Legislature(2021 - 2022)DAVIS 106

01/27/2022 11:30 AM House WAYS & MEANS

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Audio Topic
11:34:38 AM Start
11:35:05 AM Presentation(s): Fiscal Policy Impacts
01:08:47 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
-- Teleconference <Listen Only> --
-- Testimony <Invitation Only> --
+ Presentation: Fiscal Policy Impacts by TELECONFERENCED
Jared Kosin, President and CEO, Alaska
State Hospital and Nursing Home Association;
Alaska Association of School Boards;
Alaska Council of School Administrators;
Michele Girault, CEO, Hope Community Resources
**Streamed live on AKL.tv**
                    ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE                                                                                  
           HOUSE SPECIAL COMMITTEE ON WAYS AND MEANS                                                                          
                        January 27, 2022                                                                                        
                           11:34 a.m.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative Ivy Spohnholz, Chair                                                                                             
Representative Adam Wool, Vice Chair                                                                                            
Representative Andy Josephson                                                                                                   
Representative Calvin Schrage                                                                                                   
Representative Andi Story                                                                                                       
Representative Mike Prax                                                                                                        
Representative David Eastman                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
All members present                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
COMMITTEE CALENDAR                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
PRESENTATION(S):  FISCAL POLICY IMPACTS                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     - HEARD                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
PREVIOUS COMMITTEE ACTION                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
No previous action to record                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
WITNESS REGISTER                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
JARED KOSIN, President/CEO                                                                                                      
AK State Hospital and Nursing Home Association                                                                                  
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  Provided a PowerPoint presentation, titled                                                               
"Medicaid Spending & the Impact on Health Care."                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MICHELE GIRAULT, Chief Director                                                                                                 
Hope Community Resources;                                                                                                       
Board President                                                                                                                 
Key Coalition of Alaska                                                                                                         
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  Provided invited testimony about fiscal                                                                  
impacts to the healthcare industry.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
LISA PARADY, PhD, Executive Director                                                                                            
Alaska Council of School Administrators                                                                                         
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT:   Provided a PowerPoint  presentation, titled                                                             
"The Proposed Fiscal Plan and Public Education Funding."                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
BRIDGETT WEISS, PhD, Superintendent                                                                                             
Juneau School District;                                                                                                         
President Elect                                                                                                                 
Alaska Council of School Administrators                                                                                         
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION  STATEMENT:    Provided   invited  testimony  on  fiscal                                                             
impacts on Alaska's Schools.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
LON GARRISON, Executive Director                                                                                                
Association of Alaska School Boards                                                                                             
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT:  Provided invited  testimony about the fiscal                                                             
impacts of education funding.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
ACTION NARRATIVE                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
11:34:38 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR IVY  SPOHNHOLZ called the  House Special Committee  on Ways                                                             
and Means meeting  to order at 11:35 a.m.   Representatives Wool,                                                               
Josephson,  Schrage, Story,  and  Spohnholz were  present at  the                                                               
call to order.   Representatives Eastman and Prax  arrived as the                                                               
meeting was in progress.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
^PRESENTATION(S):  Fiscal Policy Impacts                                                                                        
            PRESENTATION(S):  Fiscal Policy Impacts                                                                         
                                                                                                                              
11:35:05 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR SPOHNHOLZ announced  that the only order  of business would                                                               
be a presentation on Fiscal Policy Impacts.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
11:36:32 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
JARED  KOSIN, President/CEO,  Alaska State  Hospital and  Nursing                                                               
Home  Association,  provided  a PowerPoint  presentation,  titled                                                               
"Medicaid  Spending  & the  Impact  on  Health Care"  [hard  copy                                                               
included in  the committee  packet].   Alaska State  Hospital and                                                               
Nursing Home  Association's (ASHNHA's)  mission is  advancing the                                                               
shared  interests  of  Alaska's  hospitals,  nursing  homes,  and                                                               
healthcare partners,  to build an innovative,  sustainable system                                                               
of care  for all  Alaskans.   For over  60 years,  ASHNHA members                                                               
have  worked together  to improve  health  care in  Alaska.   The                                                               
fiscal year  2023 (FY  23) 10-year plan  will flat  fund Medicaid                                                               
and will project annual growth at  1 percent after year two.  The                                                               
Medicaid  Enrollment  and  Spending   in  Alaska  forecast  (MESA                                                               
Report)  covers  20-year cycles,  was  updated  in 2021,  and  is                                                               
projected to increase  by 3.8 percent per recipient  per year for                                                               
Medicaid.   The 2022  report downgraded that  rate to  2 percent.                                                               
Historical  performance of  average annual  growth between  2016-                                                               
2019 saw general  fund appropriation at a 2.1 percent  rate.  The                                                               
average annual  growth rate for  2020-2023 was 0.7 percent.   The                                                               
pandemic  caused  Medicaid  utilization  and  healthcare  service                                                               
utilization to drop significantly.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
11:43:07 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. KOSIN demonstrated that the  payer mix shows volumes by payer                                                               
type  and  is  relevant  because  it shows  that  Medicaid  is  a                                                               
significant  wedge at  almost  30 percent  of  the total  volume.                                                               
Payer  mix varies  by service  type,  for example  90 percent  of                                                               
services of a  nursing home come from Medicaid and  any change in                                                               
fiscal  policy  regarding  Medicaid  would  significantly  impact                                                               
nursing home operations.   More than 50 percent of  the payer mix                                                               
is made up  of government programs that often pay  less than cost                                                               
and  start operations  in a  deficit which  results in  increased                                                               
costs of care.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
11:46:27 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. KOSIN described the healthcare  system continuum and that the                                                               
most expensive  part of the  continuum is the  hospital inpatient                                                               
environment and the  least expensive is at the  community care or                                                               
primary  care  level.    Capacity  deficiencies  drive  and  trap                                                               
patient care  at the  highest cost  point.   For example,  if you                                                               
don't have access to primary care  and need to go to the hospital                                                               
for services, it  will cost way more than it  should to get care.                                                               
Bed availability in nursing homes  is extremely low, if a patient                                                               
goes to  the hospital and  there isn't  space in a  nursing home,                                                               
the  patient  incurs  uncompensated   care  because  the  patient                                                               
doesn't meet the  criteria for staying in the  hospital, but also                                                               
can't be safely  discharged.  The State of  Alaska General Relief                                                               
Assisted Living  Home Program helps  Alaskans who  lack resources                                                               
to  meet an  emergent need  and are  not eligible  for assistance                                                               
from  other  programs such  as  Medicaid.   The  waitlist  system                                                               
prioritizes  those discharged  from  hospital  or long-term  care                                                               
facility.  The  current General Relief Assisted  Living home rate                                                               
is $70  per day  and has been  at that rate  since July  1, 2002.                                                               
Medicaid pays  $170.27 per day and  the rate was last  updated on                                                               
July  1, 2021.    Because of  long wait  times  for placement  in                                                               
assisted  living facilities,  some patients  are in  the hospital                                                               
for  over 100  days  and  can't be  discharged  because they  are                                                               
waiting to qualify  for Medicaid and no  assisted living facility                                                               
will take them due to the  low general relief rate.  This problem                                                               
is widespread.   People with  behavioral issues get stuck  in the                                                               
hospital  because facilities  can't accept  them due  to the  low                                                               
rate.  It takes anywhere from 45  days to 4 months to qualify for                                                               
Medicaid, and in the meantime,  patients are incurring high costs                                                               
by staying  in the  hospital, the  most expensive  environment of                                                               
care.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
11:53:10 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. KOSIN said  that simply put, a unit of  service multiplied by                                                               
a rate  of payment equals  the Medicaid expenditure.   Aggressive                                                               
targets can be  hit, some critical steps must  be taken including                                                               
planning,  projecting,  and time.    Mr.  Kosin, in  response  to                                                               
Representative Wool, said  that the General Relief  rate has been                                                               
an ongoing  issue for years  because it  is in the  general fund.                                                               
Money saved by  avoiding uncompensated care will  more than cover                                                               
the cost  of increasing the General  Relief rate.  The  amount of                                                               
time  it takes  to qualify  and process  general relief  has also                                                               
been  a contributing  factor.   Matching Medicaid  at $170  would                                                               
make an enormous difference.   The General Relief Assisted Living                                                               
Home  rate is  a  line item  in the  Health  and Social  Services                                                               
budget.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
12:02:34 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MICHELE GIRAULT,  Chief Director/Board President,  Hope Community                                                               
Resources/Key   Coalition  of   Alaska,   referenced  the   Joint                                                               
Legislative Education  Funding Task Force Report  to the Governor                                                               
and  Legislature  [included  in  the  committee  packet].    Hope                                                               
Community Resources has  been a provider of  community support in                                                               
Alaska for  53 years.   Key Coalition  of Alaska is  comprised of                                                               
stakeholders   representing  people   experiencing  disabilities,                                                               
families,  advocates,  and  a  range  of  providers  who  provide                                                               
services  from infant  learning  programs,  child and  adolescent                                                               
programs,  and adult  services.   Fiscal constraints  are pushing                                                               
community provider systems  to the brink of collapse.   Rates for                                                               
home  and   community-based  services  including   personal  care                                                               
services are  governed by regulation  7AAC145520 which  says that                                                               
rates  should  have  been  established  every  four  years  using                                                               
provider  cost data  collected for  rebasing purposes.   Although                                                               
providers have submitted  cost surveys during this  time, no rate                                                               
rebasing  has occurred  in  2014 and  2018.   A  fee for  service                                                               
system dependent on Medicaid for  reimbursement created litany of                                                               
federal  mandates, regulatory  expectations,  and changes  adding                                                               
unfunded administrative burden on providers.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS.  GERAULT said  requirements  under the  Affordable Care  Act,                                                               
expectations  to move  to an  electronic  health record  required                                                               
under  the American  Recovery and  Reinvestment Act,  self-audits                                                               
required under  Medicaid reform  SB 74,  Center for  Medicare and                                                               
Medicaid  Services requirements,  electronic visit  verification,                                                               
accreditation  requirements,   increased  training  requirements,                                                               
requirements for  note review, et cetera  have required providers                                                               
to allocate  additional funds and human  resources for compliance                                                               
without any rate adjustment.   She said 33-66 percent of services                                                               
to some of  the most vulnerable people in Alaska  are not offered                                                               
due to  lack of staffing because  of the "great resignation."   A                                                               
lack of rate  adjustment has demanded providers  create their own                                                               
cost containment measures including  reducing sick leave, cutting                                                               
positions,  closing   assisted  living  homes,   and  refinancing                                                               
properties, yet there were  still multiple-year operating losses.                                                               
We share a vision of a  flexible system where each person directs                                                               
their own support based on  their strengths and abilities towards                                                               
a meaningful life in their home,  job, and community.  The vision                                                               
includes  supported families,  professional  staff, and  services                                                               
available  throughout the  state now  and into  the future.   The                                                               
health system is in crisis due to staff retention.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
12:17:23 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MS. GIRAULT,  in response  to Representative  Josephson, referred                                                               
to  a  document, entitled  "Medicaid  Waiver  Home and  Community                                                               
Based   Services  Rate   Study  Background   and  Recommendations                                                               
Effective  Health Design"  [included  in  committee packet]  that                                                               
outlines  the rate  adjustment expectations.   She  confirmed for                                                               
Representative Prax  that the Key  Coalition has a wide  range of                                                               
partnerships.    She  noted for  Representative  Story  that  the                                                               
aforementioned report  did an analysis  on other states  that may                                                               
help to guide  the committee to address the  fiscal reality along                                                               
with the needs of the community-based system.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
12:23:40 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
LISA PARADY,  PhD, Executive Director,  Alaska Council  of School                                                               
Administrators  (ACSA),   provided  a   PowerPoint  presentation,                                                               
titled "The  Proposed Fiscal Plan and  Public Education Funding."                                                               
She noted that ACSA's unifying  purpose is to support educational                                                               
leaders   by  providing   a  collective   voice  that   champions                                                               
possibilities for  all students'  purposeful advocacy  for public                                                               
education.     While  student  achievement  is   the  number  one                                                               
priority, adequate funding  remains the most critical  need.  The                                                               
base  student allocation  (BSA)  in 2020  dollars hasn't  changed                                                               
since FY  19.   There has been  a downward trend  in the  BSA all                                                               
while  fixed costs  like electricity,  insurance, et  cetera, are                                                               
increasing.   The  value of  the  BSA has  decreased despite  any                                                               
increases in recent  years.  Flat funding for education  is a cut                                                               
to the  budget of every public  school in Alaska because  it does                                                               
not account for  inflation.  The blue line in  the graph on slide                                                               
5 which was created by  the legislative finance office, shows the                                                               
significant erosion of  the inflation adjusted value  of the BSA.                                                               
The  BSA  has been  cut  by  16 percent  from  FY  07 to  FY  22.                                                               
Nationally,  inflation has  increased by  7 percent  in the  last                                                               
year.  Alaska consumer price  index increased by 7.2 percent last                                                               
year.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
DR. PARADY  said that school  districts must fund  the increasing                                                               
cost  of health  care, utilities,  shipping costs,  and supplies.                                                               
The budget has not met  the need for nurses, substitute teachers,                                                               
counselors,  and  special education  teachers.    The urgency  of                                                               
increasing the BSA is prudent due  to the impacts of the pandemic                                                               
which has  exacerbated already existing  issues in  the operating                                                               
budget.    Early notification and stable funding  are crucial for                                                               
sound financial  management as well as  recruitment and retention                                                               
of quality  educators.  Unpredictable  funding leads  to district                                                               
uncertainty,  which leads  to district  instability and  further,                                                               
will negatively  impacts instruction.  Implementation  of a long-                                                               
term, multi-revenue  fiscal plan  remains imperative  to maximize                                                               
the  ability of  districts to  meet student  needs.   Diversified                                                               
revenue streams  are critical  in the  current fiscal  climate to                                                               
address  any  deficit and  ensure  the  ability to  fund  service                                                               
increases  associated   with  economic   development,  inflation,                                                               
deferred  maintenance,  and  capital  construction  requirements.                                                               
Reliable and predictable funding  will lead to district certainty                                                               
and district stability and will increase student achievement.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
12:34:30 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
DR. PARADY  said timely reliable predictable  revenue for schools                                                               
is  a  critical need.    The  ACSA  is  also focused  on  student                                                               
achievement, the  social emotional  needs of students,  access to                                                               
early   childhood  education,   and   retaining  and   attracting                                                               
qualified educators.   Currently, Alaska's  benefits, retirement,                                                               
and salary are  not competitive with the Lower 48  which has made                                                               
it  difficult to  recruit and  retain teachers.   The  ability of                                                               
Alaska  schools to  attract teachers  is eroded  by flat  funding                                                               
BSA.                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
12:39:18 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
BRIDGETT  WEISS,  PhD,  Superintendent, Juneau  School  District;                                                               
President  Elect,   Alaska  Council  of   School  Administrators,                                                               
pointed  out   the  compounding  impacts  that   occur  alongside                                                               
inflation  includes contract  negotiation.   Property  liability,                                                               
auto insurance,  and workers  compensation insurance  has doubled                                                               
from  $500,000 to  $1 million  in the  last year  for the  Juneau                                                               
School District.  Those increased  fixed costs were absorbed into                                                               
required expenses in  the budget.  Next  year, property insurance                                                               
alone  will  increase  another  $452,000.    The  deductible  for                                                               
property  insurance and  increased from  $100,000 to  $500,000 in                                                               
the  past five  years.    Utilities are  increasing.   There  are                                                               
shortages in  the highest need positions,  especially counselors.                                                               
There  is not  enough  funding to  fill  essential positions  for                                                               
programs that  need the  most help to  close the  achievement gap                                                               
for  Alaska Native,  low-income, and  English learning  students.                                                               
Grant services are limited in scope and are not sustainable.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  WEISS  relayed  that  with   the  deferment  of  maintenance                                                               
efforts,  facilities  across  the state  will  experience  rising                                                               
costs in  future maintenance as  problems are exacerbated  due to                                                               
the lack  of funding  to solve  issues as they  are needed.   For                                                               
example,  at   Riverbend  Elementary   in  Juneau  there   was  a                                                               
significant flood,  a water table issue  which increased moisture                                                               
levels   in  the   building  causing   damage  to   carpets,  and                                                               
significant leaks  in the  roof led to  unusable classrooms.   In                                                               
response  to Representative  Wool, she  answered that  the Juneau                                                               
School  District is  recouping  students who  had been  utilizing                                                               
remote learning resources  during the pandemic.   Because the BSA                                                               
formula doesn't  fully count  remote students,  districts receive                                                               
less funds  to serve them.   She gave an  example that a  reem of                                                               
paper cost $2.97 in 2011 and now costs $13.69.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
12:53:03 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
LON GARRISON,  Executive Director,  Association of  Alaska School                                                               
Boards,  read  from  the  following  prepared  remarks  [original                                                               
punctuation provided]:                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     Good afternoon,  Madam Chair and  members of  the House                                                                    
     Ways  &  Means  Special   Committee.  My  name  is  Lon                                                                    
     Garrison, and I serve as  the Executive Director of the                                                                    
     Association of Alaska School Boards.  Thank you for the                                                                    
     opportunity  to testify  today. My  testimony today  is                                                                    
     supported  by 2  resolutions  of  the AASB  membership.                                                                    
     These  resolutions  address  the  need  for  long-term,                                                                    
     sustainable  and predictable  education funding.  These                                                                    
     resolutions  are titled:  Resolution  2.1 -  SUSTAINED,                                                                    
     RELIABLE   AND   ADEQUATE   STATE   FISCAL   PLAN   AND                                                                    
     EDUCATIONAL  FUNDING FOR  ALASKA'S  STUDENTS THROUGH  A                                                                    
     NON-VOLATILE  FUNDING  SOURCE   and  Resolution  2.2  -                                                                    
     URGING  EARLY,  ADEQUATE,  EQUITABLE,  AND  PREDICTABLE                                                                    
     FUNDING OF PUBLIC EDUCATION. I  will speak to you today                                                                    
     regarding  Governor  Dunleavy's recently  proposed  10-                                                                    
     year  funding  plan for  education  and  its impact  on                                                                    
     school governance.  The Governor's plan  maintains K-12                                                                    
     education  funding annually  at $1.215  billion through                                                                    
     FY24 and  then 1.5%  growth for  FY25 and  beyond. This                                                                    
     would  mean that  the BSA  must remain  at the  current                                                                    
     $5,930 per  student for  the next  two years  with very                                                                    
     little  change   thereafter.  Locally   elected  school                                                                    
     boards have  been delegated the authority  to implement                                                                    
     a  system of  public education  required by  the Alaska                                                                    
     Constitution  Article   7,  Section  1.   School  board                                                                    
     members are  tasked with governing their  districts and                                                                    
     allocating  funds to  execute an  educational plan  for                                                                    
     all students  attending their public  schools. It  is a                                                                    
     highly complex  task. In Alaska, school  boards have no                                                                    
     taxing authority. They, therefore,  must rely solely on                                                                    
     revenue from the state, the  federal government, and in                                                                    
     organized areas  at least a minimum  local contribution                                                                    
     to  fund  education.  The highly  uncertain  nature  of                                                                    
     annual appropriation  for education funding as  part of                                                                    
     the   state's  general   fund  budget,   and  potential                                                                    
     executive vetoes, continually  creates uncertainty that                                                                    
     makes it  difficult to sustain a  maintenance of effort                                                                    
     in an  effective and efficient manner.  Time and again,                                                                    
     boards and superintendents must  make hard choices that                                                                    
     may   result  in   the  reduction   of  staff   or  the                                                                    
     elimination  of   programs  and  services,   which  can                                                                    
     negatively  impact  student achievement.  The  recently                                                                    
     presented  10-year  plan   for  education  funding  put                                                                    
     forward  by  the  Governor   is  an  unimaginative  and                                                                    
     minimalist    approach.   It    substantially   ignores                                                                    
     increasing  costs,  which   are  inevitable.  While  it                                                                    
     appears   stable   and  potentially   sustainable,   it                                                                    
     continues the  inadequacy we face today  in meeting the                                                                    
     needs of  our public-school students. Let  me highlight                                                                    
     a few  areas within a  school district budget  that are                                                                    
     the biggest  drivers: 2 Salaries  and benefits  make up                                                                    
     on average  80 to  85 percent  of the  district budget.                                                                    
     Most  districts operate  through collective  bargaining                                                                    
     agreements that  set the  terms for  salary advancement                                                                    
     and  benefits.  In   most  instances,  most  agreements                                                                    
     include  a  "step  and lane"  schedule  that  helps  to                                                                    
     ensure annual  salaries see  minimal growth  that helps                                                                    
     offset  yearly inflation.  In  my  experience, most  of                                                                    
     these  schedules  end  up  with  a  1  to  1.5%  yearly                                                                    
     increase. Thus,  using the Governor's  proposed funding                                                                    
     plan, there would not be  the resources to exceed these                                                                    
     current agreements  without negatively  impacting other                                                                    
     elements of the  budget. If we hope  to improve teacher                                                                    
     and  administrator  retention and  recruitment,  Alaska                                                                    
     must become competitive with  the nation's salaries and                                                                    
     benefits.  Providing an  excellent education  for every                                                                    
     student every  day means we must  continually invest in                                                                    
     developing and  retaining the  best and  the brightest,                                                                    
     especially  those  from  Alaska.  As a  result  of  our                                                                    
     inability to  adequately fund education, I  put forward                                                                    
     this example.  One of the  many services  AASB provides                                                                    
     to  districts  is  the facilitation  of  superintendent                                                                    
     searches. Over  the last five  years, as I  have worked                                                                    
     with school  boards to find their  next superintendent,                                                                    
     I  have   seen  the   number  of   applicants  diminish                                                                    
     significantly.  The  experience   and  quality  of  the                                                                    
     candidates applying have  also dramatically changed and                                                                    
     are now  dominated by applicants with  no experience as                                                                    
     a  superintendent. More  and  more,  we see  candidates                                                                    
     with minimal administrative expertise.  Some of this is                                                                    
     a   result  of   the   fact   that  administrator   and                                                                    
     superintendent  turnover  is  so  high  there  is  very                                                                    
     little time  available for candidates to  gain valuable                                                                    
     experience   as   building-level  administrators.   Our                                                                    
     ability  to   recruit  and  retain   quality  classroom                                                                    
     teachers  that  ultimately  become the  principals  and                                                                    
     superintendents of the future  is adversely impacted by                                                                    
     public   education  funding   that   is  unstable   and                                                                    
     inadequate. Maintenance and  operations account for the                                                                    
     next  10  to 15%  of  a  district  budget. This  is  an                                                                    
     incredible challenge  for school  boards as  they weigh                                                                    
     the needs  of maintaining school  system infrastructure                                                                    
     against   the  need   for   certified  and   classified                                                                    
     staffing. For  our education  system to  work, students                                                                    
     and  staff   need  structures  that   create  conducive                                                                    
     learning  environments,  whether physical  or  virtual.                                                                    
     One  result of  the ongoing  pandemic is  that we  have                                                                    
     seen how  important in person  learning is.  The human-                                                                    
     to-human interactions  between students,  teachers, and                                                                    
     their  fellow  students   cannot  be  understated.  The                                                                    
     maintenance of effort to keep  our aging schools useful                                                                    
     to good learning cannot be  underscored enough. Most of                                                                    
     Alaska's schools date back to  the 80s and 90s, meaning                                                                    
     most  of  them are  nearing  the  end of  their  useful                                                                    
     design  life.  School   programs,  administration,  and                                                                    
     other expenses  make up  the rest  of the  5 to  10% of                                                                    
     district  budgets.  It  is often  within  these  school                                                                    
     programs,  such  as extracurricular  activities,  extra                                                                    
     educational programming,  field trips, and  student and                                                                    
     family engagement,  that we  find those  most intrinsic                                                                    
     things that may connect a  student in a positive way to                                                                    
     their  school.  These  are often  the  most  vulnerable                                                                    
     elements  of   the  school  budget  that   boards  must                                                                    
     evaluate.  While  grant  funding may  provide  for  the                                                                    
     support of some of these  activities, it does not cover                                                                    
     such  things  as   basketball,  volleyball,  wrestling,                                                                    
     drama and  debate and so  on. For most  students, these                                                                    
     may  be  the  essential   connections  that  keep  them                                                                    
     engaged  in the  rest of  the educational  program. For                                                                    
     Alaska,  the   cost  of  many  of   these  programs  is                                                                    
     extremely   high    often   due   to   the    cost   of                                                                    
     transportation.  3  In  closing,   when  I  review  the                                                                    
     proposed 10-year  plan for  education funding  from the                                                                    
     Governor, a proposal  that is essentially flat-funding,                                                                    
     I don't  see the  opportunity and  hope to  improve our                                                                    
     system, to attract or train  the best and the brightest                                                                    
     to  be in  our  classrooms and  to  maintain our  aging                                                                    
     buildings  and systems.  I see  the continued  struggle                                                                    
     for school  boards to meet only  the minimum affordable                                                                    
     effort  with little  room to  focus on  innovations and                                                                    
     systems to  improve student outcomes. I  see a tradeoff                                                                    
     for  short-term, individual  financial gain  versus the                                                                    
     long-term investment in  Alaska's future, our students.                                                                    
     Alternatives  to the  Governor's proposal,  such as  CS                                                                    
     HB4003  (W&M), provides  a substantive  opportunity for                                                                    
     the  legislature to  move forward  with a  statute that                                                                    
     acknowledges the importance  and necessity of providing                                                                    
     predictable,  sustainable,  and more  adequate  funding                                                                    
     for  education.   The  proposed   language  in   CS  HB
     4003(W&M) has provisions that  address those times when                                                                    
     the formula  draw does not  meet the BSA and  also when                                                                    
     the formula draw  goes beyond the BSA  need. This seems                                                                    
     to be  a responsible solution. As  I stated previously,                                                                    
     locally elected  school boards have been  delegated the                                                                    
     authority to implement a system  of public education on                                                                    
     behalf of  the state  of Alaska. In  order to  do that,                                                                    
     they  rely upon  state, local  and federal  governments                                                                    
     for  revenue.  Locally  elected  boards  implement  the                                                                    
     local  control model  that has  served Alaska  well but                                                                    
     depend on  your support. Thank you  for the opportunity                                                                    
     to  testify today.  I would  welcome any  questions you                                                                    
     might have.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
1:03:46 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. GARRISON,  in response to Representative  Prax, expressed his                                                               
concern  that funding  that  considers  broader possibilities  is                                                               
greatly diminished because schools  have been operating in crisis                                                               
management  mode.    In  response  to  Representative  Story,  he                                                               
mentioned that  pupil transportation  and food service  needs are                                                               
not  met.   The  cost  of  food and  fuel  due  to inflation  has                                                               
negatively impacted school district budgets.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR   SPOHNHOLZ  thanked   testifiers,  and   in  response   to                                                               
Representative  Prax  cited  the  Constitution of  the  State  of                                                               
Alaska  Article  7,  Section  1,  which  says  "regarding  public                                                               
education, the  legislature shall, by general  law, establish and                                                               
maintain and  system of  public schools open  to all  children of                                                               
the state  and may provide  for other  educational institutions."                                                               
She noted that  there is a minimal obligation  to maintain public                                                               
education.   Alaska is reaching  a crisis state  regarding public                                                               
education and public health.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
1:08:47 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ADJOURNMENT                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
There being no  further business before the  committee, the House                                                               
Special  Committee on  Ways and  Means meeting  was adjourned  at                                                               
1:09 p.m.