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Season starts: Anchorage Concert Assn. says you must be masked, vaccinated (or show proof of test) for live shows

The Anchorage Concert Association says to attend any of their events this season, ticket holders must show proof of a Covid-19 vaccination or they must show proof of a recent negative Covid-19 test.

The association is joining Anchorage Opera, Anchorage Symphony Orchestra, and Alaska Center for the Performing Arts in mandating the requirements for attendees over the age of 12. The vaccination will need to be completed at least two weeks prior to the event, or the negative test result must have been within the 72 hours prior to the show.

In addition, the concert association has a mask mandate in effect, regardless of one’s vaccination or test status.

“These requirements will remain in place while transmission levels in Anchorage are High or Substantial according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Alaska’s Department of Health and Social Services,” the association warned.

Anchorage Concert Association is willing to refund tickets to accommodate those not willing or able to meet these requirements. To receive a refund for your tickets, contact the CenterTix box office at 263-2787 or complete this form.

The association’s season offerings are at this link.

Rep. Rasmussen dials it in, due to ‘close contact’ with … Covid?

Rep. Sara Rasmussen was a little vague. She didn’t say “what” she had a close contact with, but the inference is that it’s with someone who had the Covid-19 virus, so she is staying away from Juneau.

Rasmussen announced her decision on Facebook to her Sand Lake constituents, to be transparent about why she is not in Juneau with the rest of her colleagues.

“Until contract tracing and follow up testing is completed, I’m following quarantine guidance from public health,” she wrote.

“I hope to be able to get to Juneau to finish the work of this session ASAP, however with our hospitals at capacity I feel it’s best not to risk potentially spreading anything to other Alaskans,” she wrote.

Rasmussen was in Juneau for just one day so far, in the special session that started on Aug. 16. She was fishing on the Kenai River and attending events, telling critics that going to Juneau was a waste of time. Rasmussen is not in either the conservative or liberal caucus in the House, and has taken up the new position of former Rep. Gabrielle LeDoux, who turned on conservatives and then on liberals, becoming a caucus of one, before she was unelected in 2020.

Recall Dunleavy Committee, ‘with heavy heart’ folds up shop after admitting it failed

In a letter to supporters Wednesday morning, the Recall Dunleavy Committee admitted defeat, saying it would not be able to get the signatures in time to stage a recall election for Gov. Mike Dunleavy. The primary election for governor is less than a year away and the group has failed in its three-year-long mission.

The group said it had accomplished much but fell short. The group also did not say how much money it has or what it would do with its remaining funds.

“As of today, Wednesday August 25th 2021, the Recall Dunleavy effort is officially drawing to a close. We are proud to have run one of the most successful, bipartisan, and overwhelming grassroots efforts in the history of Alaska. The movement to recall Michael J. Dunleavy from the governor’s office was driven by Alaskans who care about the future of this great state and who are courageous enough to take a stand against the imminent threats to our communities,” the group wrote, saying that a court decision proved that Dunleavy had repeatedly broken the law.

“The decision to wind down the Recall was made thoughtfully by the steering committee. Strategically speaking, the Recall has done what it was intended to do, to protect Alaska and Alaskans from Dunleavy’s complete ineptitude and failure of moral character,” the group wrote. The group realized that once Dunleavy filed for reelection they would have to treat their data differently and reveal their donors.

The group also said anyone who signed the second recall petition risks retaliation, so they don’t want to release the names to the Division of Elections, after which they become public record. They also said that “Dunleavy has been crying and panhandling in Florida and all over the Lower 48 to funnel money through his anti-recall group.”

“Timing is everything, unfortunately last spring, the pandemic broke our stride. With a heavy heart the tough decision was made to pull back our signature gathering efforts for the safety of hundreds of our volunteers. The transition to COVID 19 conscious signature gathering by signing at home was another historical first, but was a slow and arduous climb. Today, 15 months before the next election with 62,373 signatures in hand, we have decided it is time to look to the future,” they wrote.

The politicos said the group always knew it would not succeed but intends to use the signatures as the data-mining it needs to back a candidate against Dunleavy. It will turn those names over to the candidate it believes in, and most likely that is former Gov. Bill Walker, since his former chief of staff, Scott Kendall, is one of the prime movers behind the recall effort.

Balls of steel: Mayor Bronson is denied his library director, but shocks Assembly when he makes Sami Graham his new chief of staff

After an hour of debate, the Anchorage Assembly voted down Sami Graham as the city librarian. But then, Mayor Dave Bronson asked for a point of privilege and announced Graham as his new chief of staff.

After the applause from the audience at the Assembly died down, Bronson announced that Graham’s office will be located at the Loussac Library.

The look on Assembly Chair Suzanne LaFrance’s face was priceless. Her face went into a look of shock.

The audience would not settle down. The applause and cheering continued. LaFrance cut the mic so the applause could not be heard by those online or on TV. She had lost control of the meeting.

The drama came after the Bronson Administration made a valiant effort to get the liberal wing of the Anchorage Assembly to change its mind and accept Graham’s impressive qualifications.

City Manager Amy Demboski pointed out that she had never been a city manager, but they confirmed her. She pointed out all the people who had been confirmed for positions they had never held before, such as Human Resources Director Niki Tshibaka, who is a civil rights lawyer.

But the Assembly had made up its mind a week earlier and would not yield: Graham may have two master’s degrees but neither are in library science, which they think is a requirement for the job.

LaFrance quickly ordered the Assembly into its dinner break.

Graham replaces Craig Campbell as chief of staff. Campbell came out of retirement to help Bronson during his transition and was co-chair of his transition team.

The denial of Sami Graham as library director was seen as largely political.

She is the former principal of Grace Christian School. She will also have an office on the eighth floor, next to the mayor, but she will also be overseeing the library, which is her passion, sources said.

Campbell will be the program and policy director for the mayor’s office.

“Sami Graham will join the Mayor’s team as Chief of Staff where she will manage the day to day administrative operations of the Mayor’s office. In her capacity as Chief of Staff, Mayor Bronson has also delegated his authority to oversee the Anchorage Public Library to Mrs. Graham. Mrs. Graham will hold physical offices in both the Mayor’s Office and the ZJ Loussac Library,” the mayor said in a statement.

“Sadly, the Assembly acted exactly how we thought they would — blinded by partisanship and driven to obstruct our administration from moving forward,” Bronson said. “Sami Graham was exceptionally qualified to serve as the Library Director and she should have been confirmed this evening. However, over these many weeks, I’ve grown increasingly impressed with Sami Graham’s political insight, organizational leadership and ability to navigate complex challenges. For many of the same reasons Sami was qualified to run the Library and more, she will be a great addition to help lead Mayor’s office operations.”

Read: Assembly prepares for the kill of Sami Graham, library director

Working group plan is dead, Legislature is a free-for-all on appropriation bill

Rep. Bryce Edmgon, who chairs the House Rules Committee, has dug in his heels: He won’t move anything out of his Rules Committee that would guarantee the people of Alaska a Permanent Fund dividend through a constitutional amendment the people themselves would vote on.

That means the work done by the bicameral working group in July was all for nothing, because nothing reaches the floor of the House without going through Edgmon’s Rules Committee.

Now, HB 3003, a big appropriation bill that has the Permanent Fund dividend, education funding, and other operating funds in it, is getting the Christmas tree treatment in Juneau — lots and lots of amendments to add more spending and an as-of-yet unknown dividend.

That bill is poised to move Tuesday out of the House Finance Committee, where it was the subject of public testimony that focused greatly on the Permanent Fund dividend.

House Speaker Louise Stutes is said to want the bill on the House floor in Wednesday for its second reading. But word is Stutes has a full-scale mutiny on her hands from both wings. It appears to be setting up for the ultimate showdown.

Meanwhile, in Senate Finance, toward the end of the hearing, Sen. Lyman Hoffman was muzzled by Sen. Bert Stedman. Hoffman was trying to explain that legislators can’t ignore the people, and the PFD needs to be a constitutional amendment so the people can vote.

Stedman could not shut Hoffman up fast enough and called the meeting to a close.

Pressure is building in the Legislature on leadership to do whatever they can do to get out of town. The longer they stay, the harder is to keep their caucuses together. The clock is not in either Stedman’s or Edgmon’s favor.

Public testimony is starting to pivot for a Constitutional Convention, which will be on the ballot next November. This is what Hoffman was referring to his his comments, telling his fellow senators that if the PFD isn’t put to a vote of the people, it will end up being part of a Constitutional Convention.

The governor called the Legislature back for its third special session this year because it has not come up with an acceptable Permanent Fund dividend. The House and Senate majorities passed a $525 dividend, which the governor vetoed, calling it an insult to Alaskans.

(This story is dynamic and may have a short shelf life in the sense that the Legislature is in state of instability.)

Redistricting Board starts mulling Southeast Alaska boundaries

On the second of a two-day meeting, the group tasked with redrawing Alaska’s political boundaries discussed how to add enough people to Southeast Alaska districts to make four legislative districts work best, considering the low population.

The redistricting process takes place every 10 years after the U.S. Census releases its granular population data that goes down to the precinct level. The Redistricting Board plans to have a draft plan available by Sept. 11, and a final map no later than Nov. 10.

As the five members of the board grappled with where to start in the state, beginning in Ketchikan emerged as the best idea, since that district can only stretch north, and has few choices. It didn’t appear the Petersburg Borough, which was just formed during the past decade, will be included in the Ketchikan District 36, because it would add too many people. District 36 stretches up to Wrangell at this point.

There are 13,948 in the Ketchikan Borough, which is 23 percent under the ideal size for a district to keep all districts the same size. The group’s target size for Southeast is 18,071 for each district.

At least one district, north Juneau, will have to stretch up to Yakutat, but not likely Cordova. Where Gustavus and Tenakee go is a decision in play. Both have strong Juneau connections.

This target number of 18,071 would leave the districts in Southeast Alaska slightly underpopulated and overrepresented by about 1,200, but if the board included Cordova in the region, they would overpopulate Southeast by 1,400.

Since Southeast is growing slower than the state as a whole, this math problem could open the redistricting map up to a legal challenge, especially if they end up overpopulating a fast-growing area of the state, such as the Mat-Su, which has grown by over 20 percent. The board needs to be careful to not intentionally underrepresent or overrepresent regions.

The overall goal for representation for each district across the state is 18,335, plus or minus 5 percent. This calculation is set by both the state constitution and by statute and is based on the state’s overall population divided by 40.

The map can have as much as a 10 percent disparity between the lowest and the highest population district in the state. To do that, however, it needs strong justification to hold up against a court challenge. Intentionally under representing a region of the state is a legal risk.

A short period of public testimony featured James Squyres from District 9, and Sen. Tom Begich, both of whom offered perspectives on how to proceed.

Squyers noted that people in Delta Junction have more in common with Fairbanks than they do with Palmer, where they are currently lumped as part of District 9. He said when they want shop at Fred Meyer, they do not cross the Alaska Range to head to Palmer, but they go to Fairbanks instead.

John Binkley, chair of the Redistricting Board, mused that he would add a “Fred Meyer” screening layer to the list of considerations, which drew laughter from the room.

Every initial redistricting plan in the past has been thrown out by the court, but there is a lot of hope among Alaskans that Binkley will be able to put together a plan that will survive a court challenge.

It’s likely that many of the districts will change boundaries and that even the numbers of some of the 40 House Districts will change, making it difficult for candidates to know what seat they might be running for next year.

To satisfy population changes since 2010, the Matanuska-Susitna Borough is expected to gain a legislative seat at the expense of Interior Alaska, Fairbanks and Anchorage, areas that lost population between 2010 and 2020.

The meeting continued into the afternoon, with the group discussing all kinds of theoretical map changes to try to even up areas that lost population with areas that gained. The focus was on the Interior areas including Hooper Bay, Chevak, Crooked Creek, Bethel, Napaskiak, Kwethluk, Quinhagak, Goodnews, Eek, Pribilof, and other rural communities.

Read more about the redistricting numbers at this link.

The Alaska Redistricting Board adopted the following meeting schedule and announced that public testimony will be taken at the beginning and end of each board meeting. The intent is to have full day meetings at the Anchorage Legislative Information Office, but that is subject to change based on availability.  Meetings times and more detailed agendas will be forthcoming as they are finalized. 

September 7 – 9, 2021: Map Drawing Work Sessions

September 10, 2021: Discussion and Adoption of Draft Plan(s)

September 17, 2021: Presentations of Submitted (3rd Party) Plan(s)

September 21, 2021: Discussion and Adoption of Additional Draft Plan(s)

More details released on shooting of trooper in Anchor Point

Troopers have released details about the events that preceded a man shooting at an Alaska State Trooper on Aug. 23, when an Alaska State Trooper assigned to Anchor Point observed 60-year-old Anchor Point resident Bret Herrick at a business in downtown Anchor Point.

Herrick was known to the officer to have multiple warrants out for his arrest. The trooper attempted to arrest Herrick on his outstanding warrants and Herrick produced a handgun and fired on the trooper, striking him multiple times.

The trooper also fired his service pistol, and as another trooper arrived, Herrick fled on foot.

“Law enforcement from across the region, Department of Public Safety aircraft assets, and Alaska State Troopers Special Emergency Reaction Team members from across the state descended on Anchor Point to search for Herrick. Search efforts were ongoing throughout the day and into the evening.

On Aug. 24, 2021, at approximately 0840 hours, an Alaska State Trooper SERT team located Herrick near his Anchor Point residence while following up on a tip.

Herrick was arrested without incident for his four outstanding arrest warrants, and additional charges are anticipated for yesterday’s incident.

The name of the trooper who discharged his weapon (and who was also wounded by the suspect) will be released, per department policy, after 72 hours.

Read: Troopers arrest man wanted in shooting of Alaska State Trooper

Zaletel adds sneak item to Assembly agenda: Mandatory masks in Muni

Assemblywoman Meg Zaletel put a “laid on the table,” which is a last-minute agenda item, into the Assembly meeting packet: It’s an ordinance requesting that the mayor enact a mask mandate in all indoor areas of municipal buildings, and to enact some unspecified mitigation measures for the entire municipality when Anchorage is in a “substantial risk or high alert level for community transmission of Covid-19.”

Zaletel represents midtown Anchorage and is the subject of a recall election that may reach voters in her district in October.

One of Bronson’s first acts as mayor was to lift any mask mandates for the municipality.

Read: No masks required or mandatory vaccines for Muni

Tonight’s Assembly meeting, which starts at 5 pm at the Loussac Library, may be contentious for that, in addition to the Assembly’s expected rejection of Sami Graham as the city librarian. Graham was nominated for the post by Mayor Dave Bronson. Numerous Democrats have lined up against Graham, who is the former principal of Grace Christian School. The Democrats have flooded the inboxes of Assembly members with letters of opposition.

Read: Assembly prepares for the kill of Sami Graham as Librarian

Breaking: Troopers arrest man wanted for shooting trooper

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Alaska State Troopers arrested 60-year-old Anchor Point resident Bret Herrick in Anchor Point at a residence at about 8:40 am Tuesday. Herrick was wanted in connection with the shooting of a trooper on Monday in Anchor Point, which is a community on the Kenai Peninsula.

The shelter-in-place has been lifted for Anchor Point and surrounding neighborhoods. Herrick was on the lam for about 24 hours.

“The Alaska State Troopers would like to thank the Anchor Point community for the valuable information that was provided that resulted in Herrick’s arrest. There will be an increased law enforcement presence in Anchor Point today as Troopers continue their investigation in the incident that occurred yesterday,” the Troopers reported.

Herrick has a long list of prior contact with law enforcement and the court system for offenses such as kidnapping, robbery, and domestic violence.

Read earlier story here: Suspect on the lam, wanted for shooting trooper.