff morale. Lawmakers have expressed support and increased funding in recent years, but point to Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s history of vetoes as a roadblock for funding education.  

The Senate draft includes $57.8 million in additional funding toward K-12 school maintenance through the Alaska Department of Education and Early Development and $17 million toward the University of Alaska. It also includes $5.7 million for the Alaska Court System’s facilities and $8 million for community infrastructure and workforce development programs through the Alaska Department of Commerce, Community, and Economic Development. 

The Legislature relies on state ranked lists to prioritize where to direct funding to capital projects for K-12 schools, the university system and the court system. 

For K-12 schools, the state’s current major maintenance list totals over $400 million needed for 103 school projects and repairs. Stedman said he recognized this year’s capital budget will only fund a fraction of those.

“Hopefully we get a quarter of it done, or something like that, but it’d be nice to retire the entire list,” Stedman said. 

The draft budget would fund the top 15 school projects on the list, plus funds for three other schools in need of emergency fuel tank repairs. The top projects range from roof and boiler replacements to septic systems, fire suppression and safety upgrades in schools from Fairbanks to the Aleutian Islands. 

In order to distribute funds more widely, members of the finance committee reduced funding for one project in Galena, in the Western Interior of Alaska, from roughly $35 million to $5 million for renovations to the Sydney C. Huntington Elementary and High Schools. They also allocated $17 million towards rebuilding the school in Stebbins in Western Alaska, after it burned down in 2024.

Mt. Edgecumbe High School student housing in Sitka is seen on Oct. 6, 2025 (Photo by Corinne Smith/Alaska Beacon)
Mt. Edgecumbe High School student housing in Sitka is seen on Oct. 6, 2025. (Photo by Corinne Smith/Alaska Beacon)

The Senate draft also adds nearly $14 million in funding for the state-run Mt. Edgecumbe High School, which has been the focus of public attention and concern after a quarter of students disenrolled this year. The additional facilities dollars include $10 million to remodel the dining hall, $3.1 million to replace dorm windows, $460,000 to replace dorm furniture, $50,000 to replace mattresses and $125,000 to replace aging laundry machines. 

Finance members added $17 million to fund the top nine projects across the University of Alaska system — three projects each within the three major campuses. 

Sen. Jesse Kiehl, D-Juneau, serves on the finance committee and his district includes University of Alaska Southeast. He described the proposed funds as a “nickel” compared to the “colossal” deferred maintenance needs of the university system. 

“That’s been built by Legislatures and Boards of Regents for 40 years,” he said on Wednesday, adding that it is a shared responsibility to put funding towards repairs and upgrades.

“The Constitution makes them a separate body within the executive branch that puts a lot of responsibility on them, too, more than the general state government,” he said “So university major maintenance is its own huge problem.”

The draft budget also includes $5.7 million for upgrades to state court facilities, mostly targeted to Anchorage and Sitka. It contains nearly $10 million for workforce development programs geared at the construction and oil and gas sectors, including for the Fairbanks Pipeline Training Center and Alaska Vocational Technical Center in Seward. 

An amendment to add $25 million to the draft budget for the Port of Anchorage, sponsored by Sen. Kelly Merrick, R-Eagle River, was voted down on Tuesday by a 5 to 2 vote. 

Before voting against the proposal, finance co-chair Sen. Lyman Hoffman, D-Bethel, said during committee deliberations the priority this year is to fund as many school maintenance projects on the list as possible, saying “schools are falling apart” and must be maintained to prevent further deterioration.

“Students that are trying to learn deserve better,” Hoffman said. “And if we are not able to provide this major maintenance, we are going to see these schools continue to crumble, and the financial burden to the state of Alaska will be hundreds of millions of dollars to rebuild schools.”

More funding for school maintenance and other capital projects could be added by the Alaska House of Representatives, who will take up the draft budget bill after it’s approved by the Senate in the coming weeks.

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Music

Legendary ‘The Gambler’ Songwriter Don Schlitz Dead at 73

He leaves behind one of the biggest legacies in country music history. Continue reading…​The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs

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Music

Legendary ‘The Gambler’ Songwriter Don Schlitz Dead at 73

He leaves behind one of the biggest legacies in country music history. Continue reading…​Country Music News – Taste of Country

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Hip Hop

Case’s 2001 ‘Open Letter’ Gets Vinyl Reissue

Case Open Letter

Case’s classic R&B record Open Letter is getting a new vinyl variant. The third studio album from Case will be released in a 2LP format, with one version in classic black vinyl and another in a limited edition color variant. Both versions of the LP are available for preorder now.

Released 25 years ago, Open Letter is presented as if Case is speaking directly to his partner through letters. The album is noted for its mix of 2000s R&B, soul, and hip-hop influences, and was bolstered by singles “Missing You” and “Not Your Friend.” “Missing You” ultimately peaked at number four on the Billboard Hot 100 and topped the outlet’s Hot R&B/Hip Hop Songs chart upon its release. The track earned Case a nomination for Best Male R&B Vocal Performance at the 2002 Grammy Awards, and also had a memorable placement in the Eddie Murphy movie, Nutty Professor II: The Klumps.

After its release, Open Letter reached number five on the Billboard 200—Case’s highest position ever—and has since been certified gold. The album remains a standout in Case’s discography; after the debut of Open Letter, the star didn’t release another album for eight years. “Right after that, I moved to Atlanta in October and I just stopped doing it. I mean, it was me doing what my heart told me to do,” Case reflected later to YouKnowIGotSoul.com. The pull to music was too hard to resist, however, and he returned to recording with 2009’s The Rose Experience.

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“Every time I write a song, it’s either about something I am going through, have gone through or somebody really close to me has gone through. For me, inspiration is everywhere. I just try to draw from real life and put some substance into the music,” Case said of his creative process in a 2015 interview with Vibe. “Those are things that you need to address and sing about.”

Buy Case’s Open Letter here.

​Discover more about the world’s greatest R&B artists | uDiscover Music