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Rachel Blakeslee

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Rachel Blakeslee
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Candidate, Anchorage School District Board of Education Seat C
Elections and appointments
Last election
April 6, 2021
Next election
April 7, 2026
Contact

Rachel Blakeslee is running for election to the Anchorage School District School Board to represent Seat C in Alaska. Blakeslee is on the ballot in the general election on April 7, 2026.[source]

Elections

2026

See also: Anchorage School District, Alaska, elections (2026)

General election

The general election will occur on April 7, 2026.

General election for Anchorage School District Board of Education Seat C

Rachel Blakeslee (Nonpartisan) and Alexander Rosales (Nonpartisan) are running in the general election for Anchorage School District Board of Education Seat C on April 7, 2026.

Candidate
Rachel Blakeslee (Nonpartisan)
Image of Alexander Rosales
Alexander Rosales (Nonpartisan)  Candidate Connection

Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Endorsements

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2021

See also: Anchorage School District, Alaska, elections (2021)

General election

General election for Anchorage School District Board of Education Seat E

The following candidates ran in the general election for Anchorage School District Board of Education Seat E on April 6, 2021.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Pat Higgins
Pat Higgins (Nonpartisan)
 
32.6
 
21,407
Sami Graham (Nonpartisan)
 
32.1
 
21,038
Image of Alisha Hilde
Alisha Hilde (Nonpartisan)
 
12.6
 
8,265
Rachel Blakeslee (Nonpartisan)
 
9.8
 
6,402
Image of Edgar Blatchford
Edgar Blatchford (Nonpartisan)
 
8.0
 
5,267
Nial Sherwood Williams (Nonpartisan)
 
4.0
 
2,653
 Other/Write-in votes
 
0.9
 
604

Total votes: 65,636
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team.

Campaign themes

2026

Ballotpedia survey responses

See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection

Candidate Connection

Rachel Blakeslee has not yet completed Ballotpedia's 2026 Candidate Connection survey. Send a message to Rachel Blakeslee asking them to fill out the survey. If you are Rachel Blakeslee, click here to fill out Ballotpedia's 2026 Candidate Connection survey.

Who fills out Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey?

Any candidate running for elected office, at any level, can complete Ballotpedia's Candidate Survey. Completing the survey will update the candidate's Ballotpedia profile, letting voters know who they are and what they stand for.  More than 25,000 candidates have taken Ballotpedia's candidate survey since we launched it in 2015. Learn more about the survey here.

You can ask Rachel Blakeslee to fill out this survey by using the button below or emailing team@blakesleeforschoolboard.com.

Email

Campaign website

Blakeslee's campaign website stated the following:

Learn More about Rachel’s Priorities:


1. Slow the pace of change for families, students and educators


In recent years, the Anchorage School District has undertaken a series of major changes: new school start times, shifting sixth grade into middle school, launching high school career academies and the ongoing rightsizing effort to name a few. While many of these initiatives have been rooted in efforts to improve outcomes for students, the pace and scale of change have left families, educators and school staff without time to adapt or recover.


I recognize and respect that many within the district are working hard under difficult circumstances and with limited resources. But the implementation of these changes hasn’t always accounted for the day-to-day realities our families face and the real needs of our kids, from childcare to transportation logistics to the balance of work and school schedules to fully thought-out prioritization of initiatives that will truly boost learning opportunities.


I believe our district needs to slow down the pace of change — not to stall progress, but to reflect on what’s working, where more support is needed and how we can roll out future changes that are needed in a way that feels manageable and responsive.


2. Rebuild trust through transparency and communication


Families and educators want to be part of shaping the future of our schools—but too often, they’re left out of the process. The rightsizing initiative is a powerful example: schools were selected for potential closure based on a rubric that, while data-informed in theory, included flawed assumptions about community realities and startlingly large gaps in critical information. Parents, educators and school communities were then forced to fill in those gaps with little notice—conducting their own research, correcting missing or inaccurate information and scrambling to advocate for their schools on a very short timeline to meet an accelerated district-imposed deadline.


Some district leaders acknowledged after the fact that they hadn’t fully understood key details about certain schools. But the burden of identifying those gaps shouldn't fall so heavily on families. It was especially burdensome on those with fewer resources at their disposal to make a case for themselves. The district’s intent to welcome feedback was real, but the process didn’t reflect a true partnership with families and school communities, ultimately further eroding public trust.


As a board member, I’d advocate for more inclusive, transparent decision-making processes, where communication is early, honest and two-way. I’d push for clearer data, more accessible and engaging public forums and enough lead time for real dialogue. It’s essential that our families and educators feel respected and heard, and I don’t feel we’ve hit the mark on that yet.


3. Make school funding understandable


We are in the midst of a public-school funding crisis — not just in Anchorage, but across Alaska. The state’s flat funding has forced local districts into impossible choices: cutting programs, increasing class sizes, continuing to fail in teacher compensation, closing schools and making heartbreaking trade-offs just to get by. I’ve stood shoulder to shoulder with parents, educators and students testifying for fair funding for far too long, and I’ve seen firsthand how hard our district leaders are working to stretch limited resources beyond logic. I also know that even the best budget decisions are difficult to understand from the outside.


Unfortunately, misinformation breeds when there are gaps in understanding. I’ve heard claims that the district has more money secretly stashed somewhere, or that administrative mismanagement, not underfunding, is what’s really to blame. It’s more important than ever that the school board helps the public make sense of the district’s finances so they can make informed decisions about what they advocate for.


As a school board member, I’d work to bring greater clarity to how our district’s finances function: where money comes from, where it goes, what financial constraints the district is under and how funding shortfalls impact our students.


4. Stand with teachers


Our schools are hurting. Teachers are burning out, support staff are stretched thin and students are feeling the effects. If we want strong academic outcomes, and thriving school communities, we have to invest in and listen to the people who make learning possible every day.


That means better pay and benefits for our teachers and providing the resources educators need to meet students where they are. It means rethinking how we support classroom management, individualized instruction and student behavior, so that teachers don’t feel like they’re doing it all alone.


It also means respecting educators as professionals. That includes listening to their expertise about what’s working and what isn’t when it comes to curriculum, assessments and district initiatives. Teachers need to be part of the decision-making process of the policies that are impacting them, not just expected to implement plans handed down from above.

— Rachel Blakeslee's campaign website (March 13, 2026)

Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.

2021

Rachel Blakeslee did not complete Ballotpedia's 2021 Candidate Connection survey.

See also


External links

Footnotes