
Frame from "House Education, 5/1/26, 8am" · Source
Alaska marks 50 years of regional education attendance areas
The Alaska House Education Committee marked the 50th anniversary of the state's Regional Education Attendance Areas on Friday. Former commissioners who helped create the unique governance structure testified about how it brought local control to rural schools.
Twenty-one REAAs were established in 1975-76 to provide education in Alaska's unorganized borough, where no local governments exist to levy taxes or operate schools. The districts serve roughly 15 percent of the state's students across more than half its land area.
Marshall Lind, who served as education commissioner for 13 years beginning in 1971, credited Alaska Native leaders with implementing the system within a single year. Byron Mallott of Yakutat and Roger Lang of Sitka led teams that worked with communities statewide to establish district boundaries aligned with Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act regional corporations.
"The only way this restructuring could be done would be to heavily involve the Alaska Native community," Lind said. "This was not something the state bureaucrats could easily do."
The REAAs replaced a patchwork system in which the Bureau of Indian Affairs operated most rural schools while the state ran schools on military bases and in some villages. Alaska's Constitution requires a public education system open to all students, but the state lacked the financial resources to fulfill that mandate until oil revenue began flowing in the early 1970s.
Lind said the legislature has failed to maintain its responsibility for REAA facilities as the assembly for the unorganized borough. Eight REAAs now own all their properties. The remaining 11 districts have a mix of state-owned and district-owned facilities.
"The legislature has clearly dropped the ball on serving as the borough assembly for the unorganized borough," Lind said. "If we do not maintain those facilities, we are doing the people in rural Alaska a major disservice."
Jerry Covey, who served as commissioner from 1991 to 1996, said the REAA system has graduated thousands of students who have contributed to Alaska's economy and communities. He noted that 23 states still operate Bureau of Indian Affairs schools serving Indigenous students.
"That move by the legislature and the subsequent action by Marshall and many people repositioned Alaska in a very effective way," Covey said.
Lori Weed, school finance manager for the Department of Education, told the committee that 19 REAAs currently operate in the unorganized borough alongside 19 boroughs and 14 cities with education powers. Two former REAAs, Rail Belt and Northwest Arctic, incorporated as boroughs.
REAA school boards consist of five to 11 elected members representing geographic sections within each district. The boards hire superintendents, set policies, and adopt annual budgets. Unlike municipal districts that raise local tax revenue, REAAs rely almost entirely on state aid through the foundation formula and federal grants.
This article was drafted with AI assistance and reviewed by editors before publishing. Every claim can be verified against the original transcript. If you spot an error, let us know.
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