Wednesday, May 7, 2025
Home Blog Page 1542

Takeaways from the Rogoff court appearance

11

Alice Rogoff, the owner of the Alaska Dispatch News (and associated companies), made her first in-person appearance in bankruptcy court today, where she answered questions under oath. During previous hearings, she had appeared telephonically.

Dressed in a dark merino wool cardigan, a Pendleton-style, box-pleat skirt, sensible heels, and carrying a well-worn boho bag, Rogoff sat before the U.S. Bankruptcy Court trustee Kathryn Perkins, and revealed as little as possible in her answers.

Some of her responses appeared to be well-coached by her bankruptcy attorney, Cabot Christianson, to whom she has paid $50,000 to handle her affairs as she tries to extract herself from having to pay the tens of millions of dollars in debts she owes.

The questions Rogoff faced today came from a handful of the more than 100 companies to which she owes a great deal of money.

It was a cat-and-mouse game, with creditors asking questions that mystified the audience of reporters, creditors, and curiosity seekers.

But Rogoff’s lawyer knew exactly what the questioners were trying to get at — and he deflected some of the questions by objecting to them, and at other times he jumped in with an answer to keep Rogoff from speaking to a topic herself:

“It’s all in here in excruciating detail,” Christianson said twice, referring to his most recent document filing that explained how the companies Rogoff set up were entwined.

When asked by the court trustee when she knew her business was financially on the rocks, Rogoff unequivocally said she wasn’t in trouble until GCI filed an eviction notice on Aug. 11. She made sure to mention that point twice, so the bankruptcy trustee would be sure to note that the collapse of the business is GCI’s fault.

But a review of the history shows that she stopped paying her bills back in 2015. She ran up unpaid utility bills with GCI at the rate of $1,500 a day and, combined with overdue rent, she was $1.4 million in arrears to the landlord at the place where her press operates on Northway Drive.

“At this time (Nov. 30, 2015) ADN also indicated to GCI that it could not and would not pay a series of unrelated invoices totaling $205,558.00 for work GCI completed on ADN’s new office premises on 31st Avenue (the “31st Avenue Receivable”), again because of a shortage in cash flow,” the eviction complaint said.

“To assist ADN in remaining operational, on January 21, 2016, GCI agreed to a Settlement Agreement pursuant to which GCI CC accepted advertising credits in lieu of cash payment of the 31st Avenue Receivable.”

January, 2016 is also when Rogoff stopped paying her former business partner, Tony Hopfinger, who says she owes him $900,000. He filed a lawsuit a few months later when she decided she didn’t owe him anything further than the $100,000 she had already paid.

Meanwhile, at the GCI building housing the press, her situation continued to deteriorate, according to GCI’s request to the court to assist in evicting the newspaper.

“In an attempt to again support continued operation of ADN, GCI tried to negotiate a second settlement agreement in February of 2016 to provide for repayment of the outstanding Holdover Rent via in-kind advertising credits and permit ADN to remain in the Premises pursuant to this arrangement through April 30, 2017.

“ADN did not agree to GCI’s proposed terms for the second settlement agreement and negotiations ceased at the end of February , 2017.”

“Since February of 2017, GCI has presented alternatives to Rogoff to enable ADN to continue operations and to prevent forcible evictions. None of these alternatives were acceptable to Rogoff.”

Rogoff, according to GCI’s eviction request, had simply stopped negotiating with GCI. She wouldn’t take GCI’s calls. This is the same Rogoff who claimed to the court that she wasn’t in financial trouble until August 2017, when GCI issued the eviction notice.

SHE HAS THE MONEY

Thursday’s proceedings revealed that Rogoff has $1.7 million in personal funds in a Wells Fargo account, and yet chose to borrow up to $1 million from the Binkley Company to keep the newspaper running for a month — including emergency payments to workers, health insurance, and other insurance premiums that were past due.

Although she revealed her investment account balance to the court, Rogoff was unwilling to reveal to the court the details of her marital allowance. She said it was personal and none of the creditors’ business.

But, just as she tried to hide her personal information in an earlier lawsuit filed by her former partner Tony Hopfinger, that marital allowance, believed to be $5 million per year from her estranged husband David Rubenstein, will eventually be made known in a “2004 deposition” (a bankruptcy tool that allows a bankruptcy trustee, a creditor, or debtor to probe for documents relevant to the issues in the case).

Rogoff also is claiming to be a victim of her company and considers herself a creditor. Last month, she said the company owed her $8 million, but this week that amount was increased to more than $12 million which makes her supposedly the largest unsecured creditor of the more than 100 others who are waiting in line to be paid.

ARE THE BINKLEYS BEING USED?

Rogoff told the court that before her bankruptcy filing, she had explored many options for the newspaper, including selling it, developing a joint operating agreement with another company, or creating a nonprofit to operate the paper in the same manner that the Fairbanks Daily NewsMiner operates under the Snedden Foundation.

Rogoff had earlier been negotiating with the  Binkley Company but had walked away from those negotiations earlier in the  summer. It wasn’t until she hit a crisis point with the impending eviction when her attorney called the Binkleys and asked them to save the newspaper, or else the paper that was published the following day would be the final one.

The Binkleys came to the rescue, and got permission from the court and her major creditors to be allowed to loan the newspaper up to $1 million to keep it afloat prior to the bankruptcy auction sale, which occurs Monday in Anchorage. The Binkley Company hopes to be the high bidder.

Meanwhile, Rogoff appears to have been working behind the scenes with other buyers, who will try to outbid the Binkleys for the newspaper, even though they have a purchase agreement with her.

In court, Rogoff did not seem warm to the Binkley Company principle, Ryan Binkley, who sat in the gallery observing the proceedings. She neither greeted nor acknowledged the family that came from Fairbanks and spent their summer trying to save the paper.

Besides the Binkley Company, Steve Malkowich of Alberta Newspaper Group has been spotted in Anchorage doing due diligence on the newspaper assets, and appears to be a credible bidder, according to those close to the newspaper operations.

THE CORPORATE VEIL

Wednesday’s questions from creditors looked to be strategic in attempting to pierce the “corporate veil,” and show that Rogoff was operating the business from her personal accounts, and therefore has personal liability.

Creditors want to get at the $1.7 million in her investment accounts to recover a portion of their losses.

Mark Miller, of M&M Wiring, was particularly interested in the relationship between her attorney, Adam Cook, and the unfinished construction project to install two presses at the 59th and Arctic Blvd building. His company had performed a lot of the wiring at the Arctic Blvd. building, half of which is unpaid.

“Did you authorize Adam Cook to communicate with the contractors and subcontractors during the Arctic project?” asked Miller, who believes he is owed about $500,000 by Rogoff for work his company performed.

Yes, she answered.

“Did you authorize Adam Cook to tell the contractors on the project that they would be paid?” Miller continued.

No, she responded. But Miller was referring to an email from Cook to the contractors, telling them to continue the work and that ADN would pay them. That was his smoking gun.

“At any point in time during the project did Adam Cook step in as project manager in place of Ed McCoy?” Miller asked.

Rogoff hesitated. “Well, not technically,” she said. Cook was her lawyer.

And that may have been exactly the answer that Miller was looking for in showing the court that her attorney from Birch, Horton, Bittner, Cherot was aware of her financial situation and did not act in a responsible manner on her behalf, mixing the job of being her attorney with the role of being her defacto project manager.

Exchanges such as this one were likely mysterious to most court observers, but had real goals for the creditors, who were having their first shot at challenging the woman who is getting ready to stiff them for millions.

Breaking: Ahtna rejects settlement with Walker over Klutina Road

3

Ahtna  has rejected the settlement with the Walker Administration over the public’s historic road access to the Klutina Lake.

This means the 2008 lawsuit over the “RS 2477” access across Ahtna land, that had been interrupted by the proposed settlement, will continue.

According to a press release from the Department of Law today, “After taking extensive public comment on the proposed settlement agreement in the litigation over Klutina Lake Road (officially named Brenwick-Craig Road), settlement negotiations between Ahtna, Inc. and the State have failed. Ahtna, Inc.’s Board of Directors voted to disapprove the proposed settlement.

“I am disappointed that the board was unwilling to come back to the table to see if we could negotiate the final terms of a settlement,” said Attorney General Jahna Lindemuth. “The State has always aimed to preserve public access to the greatest extent possible—whether through settlement or litigation. With Ahtna’s decision, we will now focus our efforts on the litigation.”

The State concluded a 45-day comment period on Aug. 30, and had received more than 400 written comments, and conducted five public meetings, with attendance ranging between 25 and 50 people at each meeting.

The State was still reviewing all the comments when it was informed of the actions taken by the Ahtna board, according to the press release.

The next step in the litigation will be for the parties to submit a status report to superior court by October 31, 2017.

A new trial date will be scheduled by the court.

Alaska Senate President Pete Kelly, Sen. Cathy Giessel (Senate Resources Committee Chair), and Sen. John Coghill (Senate Judiciary Committee Chair) announced in August that they had concerns about Walker’s settlement, which could diminish access to fishing grounds.

[Read: Walker rolls over on Klutina access]

Among their objections, the senators said that Ahtna needed to be held to specific deadlines for fulfilling its end of the obligations in the settlement, such as construction of parking areas for the public. Although the state has timeframes, Ahtna does not.

“Ahtna, unfortunately, historically, has exhibited difficult behavior on this issue in the past (putting up gates, aggressive litigation, issuing citations, delays, etc.). There needs to be accountability,” the senators wrote.

UNFUNDED LIABILITY

“On paper, the state may pursue the agreed upon surveying, construction, etc. But in reality, because of financial constraints, those processes may take years. Meanwhile access to all Alaskans will be restricted, with other viable options being severely limited,” the senators write.

The letter also points out that there is no “true dollar amount” attached to the proposed settlement.  The required funding could be hundreds of thousands, or even millions, but it is unknown.

This may lead to it being thrown out or unfunded, since the governor does not have the power to appropriate — that is a legislative authority. The governor may be putting the state on the hook for millions of dollars in costs at at a time the state is essentially broke.

The Gulkana cemetery issue is also a concern since it was not a part of the original dispute, and the senators pointed out that from a practical standpoint, the land exchange proposed would make it very difficult for vehicles with trailers to turn around, and that if there is future erosion of the access point, the public will be robbed of its access unless the state ensures it has condemnation authority to restore access.

“Many in the Senate were hopeful the state’s interests would be adequately protected during this lawsuit. Upon review of the proposed language, it’s clear the state isn’t there yet. There is still much work to be done,” the letter says.

[Read: Opinion: State rushes settlement on Klutina Road access]

The full settlement agreement is posted on the governor’s web site.

(Mayor) Dan Sullivan to file for statewide office — but which one?

9

Word is that former Anchorage Mayor Dan Sullivan is not going to file to run as mayor of Anchorage after all.

He’s planning to file for statewide office, according to those close to him who met with him today.

There are only two seats available in the statewide category — lieutenant governor or governor.

Must Read Alaska was not able to reach Sullivan tonight to ask him which he is aiming for.

Sullivan served as Anchorage mayor for six years, starting in 2009, before term-limiting out in 2015. He was followed by Ethan Berkowitz, the current mayor, who has filed for re-election for the April 3, 2018 municipal election. Political prognosticators expected Sullivan to file for that seat, which he could easily win.

Sullivan won the primary as a candidate for lieutenant governor in 2014. Paired with Gov. Sean Parnell in the General Election that year, the two were beat by just over 2 percent of the voters who were enamored with a hybrid “unity” ticket formed by now-Gov. Bill Walker and Byron Mallott.

Union leaders such as Vince Beltrami of the AFL-CIO brought all their forces to bear on that race, in part because Sullivan had earlier rewritten the city’s new labor law that curtailed certain collective bargaining rights for public employees.  That new labor ordinance was ultimately overturned by voters in a very low-turnout local election, but it left lingering union animosity toward Sullivan.

Mallott had been the Democrat nominee in 2014, but he dropped his own lieutenant governor partner, Hollis French, and accepted the Number 2 slot on a ticket the Alaska Democratic Party cobbled together with Walker at the top. French also withdrew, clearing the way for Walker-Mallot, He was later rewarded with a plum job on the Regulatory Commission of Alaska.

Sullivan was a 2016 candidate who briefly challenged Sen. Lisa Murkowski in the primary, before dropping his bid. But he picked up valuable data in the process and recent polling shows he is still well regarded among fiscal conservatives. He’s respected statewide because of how well he managed the Municipality of Anchorage’s budget, which had been left in shambles by former Mayor Mark Begich.

Begich is also expected to file for governor for 2018 as the leading Democrat.

When Sullivan left the Mayor’s Office in 2015, the municipality had gone from a Begich-induced deficit to a healthy surplus, which has since been gobbled up by spending increases under Mayor Berkowitz.

Before serving as mayor of Anchorage, Sullivan was a member of the Anchorage Assembly between 1998 to 2008, when he also reached his term limit.

The word of his possible filing for a statewide office comes on a day when many anticipate another popular figure, Sen. Kevin Meyer, will file for lieutenant governor on Thursday.

This story will be updated.

Kevin Meyer to run for lieutenant governor; Bart LeBon to run for House

0

This afternoon, Sen. Kevin Meyer sent out a press release that told the media exactly where he’ll be at 10 a.m. on Thursday: The Division of Elections Office on Gambell Street. And it has something to do with filing for statewide office.

Among political observers, it’s no surprise that what he’ll be doing is filing for the lieutenant governor race for 2018.

Meyer has served as chair of Finance, was Senate Majority leader, Senate President, and is now chair of Rules. He’s been traveling the state talking with Alaskans about the future — his future, to be specific. But also about the political landscape, and the ways that a lieutenant governor can serve.

Meyer was first elected to the senate chamber in 2008. Meyer also served in the House of Representatives from 2000 to 2008, the Anchorage Assembly from 1993 to 2000, and was on his community council.

Meyer has a B.S. in business administration from the University of Nebraska, an M.P.A. from University of New Mexico, and an M.B.A. from Alaska Pacific University.

He’ll be the third Republican to file for the slot, after Sen. Gary Stevens of Kodiak and former House member Lynn Gattis of Wasilla.

BART LEBON RUNS FOR HOUSE

A kick-off event for Bart LeBon of Fairbanks drew more than 50 people in Fairbanks as the former bank executive has filed for the seat now occupied by Rep. Scott Kawasaki, who is challenging Sen. Pete Kelly for his senate seat.

LeBon retired from Mt. McKinley Bank earlier this year, where he was executive vice president.

Among those spotted at the kickoff were former Sen. Steve Frank; former Sen. Gary Wilken; former FNSB borough Assemblyman Rick Solie; Alaska Republican Party National Committeewoman Cynthia and Ken Henry; Rep. Steve Thompson; and former city Mayor and current city Councilman Jerry Cleworth.

Bart LeBon being inducted into the Nanook Hall of Fame in 2015. University of Alaska photo

LeBon was a two-year member of the men’s basketball team at UAF. In his first year on campus, LeBon helped the UAF men’s basketball team to its first postseason tournament championship, as the Nanooks captured the 1973 NAIA District I Championship.

He is the founder of the Mt. McKinley Bank North Star Invitational, which is a women’s basketball tournament that has been played every year since 2001, and also served as chairman of the now-defunct Top of the World Men’s Basketball Tournament.

The Bart LeBon Humanitarian Award, which annually goes to a UAF student-athlete who lends a hand to the community and spends numerous hours volunteering, was named after him.

LeBon is running to represent District 1, which includes neighborhoods within the city limits of Fairbanks.

‘Beset with problems’ Dispatch goes on Auction block Monday

2

BUT THURSDAY WILL BE TELLING

A court filing by Alaska Dispatch News owner Alice Rogoff details “terms and assumptions” associated with the sale of Alaska’s largest newspaper to the Binkley Company of Fairbanks.

The paper goes on the auction block next Monday morning.

Only one bidder is known at this point — the Binkley Company, headed by Ryan Binkley, his siblings and business partner Jason Evans. Two other groups are rumored to be circling, but whether they will ultimately bid will only be known at the close of business this Thursday.

In the meantime, Sept. 8 will tell media observers a lot about the future of the newspaper.

That’s when the Binkley Company will file details of its up to $1 million loan to Rogoff to keep the newspaper afloat while it undergoes Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

That same $1 million is also the Binkley Company’s opening bid for the newspaper, which was sold to Rogoff by McClatchy Co. three and a half years ago for $34 million.

Any other interested buyers must offer up $1 million cash by then in pre-qualification funds — money that would be held in escrow by Rogoff’s bankruptcy attorney, Cabot Christianson. The funds would be forfeited if the successful bidder didn’t close within three days of bankruptcy court approval. Serious earnest money, indeed.

If another bidder besides the Binkley Company is successful, it would have to pay Binkley some $1 million plus $100,000, and 3 percent of the purchase price, money that would offset the time, trouble and treasure Binkley has gone through to rescue the paper, which was on the verge of complete collapse in mid-August.

Anything above that $1 million opening bid would start at $1.2 million, and then would continue in $100,000 increments.

What is not purchased by the new owner of the Dispatch will likely be placed into a Chapter 7 bankruptcy process and liquidated by the court to partially repay Rogoff’s debts, which are in excess of $20 million.

WHAT ABOUT THE EMPLOYEES?

The 212 employees of the Alaska Dispatch News are understandably nervous. The new owner, whoever it is, is not likely to continue the pattern of losing $5-8 million a year, as Rogoff has done since she purchased the paper.

Through her lawyer, Rogoff has made it clear that any employees the new owner doesn’t want to continue employing (or employees who don’t want to continue) will be covered by her existing severance policies, and that the buyer will pay the payroll, health insurance and other benefits, as well as the severance pay, “until such time as all of Debtor’s employees have either become Buyer’s employees or have been paid their severance pay.”

For an employee who has worked at the newspaper for 20+ years, that’s six weeks of severance pay. Between 10-20 years, the severance pay is four weeks.

Some employees have already started the search for other work, such as executive vice president Margy Johnson, who was spotted at a Gov. Bill Walker campaign fundraiser on Tuesday — a fundraiser that she co-hosted.

 

Margy Johnson, vice president of Alaska Dispatch News, cohosted a fundraiser for Gov. Bill Walker’s re-election on Sept. 5. She is reportedly staying on with the Dispatch until the sale is complete.

WHAT ABOUT GCI PRESS?

GCI has “no interest whatsoever in the having the press remain at the Northway location for more than a few months,” according to Rogoff’s bankruptcy attorney.

Rogoff has personally guaranteed the cost of removing the press, which is estimated to be a $1.2 million job.

[Read: Upside down world: Rogoff says newspaper owes her $8 million]

But if Alaska Dispatch News is converted from a Chapter 11 to a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, the press could become part of that auction, even while the Binkley Company is using it to print the paper.

Binkley has made arrangements to continue printing at GCI’s Northway location for several months.

Meanwhile, at 5900 Arctic Blvd., things are still a mess. Rogoff began installing presses in space she leased from Arctic Partners, but that construction came to a halt when she stopped paying her bills at the beginning of 2017.

“That construction was beset with problems. The installation of the press has not been completed and there is no path towards that press ever working,” according to her attorney.

The building is now part of separate-but-related litigation. M&M Wiring has a lien on the building because the work performed there for the tenant, Rogoff, has not been paid in full, and the electrical company is seeking compensation from the building’s landlord. It’s just one of several lawsuits now under way concerning Rogoff’s Dispatch dealings.

[Read: The summer of Alice Rogoff’s discontent]

[Read: List of debts owed by Dispatch goes into millions]

Domestic violence group issues apology for social media post

5

The head of one of the state’s leading agencies that addresses domestic violence and sexual assault has issued an apology to her organization’s board of directors and stakeholders, including the commissioner of Public Safety and deputy commissioner of Corrections.

Last month, the Alaska Network on Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault posted an item on Facebook that categorized the slogan “Make America Great Again” in a column with other white supremacy advocates, such as the KKK.

Must Read Alaska wrote about it and the item was shared widely on social media.

“If we’re serious about eliminating domestic violence, then it is vital to understand and eliminate all forms of subjugation including sexism, racism, homophobia, and xenophobia and thus eliminate hate and bigotry,” ANDVSA stated on August 20.

ANDVSA called for confronting “Make America Great Again” as a “covert form” of white supremacy:

“We can take action to end hate in our communities by working to understand and confront the socially accepted expressions of white supremacy,” the group wrote.

On Aug. 31, the director of ANDVSA apologized profusely for that social media post:

“This letter is to express the Network’s deepest apologies for the impacts of a Facebook post we made on 20 August, 2017. To clarify, a post was made that contained messages about white privilege and the intersections of overt and covert racism. This post had a visual that ANDVSA had received from a sister coalition, and in that visual, the slogan make America great again was listed as an act of racism.”

The letter continued to explain that the organization is nonpartisan and in no way wishes to create divisions or offense to those who support its mission. It explained that Must Read Alaska had spread it across social media and questioned the organization’s mission.

“We have reviewed our external communications strategies, and to that end have instituted a strict policy that all external communication must first be vetted through the ANDVSA Executive Director to ensure out key messages are firmly situated within our mission.

“We deeply value our relationship with the CDVSA [Council on Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault], and with the people who look to you for support and leadership in eliminating sexual and domestic violence in Alaska. We apologize to you if our actions have cause others to question your role, or if our actions have put the CDVSA in a questionable position.” The letter was signed Carmen Lowry, the executive director of ANDVSA.

Member programs of ANDVSA include AWAIC in Anchorage, the AWARE shelter in Juneau, TWC in Bethel, CFRC in Cordova, SAFE in Gillingham, AIC in Fairbanks, SPHH in Homer, WISH in Ketchikan and several others across the state who give shelter and aid to abused women.

ANDVSA is not the only group to claim that Make America Great Again is a racist slogan. A university professor in Kansas who describes herself as a “brown feminist” also labeled it racist this summer. And claims in left-leaning publications have also inferred that white racism is behind the slogan, which was first made popular by President Ronald Reagan.

Elvi Gray-Jackson files, but Sen. Berta Gardner doesn’t

3

Former Anchorage Assembly woman Elvi Gray-Jackson has filed with the Alaska Public Offices Commission for statewide office. She hit her term limit on the Assembly last year.

Elvi is a reliable Democrat. Is she planning a run for House, since Rep. Harriet Drummond has health issues and is on a cane most days.

Or will she run for Senate? Sen. Berta Gardner’s father passed away, and she is said to be re-evaluating family life vs. public life. Berta is usually one of the first to file, and takes campaigning seriously. She is one of the top Democrat fundraisers and yet has not filed for re-election, which raises a question about whether she has other plans.

The Democrats do a good job of coordinating these things.

Readers may remember Elvi as the Assemblywoman who sought to make it illegal for people to park their campers overnight in parking lots belonging to companies like Cabela’s or Walmart. She abandoned the idea after getting some serious blowback from the public.

Jason Grenn, a nominal Indie who caucuses with Democrats, filed his letter of intent on Monday.

He’s said to be driving Lyft when not legislating others out of a job. Word is he only picks up passengers from his political neighborhood — District 22.

According to his ethics legislation, shouldn’t this disqualify him from voting on anything that relates to his work zone — District 22?

Other Democrats who filed letters of intent last week: Ethan Berkowitz filed for Mayor for the April 3 municipal election, which clarifies he won’t be running for Congress.

Berkeley-bred Gabrielle LeDoux, who is still (improbably) claims to be a Republican, filed for her District 15 House seat, and then she went rafting somewhere in the West — perhaps the Grand Canyon — with Rep. Matt Claman as her guide.

Word is there is a likely primary opponent, but LeDoux, who moved to Muldoon to run for the seat, is a fierce campaigner and she has her own political action committee, where she soaks lobbyists for money that can help her.

North Korea’s environmental disaster; Gov. Walker calls for Navy base in Alaska

3

For 24 years, North Korea vowed to give up its nuclear ambitions in exchange for aid packages, and yet it carried out its sixth and most powerful nuclear test on Sunday. The politics of appeasement may not be the way forward.

Is North Korea at risk of an environmental disaster? It has detonated nuclear weapons five times under the same mountain. Scientists in China worry the mountain will implode, and radiation will escape and drift across the border.

Our site this week for all things North Korea is 38north.org

Not to be outdone, Alaska has reported 30,580 30,672 earthquakes this year.

While we’re on the topic, check out the footage of the nuclear detonation at Amchitka, Alaska in 1971. It rattled the china, and then some.

GOV. WALKER CALLS FOR A NAVY BASE

Other leaders are calling for more missile defense, which would include beefing up those in Alaska, where we have a strategic advantage. Many are calling for more diplomacy, as well, and help from China.

Gov. Walker, however, is calling for a Navy base to be built in the 49th state. He did so in a statement that was sent to the media but not posted on his web site.

A Navy base in Alaska is not exactly a national priority, and is even lower on the list than our need for more ice breakers and Coast Guard presence.

Strong missile defense would seem the most important strategy.

Sen. Dan Sullivan has spent the past two years working hard to keep the Army’s 4-25 unit at JBER. We haven’t heard of our delegation advocating for a Navy base, but it doesn’t appear that Walker consulted with them before releasing his statement.

“Such a base would also provide key support for collaborative exercises and training with the maritime forces of our allies,” Walker said.

As one Washington-based expert put it, “Walker seems out of touch when he repeats the call for building a Navy base, but that’s his go-to stance.”

Walker’s statement in full:

Governor Walker’s Statement on Latest North Korea Development

September 3, 2017 ANCHORAGE —Governor Bill Walker today released this statement on the latest news of North Korean activity:

“North Korea has just completed its sixth test of a nuclear weapon, which may be its most powerful one yet.  It has done so after recent apparently successful tests of long-range missiles.  I am committed to doing everything in my power to keep Alaskans and all Americans safe from the growing threats of this rogue nation or others in the Pacific region bent on developing weapons of mass destruction. 

“Senator Bob Corker of Tennessee is the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations.  He has called for ‘a comprehensive strategy that not only places an emphasis on deterrence but also empowers our allies and partners in the region, who must do far more to confront this threat.’  A navy base in Alaska can be a key part of this strategy.

“Our location provides the quickest access to Asia for any base which would also be under the protective umbrella of the missile defense unit at Fort Greely which protects most of North America.  This combination assures a powerful force for military deterrence will remain available to our Commander-in-Chief even if North Korea or another rogue nation were to launch a missile attack.  Such a base would also provide key support for collaborative exercises and training with the maritime forces of our allies. 

“As made clear during World War II, Alaskans understand what it means to be on the frontline of defending this nation.  Alaskans also understand what it means to be attacked on U.S. soil by a foreign nation.  The time is now to make our lands safer for today and for future generations.” -Governor Bill Walker

Labor Day in Alaska is for government workers

3

OUR SENIOR CONTRIBUTOR REFLECTS ON THE LACK OF SKILLED WORKERS IN ALASKA

By ART CHANCE
SENIOR CONTRIBUTOR

I spent much of my adult life across bargaining tables and in hearing rooms arguing with unions over wages, hours, and terms and conditions of employment.

The unions, some of them anyway, like to accuse me of being anti-union, but I’m not anti-union, when they are in their role of representing employees in matters of wages, hours, and terms and conditions of employment.  After all, I grew up in the South and I’ve seen how employers will behave in a friendly legal environment and with a labor surplus. I wouldn’t want to be an hourly worker non-union, even in Alaska.

Art Chance

I am, however, very anti-union when they assume the role of a Socialist workers’ party with the right to compel political contributions.

Today much of America’s unskilled and semi-skilled workforce would love to have an 8-hour day rather than the four- or six-hour day and two jobs to which Obamacare has sentenced them.

This Labor Day is a good time to think about the deteriorating Alaska workforce and working conditions.

Every time Pomp and Circumstance gets played, Alaska gets a bit dumber. Our best and brightest go Outside to college and the only ones who come back for more than a visit are those with a family situation they can step into.

We are graduating kids who are at best semi-literate and who have zero work skills. Throw in the amount of drug use and we’re producing a workforce that lacks fundamental work habits and skills, and because of drug use cannot be employed in any safety sensitive job.

Employers willing to put up with the low quality workforce can hire at the minimum wage and those with some concern for Workers’ Compensation costs can pay a dollar or two more and require drug testing. You cannot live on the minimum wage or even a dollar or two more anywhere in Alaska except in your parents’ house or piled in with a bunch of others similarly situated in an apartment in a bad part of town.

And, no, the answer isn’t to raise the minimum wage.

At this time of celebrating those who labor, we should be concerned that the last time labor force participation rate in the US was so low — in the early Seventies — a large number of women began to enter the workforce.

I’ve never looked at Alaska specific workforce participation rates, but it must be abysmal Statewide and disastrous in rural Alaska. And it isn’t going to get any better unless we take steps to produce a more skilled workforce.

If you’re a entry level or low/semi-skill worker, only your personal pride causes you to take the jobs that are available to you in the private sector.  If you can’t get an entry-level government job, and the competition is intense, you’re better off on welfare than working two or three lousy jobs to try to support yourself.

Frankly, if you go to college and come out with some general studies/liberal arts degree, you’re still an entry level or low/semi-skilled applicant and they’re a dime a dozen, though the degree might give you a little advantage in getting a government job.

There really isn’t much to celebrate about labor in Alaska unless you are a high-skill worker or have a unionized government job. The unions, particularly the building trades unions that were once the most powerful force in Alaska politics, have all but abandoned doing anything other than protecting their niche. They should be desperately concerned about their diminishing ability to send a qualified employee when one of the few remaining unionized employers calls the hall.

Young people are trying to enter the workforce with no skills and no clue as to what is expected from an employee. Just as the University of Alaska has to provide remedial courses before Alaska graduates can even take college level classes, themselves dumbed down already, the unions that have apprenticeship programs have to teach their apprentices what work is before they can teach them the skills of their trade.

They need to help do something about it, but so far they seem content with the status quo and are allied with the teachers’ unions in maintaining that status quo.

Art Chance is a retired Director of Labor Relations for the State of Alaska, formerly of Juneau and now living in Anchorage. He is the author of the book, “Red on Blue, Establishing a Republican Governance,” available at Amazon. He only writes for Must Read Alaska when he’s banned from posting on Facebook. Chance coined the phrase “hermaphrodite Administration” to describe a governor who is both a Republican and a Democrat, but neither. This was a grave insult to hermaphrodites but he has not apologized.