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Sponsor separates refugee coordinator from Welcoming Alaska director to leverage federal funds; amendment tabled
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Summary
Representative Genevieve Mina moved an amendment to HB 188 to create two positions — an executive director and a separately funded refugee coordinator — so federal refugee resettlement funds can directly fund the coordinator. Members questioned workload and funding; amendment was tabled for the next hearing.
Representative Genevieve Mina, sponsor of House Bill 188, told the committee on April 21 that Amendment 1 (I.1) separates the executive director of the proposed Welcoming Alaska office from the federally required refugee coordinator so the state can leverage federal refugee resettlement funds to fund the coordinator position.
Mina said similar offices in other states commonly have more than one full‑time equivalent (1.5–2.5 FTEs) and that combining the roles could overburden a single employee. Representative Vance asked whether the coordinator role must be separate or could be combined to save state dollars. Adam Weiner, special assistant to the commissioner at the Department of Labor, said the existing Office of Citizenship Assistance supports a broad caseload and that the office’s three staff assisted “several hundred” people in 2025; he said the office was not backlogged but has limited staff.
Committee members discussed workload, potential costs (Mina referenced federal funding opportunities) and the existing staffing model. Because time ran short the committee moved to table the unresolved amendment until the next meeting (Saturday) and will resume amendment consideration then.
