Experts address housing issues at summit

ANCHORAGE — Experts from around Alaska were participating in a daylong summit Wednesday to address housing challenges in the vast state that’s facing a growing shortage of homes amid prohibitive construction costs, particularly in rural areas far off the road system.

The goal by the end of the day at the Anchorage event hosted by Gov. Bill Walker was to come up with possible solutions that are budget neutral in Alaska’s ongoing fiscal crisis. A report on the event outcome will be prepared at some point.

Walker, who said he had to leave the summit early, gave the opening speech. He told the crowd that growing the state’s housing stock will depend on finding appropriate financing and affordable land.

Walker drew applause when he said the state has a lot of land and will look at ways to make it available for housing.

“I don’t mean give it away,” Walker said. “I don’t mean just sign it over to somebody, but make it available in such a way that … housing can be developed.”

Many aging homes in the state were substandard when they were quickly built during the state’s oil boom decades ago — homes that are now drafty or moldy and exorbitantly expensive to heat. Another huge problem is overcrowding, with available housing stock virtually at zero in some communities such as Kodiak, according to Alaska Housing Finance Corp. CEO Bryan Butcher.

A 2014 housing needs assessment by his agency and others shows Alaska’s rate of overcrowding is more than twice the national average, Butcher said. More than 15,000 homes in Alaska are considered overcrowded or severely overcrowded.

“That’s just not a physical health issue,” Butcher said. “That’s a mental health issue.”

Summit participants broke into smaller groups to look at problems and possible solutions from various angles, including housing in rural Alaska, financing options, homelessness and senior housing.

Nowhere is the state’s housing crunch as challenging as rural Alaska, according to many participants.

Among barriers listed by the rural housing breakout group: Bureau of Indian Affairs trust land sitting idle because old structures have not been removed; federal income limits that are unrealistic for the state; a lack of master planning at individual villages; and the prohibitive cost of labor, supplies that have to be shipped or flown in; and logistics to develop housing in remote places.

Some participants mentioned a lack of coordination between federal, state, regional and tribal governments.

Brenda Akelkok, executive director of the Bristol Bay Housing Authority, repeated the state availability idea approached by Walker earlier.

Akelkok noted that an old state-owned airstrip is going unused in one village in her region, Manokotak, which got a new landing strip in recent years. To her way of thinking, freeing up that state land for housing would be a budget-neutral solution.

After her group broke for lunch, Akelkok said no one in Manokotak has approached the state about such a transaction. It’s a brand new idea that emerged during a community planning effort, according to Akelkok, who described the state site as having good quality gravel near existing water and sewer services.

“It seems like it would be a no-brainer,” she said.

___

Follow Rachel D’Oro at https://twitter.com/rdoro

More in News

The northern lights are seen from the North Douglas launch ramp late Monday, Jan. 19. A magnetic storm caused unusually bright northern lights Monday evening and into Tuesday morning. (Chloe Anderson/Juneau Empire)
Rare geomagnetic storm causes powerful aurora display in Juneau

The northern lights were on full display Monday evening.

Seven storytellers will each share seven minute-long stories, at the Kunéix Hidi Northern Light United Church at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 10, benefitting the Southeast Alaska Food Bank. (Photo by Bogomil Mihaylov on Unsplash)
Mudrooms returns to Juneau’s Kunéix Hidi Northern Light United Church

Seven storytellers will present at 7 p.m. on Feb. 10.

The Alaska State Capitol building stands on Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2025. (Mari Kanagy/Juneau Empire)
Rep. Story introduces bill aiming to stabilize education funding

House Bill 261 would change how schools rely on student counts.

Weekly events guide: Juneau community calendar for Feb. 9 – 15
Juneau Community Calendar

Weekly events guide: Feb. 9 – 15

teaser
Juneau activists ask Murkowski to take action against ICE

A small group of protesters attended a rally and discussion on Wednesday.

A female brown bear and her cub are pictured near Pack Creek on Admiralty Island on July 19, 2024. (Chloe Anderson for the Juneau Empire)
Pack Creek permits for bear viewing area available now

Visitors are welcome from April 1 to Sept. 30.

Cars pass down Egan Drive near the Fred Meyer intersection Thursday morning. (Clarise Larson / Juneau Empire file photo)
Safety changes planned for Fred Meyer intersection

DOTPF meeting set for Feb. 18 changes to Egan Drive and Yandukin intersection.

Herbert River and Herbert Glacier are pictured on Nov. 16, 2025. (Mari Kanagy / Juneau Empire)
Forest Service drops Herbert Glacier cabin plans, proposes trail reroute and scenic overlook instead

The Tongass National Forest has proposed shelving long-discussed plans to build a… Continue reading

A tsunami is not expected after a 4.4-magnitude earthquake northwest of Anchorage Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2026. (U.S. Geological Survey)
No tsunami expected after 4.4-magnitude earthquake in Alaska

U.S. Geological Survey says 179 people reported feeling the earthquake.

Most Read