Tuesday, August 19, 2025
Home Blog Page 1511

Final EIS issued for Greater Mooses Tooth 2

0

A major step forward for the proposed Greater Mooses Tooth 2 production pad in the  National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska was announced today by the Bureau of Land Management.

It will be the second significant project by ConocoPhillips in the Greater Mooses Tooth Unit.

The peak workforce during the winter construction period is estimated to be 700 and estimated peak production is 25,000 to 30,000 barrels per day going into the Trans Alaska Pipeline System.

ConocoPhillips applied for a permit to drill in August of 2015. Today, the Final Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement was released, which makes good on the Trump Administration’s commitment to jump-start Alaska energy. It will bring more jobs to the North Slope to develop a 14-acre pad and up to 48 wells. A pipeline and access road will cross Native lands as well as federally owned lands in the NPR-A. Infrastructure includes an 8-mile road and 8.6-mile pipeline.

ConocoPhillips has budgeted the project at $1.5 billion for development.

“Oil and gas development in the NPR-A is important to meeting our nation’s energy needs and this analysis provides a responsible path forward in balance with resource protections. And, throughout the process we are proud of our efforts of involving the people most affected by development activities on the North Slope of Alaska,” said Joe Balash, Assistant Secretary for Land and Minerals Management at BLM.

The area was leased in 1999 and development was originally approved as CD7 in the BLM’s 2004 Alpine Satellite Development Plan EIS.

ConocoPhillips submitted a new drilling permit application in 2015, relocating the drill pad.

A notice of availability for the Final Supplemental EIS for the Alpine Satellite Development Plan for the Greater Mooses Tooth 2 Development Project will be published Aug. 31.

A record of decision could be issued within 30 days.

Troopers get big raise from governor, but…

2

THESE ARE THE RAISES FOUGHT FOR BY SEN. MICCICHE

In the heart of Republican country, where his leading opponent for governor is the strongest, Gov. Bill Walker has announced the Alaska State Troopers will receive a 7.5 percent wage increase.

It’s not only good for Troopers and safety, it’s good press for his campaign for re-election prospects in the Mat-Su Valley, an area where the governor’s popularity is anemic.

By most accounts, the raises are needed. But Walker is taking credit for raises that were fought for hard by a senator from Soldotna.

Sen. Peter Micciche, Majority leader, Finance member and chair of the Department of Public Safety budget, butted heads with the governor in March, when Walker asked for more positions in his Public Safety budget, and Micciche said that what was needed was not more positions at this time — over 50 are unfilled of the 389 Trooper positions funded — but better pay to retain uniformed officers.

Micciche had talked to people throughout the Department of Public Safety, and they confirmed it: Alaska State Troopers are not compensated enough for what they are asked to do on a daily basis.

Micciche was also relying on a report on trooper retention to fight for the better pay.

Back then, the governor’s Chief of Staff Scott Kendall, took to Twitter and demanded that Micciche’s Senate committee restore the budget increases the governor had proposed for more positions.

“Budget served up by and slashes public safety by $4.5 Million from budget proposed by . Shameful. Funds for troopers/safety not a political football for negotiations. Enough games. Grow up and put the funds back. Now. ,” the chief of staff demanded in a fit of pique in April.

What the governor had asked for was $4 million for more rural law enforcement and various public safety programs.

The governor wanted two more pilots in the Department of Public Safety and some $600,000 for a records and statistics unit. He wanted more troopers in rural Alaska, although there were 50 positions in the department that were unfilled. All this, at a time when the governor was asking for taxes from everything that wasn’t nailed down, and not providing nearly enough budget cuts across the departments.

Micciche didn’t back down. Two years ago, Gov. Walker had come to the Legislature for millions of more dollars in public safety without providing any objective justification to the Legislature.

Micciche met with the leadership of the Troopers and told them to build a case for the money they needed, through an analysis that would withstand scrutiny. The Troopers’ hiring and retention study convinced Micciche of the need for better compensation first, before more positions, and he placed the language in the operating budget and pushed it over the finish line.

In recent months, the governor has come under criticism for overusing Trooper pilots and the King Air for his campaign-related stops around the state. Today’s announcement included a tactical pilot position in the Wildlife Troopers’ Aircraft Section to assist with search-and-rescue and counterdrug efforts.

Last week, the Troopers unveiled a new recruiting logo and branding package to help attract a new generation of law enforcement professionals.

Walker said he will recommend another 7.5 percent pay increase in the coming budget, although it’s uncertain he will be around to defend his budget. He faces a tough re-election cycle with two other heavy-hitters in the race for governor — Mike Dunleavy and Mark Begich.

The governor cites legislative budget intent language as his authority for appropriating the funds through a supplemental budget item, according to his press office.

TIMING WAS TO HURT MICCICHE, HELP WALKER’S RE-ELECTION

But the announcement comes weeks after Micciche sent a letter was sent to the Department of Administration, pleading with the State to release the funds he had fought for to boost Trooper salaries. It was something Gov. Walker had no intention of doing before the Primary Election, as that would have helped Micciche, who was in a tough primary battle with a Republican candidate who was criticizing him relentlessly on public safety issues.

Not until after the primary, and Micciche’s slim win was certain, did Walker finally announce that the wage increases would go into effect.

If Walker couldn’t hurt Micciche by withholding Trooper raises earlier this summer, at least he could help his own re-election chances,and announce the pay increases in a manner that would allow him to receive all the credit.

Little Chicago?

Oh, my. Voting irregularities? Dead people trying to vote? What are we, Little Chicago?

It turns out there may have been more than a little hanky-panky in the District 15 GOP primary pitting incumbent Rep. Gabrielle LeDoux against political newcomer Aaron Weaver.

[Read more at Anchorage Daily Planet]

Anchorage women’s club puts $10K into Dunleavy campaign

1

Anchorage Republican Women’s Club issued a $10,000 check to the Mike Dunleavy campaign for governor. The group made the presentation on Tuesday evening at a fundraiser in Anchorage. Over 75 people attended the fundraiser, including many Republican senators.

GOP to pursue write-in campaign against LeDoux

3

Although Gabrielle LeDoux may have won her re-election, she may face a write-in campaign in the November General Election.

Tuckerman Babcock, chairman of the Alaska Republican Party, said that the write-in could be for either LeDoux’s primary challenger, Aaron Weaver — or if Weaver chooses otherwise, another candidate, such as Jake Sloan, who had run for the office briefly but withdrew.

Babcock will be meeting with Weaver and District 15 Republican officials tomorrow to discuss the next steps.

LeDoux’s election is under a cloud of suspicion as some of the ballots voted in her district have been sent to the criminal division of the Department of Law for investigation of possible fraud.

LeDoux, the incumbent for House District 15, now leads by 113 votes, with 26 votes being considered suspect due to residency or other legitimacy issues.

“The Alaska Republican Party does not acknowledge Gabrielle LeDoux as a Republican candidate,” Babcock said.

Rep. Paul Seaton, Gabrielle LeDoux, and Louise Stutes listen as a Republican Party official explains why they are being sanctioned and targeted for removal by the Alaska Republican Party, during a state central committee meeting last year.

Last year, the Alaska Republican Party voted to remove all support from LeDoux and to actively seek her removal. The party asked her to change her registration from Republican to something else, because the party believed she was a turncoat.

LeDoux issued a statement to the Anchorage Daily News that defended her efforts to bring in the votes for her candidacy in District 15, and denied doing anything illegal.

Sen. Lisa Murkowski successfully ran a write-in campaign against Joe Miller in 2010, and in Juneau, Sally Rue won as a write in candidate for the Juneau Board of Education in 1992.

KTVA FINDS MANY IRREGULARITIES

KTVA crews went to some of the addresses where votes were sent from in Muldoon, and found plenty of irregularities, including addresses that simply do not exist.

Read the KTVA report here.

If LeDoux is found to have participated in voter fraud, she could be disbarred from the Alaska Bar Association and also face legal penalties.

Ben Carpenter to replace Mike Chenault in House District 29?

2

IT LOOKS LIKE 13 VOTES ADVANTAGE FOR CARPENTER

After absentee, early, and questioned votes were counted in the House District 29 race, it appears Ben Carpenter has the edge over Kenai Borough Assemblyman Wayne Ogle.

But it’s only by 13 votes. The official count has not been announced; this calculation comes from a review of the most recent tapes from the Division of Elections.

And with just 10 votes, there could be a recount.

At the end of Election Day, Ogle had 1,222 votes to Carpenter’s 1,219 votes in the Republican Primary, a three-vote margin.

With all the absentee, early, and questioned ballots in, the current count appears to be 1,367 for Carpenter to 1,354 for Ogle, according to an analysis of the Election Division’s tapes in Juneau, where the district’s remaining outstanding votes were counted this afternoon.

Carpenter is recently retired from the Alaska National Guard, where he was a special staff officer in the commanding general’s office. He is also a U.S. Army and Air Force veteran. He and his wife grow peonies at their Nikiski home and property.

A 1993 graduate of Nikiski High School, Carpenter served in Iraq and Afghanistan and in Turkey and Kuwait with the Air Force.

He is president of the Alaska Peony Market Cooperative and ran for House after Mike Chenault announced his retirement earlier this year.

The winner of the Republican primary will face Shawn Butler, a Democrat, in November. Butler is a retired U.S. Army officer who teaches at the University of Alaska and lives in Hope.

Micciche pulls ahead in absentee count

5

In one of the closest races in the Alaska Republican Primary, Sen. Peter Micciche has fended off a challenge by newcomer Ron Gillham by what appears to be 72 votes.

After absentee, early, and questioned ballots were counted in the District O race, Micciche had 2,930 votes to Gillham’s 2,858.

Voters who were unhappy with the way the Permanent Fund dividend has been decided and an abundance of crime in Alaska gave several incumbents a punishing election season, and Micciche early on said he felt he was in a tough primary battle.

Gillham, who works on an oil rig in Cook Inlet, was ahead by 9 votes on Election night, but Micciche had run an effective absentee ballot push, and that pulled him out of reach today. Micciche has held the seat since 2013 representing the Kenai Peninsula.  He was previously the mayor of Soldotna, and a member of its city council.

The absentee ballots were counted in Juneau and results were not available until late in the day.

There was no Democrat in the race, so this result decides the Senate Seat O election.

Ben Carpenter to replace Mike Chenault in House District 29?

 

 

Can this candidate be saved?

1

Democrat Rep. Scott Kawasaki, running for Senate Seat A against Sen. Pete Kelly, and needs volunteers, according to his recent announcement. He’s having a volunteer rally in Fairbanks on September 1.

We took one look at this flyer and identified an immediate volunteer need.

(And it’s not just the design of the “resistance” raised fists and lightning bolts on a black background that’s a problem. There’s a significant spelling issue.)

Criminal investigation underway; LeDoux now up by 87 votes

DISTRICT 15 ELECTION IRREGULARITIES SENT TO DEPARTMENT OF LAW

Rep. Gabrielle LeDoux appears to have won her primary re-election.

The Aug. 28 count of absentee ballots has yielded 142 for LeDoux, and 33 for her Republican opponent, Aaron Weaver.

All things counted, she’s 87 votes ahead. That’s not counting 26 suspect ballots. All of those votes went to LeDoux but are not being included at this point.

100 votes is what LeDoux paid a man named Charlie Chang, from Fresno, Calif., to get for her as insurance for her election. She paid Chang $10,000 and plane tickets to and from Fresno to work over the Hmong vote in Muldoon.

[Read: LeDoux’s vote-getting scheme raises eyebrows]

[Read: Division of Elections: Irregularities in District 15]

District 15 primaries are low-turnout events, and this one was no different, so she wanted insurance to make sure nothing happened to bump her from office.

Yet on election night, she trailed Aaron Weaver by 3 votes, 294 to 291. But that was before all the absentees came in.

During the counting of absentee ballots, so many irregularities were discovered, that the Division of Elections has forwarded on information to the State Department of Law’s criminal division.

There were absentee ballots being requested by dead people, and phone numbers given on absentee ballots that were non-functioning. People voted who didn’t live in the district. People told the Division of Elections that they hadn’t voted, although ballots had been turned in in their name.

The tape showing the absentee count for District 15.

The Department of Law isn’t saying much, other than there is evidence of voter fraud.

IS CHANG A PART OF THE FRESNO DEMOCRATIC PARTY?

Chang was given the $10,000 vote bounty by LeDoux in late July to bring in the absentee votes throughout the Hmong community in District 15, where LeDoux serves as a House representative. The check went to his Sierra Vista address in Fresno.

Chang is a former president of the California Minority and Women’s Contractors Association, a now-defunct nonprofit registered to his address at 8437 N Sierra Vista, Fresno, California 93720.

But is he also the same Charlie Chang who is a Democrat activist in Fresno, the head of the Fresno Democratic Party’s Hmong Committee? Must Read Alaska found the group’s website, which shows:

Mission Statement

We, as Democrats, are devoted to advancing equal rights for all Hmong people regardless of age, race, gender, sexual preference, religion, national origin or economic status. We support the Democratic Party and those Democratic candidates who support our mission.

We will strive to realize these goals:

  • To educate the Hmong community and others about the significant differences between the two major parties on issues of concern to this community.
  • To encourage, empower and inspire Hmong to run for political office.
  • To encourage members of the Hmong community to support and vote for Democratic candidates, especially Hmong Candidates who are committed to defeating prejudice.
  • To lead the Central Valley Hmong Democrats to improve its record on issues of importance to our community.
  • To work for the nomination of Hmong Democratic candidates at local, state and national levels of government  who will be fully supportive of the struggle against bigotry and intolerance.
  • To provide manpower, resources, guidance and training to support and provide Hmong political candidates the best experiences and opportunity.
  • To provide Hmong elders and non-English speakers the support they need during elections.
  • To work with other groups and individuals to promote these goals.

President: Dr. Charlie Chang
559-470-4788
[email protected]

Meets third Thursday of each month at 6 p.m.
Democratic Party HQ
1035 U St., Fresno