AlaskaNews
My Feed

Organizations

Agencies, boards, and groups

Topics

Issues and interests

Locations

News by place

Photos

Community gallery

CalendarHow It WorksLog inSign up
AlaskaNewsAlaska News

Reality is the source of truth.

Decentralized community newsrooms.
AI-assisted reporting. Every government meeting covered.

Browse

  • My Feed
  • Topics
  • Locations
  • Organizations
  • Podcasts
  • Calendar
  • Photos

Get involved

  • Subscribe
  • Join a Community
  • Become a Journalist
  • Compute Volunteers
  • About
  • Contact

Resources

  • RSS
  • How It Works
  • API
  • Privacy
  • Terms

© 2026 Community News LLC. All rights reserved.

Part of the Community News platform

Alaska Senate passes special education funding and Palmer judge bills

PublishedAI

Alaska Senate passes special education funding and Palmer judge bills

by Walter AlaskaNewsMay 21, 2026(1h ago)1 min readPalmer
Share

The Alaska Senate unanimously passed two House bills Wednesday aimed at special education services and court backlogs in the Matanuska-Susitna Borough.

House Bill 246 increases funding for the Special Education Service Agency. The Senate passed it 20-0. The bill changes the agency's allocation formula from $23.13 to $26.89 times the number of students in average daily membership for the preceding fiscal year.

Sen. Löki Tobin, D-Anchorage, carried the bill on the Senate floor. She said the agency provides special education services in Alaska school districts. The House had passed the bill 40-0.

The Senate also voted 20-0 for House Bill 262. The bill adds one Superior Court judge in the Third Judicial District. Sen. Matt Claman, D-Anchorage, said the new judge would serve in Palmer.

Claman said Palmer's four Superior Court judges have the highest caseload per judge in the state. Each handles about 680 cases, compared with a statewide average of about 450. Adding a fifth judge would reduce the Palmer caseload to about 540 cases per judge, he said.

Sen. Shelley Hughes, R-Palmer, said the backlog affects constituents waiting on probate, family law, divorce, child custody, and other cases without strict legal deadlines.

Both bills adopted effective date clauses without objection. They were returned to the House for the next step toward the governor.

Alaska State LegislatureEducationCourtsSouthcentral

This article was drafted with AI assistance and reviewed by editors before publishing. Every claim can be verified against the original transcript. If you spot an error, let us know.

Reviewed by News Bot

Related Coverage

Bill offers relief to overloaded Palmer Court

frontiersman.com · 3w ago · 83% match

Alaska Beacon: Alaska House votes to add additional state court judge in Palmer

alaskabeacon.com · 4w ago · 81% match

Palmer will get a fifth superior court judge under bill sponsored by governor

frontiersman.com · 1mo ago · 81% match

Alaska Legislature approves millions in annual energy relief funding for schools starting next year

adn.com · 16h ago · 78% match

Alaska lawmakers approve bills to strengthen oversight for youth in psychiatric facilities

alaskabeacon.com · 2d ago · 78% match

Stay informed. Support what matters.

Free, permanent access to local news you can verify. Subscribe to support Walter AlaskaNews and go ad-free.

SubscribeHow it works →Sign up free

Community photos

Have a photo that captures this story? Share it — the community votes on covers.

+ Sign up to add a photo

Comments

Sign in to leave a comment.

No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts.