Tuesday, May 13, 2025
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Heads and Tails: Begich wonders what to do with his life; Mallott forgets his manners

WHAT TO DO WITH MARK: While Mark Begich, one-term Democrat senator for Alaska, mulls a run for governor, he has asked his supports what they think. Should he run?

Some of them think he’d be handing the win to the Republican nominee, whomever that is.

Meanwhile, Begich was the “Sold Out!” keynote speaker at the Democrats’ Lee Hamilton Dinner in French Lick, Indiana tonight. It’s a cooperative fundraiser held with the Indiana Democratic Editorial Association. You read that right: There is such a thing.

ALASKANS FOR INTEGRITY, BROUGHT TO YOU BY JIM LOTTSFELDT? A new independent expenditure group has filed its first report with the Alaska Public Offices Commission.

Alaskans for Integrity, spearheaded by Democrat and campaign strategist Jim Lottsfeldt, shows tens of thousands of dollars in contributions from a liberal Massachusetts firm called “Represent.Us.”

The group wants to end closed primaries (like the Alaska Republican Primary), wants progressive voting (ranking of your preferred winners on the ballot), wants to restructure how redistricting is accomplished (their way is best, surely), and a host of other suggestions.

It’s likely some type of voter initiative will be on the 2018 General Election ballot that will swing the state more to the blue side, as that is the ultimate goal.

Lottsfeldt lobbies for unions, for Anchorage Mayor Ethan Berkowitz, and he ran former Sen. Mark Begich’s super-PAC Put Alaska First, which spent tens of thousands of dollars opposing Dan Sullivan, who eventually beat Begich.

BYRON MALLOTT TO CHARGE COMMISSION FOR VOTING DATA: The Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity can have whatever anyone else can have in the voter database.

Any citizen can get the information from the Division of Elections for $21, so the lieutenant governor going to charge the commission the same. And force the commission to file a public records request for it.

LG Mallott seems unaware that Alaska gets more money from the federal taxpayers than any other state on a per capita basis. Total federal spending per capita in Alaska is $17,762.

But political activist David Nees of Anchorage says, “No problem.” He’s already sent the commission the information it asked for — and didn’t charge a penny.

 

CECIL ANDRUS, RIP: Former Interior Secretary Cecil V. Andrus, who managed the lock-up of millions of acres of Alaska land during the Jimmy Carter administration, has died at 85.

He served four terms as Idaho governor. Halfway through his second term, he resigned to become Carter’s secretary of the Interior and he stayed in that role through Carter’s term, which ended in 1981. Andrus ran for governor of Idaho again, and became the first four-term governor of the state, but was also the last Democrat to serve in that position.

Carter signed the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act (ANILCA), making 104 million acres of land unavailable for resource development. Much of the land was set aside as wilderness over the objections of Alaskans, including the late Sen. Ted Stevens and Congressman Don Young.

DISTRICT 10 HAS A ‘D’ CHALLENGER ALREADY, BUT IS SHE? Patricia Faye-Brazel is a lifelong Democrat living in Houston, Alaska. Last year, she filed to run against Rep. David Eastman, who is her opposite politically. Eastman won.

Faye-Brazel is a Bernie Democrat, and in May, 2017 she filed once again for the Wasilla House District 10 seat, for the 2018 race.

Except now on Facebook she says she’s quit the Democrat party because of what happened during the 2016 primary cycle when the party machine engineered a win for Hillary Clinton over Bernie Sanders. Has she become one of Bill Walker’s new nonpartisans?

 

Super-lobbyist Begich? Governor Begich? Publisher Begich? Which will it be?

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LETTER OF ‘INTENT’

Mark Begich stepped back into the political ring in Alaska. The Democrat and superlobbyist is making a big play — not only for governor, but for Alaska’s largest newspaper.

In the same week when Gov. Bill Walker filed his letter of intent for the governor’s race, Begich filed his own version of a  letter of intent: He sent a dog-whistle email to leading Democrats who might be planning to write checks to Walker’s campaign at Walker’s Sept. 5 fundraiser, warning them off: “I ask you to keep your powder dry,” Begich wrote.

The fundraiser is being held at the home of Walker’s cabinet member and oil adviser John Hendrix. Chances are, all the commissioners and deputy commissioners will attend with their $500 checks, but no Republicans. And now, no Democrats.

Walker is an unaligned candidate once again and earlier this week Democrat Party Chair Casey Steinau cautioned party faithful that the party is still determined to elect a Democrat. Unlike in 2014, when they backed Walker.

[Read: Democrat Party waffles on Walker-Mallott]

PUBLISHER?

At the same time, former Sen. Begich is behind a group of liberal investors putting together a possible bid to purchase the Alaska Dispatch News. These investors are said to have been combing the financials of the Anchorage-based newspaper in a “due diligence” fashion. They are working with a major Democratic fundraiser: Ultra-left, environmentalist, and hedge fund manager Tom Steyer of San Francisco. Steyer contributed more than $87 million exclusively to liberal candidates during the 2016 election cycle. He’s the George Soros of the West Coast.

[Read: The billionaire on a mission to save the planet from Trump]

Whether the Begich group can be successful in bidding on the Alaska Dispatch News will be seen on Sept. 11, the date of the bankruptcy hearing.

The letter that Begich sent to supporters was leaked to the media early today. It asked for help and he mentioned not a word about the deal he is trying to put together with a group of investors to outbid the Binkley Company when the Alaska Dispatch News goes up for auction:

As I travel around the state working on many issues, I have heard from so many of you wondering what is next in my political future. So, I wanted to send this quick update ­ and ask for your help.

First, Deborah and Jacob are doing great. Jacob just started his sophomore year at West High and Deborah is busy running her successful businesses here in Anchorage. We had another great Alaska summer filled with friends, family, and plenty of fish!

As many of you have heard, I love what I am doing now. We are busier than ever at Northern Compass Group solving problems and building businesses for Alaska and I am enjoying the extra time at home with my family.

Meanwhile, it seems the election season has already started for some and so it comes back to the question everyone is asking ­ are you running for Governor? My passion is and always will be public policy and I love working with Alaskans to solve the many challenges we face as a State. Alaska is at a crossroads and you can be sure that no matter where I am I will do my part to help build a stronger, more secure future for all Alaskans.

I wanted to let you know that in response to many urging me to run, I am considering it, but Deborah and I have not made a decision yet. I hope to make a decision and share that with you in the next few months. In the meantime, I ask that you keep your powder dry.

As I think about this decision, I’d love to hear from you. Should I or shouldn’t I run for Governor? Do you think Alaska is on the right path? What are your biggest hopes and concerns for our future?

Mark

Begich has penned two opinion pieces in the Alaska Dispatch News in recent weeks, and has been raising his profile around Alaska “working on many issues.” He has been making a six-figure salary as a superlobbyist, and some observers say he’s happy with his lifestyle, but many who know him say his political aspirations are baked into his DNA.

Pundits contacted Must Read Alaska, saying they are wagering he’ll wait until 2018 wait to get into the governor’s race, and he’ll bring a lot of funds with him, and maybe a compliant liberal-branded newspaper.

Anyone wishing to send Begich advice about whether he should run for office may reach him at [email protected].

This is not what PETA had in mind

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The People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals rolled out a new Facebook marketing campaign recently: “Shoot Selfies, Not Animals.”

It didn’t go over well for PETA in Alaska.

Dozens of hunters took PETA up on the challenge, using the nonprofit’s frame to show off their most recent kills.

The hashtag was #ShootSelfiesNotAnimals.

PETA framed that spectacular backfire as a victory, however. “As a result, the hunters have introduced PETA and its anti-hunting message to a whole new audience: More than 250,000 people have now used the frame—and the number of people spreading the anti-hunting messageis growing, as PETA saw more than a 50 percent increase in “likes” of its Facebook page from Tuesday to Wednesday,” the organization announced.

“These trigger-happy trolls didn’t realize that they were helping to spread PETA’s message of respect for wildlife,” said PETA Executive Vice President Tracy Reiman. “Supportive messages are pouring in from people who agree that only bullies or cowards get their kicks from gunning down a beautiful wild animal.”

PETA also frowned upon the number of young children posing in the photos, saying that parents who introduce their children to hunting may be creating killers out of them.

“Nearly every serial killer and school shooter first killed animals. PETA encourages parents to teach their children empathy for others by encouraging them to shoot with a camera instead of a gun,” the organization wrote.

WORD OF CAUTION

While it may be fun for hunters to troll PETA with hunting pictures by using their free social media frame, hunters should know that by doing so, they are giving PETA at least some information about them, and it may expose them to harassment by the organization or its supporters.

But more importantly, PETA is not trying to turn hunters into vegans — the organization knows better than that. Instead, it is aiming at non-hunters, trying to convert them into anti-hunters.

An article in Outdoor Life suggests that hunters develop their own social media frames, such as “I Work Hard for my Dinner.” That message might help nonhunters understand them better.

“By flooding Facebook and Instagram with trophy shots, we’re putting thousands of dead animal photos in front of non-hunters who are not asking to view them. If we’re posting these photos just to troll PETA, we’re stripping away the context of the hunt and the whole point of the photo in the first place. Most of the ironic posts using the PETA frame have little or no information about the challenge or ethics of the hunt, the beauty of the landscape and habitat, or all the healthy wild meat those dead critters provided. They are mostly just dead animal photos with text that pokes fun at PETA,” writers Alex Robinson and Natalie Krebs argue.

In other words, it may be that nonhunters don’t really appreciate the humor that hunters are trolling PETA with.

HUNTING SEASON IS ON: EMPEROR GEESE IN SEASON

Hunting season has started in Alaska, with caribou and sheep hunts already under way. Moose season begins in earnest on Sept. 1, and for the first time in three decades, Alaska hunters will be able to hunt for emperor geese, a bird that has seen a rebound in population. Hunters are limited to one each.

Recreational hunts for emperor geese were closed in 1986, and subsistence hunts were cut off in 1987 after an alarming decline in the population.  Now, the number of emperor geese is believed to be more than 100,000, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, but could be as much as 170,000.

The habitat for the emperor geese stretch fron the Aleutian Islands in the winter to the Yukon-Kuskokwim deltas during mating season.

 

Supremes rule on Dividend cut: Legal to veto unless enshrined in constitution

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The Alaska Permanent Fund Dividend has been calculated in a nonpolitical formula by tradition since the first checks were cut in 1982. The amount of dividends was always tied to the actual performance of the Permanent Fund.

But when Gov. Bill Walker sliced the dividend in half in 2016, he changed the course of Alaska history. The Permanent Fund Dividend can now be used as a blunt political instrument.

The Alaska Supreme Court on Friday upheld Walker’s right to veto the dividend. In a unanimous decision, the court discarded the arguments made by Democrat Sen. Bill Wielechowski, and former Republican Sens. Rick Halford and Clem Tillion, who had sued the governor.

The judges said that the dividend is like any other appropriation in the budget, which makes it subject to veto. Walker set last year’s dividend at $1022, when normally Alaskans would have received more than $2,050, due to the strength of the fund, which is now worth over $60 billion.

The cut took $650 million out of Alaskans’ wallets in 2016 but the dividend was close to the historical average for dividends, which is $1,150.

This year the Legislature did the cut for him, by setting the amount at $1,100. Alaskans who qualify will receive their checks the first week of October.

The argument made by Wielechowski, Halford, and Tillion was that the 1976 constitutional amendment creating the Permanent Fund gave lawmakers constitutional authority to pass laws dedicating use of fund’s income without need for annual appropriations. Therefore, because the dividend is unlike other appropriations, it is not subject to a gubernatorial veto.

But judges said that even if the constitutional amendment gave the legislature dedication powers over the dividend, the matter is part of the normal appropriation and veto processes that govern the budget.

“We conclude that Governor Walker validly exercised his constitutional veto authority when reducing the transfer amount from the earnings reserve to the dividend fund,” the judges wrote.

THE DANGER WITH THE DECISION

Amy Demboski, who hosts a conservative talk show on KVNT, cautioned, “Well, there you have it. Your PFD will forever more be subject to the political whim of the Legislature and governor. The only way to protect it is a constitutional amendment.”

Sen. Mike Dunleavy, a Republican candidate for governor, has been calling for a constitutional amendment for a while, and he left the Senate Republican majority caucus earlier this because he disagreed with his fellow Republicans over their decision to set the dividend lower than it would be if calculated in the traditional method.

“We need to constitutionalize the Permanent Fund Dividend, sooner, rather than later,” he said today. “That was overlooked when they constitutionalized the Permanent Fund. If we don’t do this, the politicians will spend all that money in the blink of an eye. This coming session, like-minded people will need to work together to protect the dividend for future generations.”

The court decision is here.

Democrat Party waffles on Walker-Mallott

The chair of the Alaska Democrats penned a letter to the party faithful on Thursday, and it might have Gov. Bill Walker watching his back.

Alaska Democrat Party Chair Casey Steinau signaled that Democrats may offer up their own candidate for governor after all.

Walker and Lieutenant Governor Byron Mallott have filed as unaffiliated candidates for the 2018 election. That leaves Democrats in a quandary.

Back in 2014, Mallott was chosen by primary voters to advance to the General Election ballot as the Democrat choice for governor.

But right after the primary, the Democrat Party’s State Central Committee rejected Mallott’s win.

The Democrats’ Central Committee moved Mallott down the ballot to the lieutenant governor’s slot, and moved Walker to the top of the ticket. Walker, in exchange, switched from being a Republican to unaffiliated. The resulting marriage of convenience was called the “unity ticket” with the full support of the Alaska Democrat Party and Big Labor. They went on to defeat Republican Gov. Sean Parnell in the General Election.

But that was then. This year, Democrats are considering all the possibilities, including that a big-name Democrat may be planning to run. Steinau wrote to her email list:

Dear Friend,

As you have heard, the Governor and Lt. Governor have announced that they are running for re-election.  While there are questions about what the campaign will look like since they don’t currently have the institutional support of either party, I want to be clear about what is in the best interest of the Alaska Democratic Party and that is continuing to advocate for a progressive agenda for Alaska. 

I know there are individuals considering seeking the Democratic nomination for Governor and we are ten months away from the filing deadline and one year away from the August 2016 primary — an eternity in politics.  The goal of the Democratic Party continues to be to elect Democrats.  Additionally, the stakes in 2018 when it come redistricting (sic) couldn’t be higher.  We must do everything possible to keep a Republican Governor from being elected in 2018.

Sincerely,

Casey Steinau

REPUBLICANS RESPOND

Tuckerman Babcock, chair of the Alaska Republican Party, said the chickens have come home to roost for the Alaska Democrats’ State Central Committee.

“The Democrats’ party leaders can’t decide if their Democrat-elected governor is Democrat enough for them. They’re spinning around in confusion,” he said.

“This is buyer’s remorse,” said Sen. Mike Dunleavy,  the gubernatorial candidate from Wasilla. “They are hedging their bets. We need to put Alaska back on track. The Democratic party has been about causes like saving the whales and tearing down statues. We’re focused on each and every Alaskan having opportunity, each and every Alaskan having a job. The last thing this state needs is a rerun of the last three years.”

“Gov. Walker is a man without a state,” said former Sen. Charlie Huggins, who is weighing a run for the office. “He was once supported by the Democratic Party, which now has decided to go in a different direction than the ‘unity ticket.’ Goodbye Gov. Walker.”

Scott Hawkins, who has an interest in running for governor, had this to say: “Let’s not kid ourselves. Gov. Walker calls himself an ‘Independent,’ but has been governing very much as a Democrat. The real question is, will there be one Democrat in the race for governor, or two?”

Homer council members want to put the chill on recall elections

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Homer City Council Members Tom Stroozas, David Lewis, Mayor Bryan Zak, Heath Smith, Shelly Erickson, Donna Aderhold and Catriona Reynolds. Smith and Aderhold want to make it tougher to recall locally elected officials.

Is it too easy to recall local city council or assembly members?

Two who serve on the Homer, Alaska City Council think so, and they’ve written a resolution asking the Legislature to put stiffer sideboards around recall efforts.

Three members of the Homer City Council faced a contentious recall election in June after they circulated a resolution that many saw as partisan national politics invading the quaint little fishing-and-arts town along Kachemak Bay. The kerfuffle was over whether Homer should become a sanctuary city.

One of the members who faced recall, Donna Aderhold, believes it’s too easy to launch a recall election. She and council member Heath Smith will  introduce a resolution at the Aug. 28 meeting to ask the Alaska Legislature to tighten the standards for recall elections.

The draft resolution states that recall elections concerning municipal and local elected officials have recently been held or contemplated in the City of Homer, the Kenai Peninsula Borough, the City of Haines, City of Cordova, and the Petersburg Borough.

(It was actually the Haines Borough Assembly that had a recall election in August. The three subjects of that election, Tom Morphet, Heather Lende and Tresham Gregg, who were accused of violating the Open Meetings Act, survived the vote.)

In July a group of Petersburg residents turned in a recall petition for assembly members Jeigh Stanton Gregor, Nancy Strand, Kurt Wohlhueter, and Eric Castro. That recall effort was also about Open Meetings Act violations, but borough attorney Sara Heideman disputed the allegation and the recall never made it to the ballot.

“The standards for what constitutes both an action that would justify recall and how a local municipal official should evaluate the recall petition’s sufficiency are not clearly defined in the Alaska Statutes, leading to a wide range of interpretations,” Resolution 17-078 reads.

The standard for “misconduct in office” is vague, Aderhold and Smith say. Further, city clerks are not lawyers, but must make decisions about whether a misconduct is great enough to justify a recall.

The resolution makes reference to a 1984 Alaska Supreme Court statement that recommended the Legislature clarify the intent of the legal provisions governing recall elections, saying, “The need for judicial participation in the recall process could be decreased by more carefully drawn statutes.”

The judicial system came into play in Homer only when the three council members facing recall enlisted the American Civil Liberties Union to help them sue the city and stop the election. They lost that battle in court, but voters ultimately retained them in office.

The resolution asking the Legislature to address the issue is here.

It’s payday at the Dispatch, Alice sailing in Nantucket

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IN HER HAPPY PLACE

Nantucket was the place to be last week for the East Coast sailing set, and Alice Rogoff, owner of the Alaska Dispatch News, was present and accounted for, as she is most years.

The annual regatta week ended Sunday, just in time for Rogoff to appear in Anchorage bankruptcy court on Monday afternoon — telephonically from her Nantucket home.

Rogoff filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy earlier this month, with a pending sale to the Binkley Company.

Rogoff, married to one of the richest men in America, is being sued by creditors and owes millions of dollars to numerous Alaskans and small Alaskan businesses.

But Nantucket at the end of August is a “must” for her. She joined a crew on the yacht American Eagle last week to win second place in the Gifford Bowl, as seen in the social media post of her longtime pal Susan Wayne:

Meanwhile, the Alaska Dispatch News will be able to pay its reporters, press persons, administrative and advertising staff this Friday, thanks to a $300,000 to $1 million series of loans being offered by the Binkley Company, which received permission from a bankruptcy judge on Monday to loan to the Dispatch funds it needs to keep going until the sale of the paper is finalized.

The Binkley Company has also paid two months of past due premiums to Premera Blue Cross, for employees’ health insurance, and the workers compensation and general liability policies that were weeks in arrears.

The newspaper has survived yet another week, although it’s running on fumes.

IN THE SALE: NORTHRIM GETS PAID FIRST

The sale of the Alaska Dispatch News, presumably to the Binkley Company, takes place at a Sept. 11 court hearing. With Ryan Binkley at the helm, Binkley is offering to buy the paper for the $1 million it will have invested.

Any other bidders who come in higher will be paying Rogoff’s creditors. The first $1 million would go to Binkley, and everything else up to approximately $10 million would go to Northrim Bank.

Northrim has the only secured loan to Rogoff. It’s unlikely that any bidders will offer enough for the paper to pay off Northrim entirely, which means the rest of the creditors — and that’s a long list — will almost certainly be stiffed by Rogoff, unless they can legally break down the barrier between her personal assets and her companies.

[Read: List of debts owed by Rogoff]

You can bet lawyers are eager to “pierce the corporate veil.” GCI, which is the landlord for the newspaper’s press operation, appears to know that, and was able to get Rogoff to sign a personal guarantee that she will pay to have the press removed from GCI’s building — an endeavor that is expected to cost well over $1.2 million. That was the price needed for GCI to remove its objection to the Binkley Company loaning the Dispatch the money needed to save the paper.

Rogoff is said to have returned to Anchorage today. Creditors will be keeping a close eye on whether or not she’s removing the artwork from her lakeside home, now that even Judge Gary Spraker has hinted that Chapter 7 bankruptcy — a complete liquidation of assets — is a likely next step.

Juneau night life: Assembly meetings get more interesting by the hour

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By WIN GRUENING
SENIOR CONTRIBUTOR

Win Gruening

The “business of governing” is such a misnomer because government rarely acts like a business. If it did, it would run smoother, things would happen faster, and money would be saved. But as much as some would like to follow a business model in managing our various federal, state and municipal governments, in our imperfect democracy, it just isn’t possible.

The pace of change is maddening — the arcane rules, red tape and bureaucratic mumbo-jumbo almost unfathomable. Try as they might, our elected officials are as frustrated as we are when navigating the complicated officialdom and political mine fields greeting their every move.

Most of us don’t attend local assembly meetings often. Indeed, for some it may be considered an act of heroism to sit through hours of endless agenda items, then public testimony, motions, amendments, amendments to the amendments, at-eases, finally a vote — then reconsideration for further discussion at the next meeting.

If you have attended one of these meetings, you can’t but help feel sympathy and gratitude for our Assembly members who endure this on a regular basis. As these meetings slog on, much of it is just routine approvals and rubber-stamping of previous committee decisions. These are the boring but necessary functions allowing city hall to creep along its serpentine path.

Yet, occasionally, questions get asked and issues are raised that might not otherwise get the attention they deserve.

The most recent City and Borough of Juneau Assembly meeting on Monday, July 31, is a good example. The four-hour meeting addressed a variety of routine topics during the bulk of the meeting.

After dispensing with the flag salute, roll call, approval of the previous meeting’s minutes and public participation on non-agenda items, the consent agenda was approved containing four ordinances for introduction (including renewal of CBJ’s 1 percent sales tax and a proposed 2 percent increase in our hotel/motel bed tax), one bid award for $15.4 million (wastewater biosolids dryer building), and three liquor license actions.

The Assembly then unanimously approved a resolution to name the city park, now unofficially called Bridge Park or Whale Park, to “Mayor Bill Overstreet Park.”

This was followed by a series of actions on five different ordinances — all approved.

The Assembly then dealt with some Docks and Harbors matters and several pending appeals, one regarding property taxes and one regarding a Planning Commission action.

In a split vote, the Mayor and several Assembly members questioned the $1.2 million in supplemental funding requested for a pump house and restroom accommodations related to the bronze whale site. Six hundred thousand dollars in sales tax money was being used. It had been the understanding of some that no more tax money would be spent on this project. The request was narrowly approved on a 5-4 vote.

Up to this point in the meeting, after several hours had passed, there had been little public comment on any of the approved items and, except for two actions, all the manager’s recommendations were approved unanimously.

It wasn’t until towards the end of the meeting, during the Assembly comments and questions, two interesting topics surfaced.

First, Assembly Member Debbie White expressed concerns about the recently announced proposed sale of Juneau’s electric utility, AELP, to a Canadian company, Hydro One — 49 percent owned by the provincial government of Ontario. White raised the possibility of CBJ encouraging and/or facilitating retention of AELP by local ownership and offered a suggestion on how that might occur.

Consideration was given to CBJ taking an equity position in the utility or assisting a local private group to purchase the company. Discussion on the matter ensued at length noting that AELP is a very profitable company and many other Alaska cities have ownership in their electrical utility. There was general agreement this was important to Juneau and various avenues should be explored to determine what might be possible.

Second, Assembly Member Jerry Nankervis asked permission to meet with the Finance Department to discuss possible changes to sales tax exemptions as it applies to nonprofit organizations, such as those doing business as the Sealaska Heritage Institute retail store and the Juneau Arts and Culture Center (JACC).

He wondered about the appropriateness of having these organizations not being required to collect sales tax from visitors and residents buying their merchandise such as art, jewelry, and handicrafts when other competing local businesses are required to do so. Nankervis made clear he was not referring to a nonprofit’s exemption from paying sales tax — only from collecting it from a buyer. Without objection, permission was granted by the Assembly.

The meeting finally adjourned at 10:55 p.m. — long after many members of the public had departed.

Just another day (and night) in the life of our borough Assembly members.

Win Gruening retired as the senior vice president in charge of business banking for Key Bank in 2012. He was born and raised in Juneau and graduated from the U.S. Air Force Academy in 1970. He is active in community affairs as a 30-plus year member of Juneau Downtown Rotary Club and has been involved in various local and statewide organizations.

 

Heads and Tails: Campaigns, dialing for dollars, fishing with the stars

Rep. Chris and Pam Birch

CHRIS BIRCH FOR STATE SENATE — IT’S ON LIKE DONKEY KONG: Rep. Chris Birch raised $102,000 for his House campaign in 2016, and a year later he’s budgeting $200,000 for his 2018 run for the Senate seat now held by Sen. Kevin Meyer of South Anchorage, District M.

Meyer has been mulling a run for lieutenant governor but hasn’t decided, while Birch said it was time to put his stake in the ground for that eventuality. He went ahead and filed, knowing he has a fallback position in running for his House seat, which he won by 30 percent margin in 2016.

Birch said Marc Langland has agreed to reprise his role as campaign chair,  regardless of which office Birch eventually picks.

“I’m expecting heavy labor engagement with them trying to hammer out a win. I’m not naive enough to think they aren’t going to dump a ton of money into it,” he said.

Rep. Charisse Millett, District 25, has indicated she’s also interested in running for the Senate seat, should Sen. Meyer make the decision to run for lieutenant governor. She is House Minority Leader, and is a Republican who serves a swing district.

WALKER DIALING FOR DOLLARS: Gov. Bill Walker is personally calling around to captains of industry to get them to cohost a Sept. 5 fundraiser for his candidacy. The event is at the Atwood mansion now owned by Walker’s own cabinet oil chief, John Hendrix, formerly with Apache Corp. Will anyone lend their name to Walker’s campaign at this early stage? Evidently at least one big name said “It’s too early, Bill.”

WALKER FILES FOR GENERAL, THEN FILES FOR PRIMARY: On Aug. 21, Gov. Bill Walker filed a letter of intent with the Alaska Public Offices Commission for governor, to run in the 2018 General Election.

The next day,  Aug. 22, he filed to run in the 2018 Primary Election, too.

Yet, because he is claiming to be a no-party candidate, there is no primary for Walker. Instead, he just has to collect 3,213 signatures to get on the General Election ballot, as he did in 2014.

Furthering the mystery is that the campaign filing for the General Election lists an Anchorage campaign office on 5th Avenue. But for the Primary Election, Walker lists the Governor’s Mansion in Juneau as his campaign address. Intriguing.

Is he keeping his powder dry in case he needs to run as a Democrat?

More likely it is that because the petition process covers the period prior to the primary, both Walker and Lt. Gov. Byron Mallott, his Democrat running mate, need to file for the primary and establish an APOC account to fund their first phase, which includes signature gathering, shaking hands, and kissing babies. After the primary, they bloom into a general candidacy.

In the meantime, don’t try going by the Governor’s Mansion to sign the petition. Because that would be awkward.

KENAI CLASSICS HAS ALL THE ‘STAR’ FISH: The place to be tonight is at Bob Penney’s house on the Kenai River. The “politicos of the first order” are there warming up for the Kenai Classic, which starts at 6 am Thursday. This is the event’s 25th anniversary and it trends conservative/conservationist. Seen tonight were Sen. Lisa Murkowski, Sen. Dan Sullivan, State Senators Kevin Meyer, Peter Micciche, David Wilson, and Senate President Pete Kelly; also Reps. Charisse Millett, Mike Chenault, Gary Knopp, George Rauscher, David Eastman, Jennifer Johnston, Chris Birch, Lance Pruitt, Dan Saddler. Reps. Scott Kawasaki and Andy Josephson were showing the flag for the Democrats. Catherine Stevens showed up and Ben and Elizabeth Stevens are heading to the banquet and auction tomorrow as the organizers honor the lifetime works of the late Sen. Ted Stevens, who co-founded the classic to strengthen and enhance the Kenai River fish ecosystem.

Among the items to be auctioned to support the Stevens Hooked on Fishing Program, which offers angler education and youth events, are original signed portraits of Sen. Ted Stevens and Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor. The portraits were painted by celebrity portrait artist Nicolosi, and the O’Connor portrait is especially valuable since it is the first item she has signed after a 10-year mandatory moratorium that disallowed her from signing items for sale after serving as a Supreme Court Justice.