This June 14, 2019, photo shows a Wasilla sign on the outskirts of Wasilla, Alaska. Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy has called lawmakers into special session in Wasilla beginning July 8, but some lawmakers have expressed concerns over security and logistics with the location more than 500 miles from the state capital of Juneau, Alaska. (AP Photo/Mark Thiessen)

This June 14, 2019, photo shows a Wasilla sign on the outskirts of Wasilla, Alaska. Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy has called lawmakers into special session in Wasilla beginning July 8, but some lawmakers have expressed concerns over security and logistics with the location more than 500 miles from the state capital of Juneau, Alaska. (AP Photo/Mark Thiessen)

Dunleavy pitches hometown Wasilla for special session. Here’s why some are concerned.

It would be the first time an Alaska special session has convened outside the capital.

WASILLA — When Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy called for the Legislature’s next special session to be held in Wasilla, some agreed with him that a change of venue would be good for lawmakers struggling to finish their work after a drawn-out five months at the state capital.

Others called it a means of intimidation or cited security and logistical concerns.

Now, the wait is on to see if the House and Senate heed Dunleavy’s call to do business July 8 in his conservative hometown.

This June 14, 2019, photo shows Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy leading state and local officials out of Wasilla Middle School in Wasilla, Alaska, to a news conference. Dunleavy has called lawmakers into special session in Wasilla beginning July 8, but some lawmakers have expressed concerns over security and logistics with the location more than 500 miles from the state capital of Juneau, Alaska. (AP Photo/Mark Thiessen)

This June 14, 2019, photo shows Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy leading state and local officials out of Wasilla Middle School in Wasilla, Alaska, to a news conference. Dunleavy has called lawmakers into special session in Wasilla beginning July 8, but some lawmakers have expressed concerns over security and logistics with the location more than 500 miles from the state capital of Juneau, Alaska. (AP Photo/Mark Thiessen)

It would be the first time an Alaska special session has convened outside the capital, Juneau, or the state’s largest city, Anchorage, where a few have been held.

Nationally, it’s rare for special sessions to be held outside state capitals, though committee hearings sometimes take place elsewhere. Former Ohio Gov. John Kasich, pitching it as a way to make government more accessible, gave most of his State of the State speeches outside of that state’s capital, after his first address at the Statehouse was marred by protests.

Alaska’s Republican governor called the session so lawmakers can finalize this year’s payout to residents from the state’s oil wealth fund, a politically divisive issue that has been simmering for years and is nearing a boiling point. The checks have been smaller for the past three years as political leaders struggling with a budget deficit strayed from a formula in state law for calculating them.

If the law is followed as Dunleavy wants, this year’s check will be about $3,000. The House, controlled by a bipartisan majority composed largely of Democrats, rejected a full payout during the first special session of the year, in Juneau, while the Republican-led Senate was more closely divided in not advancing a full payout.

Dunleavy warned of a change of venue if lawmakers didn’t complete their business during that session, suggesting as a potential site the Matanuska-Susitna region, where Wasilla is nestled about 40 miles north of Anchorage. Wasilla made headlines more than a decade ago as the hometown of then-Alaska governor and 2008 Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin.

This June 14, 2019, photo shows Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy speaking at a news conference at Wasilla Middle School in Wasilla, Alaska. Dunleavy has called lawmakers into special session in Wasilla beginning July 8, but some lawmakers have expressed concerns over security and logistics with the location more than 500 miles from the state capital of Juneau, Alaska. (AP Photo/Mark Thiessen)

This June 14, 2019, photo shows Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy speaking at a news conference at Wasilla Middle School in Wasilla, Alaska. Dunleavy has called lawmakers into special session in Wasilla beginning July 8, but some lawmakers have expressed concerns over security and logistics with the location more than 500 miles from the state capital of Juneau, Alaska. (AP Photo/Mark Thiessen)

Senate Minority Leader Tom Begich, an Anchorage Democrat, said he sees Dunleavy choosing Wasilla as a way to intimidate legislators. He said the governor had an opportunity to work with legislators on a location that logistically made sense.

Begich’s brother, former U.S. Sen. Mark Begich, lost last year’s governor’s race to Dunleavy.

This June 14, 2019, photo shows Jeff Turner, the deputy communications director for Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy, sitting next to artwork displayed at Wasilla Middle School in Wasilla, Alaska. Dunleavy has called lawmakers into special session in Wasilla beginning July 8, but some lawmakers have expressed concerns over security and logistics with the location more than 500 miles from the state capital of Juneau, Alaska. (AP Photo/Mark Thiessen)

This June 14, 2019, photo shows Jeff Turner, the deputy communications director for Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy, sitting next to artwork displayed at Wasilla Middle School in Wasilla, Alaska. Dunleavy has called lawmakers into special session in Wasilla beginning July 8, but some lawmakers have expressed concerns over security and logistics with the location more than 500 miles from the state capital of Juneau, Alaska. (AP Photo/Mark Thiessen)

House Speaker Bryce Edgmon, an independent from the southwest Alaska fishing community of Dillingham, has cited logistical concerns with meeting in Wasilla, along with security worries.

Edgmon said he has received threatening calls and “angry, vitriolic” emails from people frustrated with lawmakers for not approving what they consider a “birthright” — a $3,000 dividend check. Many emails have come from the Matanuska-Susitna region, he said.

“It could be a very volatile environment,” Edgmon said.

Dunleavy’s administration has tried to allay concerns. While the governor’s office has singled out some legislators for their position on the dividend and encouraged Alaskans to weigh in, Dunleavy has asked them to do so civilly.

Deputy chief of staff Jeremy Price gave reporters a tour last week of Dunleavy’s recommended venue for the special session, Wasilla Middle School, showing off two gymnasiums with room for spectators that he said could accommodate concurrent House and Senate floor sessions. Self-locking doors were touted as security measures.

This June 14, 2019, photo shows Jeremy Price, a deputy chief of staff to Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy, showing reporters the cafeteria at Wasilla Middle School in Wasilla, Alaska, that would be available to lawmakers. Dunleavy has called lawmakers into special session in Wasilla beginning July 8, but some lawmakers have expressed concerns over security and logistics with the location more than 500 miles from the state capital of Juneau, Alaska. (AP Photo/Mark Thiessen)

This June 14, 2019, photo shows Jeremy Price, a deputy chief of staff to Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy, showing reporters the cafeteria at Wasilla Middle School in Wasilla, Alaska, that would be available to lawmakers. Dunleavy has called lawmakers into special session in Wasilla beginning July 8, but some lawmakers have expressed concerns over security and logistics with the location more than 500 miles from the state capital of Juneau, Alaska. (AP Photo/Mark Thiessen)

Cost estimates for holding a special session in Wasilla haven’t been publicly released.

“Juneau has a lot of costs all their own, and a whole lot fewer fast-food options,” said Republican Rep. David Eastman of Wasilla, where the state’s first Sonic drive-in restaurant is set to open in September.

Juneau’s downtown restaurant options, within walking distance of the Capitol, include a Subway sandwich shop.

Wasilla residents and officials see the special session as an opportunity for the region to flex its political clout. The fast-growing Matanuska-Susitna Borough has a population of more than 100,000.

“We’re really progressing, but the rest of Alaska wants to ignore that or pretend it’s not happening,” borough manager John Moosey said. “We’re growing. Anchorage is not.”

Dunleavy touted the location as a selling point, saying it is within a five-hour drive of a large majority of the state’s more than 730,000 residents.

This June 14, 2019, photo shows people cooling off in Wasilla Lake in Wasilla, Alaska. Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy has called lawmakers into special session in Wasilla beginning July 8, but some lawmakers have expressed concerns over security and logistics with the location more than 500 miles from the state capital of Juneau, Alaska. (AP Photo/Mark Thiessen)

This June 14, 2019, photo shows people cooling off in Wasilla Lake in Wasilla, Alaska. Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy has called lawmakers into special session in Wasilla beginning July 8, but some lawmakers have expressed concerns over security and logistics with the location more than 500 miles from the state capital of Juneau, Alaska. (AP Photo/Mark Thiessen)

Juneau and the surrounding area, home to about 32,000 people, are not on the main road system. People have to fly or take a boat, like a state-run ferry, to get there. There have been periodic efforts to move the capital or Legislature.

Jan Engan, who moved to Wasilla in 2014 to be closer to family, cited cost concerns with traveling to Juneau and said people in other states have easier access to their lawmakers. Engan used to work for state government in North Dakota.

Some in the region, sometimes referred to as the Mat-Su Valley, see the special session as a chance to shake off the “valley trash” slight used years ago by former state Sen. Ben Stevens, a Republican who is now a Dunleavy adviser. A 2004 editorial in the local newspaper said Stevens used the term in response to an email from an individual criticizing him. Stevens didn’t respond to an email from The Associated Press seeking comment for this story.

The Bearpaw River Brewing Co. recently resurrected the “Valley Trash” imperial blonde ale, using the recipe from the original brewery that closed. The beer is sold in cans.

“The label is ironically classy, with cursive lettering,” owner and operations manager Jake Wade said.

This June 14, 2019, photo shows Jake Wade, the owner and operator of Bearpaw River Brewing Co., posing for a photo in his craft brewery in Wasilla, Alaska. The brewery has begun making the Valley Trash ale, using the original recipe from another brewery that went out of business. The name of the beer harkens back to a slur cast on residents of the Matanuska-Susitna Borough by former state Sen. Ben Stevens, an Anchorage Republican who now serves as an aide to Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy. (AP Photo/Mark Thiessen)

This June 14, 2019, photo shows Jake Wade, the owner and operator of Bearpaw River Brewing Co., posing for a photo in his craft brewery in Wasilla, Alaska. The brewery has begun making the Valley Trash ale, using the original recipe from another brewery that went out of business. The name of the beer harkens back to a slur cast on residents of the Matanuska-Susitna Borough by former state Sen. Ben Stevens, an Anchorage Republican who now serves as an aide to Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy. (AP Photo/Mark Thiessen)

Jessica Viera with the Wasilla chamber said too many people see the city as a place you pass through on your way somewhere else and don’t see its expansion.

“So, to have this kind of growth and then just be like, ‘Oh, well. Who cares about Wasilla?’ Well, we care about Wasilla because we love living here, playing here, working here. You can do everything.”

It remains unclear whether lawmakers will legislate there. Legislative leaders have been discussing their options.


• This is an Associated Press report by Mark Thiessen and Becky Bohrer.


More in News

Guests ride the Porcupine chairlift at Eaglecrest Ski Area. (Eaglecrest Ski Area photo)
Eaglecrest opens Westside, offers $7 lift tickets Saturday

After a rocky start to the season, the ski area is celebrating its 50th birthday.

Thomas Hatley stands before a helicopter. He was announced the new fire chief for Capital City Fire and Rescue on Friday, Jan. 16, 2025. (Thomas Hatley photo)
Hatley appointed new Juneau fire chief

Former Fire Chief Rich Etheridge announced his retirement in September.

Salvage captain Trevin Carlile, left, and diver Phil Sellick at Melino’s Marine Service re-float a sunken boat in Harris harbor on Jan. 8, 2026. Record-breaking snow at the beginning of the month caused at least eight boats to sink in Harris, Douglas and Aurora harbors, resulting in oil spills. (Chloe Anderson for the Juneau Empire)
A historic storm in Juneau: 10 sunken boats and what it takes to re-float them

Sunken boats don’t become wrecked relics. Left underwater, they can damage vessels overhead and threaten the environment

The Department of Environmental Conservation helped a Nikiski resident dispose of over 43 tons of contaminated soil after a home heating oil spill in November. DEC on Friday launched a program to help eligible homeowners cover cleanup costs relating to home heating oil spills. (Photo courtesy of DEC)
State launches program to help homeowners cover heating oil spill cleanup costs

The Department of Environmental Conservation announced the program on Friday, Jan. 9.

Mount Juneau stands among fog on Jan. 14, 2025. (Chloe Anderson / Kenai Peninsula Clarion)
CBJ lifts all avalanche evacuation advisories for Juneau

That includes the advisory for the Behrends slide path, the last remaining evacuation notice.

Juneau Jazz Fest founder Sandy Fortier will be leading Alaska Arts Education Consortium. (Alaska Arts Education Consortium)
Juneau Jazz Fest founder to lead Alaska arts consortium’s education efforts

Sandy Fortier, now AAEC executive founder, was a Juneau music teacher

A City and Borough of Juneau map from 2021 shows labels four avalanche slide paths on Mount Juneau. (City and Borough of Juneau)
Avalanche hazard on Behrends path to peak late Tuesday, CBJ says

‘Likelihood of large avalanches’ could significantly increase during that time, advisory warns.

A City and Borough of Juneau map from 2021 shows labels four avalanche slide paths on Mount Juneau. (City and Borough of Juneau)
Evacuation advisory in effect for Behrends slide path, all others lifted in Juneau

Avalanche hazard is still high across all known slide paths, CBJ says.

A map from the City and Borough of Juneau shows the potentially impacted area of an avalanche advisory that was issued Friday morning (Jan. 9, 2026) (City and Borough of Juneau)
UPDATE: Thane Road reopened, “Hazard is still high” for downtown avalanche

Avalanche risk remains high, and more rain is expected through tomorrow evening

Most Read