Anchorage poll: voters more likely to accept school consolidation when told it restores sports, nurses
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A district poll showed about 40% initially favored immediate consolidation while 42% wanted more engagement; when the question highlighted that consolidation could restore cuts to sports and school nurses, roughly three-quarters leaned toward consolidation.
A survey presented to the Anchorage School District board found public views on consolidating underutilized elementary schools shifted when respondents were told consolidation could restore cuts to extracurriculars and school nurses.
Everett, the survey researcher, said the first general question asking whether ASD should "immediately consider consolidating" drew roughly 40% support and about 42% who said the district should only consider consolidation with long-term population shifts and more community engagement. "We see that over 76% of people leaned towards consolidating the schools" when the scenario explicitly framed consolidation as a way to partially reverse cuts to sports programs and school nurses, Everett said.
Board members pressed staff for context and subgroup breakdowns. Everett stressed that framing matters: among respondents who initially opposed consolidation, about 28% shifted toward consolidation when the tradeoffs included restoring sports and nurses. The presenters said the findings suggest public education on budget tradeoffs could change voters' calculations ahead of the April election.
