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COVID daily update: 14 more cases; 133 total in Alaska

The Alaska Department of Health and Social Services today announced 14 new cases of COVID-19 in five Alaska communities – Anchorage (2), Eagle River (2), Fairbanks (5), Juneau (4) and Kenai (1). One is a worker on the North Slope. This brings the total confirmed case count in Alaska to 133.

Two of the new cases are older adults (60+); 10 are adults aged 30-59; and two are younger adults aged 19-29. Five are female and nine are male. Five of the cases are close contacts of previously diagnosed cases; two are travel-related and seven are still under investigation.

So far the communities in Alaska that have had confirmed cases include: Anchorage (including JBER), Eagle River/Chugiak, Girdwood, Homer, Fairbanks, North Pole, Ketchikan, Juneau Palmer, Seward, Soldotna, Sterling and Kenai.

Nine of the Alaskans with COVID-19 are hospitalized, two more than Monday. There have been no additional deaths beyond the three already announced.

Prudhoe Bay worker has COVID-19; Slope work slows

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Update: The worker is an Alaskan who had recently traveled out of state but returned before the mandatory 14-day quarantine was put into effect.

BP Alaska is stopping all non-essential activity on the North Slope after a worker at Prudhoe Bay tested positive for coronavirus.

In an emailed statement, BP said the company is ” following procedures and protocols to minimize the risk of COVID19 and ensure the safety of our people.” MRAK has learned that at least three other people on the Slope are being tested, but it’s clear that the person who arrived in camp came on a plane with many other workers.

BP, in the Alaska oil business since1959, operates Prudhoe Bay, with a working interest of 26 percent. It accounts for about half of the oil in the Trans Alaska Pipeline System and is in the middle of selling its Alaska assets to Hilcorp.

Earlier this week, BP announced it was donating $2 million to the World Health Organization to fight the spread of COVID-19 through the BP Foundation.

April fools – joke is on you with ML&P, Chugach Electric

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By BOB MAIER

Filed on April 1, 2019 with the Regulatory Commission of Alaska, Chugach Electric’s application to purchase Municipal Light & Power remains unresolved after one full year.

Extending their decision deadline until May 28, 2020, the issues remaining for further study have centered on the agreed-upon purchase price for ML&P of $1 billion.

ML&P has a net book value of $715 million.

That $285 million difference is what is known as an “acquisition premium.”

Alaska State Statute 42.05.441(b) denies the RCA from allowing the recovery of an ‘acquisition premium’ in a purchase price unless specific criteria are met. With Chugach Electric seeking recovery of all transaction costs including that acquisition premium, by use of future rates, another issue arises.

On the April 03, 2018, Anchorage Municipal Ballot Proposition 10 proposing the sale of ML&P to Chugach Electric passed by a 65% to 35% margin. Stated in that ballot language was “No Increase in Base Rates.”

Chugach Electric’s website ‘Power Anchorage’ further states “Chugach has affirmed, and it was part of the ballot language, that base rates will not increase as a result of the transaction.”

Now two years after that election, discussions center whether the average voter understood what a “Base Rate” actually is.

Did the average voter interpret this ballot language to mean no rate increases at all due to the sale? Those 65% voting ‘yes’ will be surprised what their electric bill will look like if this billion-dollar sale is completed. Factoring in that price tag, the cost savings advertised to ratepayers of combining ML&P and Chugach appear to evaporate.

Another concern of the sale of ML&P is the effect on the Anchorage Water and Wastewater Utility ratepayers. Title 42 of Alaska State Statute identifies the reason that AWWU is a regulated Utility. If ML&P is sold, the Anchorage Assembly becomes the rate making authority for AWWU, replacing the RCA. By not informing the voters prior to the April 2018 election, this aspect of the sale has caused additional conversation at the RCA hearing.

By having Anchorage Electric Utility ratepayers pay Anchorage Municipal government the $1,000,000,000.00 price tag for ML&P through Chugach Electric’s increased rates, the Municipality gains revenue, which is otherwise constrained by the tax cap.

In this scenario, the property taxpayers of Anchorage, who are also the electric utility ratepayers, lose the benefits of ownership of a Municipal asset.

This is not Warren Buffett writing a $1 billion check for ML&P. This is ourselves purchasing ML&P from ourselves and giving it to Chugach Electric.

Moving forward … dissolving both ML&P and Chugach Electric and forming one new electric utility is the path to follow. Without the electric utility ratepayers having to pay a purchase price provides benefits that include a different managerial structure along with the legacy labor contacts having a fresh set of eyes reviewing them.

Either this whole thing is about what is best for the ratepayers or it is not.


Bob Maier is an Anchorage utility ratepayer who has provided to both the RCA and the Anchorage Assembly on the sale of ML&P.

Judge denies state employee union’s request for instant restraining order

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 Superior Court Judge Thomas A. Matthews said no to the Alaska State Employees Association, which was trying to force the State of Alaska to send more than half of the state workforce home.

ASEA had asked for a Temporary Restraining Order to effectively require the State of Alaska to close state offices and send roughly one half of the state’s workforce home. ASEA, in its request, did not concern itself with the impact of what would be a major disruption to government and how the public would be put at risk if workers were ordered to stay home during a global pandemic emergency.

Applauding the trial court’s order, Attorney General Kevin Clarkson said, “Judge Matthews recognized that government power regarding how to address the COVID-19 pandemic, while continuing to maintain essential state services, is entrusted to the Governor and not the judiciary. The State of Alaska is doing all it can to ensure the safety of our valued state employees.”  

“As noted by Judge Matthews in the court’s order, the issues faced by Governor Dunleavy’s administration in the ever-changing face of this pandemic are daunting, and the situation is ‘like trying to fly an airplane at the same time you’re building it.’  These are unprecedented times and we must all step up to do what we can to get through this pandemic, while still keeping the State functioning to provide essential services to Alaskans.” 

The Superior Court heard the matter on an expedited basis. The court ordered a telephonic status/pretrial conference for April 6, 2020 at 3 pm. 

In filing the lawsuit, Executive Director of the AFSCME Jake Metcalfe stated:

Our contract guarantees employees safety and security in the workplace. A pandemic does not mean that our contract goes out the window. This is when it is especially important that we look out for everyone’s health and safety due to the high rate of transmission of this virus. We aren’t asking for state government to shut down – we’re asking that non-essential staff who are able to work from home, to be given that permission – and for critical staff who must continue to work, to have the ability to practice proper social distancing and to have access to hand sanitizer and other cleaning products for wiping down shared surfaces. We’re also asking for relief from delays in processing telework agreements and for paid administrative leave for employees who can work from home but are waiting for logistics to get worked out. We know this is complicated, this isn’t anything any of us were prepared for – but it’s critical that we work together to look out for the health and safety of all Alaskans which means requiring as much as your workforce as possible to work from home.

But for many departments, nearly half of the State workforce is already working from home, and those who work in Corrections, Public Safety, and child protection, among others, must continue to interact with clients and the public. The State departments are implementing precautions, but none are sufficient for Metcalfe.

Municipal voting ticks up over 2019 with 7 days left

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More than 27,544 Anchorage residents have cast their ballots in the election that ends in seven days on April 7.

That compares favorably to the approximately 20,000 who had voted by this time last year in the mail-in municipal election in Anchorage. Two years ago, 25,000 had voted by the time the last week of mail-in voting had begun.

Conservatives usually don’t turn out for municipal elections as strongly as public-union Democrats, and the unions are well-oiled vote in the Anchorage bowl. But this year, with the coronavirus pandemic changing everyone’s schedules, many people are staying home and are perhaps finding more time to take care of their civic duty.

Alaska Family Council has given its endorsement to the following candidates:

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, only one of the six Anchorage Accessible Vote Centers will open as scheduled on Monday, March 30th for the April 7, 2020 Regular Municipal Election. 

The City Hall Accessible Vote Center is now open:

  • M-F, March 30 – April 6, 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
  • Tuesday, April 7, 7:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m. 

If voters have questions about voting or the election, voters should call the Voter Holtine at 243-VOTE(8683).

Corona-impact: ADN’s downsizing doublespeak

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By CRAIG MEDRED / CRAIGMEDRED.NEWS

Alaska’s largest newspaper is again downsizing, but it is understandable if you missed this news.

The email to ADN.com viewers from editor David Hulen required fluency in Orwellian doublespeak.

One could easily have taken at face value his pitch that “ADN has mobilized to cover the coronavirus crisis” and missed the contradiction that followed:

“We’ve had to temporarily cut back hours and pay for all employees, along with some painful layoffs.”

A reduction in force through layoffs, shrinking man hours and pay cuts is not  a mobilization. It is what the military would call a demobilization.

Doublespeak – from George Orwell’s dark vision of the future in the novel “Nineteen Eighty-Four – is the description for language turned on its head. Demobilizing the staff means mobilizing the coverage. Retreating means attacking. Doing less means giving you more.

And mainstream journalism wonders why it has a credibility problem.

The sad thing is Anchorage Daily News staffers appear to have been working hard through the COVID-19 crisis. And you can expect those left to continue to work hard despite what is said to be a significant cut in pay driven by a drop in advertising revenue due to the pandemic.

With bars and restaurants closed, events canceled, the upcoming tourist season headed for the rocks, supermarkets trying to discourage hoarding rather than attract customers, and health care professionals avoiding elective surgeries while helping the sick, key parts of the advertising base are gone.

And all the commerce that has moved online doesn’t really need the newspaper or ADN.com. Once the shop of your choice gets your email, it can cut out the middleman and go straight to you.

This might be the darkest hour for journalism as older Americans have known it. I fear an old journalism friend who thought early on that COVID-19 might save the business was badly wrong.

“People need reliable sources in the midst of this,” he said.

He was right about that. The problem is there are likely a lot of people who are doing what I am doing on a personal level, and that is turning to professional sources instead of journalists.

Read about how Craig Medred is getting his coronavirus information at his website: CraigMedred.news

U.S. Attorney to prosecute hoarding, price gouging of essential medical items

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U.S. Attorney Bryan Schroder on Monday announced a task force charged with investigating and punishing those who hoard and price gouge certain items associated with COVID-19.

The task force comes as the Department of Justice responds to a March 23, 2020 Executive Order signed by President Donald Trump.

“The Department of Justice, and the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Alaska, will not tolerate those who try to take advantage of the COVID-19 pandemic to defraud the people of our state,” said Schroder in a statement.  “The pandemic continues to cause anxiety and uncertainty across the country.  At a time when our country needs to join together, it is repugnant that fraudsters will try to take advantage of our communities.  The U.S. Attorney’s Office, along with our law enforcement partners in Alaska and beyond, will root out these schemes and bring the criminals to justice.”

The president’s order gave the Department means to fight misconduct under the authority of Section 102 of the Defense Production Act, which prohibits hoarding of designated items. The order authorizes the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) to protect scarce healthcare resources and medical items by designating particular items as protected under the statute. Once an item is designated, it becomes a crime under the statute 50 U.S.C. §§ 4512, 4513 for any person to accumulate that item either (1) in excess of his or her reasonable needs or (2) for the purpose of selling it in excess of prevailing market prices. 

In response, HHS announced a list of designated health and medical resources necessary to respond to the spread of COVID-19 that are scarce and would be subject to these hoarding prevention measures:

  • N-95 Filtering Facepiece Respirators;
  • Other Filtering Facepiece Respirators (e.g., those designated as N99, N100, R95, R99, R100, or P95, P99, P100);
  • Elastomeric, air-purifying respirators and appropriate particulate filters/cartridges;
  • Powered Air Purifying Respirator (PAPR);
  • Portable Ventilators;
  • Chloroquine phosphate or hydroxychloroquine HCl;
  • Sterilization services for certain medical devices and certain sterilizers;
  • Disinfecting devices and other sanitizing and disinfecting products suitable for use in a clinical setting;
  • Medical gowns or apparel, e.g., surgical gowns or isolation gowns;
  • Personal protective equipment (PPE) coveralls, e.g., Tyvek Suits;
  • PPE face masks, PPE surgical masks, PPE face shields, PPE gloves or surgical gloves;
  • Ventilators, anesthesia gas machines modified for use as ventilators, and positive pressure breathing devices modified for use as ventilators, ventilator tubing connectors, and ventilator accessories.

U.S. Attorney Schroder urged Alaskans to be vigilant in reporting any COVID-19 related hoarding or fraud activities, noting that criminals will likely continue to use new methods to exploit COVID-19 worldwide.

If you think you are a victim of a scam or attempted fraud involving COVID-19, you can report it without leaving your home though a number of platforms:

COVID casualty: Newspapers find advertising is first to go

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DOORS CLOSING FOR SOME, LAYOFFS FOR OTHERS

The Wuhan coronavirus is taking its toll on newspapers across the Pacific Northwest, from the largest to the smallest, and from Seattle to Girdwood.

Alaska’s largest newspaper, the Anchorage Daily News, just wrote that since ” a sudden plunge in advertising and event revenue over the past month, we’ve had to temporarily cut back hours and pay for all employees, along with some painful layoffs. This cost-cutting is aimed at the continuing viability and sustainability of the organization.”

The parent company of the Juneau Empire has closed newspapers and announced layoffs across the Pacific Northwest, where the company has numerous small-town newspapers. According to a report in The Seattle Times, six part-time reporters are responsible for producing Sound Publishing’s 11 Seattle-area papers, including the Renton Reporter and Federal Way Mirror. And the company stopped printing nine of its 13 free weeklies. Those left on staff are working reduced hours, the paper reported.

In Girdwood, Alaska, the tiny but deeply community-focused Glacier City Gazette went to an all-digital edition earlier this year. But when COVID-19 shut down the upcoming tourism season, Publisher and Editor Marc Donadieu said that without advertising, he can’t continue. He put the newspaper to sleep on March 19, saying he didn’t know if it would be something he could revive later on.

“After fours years of publishing GCG, I took a short hiatus to recharge. I was taking steps to resume publishing GCG online, but now it is on indefinite hiatus. The Corvid-19 pandemic has dramatically changed the advertising climate in a town dependent on tourism. Ads are the first thing to go, and without enough of them, I cannot pay my staff or myself,” Donadieu wrote.

“Who knows how long the pandemic will last and what its effects will be? Who knows how long and deep the inevitable recession will be? I don’t have any answers about GCG at this point or what I’ll be doing in the future. We’ll see what happens.”

At a time when nearly all businesses in Alaska are reeling from the economic body slam of the pandemic, the Glacier City Gazette, which supported a half-dozen writers and photographers, is the poster child for how the Wuhan virus has impacted many small mom-and-pop businesses far from the epicenter of uncertainty caused by COVID-19.new

Five new cases of COVID-19

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Alaska gained 5 new known cases of COVID-19 since Sunday. That brings the total to 119 positive cases in Alaska, and no new deaths since the three that have already been announced.

Two of the new cases were in Anchorage, two in Fairbanks, and one in Palmer. The total number of people who have been tested in Alaska is 3,713. Seven of those afflicted by the virus have been hospitalized.

The number of new cases has dropped when compared to recent days. Two days ago, 19 new cases were announced, while 12 new cases were announced on Sunday.

Chief Medical Officer Dr. Anne Zink said that over weekend the State received an additional 60 ventilators. Alternative care sites are being set up in Anchorage at the Alaska Airlines sports center on the University of Alaska campus, with 150 cots in place now for those who need medical monitoring, and she is working to create those centers in as many as 18 other communities.

The total case count for Monday, March 30:

  • Anchorage: 61, up from 59 on Sunday
  • Fairbanks/North Pole/Interior: 30, up from 28 on Sunday
  • Mat/Su: 3, up from 2, which had been stable for three days
  • Ketchikan: 13, no change
  • Juneau: 5, no change
  • Kenai Peninsula communities: 7, no change