The Empty Office Podcast

with Senator Löki Gale Tobin

Breaking down the interworkings of the Alaska State Senate. lgtobin.substack.com

  1. May 24

    The Empty Office Podcast - Season 4, Episode 19

    The Second Session of the 34th Alaska State Legislature was adjourned Sine Die on Wednesday, May 20. That’s the official term for adjourning without a future date designated for resumption. While the Second Session officially ended on May 20, the First Special Session began on May 21. Governor Mike Dunleavy called a 30-day special session for lawmakers to consider legislation authorizing tax breaks and concessions for a natural gas pipeline and other infrastructure related to the Alaska LNG project. During this episode of The Empty Office Podcast, we look back on the 2026 session and highlight some of the impactful legislation that was and will be sent to the Governor for his signature. Let’s begin with House Bill 78, which would reinstate a defined-benefit pension plan for public employees in Alaska. On day 99 of the 2nd legislative session, Senator Tobin spoke in favor of the bill by noting its potential positive impact on Alaska’s public education system. On April 28, the Alaska State Senate passed House Bill 78 by a vote of 12-8. The House concurred with the changes made in the Senate by a vote of 21-19. Governor Dunleavy vetoed the bill on May 18, and the next day, the effort to override the Governor’s veto failed by a vote of 33-27. Another bill to highlight was a top priority of Senator Tobin and many Democrats in the Alaska State Legislature. Senate Bill 64 was an election reform bill that included several provisions to modernize Alaska’s elections. The bill sought to clean up the voter rolls and protect voters’ confidential information. The bill would have required the timely release of election results and the creation of an online ballot-tracking system. SB 64 included many other common-sense election provisions. After a tremendous amount of hard work and good faith negotiations, SB 64 passed the Alaska Legislature and was sent to Governor Dunleavy for his consideration. Unfortunately, the Governor vetoed the bill. On May 4, lawmakers met to try to override the veto. Senator Tobin was among the lawmakers to speak that day. Unfortunately, the effort to override the Governor’s veto of Senate Bill 64 failed by a vote of 38-22. If you are listening, you likely know that Senator Tobin’s number-one priority since being elected has been to support Alaska’s public education system with additional funding and sound public policy. That’s why she worked so hard to pass House Bill 28, which our office has affectionately called the mini-school bus. Through the legislative process, HB 28 went from a bill to implement a targeted student loan repayment program for teachers to a bill that includes several important education policy changes and a potentially transformational state grant program to cover school district energy costs. Senator Tobin helped shape and guide HB 28 through the legislative process. On May 19, Senator Tobin carried the bill on the Senate Floor. HB 28 passed the Senate by a vote of 17-3. On the final day of the session, the Alaska House of Representatives approved the bill by a vote of 34-6. The bill will be sent to Governor Dunleavy for his consideration. The Division of Legislative Finance estimates that the grant program could cover upwards of $89 million in school district energy costs starting in Fiscal Year 2028, which begins on July 1, 2027. “The recent rise in energy prices has strained schools, forcing them to divert classroom funds for electricity and heating. HB 28 introduces a crucial grant program to assist schools with these costs, providing much-needed relief. I want to thank outgoing Senator Lyman Hoffman for his support in developing this initiative. I will miss his mentorship and commend him for his dedicated service to Alaska.” – Senator Löki Gale Tobin Staying on the topic of education, Senator Tobin worked closely with her colleagues on the Senate and House Finance Committees to ensure that schools across the state would receive full foundation formula funding at $1.27 billion, and additional funding starting on July 1. The approved FY 2027 operating budget that will be sent to Governor Dunleavy includes: * $144 million in one-time funding for public schools. * $29.1 million in energy relief payments to school districts. * $53,400 in travel funding for the DEED Commissioner to visit rural schools. * $376,600 in funding for the DEED Student Information System and Predictive Data Dashboard. * $355.8 in additional funding for the Parents as Teachers Program. * $3.75 million to increase Head Start Grants to the full amount needed to meet the required non-federal match. * $450,000 in additional funding for Mt. Edgecumbe High School to pay for student travel, utility costs, student activities, and mental health services. * $217,500 increase in funding for the Statewide Library Electronic Doorway (SLED). * $490,000 for the Alaska Council of School Administrators contract for the Alaska Educator Retention and Recruitment Center. * $400,000 for LB&A to pay for a public school funding adequacy study. That final item was a priority of the Task Force on Education Funding, which Senator Tobin co-chairs. The requested research will serve as a critical tool for evaluating the adequacy of established funding factors and the sufficiency of base and total student funding. A comprehensive adequacy study would be a good first step towards updating the Foundation Formula. In addition to co-chairing the Task Force on Education Funding, Senator Tobin is one of the 4 co-chairs of the Alaska Children’s Caucus. The caucus's top priority was Senate Bill 178, which would expand access to Alaska’s Infant Learning program and provide healthcare and therapy services to more young children with developmental delays. On May 13, Senator Tobin carried SB 178 on the Senate Floor. On May 13, the Senate passed SB 178 by a unanimous vote. The bill moved quickly through the House and was passed by a vote of 39-1 on May 17. Senate Bill 178 will be sent to Governor Dunleavy for his consideration. “Early intervention is crucial for the long-term health and wellness of our most vulnerable youth, and it is far less costly than waiting. A child served through the Infant Learning Program costs one-tenth as much as it takes to provide equivalent services after age three. This will ensure children who need services can get them before delays compound and costs grow,” Senator Löki Tobin (D-Anchorage), Co-Chair of the Alaska Children’s Caucus In addition to the legislation to expand access to the Infant Learning Program, Senator Tobin worked with her colleagues on the House and Senate Finance Committee to ensure that additional funding was included in the approved operating budget for the program. $2.7 million was added to account for inflation, and $3 million was added to fund the program’s expansion. Hopefully, SB 178 and the associated funding in the budget will be signed into law so that more children can receive the life-changing services they deserve. This is the final scheduled episode of The Empty Office Podcast for season 4. Season 5 will begin in January 2025. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit lgtobin.substack.com

    22 min
  2. May 17

    The Empty Office Podcast - Season 4, Episode 18

    Below are the show notes for the original episode. We are re-airing this episode in honor of Marshall Lind’s involvement in the creation of Alaska’s Regional Educational Attendance Areas. Senator Tobin sponsored Senate Concurrent Resolution 17 to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the REAAs. SCR 17 is poised to pass the Alaska State Legislature. This week’s The Empty Office Podcast episode features UAF Chancellor Emeritus Marshall Lind. He was Commissioner of the Alaska Department of Education from 1971 to 1983 and then again from 1986 to 1987. Marshall served as the Chancellor of the University of Alaska Southeast from 1987-1999 and as Chancellor of the University of Alaska Fairbanks from 1999 to 2004. In 2022, Marshall Lind received the Denali Award from the Alaska Federation of Natives for his commitment to serving the educational needs of rural and Native Alaskans. The Denali Award is the highest honor AFN gives to non-Natives. “My association with the students over the years has been the high point of the job. The many examples of their enthusiastic spirit, candor, dreams, aspirations, unbridled talents and accomplishments will forever serve as positive reminders of why I got into this field.” – Marshall Lind in an open letter to the UAF campus community (September 15, 2023) Thank you for reading The Latest. This post is public so feel free to share it. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit lgtobin.substack.com

    46 min
  3. May 10

    The Empty Office Podcast - Season 4, Episode 17

    This episode of The Empty Office Podcast features a wide-ranging conversation with Alaska State Representative Andrew Gray from Anchorage. He was elected to the Alaska House of Representatives in 2022, representing the UMED District of Anchorage. Rep. Gray is a physician’s assistant by trade. He has a master’s degree in physician assistant studies from Baylor College of Medicine. One of the main topics of discussion during this episode of the podcast is the Veterans Justice Act, which will help veterans avoid involvement in the criminal justice system. The Veterans Justice Act will allow judges in Alaska to consider veterans’ national service and military experiences when sentencing. The Act will also create a Veteran Sentencing Option (VSO) that uses probation and treatment instead of incarceration. The Veterans Justice Act is a model policy developed by the Veterans Justice Commission, which was formed in 2022 to examine the extent and nature of veterans’ involvement in the criminal justice system. The Commission was composed of senior military and criminal justice leaders, including former U.S. Defense Secretaries Charles Hagel and Leon Panetta. The Veterans Justice Act model policy was adopted by Nebraska in 2024. “While parades, monuments, and other symbolic expressions of appreciation feel good, they are no substitute for policy solutions that can catch veterans when they fall into the criminal justice system and return them, as assets, to the communities they served to protect.” - Brock Hunter, advisor to the Veterans Justice Commission Senator Tobin is sponsoring the Veterans Justice Act model policy in the Alaska State Senate as Senate Bill 236. The House version of the bill is House Bill 299, sponsored by Representative Will Stapp from Fairbanks. HB 299 is currently in the House Judiciary Committee, chaired by Rep. Gray. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit lgtobin.substack.com

    59 min
  4. May 3

    The Empty Office Podcast - Season 4, Episode 16

    Today’s episode of The Empty Office Podcast features a wide-ranging conversation with long-time Alaska State Senator Bill Wielechowski from Anchorage. He currently serves as the chair of the Senate Rules Committee, which makes him the highest-ranking Democrat in state government. The interview with Senator Wielechowski was conducted the day after the Alaska State Senate passed a high-priority bill to authorize a new defined contribution pension plan for public employees in Alaska. House Bill 78 passed the Senate by a vote of 12-8. Both Senators Wielechowski and Tobin voted yes. In May of last year, the bill passed the Alaska House of Representatives by a vote of 21-12. On April 29, the House concurred to the changes made by the Senate by a vote of 21-19. The bill was transmitted to the Governor on April 30. The Governor has until May 18 to either sign or veto the bill. If he does neither, the bill will become law without his signature. Senator Wielechowski and Senator Tobin spoke in favor of House Bill 78 during the floor debate on April 28. Click the thumbnails below to watch the speeches. The speeches are also available on YouTube. * Senator Wielechowski’s HB 78 speech on YouTube. * Senator Tobin’s HB 78 speech on YouTube. Another major topic of conversation during this episode of The Empty Office Podcast was the decade-long effort to reform and modernize Alaska’s elections. In May of last year, Senate Bill 64 passed the Senate by a vote of 14-6. In March, the bill passed the House by a vote of 23-16. Unfortunately, Alaska Governor Mike Dunleavy vetoed Senate Bill 64 on May 1. The members of the Alaska State Legislature will meet in a joint session on Monday, May 4, to try to override the Governor’s veto. “We are raising the standard for elections in Alaska. SB 64 makes it easier for eligible voters to participate and harder for errors or misconduct to undermine the process. This protects both access and the integrity of every vote.” - Senator Bill Wielechowski This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit lgtobin.substack.com

    42 min
  5. Apr 26

    The Empty Office Podcast - Season 4, Episode 15

    This episode of The Empty Office Podcast features a wide-ranging discussion with retiring state lawmaker Andy Josephson from Anchorage. Josephson has been a member of the Alaska House of Representatives since 2013 and currently serves as a co-chair of the House Finance Committee. Andy Josephson graduated from West High School in Anchorage and holds a bachelor’s degree in history from Whitman College in Walla Walla, Washington. He has a law degree from the Penn State Dickinson School of Law. Prior to joining the Alaska Legislature, Andy Josephson was a public-school teacher, law clerk, and Assistant District Attorney. Rep. Andy Josephson is retiring from the Alaska State Legislature at the end of this term to accept a fellowship at the Vermont Law and Graduate School to attend the LLM program in Environmental Law. The program is designed for lawyers who want to focus their career on environmental law and issues, including climate change, land use, natural resources, water resources, or environmental tax policy. One of the bills mentioned during the interview with Rep. Josephson was House Bill 25, which would prohibit restaurants in Alaska from providing food in polystyrene foam containers. The bill passed the Alaska House of Representatives on April 21 by a vote of 25-15. The bill is scheduled to be heard on April 28 in the Senate State Affairs Committee. If the bill becomes law, Alaska would join 12 other states in banning polystyrene containers. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit lgtobin.substack.com

    51 min
  6. The Empty Office Podcast - Season 4, Episode 14

    Apr 19

    The Empty Office Podcast - Season 4, Episode 14

    For this episode of The Empty Office Podcast, Senator Tobin and Mike Mason look back on the first three months of the legislative session in Juneau and look forward to the final month. This episode was recorded on Day 86. The legislative session is constitutionally limited to 120 days. That means the session must end by May 19. During this episode, Senator Tobin discusses several of the bills she is sponsoring this session, including Senate Bill 89 to help physician assistants across Alaska. Last month, the bill passed the Senate by a unanimous vote, and it is poised for a vote on the House floor. Other legislation discussed during this episode includes: * Senate Bill 62 - Board of Parole Membership * Senate Bill 93 - Early Education Programs * Senate Bill 210 - Indigenous Cultural Heritage Education * Senate Bill 236 - Veterans Justice Act * Senate Bill 250 - Data Centers During this episode, Senator Tobin and Mike Mason also delve into the ongoing work of the Task Force on Education Funding, which was created last year by the Alaska Legislature to analyze public education funding and the current accountability provision for Alaska’s schools. Senator Tobin is one of the Task Force co-chairs. The Task Force is required to submit a report with findings and recommendations by the first day of the 35th Alaska State Legislature on January 19, 2027. In this podcast episode, Senator Tobin and Mike Mason discuss a Task Force on Education Funding meeting held on April 15, focused on accountability. During that meeting, Task Force members heard from an education professor at Furman University about the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), which is often referred to as the Nation’s Report Card. Professor Paul Thomas argues that politicians and journalists are misinterpreting NAEP results. In a commentary published in the Washington Post, Professor Thomas wrote that: “The common misreading of NAEP data has allowed the country to ignore what is urgent: addressing the opportunity gap that negatively impacts Black and Brown students, impoverished students, multilingual learners, and students with disabilities.” – Paul Thomas, Professor of Education at Furman University (Excerpt from a commentary published in the Washington Post) Through her work on the Senate Education Committee and the Task Force on Education Funding, Senator Tobin has repeatedly stressed that NAEP proficiency is not a good indicator of a student’s academic success. Find out more in Senator Tobin’s newsletter from last year titled “What does 'Alaska is 51st out of 53' actually mean?” During her time in office, Senator Tobin has consistently urged her legislative colleagues not to make education funding decisions based on NAEP data. “Most importantly, NAEP proctors, those giving the tests, are very clear that student performance on NAEP assessments should never be considered representative of state education standards or used for high-stakes decision making – like whether we adequately fund our schools.” – Sen. Löki Gale Tobin At one point in this podcast episode, Senator Tobin discusses the use of chit sheets in the Alaska State Legislature to indicate support or opposition to a particular piece of legislation. Neither Senator Tobin nor Mike Mason knew where the word “chit” came from. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, “chit” is a short official note signed by a person in authority, typically written or printed on a slip of paper and granting the bearer permission to do something. The earliest known evidence for the use of the word “chit” is from 1757. The music for this episode of The Empty Office Podcast is an instrumental version of the Rolling Stones’ “You Can’t Always Get What You Want” performed by the Danish Radio Big Band & Charlie Watts. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit lgtobin.substack.com

    52 min
  7. Apr 12

    The Empty Office Podcast - Season 4, Episode 13

    During this episode of The Empty Office Podcast, Senator Tobin sits down with Thread CEO Stephanie Berglund. Thread serves as Alaska’s child care resource and referral network. This year, Thread is celebrating its 40th anniversary. The toll-free number to contact Thread is 1-800—278-3723. One of the major points of discussion on the podcast is the annual ROOTS awards, which serve as a recruitment and retention stipend for early childhood educators across Alaska. The current version of the FY 2027 operating budget under consideration in the Alaska House of Representatives includes $7.5 million for the ROOTS awards grants. During this episode of The Empty Office Podcast, Senator Tobin and Stephanie Berglund also discuss Alaska’s ongoing child care crisis. About 20% of Alaska’s childcare programs have closed in the last 4 years, and over 19,000 Alaska families are still seeking childcare. Both Senator Tobin and Stephanie Berglund were members of the Governor’s Task Force on Child Care, which wrapped up its work in late 2024. The Task Force commissioned a study on the cost of child care in Alaska and put forward 56 recommendations, outlined in two reports. * Governor’s Task Force on Child Care - Report 1 * Governor’s Task Force on Child Care - Report 2 * Child Care in Alaska: The True Cost of Care This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit lgtobin.substack.com

    46 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
4 Ratings

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Breaking down the interworkings of the Alaska State Senate. lgtobin.substack.com

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