New Clients — Available 24/7 (929) 788-6382 Text ENROLL to (201) 205-3201
⚖️ America’s Only Lawyer-Founded & Lawyer-Run Anger Management Program | Call or Text ENROLL to (201) 205-3201

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Employer-Referred · Statewide Alaska Coverage · Secure Telehealth

Anger Management for Employees in Alaska

When an Alaska employee’s conduct crosses a line — an altercation on a North Slope crew, a blow-up at an Anchorage logistics operation, a processing supervisor the crew has started documenting — the employer needs a response that is fast, professional, and provable. New Jersey Anger Management Group provides one-on-one anger management by secure telehealth to employer-referred employees anywhere in Alaska, from Anchorage to the Slope, with the written documentation your HR file, counsel, or agreement requires.

Attorney-founded to meet any compliance need. Weekly attendance and report documentation. After-hours and weekend availability. Over 10 years of experience. Full program available in English and Spanish.

TEXT ENROLL to (201) 205-3201

Alaska employers & HR: call or text (929) 788-6382 to discuss a referral.

Attorney-Founded to Meet Any Compliance Need

Last chance agreement, company policy, union contract, or insurer requirement — documented to satisfy it.

Weekly Attendance & Report Documentation

Written verification every week, from enrollment through Completion Letter.

After-Hours & Weekend Availability

Built for Alaska schedules — North Slope rotations, fishing and processing seasons, and Alaska-time after-hours access.

10+

Over 10 Years of Experience

A decade-plus documenting program compliance for courts, counsel, and employers.


The Alaska Workplace

Why Alaska Employers Refer Employees to Anger Management

Alaska runs on some of the most remote and demanding work in America. North Slope oil and gas crews work long rotations in extreme conditions, commercial fishing and seafood processing surge through intense seasons, Anchorage anchors air cargo and logistics at one of the world’s busiest freight airports, and mining, healthcare, tourism, and government fill in the rest. Rigs, boats, plants, and yards — crew-based work where an altercation is a serious, reportable event and where the nearest in-person provider might be a plane flight, not a drive, away.

Alaska is the ultimate case for telehealth: vast distances, many communities off the road system entirely, and specialty providers concentrated in a few cities. A structured anger management program delivered by secure video reaches a worker in Utqiagvik, Bethel, or a fishing town as readily as one in Anchorage — and where union agreements apply on the Slope, in the trades, and in the public sector, it produces the gapless weekly record that last chance agreements and return-to-work conditions require.

What an Alaska referral needs to work: a program that starts within days, doesn’t put the employee in a group of strangers, flexes around Slope rotations and fishing seasons, produces written verification the employer can file every single week, and ends with a Completion Letter a lawyer would be comfortable relying on — with scheduling that respects Alaska time. That is exactly what we built.

A referral without documentation is just a suggestion. A referral with an Enrollment Verification Letter, weekly attendance reports, and a formal Completion Letter is a record — and a record is what protects a Alaska employer if the situation is ever examined by an arbitrator, an agency, or opposing counsel.

Who We Work With in Alaska

Built for the People Who Handle the Aftermath

HR Directors & Managers

From a North Slope operator’s HR office to a logistics firm in Anchorage, you get the same thing: enrollment typically within 48 hours, weekly attendance and report documentation, and a single point of contact — with after-hours scheduling that accounts for Alaska time.

Employment Counsel

When a settlement, last chance agreement, or return-to-work condition requires anger management, you need a program whose documentation matches the provision’s language exactly. Send us the provision — we’ll confirm fit in writing before anyone enrolls. See our full guide: Anger Management in Last Chance Agreements.

EAP Coordinators

When the EAP’s short-term counseling model isn’t built for a conduct referral, we provide the structured alternative: a defined curriculum, a defined length, weekly documentation, and a Completion Letter — the pieces a conduct file actually needs.

Union Representatives

North Slope and trades units, and public-sector locals — Alaska grievance procedures regularly land on anger management as the negotiated alternative to termination. Our written-authorization model gives every party the visibility the agreement entitles them to, without exposing session content.

Safety & Compliance Officers

After a threat or altercation in a safety-sensitive environment, the incident file needs to show the employer’s response was proportionate and documented. A structured referral with weekly verification does exactly that.

Small Business Owners

No HR department? One call to (929) 788-6382, one referral, and you receive written confirmation at every stage. You keep a valuable employee; the employee keeps their job; the file protects you both.


Common Referral Situations

The Situations Alaska Employers Bring to Us

  • Workplace altercation or physical confrontation — a confrontation on a Slope crew, a processing floor, a boat, or a job site where termination was on the table but the employer chose a documented second chance instead.
  • Verbal threats or intimidation — a supervisor or coworker reported feeling threatened, and the employer needs a response that takes it seriously without ending a career over one bad day.
  • Pattern of hostility — no single fireable incident, but a documented trail of outbursts, slammed doors, and complaints that a performance improvement plan alone hasn’t touched.
  • Last chance agreement condition — the agreement requires a defined anger management program with proof of completion by a date certain.
  • Return-to-work condition — after a suspension, completion of anger management is the gate back to the schedule.
  • Customer-facing incidents — a driver, technician, or service employee whose temper reached a customer, where the employer needs to show corrective action was real.
  • Manager and supervisor referrals — a talented leader whose team is quietly transferring away; anger management as a leadership intervention before the exodus becomes an exit.
  • Proactive self-referral — Alaska professionals who see where things are heading and enroll before their employer ever asks. Discreet, one-on-one, no waiting room.
Statewide by Telehealth

Anchorage to the Slope to the Bush, Every Distance

The employee who needs the program is as likely to be in a community off the road system or on a rotation at Prudhoe Bay as in Anchorage — and in Alaska, telehealth isn’t a convenience, it’s frequently the only option that exists. Secure video reaches all of them identically: the same one-on-one sessions, the same curriculum, the same weekly documentation.

We serve employer-referred employees throughout Alaska, including:

Anchorage
Fairbanks
Juneau
Wasilla
Palmer
Sitka
Ketchikan
Kenai
Kodiak
Bethel
Utqiagvik
Nome
Homer
Soldotna
Valdez
Prudhoe Bay (rotations)

And for the schedules Alaska actually runs on — North Slope rotations, fishing and processing seasons, air-cargo shifts — sessions are available after hours and on weekends, with scheduling that accounts for Alaska time, so completing the program never means missing work, and missing work never becomes the excuse for missing the program.

TEXT ENROLL to (201) 205-3201

Employers: (929) 788-6382 — statewide Alaska coverage, enrollment typically within 48 hours.


Programa Completo en Español

The Full Program in Spanish — Not a Translated Handout

Alaska’s Spanish-speaking workforce is present in seafood processing, hospitality, and construction, and we deliver the full program in Spanish for any Spanish-dominant employee — because an English-only program for that worker isn’t a rehabilitative step, it’s a formality that fails on contact.

Our program is delivered entirely in Spanish for Spanish-dominant employees: intake, every one-on-one session, the worksheets, and the skills practice, through the Completion Letter. Not subtitles, not a translated PDF — a bilingual program director working with the employee in the language they actually think and get angry in. The employer’s documentation arrives in English, so the file works for HR and counsel while the program works for the employee.

Inside the Program

What the Employee Actually Learns

This is a structured, evidence-informed psychoeducational curriculum — not venting sessions, and not a video course. Across the program, delivered one-on-one, the employee works through:

  • Trigger identification: mapping the specific situations, people, and pressures that reliably precede the employee’s anger, so they stop being ambushed by it.
  • Early-warning recognition: learning the physical and cognitive signals (heat, clenched jaw, all-or-nothing thoughts) that fire before the outburst, creating the window where a different choice is still possible.
  • REBT-based thinking skills: using the ABCDE model from Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy to identify the beliefs that turn an ordinary frustration into a confrontation — and to dispute and replace them in real time.
  • De-escalation and exit strategies: concrete techniques for cooling a moment down or leaving it safely — on a job site, in a meeting, with a customer — without either exploding or bottling.
  • Communication under pressure: assertive (not aggressive) language for disagreement, feedback, and being challenged, tailored to the employee’s actual workplace situations.
  • Stress and load management: the sleep, workload, and off-hours patterns that keep an employee living at a 7 out of 10 before anything even happens at work.
  • Relapse planning: a written, personal plan for the next high-risk moment — because the test of the program is not the sessions, it’s the following March.

Because sessions are one-on-one, the curriculum bends to the referral: a supervisor referred for how they run meetings works different scenarios than a processing employee referred after an altercation during a season. That specificity is what a group class structurally cannot do.


The Process

From Referral to Completion Letter

1

Refer the Employee

The employee texts ENROLL to (201) 205-3201, or HR/counsel contacts us directly at (929) 788-6382. Intake is handled the same or next business day, and if an agreement or policy defines the requirement, we review it first.

2

Enrolled Within 48 Hours

With the employee’s written authorization, the employer receives an Enrollment Verification Letter confirming the start date and program length — the deadline is met and documented.

3

Weekly Sessions, Weekly Documentation

One-on-one telehealth sessions in English or Spanish, scheduled around Alaska work schedules — evenings and weekends included. The employer receives weekly attendance and report documentation for the file.

4

Completion Letter Delivered

A formal Completion Letter on our letterhead stating the program length and dates — the document HR, counsel, and arbitrators expect, from a provider who can verify it.

The Paper Trail

Exactly What Lands in the Employer’s File

Documentation is where this program was designed to be different, because it was designed by an attorney who has spent over 10 years watching what happens to vague paperwork under scrutiny. With the employee’s written authorization, the employer receives:

  • Enrollment Verification Letter — issued at the start, on letterhead, stating the enrollment date and the program length. If a last chance agreement set a deadline, this is the document that proves it was met.
  • Weekly attendance and report documentation — every week, in writing, from the first session to the last. The file is never waiting on an update, and there is never a gap for opposing counsel to point at.
  • Immediate notice of non-attendance — if the employee stops showing up, the employer finds out in that week’s documentation, not two months later. That protects the employer’s timeline and the employee’s honest chance.
  • Formal Completion Letter — stating the program length and dates, in the format we refined over a decade of serving courts across New Jersey. If a workplace document may one day be read by an arbitrator or a judge, it should be written by someone who has drafted for that reader.

Session content itself stays confidential between us and the employee. The reporting covers enrollment, attendance, participation, and completion — the compliance facts — which is the balance that keeps the employee engaged honestly while giving the employer everything the file requires.


Alaska Employer Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you work with employees anywhere in Alaska?

Yes — statewide, by secure telehealth. Anchorage, Fairbanks, Juneau, the Mat-Su, the Kenai, and communities across the Bush and off the road system. Our program is a structured psychoeducational anger management program — education and skills training, not psychotherapy or medical treatment — which is what allows consistent delivery statewide and nationwide.

How fast can a Alaska employee start?

Typically within 48 hours of first contact. The employee texts ENROLL to (201) 205-3201, and intake is handled the same or next business day. The employer receives written enrollment verification once the employee authorizes it.

Our crews work Slope rotations and we’re in a different time zone. Will scheduling work?

Yes — after-hours and weekend availability is built into the program, sessions flex around rotations, and scheduling accounts for Alaska time. The employee never has to miss work to attend, and the employer never hears scheduling as the reason for non-compliance.

What does the employer receive week to week?

With the employee’s written authorization: an Enrollment Verification Letter at the start, weekly attendance and report documentation throughout the program, and a formal Completion Letter at the end stating program length and dates. Session content itself remains confidential.

Can the program match a last chance agreement’s specific requirements?

Yes. If the agreement specifies a number of sessions or hours, we structure the program to that exact requirement and state it in the documentation. Send us the provision before enrollment and we’ll confirm fit in writing. Full guide: Anger Management in Last Chance Agreements.

Do you offer the program in Spanish?

Yes — the entire program, from intake through Completion Letter, is delivered in Spanish for Spanish-dominant employees, with the employer’s documentation provided in English.

Is this a group class?

No. Every session is a live, private, one-on-one session. No groups, no pre-recorded videos, no automated certificates — and the curriculum is tailored to the specific conduct that prompted the referral.

How long is the program?

Commonly 8, 12, or 26 sessions, matched to the seriousness of the situation or the terms of the agreement or policy that requires it. We recommend a length if the referral doesn’t specify one.

Who pays — the employer or the employee?

Either. Some Alaska employers cover the program as part of a return-to-work plan; in other cases the employee pays directly, sometimes with partial payment terms. We invoice whichever party the referral specifies.

Why a New Jersey provider for a Alaska employee?

In Alaska, telehealth is frequently the only option that exists — and it delivers everything the situation needs: a program that starts in 48 hours, documents every week, flexes around a Slope rotation, and produces attorney-drafted completion documentation, reaching a worker whether they’re in Anchorage or off the road system.

Ready to Refer a Alaska Employee?

TEXT ENROLL to (201) 205-3201

Employers & counsel: (929) 788-6382  •  Enrollment typically within 48 hours  •  Weekly documentation  •  English & Spanish  •  After-hours & weekends

National program overview: Anger Management for Employers  •  For counsel: Last Chance Agreements & Anger Management

New Jersey Anger Management Group — 97 Newkirk Street, 2nd Floor, Jersey City, NJ 07306. Attorney-founded, one-on-one telehealth anger management serving employer-referred employees nationwide.

New Jersey Anger Management Group is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice or legal representation. Nothing on this page creates an attorney-client relationship, and general information about Alaska employment practices is educational only — employers should rely on their own counsel for legal questions. Our program is a structured psychoeducational program in anger management skills; it is not psychotherapy, counseling, or medical or mental health treatment, and it is not a substitute for care from a licensed clinician.