Alaska House Calls Off Session in Mask Dispute

By BECKY BOHRER
The Associated Press

JUNEAU (AP) — The Alaska House canceled another floor session Wednesday over what Speaker Louise Stutes said was an unwillingness by some minority Republican lawmakers to comply with masking rules.

The House does not plan to hold another formal floor session until next week, said Joe Plesha, communications director for the House majority coalition.

Stutes had announced Monday that masks would be required in the House chambers until further notice, citing COVID-19 cases. She told reporters Wednesday that several minority Republican lawmakers have chosen not to wear masks.

“This is the policy, and if you think you’re going to come in here and totally ignore the policy, we simply aren’t going to have session,” she said.

Minority House Republicans have been critical of how the situation has been handled, saying in a statement Tuesday that the “fact that some choose not to wear a mask is not a viable excuse to abruptly adjourn or cancel the floor session.”

Minority Leader Cathy Tilton was not immediately available for comment Wednesday.

A technical floor session, which features little more than gaveling in and out, was scheduled for Thursday, according to Stutes’ office.

Plesha said given the “continued refusal of a few representatives to follow the temporary mask requirement on the House floor while we try to manage an active COVID outbreak in the building, floor session has been cancelled until next week, when case counts hopefully subside.”

There are no universal masking rules in effect at the Capitol. But the presiding officers of the House and Senate have authority over their respective chambers and can impose masking requirements within them, the executive director of the Legislative Affairs Agency has said.

Stutes recessed a floor session Monday, saying there were members who had “chosen not to comply” with the rules. House floor sessions the next two days were canceled.

The Senate has not imposed a masking rule amid the latest outbreak of cases and has held floor sessions this week, taking up several bills. Some senators wore masks on the floor Wednesday; others did not.

The House has yet to read across a state budget bill that advanced from committee last week. That is a necessary step before the package can be taken up for debate.

The 40-person House includes a 21-member majority coalition led by Stutes, an 18-member Republican minority and one Republican representative who is not part of a caucus.

 

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20 YEARS AGO

September 2004

Photo caption: Nikko Friedman and Gus Bruhl of the Rain Forest Rascals running team, dressed in skunk cabbage and boots, make their way down Lincoln Street during the  annual Running of the Boots. Scores turned out for the event, a fundraiser for the Dog Point Fish Camp.

50 YEARS AGO

September 1974

The freshmen students initiation will be Friday at the school. Dress will be respectable. ... Suspension of three days will be enforced for any of the following violations: throwing of eggs; spraying of shaving cream; cutting of hair; and any pranks which could be harmful to the welfare of the students.


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