Thursday, May 7, 2026
Home Blog Page 1605

Gov. Walker: LNG, seafood, beer, baby food to balance China trade

5

ALASKA HAS THE GOODS TO CLOSE THE GAP, HE SAYS

Could Gov. Bill Walker become the new China-U.S. trade negotiator for the Trump Administration?

President Donald Trump upped the ante in the tariff war with China today, ordering U.S. officials to add another $200 billion worth of Chinese goods to the list of those that would be hit with an additional 10 percent tariff.

Last week, China said it would retaliate against the first round of $50 billion in announced U.S. tariffs. China issued a list of nearly 550 U.S. products that will be hit by a 25 percent tariff starting July 6. It included Alaska seafood.

“This latest action by China clearly indicates its determination to keep the United States at a permanent and unfair disadvantage, which is reflected in our massive $376 billion trade imbalance in goods,” Trump said today.

“This is unacceptable. Further action must be taken to encourage China to change its unfair practices, open its market to United States goods, and accept a more balanced trade relationship with the United States,” Trump said.

[Read: Alaska salmon, halibut hit by China tariffs]

Meanwhile, Gov. Bill Walker of Alaska also made a statement today about the trade war, but it was soothing, and   indicated that Alaska can “dramatically” soften the trade imbalance with the state’s natural gas, baby food, beer, and seafood. His statement in full:

“Alaska has abundant resources, from natural gas and seafood to beer and baby food. These resources enable our state to dramatically reduce the trade deficit between the United States and China, if we can finalize agreements to increase exports of our products. Trade negotiations between leaders from both countries are ongoing. I am confident that we will, in the end, embrace the opportunity for mutual economic growth that we can achieve by working together. Next week, I will meet in Washington with leaders from both governments who have been at the table leading the efforts to avoid an unnecessary trade war. I will continue to work directly with both sides to make sure Alaska’s interests are protected.”

Parnell joins Holland & Hart

0

Sean Parnell, former governor of Alaska, has joined the law firm of Holland & Hart, in the firm’s Anchorage office.

Parnell was governor from 2009-2014, and served as lieutenant governor, state senator, and representative. He is a lifelong Alaskan with decades of experience in commercial contracts, natural resources and government.

Parnell will serve clients in energy and infrastructure development, and will continue to serve his existing Alaska business clients developed in his private practice in Palmer, where he and his wife Sandy live. He will work both in Palmer and in Anchorage.

“The extensive connections and relationships Sean has fostered at state, federal, and Western regional levels make Sean a valuable resource for clients undertaking infrastructure or natural resource exploration and development. Sean provides the firm’s energy and natural resources clients with a unique combination of experience as a former government leader, legislator, administrator, and legal advisor,” said Kyle Parker, administrative partner.

Holland & Hart opened up its Anchorage office in 2017, taking over the practice of Crowell & Moring. Its 500-lawyer firm has the largest environmental law practice in the country, according to Law360. It has 16 offices across the Mountain West and in Washington, D.C.

Shhh! Governor hires ‘Innovation Stakeholder Change Manager’ in secret

Meet Jason Schneider, the State of Alaska’s newest member of the Walker Administration. His job title is “Innovation Stakeholder Change Manager.”

You’ve not heard of this? It’s kind of a secret.

Schneider, a surfer originally from California, was over the winter hired away from his job as the executive director of the Marquette, Michigan Chamber of Commerce, where he worked for the past three years. Marquette is a small town on the shore of Lake Superior, population 21,000.

In addition to starting the Chamber of Commerce there, he has also been a wedding and event photographer for 17 years. He has run a coffee shop and he likes rock climbing. Schneider has a B.S. in economics from Northern Michigan University.

Schneider announced he was leaving his Michigan job in February, and the local Marquette media reported it at the time, but he would not reveal to them where he was moving to or what the new job was. It was a secret.

In an interview in March with a Marquette blog, he said his duties were still being worked out, but he still wasn’t ready to say where he was going. It was still confidential — he couldn’t talk about it.

Last week, word was out in Marquette: He had been hired by the State of Alaska as the chief “innovation stakeholder change manager officer,” with his start-date in May.

Must Read Alaska has submitted a public records request for his duties, chain of command, and pay. He’s stationed in Juneau in the Department of Administration and he’s clearly enjoying his life in Juneau so far, according to social media. But it’s only been a couple of weeks in the belly of the beast that is state bureaucracy.

Anchorage Mayor Ethan Berkowitz also hired a change agent in his administration. Brendan Babb is the municipality’s “Chief Innovation Officer.”

The role of Chief Innovation Officer is a new thing in bureaucracies, but it’s clearly trending. Usually the role is associated with technological advancements and how to modernize data systems.

[Read: Chief Innovation Officers in State and Local Government in the GovTech blog]

Breaking: Sturgeon case gets round two at Supreme Court

About 8,000 cases were denied by the U.S. Supreme Court this session, but Alaska’s John Sturgeon vs. Frost (U.S. Park Service case #17-949) was accepted — for the second time. The announcement came this morning.

JOHN STURGEON DECISION

The high court’s first ruling in 2016 was narrow, but in Sturgeon’s favor. It sent key questions back to the Ninth Circuit, which doubled down  in October, 2017 on its ruling against state sovereignty and aspects of the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act. The 9th Circuit judges ruled the federal government has authority over rivers within the national parks under a broad scope of water reservation provisions in federal law.

The Supreme Court accepts fewer than 1 percent of the cases brought to it. But after the court took his case the first time in 2016, Sturgeon felt somewhat more confident it would accept his case again, if only because the 9th Circuit simply ignored the Supreme Court’s directions for review.

“Going to the Supreme Court is a miracle,” said Sturgeon. “And of the 8,000 petitions this term, they took 20. It means that hopefully the federal government will understand the state sovereignty issues: The State of Alaska owns the rivers and navigable waters, and it gets to manage them, under the provisions of ANILCA. Above all, this is about state sovereignty.”

Read the October, 2017 story on this Alaska case at Must Read Alaska.

WHAT HAPPENS NEXT

Sturgeon thinks the case will be heard this summer, and that the justices will answer the question of whether Section 103c of ANILCA says the federal government cannot control navigable waters and has no control over inholdings on national parks and preserves under ANILCA.

Walker campaign ad rips off now-famous eye-roll ad

WHO ‘BORED IT’ BETTER?

Gov.  Bill Walker unveiled his campaign video on Sunday, and it is eerily similar to the video that went viral in 2016 for Travis County Commissioner Gerald Daugherty, featuring Daugherty blabbing endlessly about solving problems for the very populous county in Texas, where the county seat is the state capital, Austin. If we didn’t know any better, we’d think that the Walker videos is the sincerest form of flattery: Imitation.

Walker’s campaign manager John-Henry Heckendorn may have thought no one would notice, but the Daugherty ad is a modern day campaign classic, seen by nearly four million YouTube viewers.

Here is the original Travis County Commissioner ad, with Daugherty’s wife begging voters to re-elect her husband, lest she languish away listening to him discuss infrastructure solutions:

In the Fathers Day Walker ad, the same wifely eye-roll comes courtesy of First Lady Donna Walker and Second Lady Toni Mallott, who display the patience of Job as they listen to Bill Walker and Byron Mallott destroy a perfectly good game night by explaining the intricacies of a Alaska natural gas pipeline and Mat-Su carrot carbohydrates. The wives seem passive and long-suffering. His daughter, Lindsay Walker-Hobson, who doubles as his campaign spokesperson, even falls asleep for a moment.

Watch the Walker ad here:

 

[Related: Dunleavy Fathers Day video will get you in the ‘feels’]

Dunleavy Fathers Day video will get you in the ‘feels’

HAPPY FATHERS DAY

Hallmark Cards couldn’t have done it better.

In a 90-second video for Fathers Day, candidate Mike Dunleavy drives a tractor while his daughters talk about being homeschooled and competing in sports, and his wife, Rose, brings out a family photo album to reminisce.

The candidate for governor hardly says a word in the ad, but the viewer gets to see his family talking about him in the way that kids talk about their dads. There’s also a cameo appearance by the family dog, but not the kind you might expect.

Getting all three Dunleavy daughters in the video was harder than it looks. They all work at Red Dog Mine this summer, and are on two-week shifts, rarely at the same time.

It’s the first time Dunleavy has had his family so prominently included in a campaign message — although the political content is nil, and the “feels” quotient is high.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yreH7m28HQ8

 

 

That sinking feeling: Job leakage continues in Alaska

2

The State of Alaska says that May employment was down by 2,000, or 0.6 percent, from May 2017.

The biggest losses in the 49th state were in retail (-800) and state government (-500). The oil and gas, financial, professional and business services sectors lost 400 jobs over the year, according to the Department of Labor.

The health care sector continues to add jobs, with 1,000 added since May, 2017, much of it meeting the growing demand through Medicaid expansion, and manufacturing and other sectors added 600 jobs.

While employment was down, Alaska’s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate dropped slightly in May, to 7.2 percent. It’s been 7.3 since the beginning of the year. The two figures — with both employment and unemployment down — suggest that job losses have led to more people leaving the state for opportunity elsewhere. The national unemployment rate is 3.8 percent.

The lowest unemployment rate in Alaska was 4.1 percent in Sitka. Kusilvak Census Area (formerly Wade Hampton Census Area) continued to have the highest rate at 21.2 percent. That area in 2000 had an unemployment rate of 14.7 percent. The Kusilvak area is 19,673 square miles and has an overall population of 8,000.

The Alaska labor force was 362,496 in May. Of that workforce, 26,251 Alaskans were considered unemployed, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

In May of 2017, the workforce was 362,979, and 25,875 were considered unemployed.

Dunleavy salvo: Walker silent on China fish tariffs

While there’s no audible objection coming from Gov. Bill Walker on China’s new 25 percent tariff hike on Alaska seafood, gubernatorial candidate Mike Dunleavy took to Twitter to provide a possible explanation for Walker’s silence:

“The governor claims to be ‘fish first’ while dismissing the mining industry, then goes silent as China tries to sink a $2b annual Alaska seafood industry with dirty trade tactics. What is the real cost of his China-first Gasline? #alaskafirst”

Walker made his own social media remarks Saturday, but they were aimed at sending his good wishes to participants in the LGBTQ Pride Day parade in Anchorage, where his campaign had a booth.

Is Walker feeling muzzled about fish tariffs because he so badly needs China’s money to build the AK-LNG project? Is this the new reality for Alaska, to not be able to criticize Chinese foreign or trade policy for fear of retribution?

Concern has been voiced among U.S. diplomats about Alaska’s subnational (state-to-China) relations. “States should ensure that the agreements that they sign are fair (given Beijing’s penchant for predatory investment), have no bearing on state or federal legislation, and don’t ultimately undermine U.S. foreign policy,” wrote Ashley Feng and Sagatom Saha in The Diplomat publication in April. Not to mention national security.

The Council on Foreign Relations has advised the Trump administration to appoint a full-time special representative and fund an office to coordinate state diplomacy like Walker’s, and provide advice and intelligence on Chinese investment in critical infrastructure.

Alaska salmon, halibut among China tariff targets

THIS TIME, TRADE-SECRET WARS HIT ALASKA FISHING FLEET

Just as the Alaska commercial salmon fishing season is getting underway, China has retaliated against a new U.S. tariff schedule by slapping tariff increases on 545 products from the United States, including red salmon, other salmon, and halibut.

Dozens of other seafood products, such as lobster, tuna, shrimp, and prawns, also got caught in the China tariff net.

A previous skirmish in the tariff war that started during the winter did not include Alaska seafood products, but this time they are on the list — just when salmon will be coming out of the water.

The tariffs will go into effect on July 6 and will mean an additional 25 percent tax on top of current tariffs.

John Connelly, president of the National Fisheries Institute, said his group is reviewing the announcement.

“We are deeply disappointed in these retaliatory tariffs. There is no connection between the products targeted by the U.S. and the tariffs Beijing plans to impose on exported American seafood. It is Maine lobstermen, the men and women on boats in Alaska and families harvesting and processing seafood in the Pacific Northwest who will feel the brunt of the Administration’s misguided policy. It is not clear where these trade actions will ultimately lead, what is clear is that they will negatively impact American seafood jobs,” he said in a statement.

Although free markets tend to adjust, the tariff could have an impact and make supply chains less efficient for an unknown period of time. Major seafood processors such as Trident, Peter Pan, North Pacific and Alaska General will likely have their tariff experts working through the weekend to try to determine the effect of China’s actions, not only on the products that are sold for domestic consumption in China, but in the massive secondary processing industry that China has. A tariff could boomerang on China, impacting its fish processing workforce, as well.

The news creates uncertainty for the U.S. commercial fishing fleet and could have a deleterious effect on the pink salmon market, since those fish are cheap and abundant, but require processing to be commercially viable.

China is Alaska’s largest seafood export market. By tonnage, exports to China account for more than 35 percent of Alaska’s seafood catch. The export value is at least 27 percent. China overtook Japan as Alaska’s top destination a few years ago.

But, while China is very important as a market for Alaska, the nation brings in most of its salmon from Norway and Chile. Last year, China imported 40,000 tons of salmon.

The Alaska exports to China are usually sent as headed and gutted salmon, which are then processed using cheap labor and exported to other markets, with Europe, the United States, and Japan being the largest. The processing involves a lot of removal of tiny pin bones, a labor-intensive process that would make salmon more expensive if done stateside.

Industry leaders that Must Read Alaska spoke to over the weekend were unsure if the tariffs would apply to the fish that was being processed and simply re-exported from China. That is a question being sorted out by the experts.

TARIFFS – NEED TO REBALANCE?

Tariffs are always a top concern for exporters. The latest tariff increases by China on U.S. products include everything from cat food to whiskey.

But the move was long expected. Trade fairness initiatives began earlier this year when the White House asked the U.S. Trade Representative to develop a list of Chinese products to be targeted with tariff increases due to China’s unrepentant technology pirating practices.

“China’s government is aggressively working to undermine America’s high-tech industries and our economic leadership through unfair trade practices and industrial policies like ‘Made in China 2025,’” U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said in a statement.

Many U.S. producers have long felt that the scale was tipped in favor of other countries, even in such sectors as seafood.

For instance, last week the American Scallop Association wrote to Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross and asked for changes to the Canada-European Union Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement, which the groups says puts the U.S. scallop and lobster exporters at an 8-percent disadvantage against their Canadian competitors.

The group wants the Trump Administration to renegotiate terms with EU members that give U.S. products the same tariffs as Canadian products.

President Trump started the tariff war because China has been stealing technology and intellectual property for years.

“President Trump starts a lot of his negotiations by dropping a figurative atomic bomb, and that gets the conversation started,” said Alaska State Sen. Peter Micciche, a commercial fisherman as well as a policy maker. “As a fisherman, the margins are tight, so that 25 percent eliminates many product lines from consideration globally. As a policy maker, I’ve seen this volley going back and forth, and it’s the way Trump is having a conversation with them. But for some of us, it hits this close to home, and I can understand why people cringe in other industries.”

HIGH STAKES ON THE HIGH SEAS

While China and the U.S. are in the middle of a “conversation,” China is quietly building salmon farms in the Yellow Sea. A Chinese company, Shandong Wanzefeng Fishery, took delivery of a massive net cage last week. It’s the largest of its kind in the world, and it will be placed about 130 miles east of Rizhao, where the company believes the water is cold enough to rear salmon. The company plans to harvest 1,500 tons of salmon per year when operational. More will be added as the process is refined.