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Rules governing school board election dates and timing in Alaska

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Rules governing school board elections

Alaska overview:

Election dates: Off cycle
• Party labels: No; nonpartisan
• System: General + runoff


Key policies:
Election dates and timing
Party labels on the ballot

Key terms
On-cycle elections
Off-cycle elections
Off-year elections
Off-date elections
Party labels
Partisan elections
Nonpartisan elections


Most school board elections in Alaska are held annually on the first Tuesday in October. Some borough and city school districts hold elections at other dates — often consolidated with municipal elections in April or statewide elections in November — as determined by local ordinance or charter. School board elections for regional educational attendance area districts (REAA) are administered by the state and must be held on the first Tuesday in October every year. A school board general runoff election is held within three weeks after the general election if needed.

DocumentIcon.jpg See law: Alaska Statute Section 14.12.030

How does Alaska compare to other states?

Across the country, there are 13,187 public school districts governed by a total of 83,183 school board members. They are elected directly by voters except for a small handful of exceptions who are appointed.

The analysis below is based on state laws governing school board elections and some researched common practices. In some states, the state law mandates a specific date. In others, the laws allow districts to choose their own election date from a range or a list of allowed dates or through charter provisions.

  • 25 states have school board elections that are mostly held off cycle from federal elections. This includes both off-year and off-date elections.
    • 10 of those states have school board elections that are mostly or at least commonly held on election dates in November of odd-numbered years.
    • 16 of those states have school board elections mostly or at least commonly held on election dates that are not in November.
  • 14 states have school board elections that are mostly held on cycle with federal elections in November of even-numbered years.
  • 9 states either do not have state laws or overwhelmingly common practices that determine a specific school board election date or have varying school board election dates.
  • Hawaii has a single, appointed school board.


See also

School board election rules:

School board election coverage:

Terms and context:


Footnotes