Legislative resolution urges federal flexibility for Alaska’s rural health transformation funding

Senate Health and Social Services Committee · April 7, 2026

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Summary

A legislative resolution (HJR 32) asks CMS and Alaska’s federal delegation to adjust Rural Health Transformation Program timelines so the state can responsibly evaluate proposals, citing Alaska’s unique logistics, tribal consultation needs and a large per‑capita grant award.

HJR 32 asks the federal government to work with Alaska to ensure the state can fully benefit from the Rural Health Transformation Program, a federally funded initiative created under HR1.

The resolution, introduced to the Senate Health and Social Services Committee by Laurie Wing Hyre, legislative health care liaison, underscores that Alaska received a large per‑capita award and faces practical constraints that could jeopardize timely spending. "HJR 32 reflects the concerns of legislators about the implementation of the rural health transformation program," Wing Hyre told the committee, noting the program requires states to meet aggressive deadlines and pass related legislation such as multi‑state licensing compacts and expanded pharmacy scopes.

Wing Hyre said Alaska’s award is substantial and that logistical hurdles—shipping delays, restrictions against using funds for new construction, and the need for close coordination with tribal partners—make the current federal timelines difficult to meet. She provided the committee with funding figures and an administrative timeline, saying the state must obligate funds under the current federal timeline and spend them by 2027.

Committee members asked clarifying questions about the resolution’s language and prior drafting changes. Senator Tobin asked about edits made to condense prior verbose whereas/therefore language; Wing Hyre explained the House version had been shortened to focus the document on its intent and urged lawmakers to support coordinated advocacy so Alaska does not lose funds because of logistical hurdles beyond state control.

The committee did not take action on HJR 32 at the hearing; Chair Dunbar invited members to review the resolution and consider amendments before the committee moves it forward.