Gov. Dunleavy’s education bills would restrict sex-ed, offer teacher bonuses

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Gov. Dunleavy’s education bills would restrict sex-ed, offer teacher bonuses
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Gov. Mike Dunleavy on Tuesday introduced education policy proposals that would limit sexual education and the rights of gender nonconforming students in Alaska public schools.

Gov. Mike Dunleavy spoke at a news conference in Anchorage on March 7, 2023, to announce two education bills to filed this week, one regarding teacher recruitment and retention and the other regarding parental rights.

“Parents need to be able to say whether they want their children part of this or whether they don’t,” said Dunleavy, adding that issues relating to sex and gender are tied to “family values.” “It really does increase harm to young people,” Tobin said. “However you want to slice it — that’s what this bill does.”earned the moniker “don’t say gay” bill because of its limits on teachers’ ability to talk about LGBTQ issues in schools. Dunleavy repeatedly said Alaska’s bill would be different.

Alaska already has a parental notification statute that allows parents to opt out of sexual education classes for their children. That measure was championed by Dunleavy during his time in the state Senate, before he was elected governor. Allard said that’s not enough. But her House Education Committee Co-Chair Rep. Justin Ruffirdge, a Soldotna Republican, said he thinks school districts already do a good job of letting parents know about sexual education classes.

“We’re just introducing this approach now, so we want to give a little time so we have the discussions and we’ll see what occurs,” said Dunleavy.Members of the Senate majority and House minority caucuses have consistently named increasing state funding for public schools as one of their top priorities for the legislative session, amid an ongoing budget crisis in public schools exacerbated by a years-long strength with no significant increases to the formula used to calculate per-student funding.

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