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University of Alaska outlines workforce gains and teacher pipeline shortfalls to House Finance subcommittee

House Finance University of Alaska Subcommittee · February 23, 2026

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Summary

University leaders told the House Finance subcommittee that UA produces graduates who largely remain in Alaska and bolster high‑demand industries, but that teacher production has fallen since UAA’s licensure disruption and the system is turning away candidates from state‑supported teacher‑pipeline programs.

University of Alaska officials told the House Finance subcommittee on Feb. 23 that systemwide workforce programs produce graduates who largely remain in Alaska, but that teacher production and capacity for specialized trades face constraints that the FY27 budget seeks to address.

Terry Coughran, associate vice president for academic and student affairs, said UA serves more than 20,000 students and that 45% access education through 13 community campuses and technical colleges. "More than 90% of our graduates stay in Alaska," Coughran said, and noted that graduates earn roughly "26 to 35% above national medians." He highlighted health care as the largest growing sector and said recent investments aim to graduate an additional 100 healthcare workers annually.

Committee members then probed teacher production. Bridget Weiss, liaison to the Alaska College of Education Consortium, presented five-year initial‑licensure totals and attributed low production at UAA in part to a reaccreditation process that temporarily redirected students to other campuses. Weiss said UAA previously produced ‘‘over a hundred’’ initial licensures and that disruption contributed to declines at the system level. She described outreach programs (Ed Rising, Grow Your Own) and reported the university spends about $1,000,000 annually to support teacher candidates; Weiss said UA supported nearly 100 candidates this year and "turned down approximately 15 students" because of program criteria and capacity limits.

The committee also discussed maritime and trades training at UA Southeast. Vice Chancellor John Luszynski described associate degrees and continuing education in marine transportation, and the Maritime Training Center in Ketchikan, which he said is the largest USCG‑approved training center in the region. He told the committee that further expansion will require more space, housing and updated training equipment.

Members pressed whether state policy or funding could expand teacher pipelines and retention. Weiss said financial barriers persist and that some states fully support initial licensure during internships; she recommended state support to allow candidates to focus on training rather than costs. Representative Galvin emphasized classroom vacancies: "we began the school year with 319 classrooms without a teacher," Galvin said, adding that the shortfall disproportionately affects rural Alaska.

Ending: The subcommittee asked UA to provide additional data on workforce gaps and teacher-production trends and indicated it will consider those details in its closeout deliberations.