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Incredible: Gasline corporation says 78 percent of Alaskans favor project

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The Alaska Gasline Development Corporation board of directors yesterday learned that the staff of the agency commissioned a poll to determine how the project is faring in the hearts and minds of the voting public. And how to make it fare better in those hearts and minds.

It wasn’t exactly a push poll. The agency is message testing: trying to figure out how to convince the public to have some confidence in the project, and to determine which messages work on Alaskans.

According to the poll, 78 percent of Alaskans would favor the gasline once they are told it will bring jobs, a strong economy, cheaper energy for Alaskans, and will provide cleaner energy in general.

The poll is not being done in a vacuum, but is being used to develop an advertising campaign directed at Alaskans.

 

POLL IS PARALLEL TO CAMPAIGNING

The ad campaign to shore up support for the gasline will occur during the same cycle as Gov. Bill Walker’s re-election campaign. The gasline is the governor’s signature project that he ran on in 2014, but it has met with strong marketplace headwinds. The world is increasingly awash in natural gas and buyers are no longer engaging in the long-term contracts needed to build the AK-LNG project.

A year ago, a Dittman Research poll of 700 Alaskans showed that 44 percent of Alaskans said a gas line “will never happen,” and 42 percent said they thought the project was “getting closer.” The remaining respondents were undecided.

But public perception of the project’s future has darkened dramatically: Today, according to the most recent Dittman poll, 69 percent of Alaskans believe the gasline isn’t going to happen — at least not in the foreseeable future.

 

The public is very likely right about the project’s dim outlook. Yet, the AGDC is contemplating an expensive statewide ad campaign to promote the project, the timing for which just happens to coincide neatly with the Walker-Mallott re-election campaign.

Last week, AGDC Board President Dave Cruz scolded members of the Alaska Legislature and the media for expressing skepticism about the project, saying, “The world is watching us. This is not just some little project in Alaska that the world doesn’t know about. And every local news story that is picked up by our industry and world press it places a great challenge on our team when they have to first defend the project against the negative comments before being able to sell it on its merits.”

AGDC spokesperson Rosetta Alcantra in May said that the Senate’s attempts to cut the budget of AGDC and use the funds for public safety and education was unhelpful to the project.

“You know, there’s a lot of positive movement out there and from the perspective of potential customers, I don’t think that helps the message,” she said.

AGDC President Keith Meyer is in Asia, where he has spent much of the year looking for a buyer for Alaska’s gas. He missed the legislative update meeting last week and the AGDC board meeting on Monday.

The agency is burning through $3 million a month in State money.

[Read: ADGC to go it alone on gasline]

 

Murkowski, Sullivan dine with Trump

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THE PROTESTORS HAVE INFILTRATED THE MEDIA

Sen. Lisa Murkowski, Sen. Dan Sullivan and other Senate leaders are having their weekly policy luncheon today, and President Donald Trump is attending. Usually Vice President Mike Pence attends.

Before the “Unity” lunch, as it’s billed, Trump and Sen. Bob Corker of Tennessee traded indignities and insults over tax reform, in a battle of words that swamped the news cycle.

The lunch, in the historic Mansfield Room of the Capitol is intended to demonstrate unity on the Republican agenda of tax reform, health care reform, and energy dominance.

A protestor, posing as a journalist, threw papers with the image of the Puerto Rico flag on them at Trump as he arrived at the luncheon with Sen. Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, as seen in this screen shot of a video shot by NBC’s Frank Thorpe V. The protestor was removed in handcuffs by Capitol security.

Trump last attended a Senate Republican lunch in 2016, when he was the party’s nominee for president.

Three committees for crime reform cut quickly to two

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On April 7, when the House Democrats received Senate Bill 54 crime legislation after it passed the Senate, they assigned it to three committees — a death sentence.

No committee hearings were ever held, and criminals were free to roam, rob, and wreak havoc all summer in Alaska and well into the fall. And they have.

Today, on the first day of the fourth special session of the year, Democrats waived the legislation through the House State Affairs Committee, which was its first committee of referral. It is on to Judiciary, where Chairman Matt Claman has promised plenty of public input.

Hearings today will go three hours, and beginning at 6 pm on Tuesday, House Judiciary will hear another three hours of public testimony on criminal justice reform and its impact on their lives.

The public can listen and watch the committee proceedings here.

http://akleg.gov/#tab5

Related documents for SB 54 are linked here.

Things are looking up for Alaska economy

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By WIN GRUENING
SENIOR CONTRIBUTOR

If you were to judge our economic prospects by listening to most media reports and political commentary, you would conclude Alaska’s economy is in a death spiral with little hope of recovery. Yet, there are many signs just the opposite is occurring.

During a recent swing through SE Alaska, Sen. Dan Sullivan explained he is extremely optimistic about pending Congressional action on tax reform along with a number of other developments that will positively affect our state.

Sen. Sullivan feels strongly better days are ahead now that Congress is finally working on ways to revive our nation’s sluggish economy. Mired down in debates about immigration, healthcare and Russian influence in our election, Congress has paid scant attention to our economy.

GROWING ECONOMY: During the 8-year Obama presidency, the country never returned to the economic growth America experienced prior to the 2008 recession. Since 1929, U. S. GDP has averaged 5.8% and post -WWII has averaged 3.2%

Yet, GDP growth averaged less than 1.5% during Obama’s administration. Masked by a bull market on Wall Street, the country’s mediocre GDP growth has been dismissed by Obama defenders and the media by simply labelling it the “new normal.”

President Trump set an ambitious 3% growth target for 2017, to be achieved through a mix of tax cuts, deregulation and infrastructure spending. While this may prove to be optimistic for 2017, Alaska will benefit by progress in all these areas as will the rest of the country.

ANWR: During congressional debate on a tax reform package, the Senate Budget Committee tasked the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, chaired by Sen. Lisa Murkowski, to find ways of generating an additional $1 billion in revenue.

Of special interest to Alaskans, this may result in the approval of drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge as a method of raising that revenue.

Since this provision would be decided under budget reconciliation rules, a simple majority of the Senate would be needed to approve it – not the 60 vote super-majority required to break a filibuster. Passage of this measure would allow responsible oil development in ANWR – long favored by most Alaskans.

MILITARY: Another issue benefitting Alaska is Congress’s efforts to further strengthen our military. With increased tension over North Korea’s nuclear ambitions and missile program, national security remains an important topic in Washington and much of the resulting military spending will occur in Alaska – the backbone of our nation’s strategic missile defense program.

The latest National Defense Authorization Act requires 20 new ground-based missile interceptors at Fort Greely near Fairbanks, additional F-35s at Eielson Air Force Base and construction of six new icebreakers to serve an Arctic increasingly seen as threatened by Russia’s buildup of nuclear-capable icebreakers.

ALASKANS IN CHARGE: Alaskans should also be particularly heartened by recent appointments at the Federal level directly impacting how (and if) Alaskans will be able to continue developing their natural resources.

In June, Chris Oliver was named assistant administrator for NOAA Fisheries. No stranger to Alaska, Oliver has worked at the North Pacific Fishery Management Council for 27 years – first as a fisheries biologist, later as deputy director, and finally as executive director.

Another important federal appointment recently announced was Drue Pearce, as Deputy Administrator for the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration. Pearce is a former Alaska legislator and State Senate President and has served in several federal positions where she oversaw efforts to advance the nation’s energy, environmental, and economic security.

Tara Sweeney was recently nominated as Assistant Secretary in the Department of Interior overseeing the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA). Originally from Utqiaġvik (Barrow), Sweeney has served Arctic Slope Regional Corporation for nearly 20 years in a variety of roles, most recently as executive vice president of external affairs. It would be the first presidential nomination and U.S. Senate-confirmed position for any Alaska Native woman in the history of the state.

President Trump has also announced the nomination of Joe Balash to be an Assistant Secretary of the Interior, Land and Mineral Management. Balash, a North Pole native, has been serving as Chief of Staff for Sen. Sullivan.

This position, when confirmed, would make Balash the primary manager of federal lands and waters – critical to Alaska since two-thirds of Alaska’s land is controlled by the federal government. A former Alaska DNR Commissioner, Balash has more than 19 years of experience in land and natural resource management.

Alaska’s dependence on oil revenues won’t be reduced dramatically anytime soon. With oil prices projected to hover in the $50/barrel range for the foreseeable future, reversing declining production remains paramount. This is the only way to stabilize Alaska’s pipeline revenues while we are working to diversify our economy in other ways.

These recent developments will help us do that and bode well for Alaska and our country.

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.

Alaska’s self-licking ice cream cone

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GARY WILKEN
GUEST COMMENTARY

I’ve great respect for Gov. Bill Walker. He’s been dealt some difficult hands to play, particularly in regard to our state’s budget. However, I’m very disappointed in his special session platform revealing troubling expectations for the upcoming special session.

With all due respect, our governor must speak in complete sentences. In an Oct. 2 presentation to Commonwealth North, he spoke of the Oct. 23 session and his expectations. The governor said, “We’re at a point where we can no longer be the only state in the nation that doesn’t have a broadbased tax.”

That sentence is incomplete. The governor should finish it by saying, “and we’re the only state in the nation with $64 billion in the bank solely for the benefit of its residents.”

Gary Wilken

Think of that: Alaskans have $64 billion in the bank, but our governor is asking the Legislature to ignore that wealth and tax only the working people of Alaska to fund government. There’s something wrong here.

Each and every Alaskan currently has an $87,000 plus investment account, and it’s growing every day.

For 30 years, each Alaskans’ account has yielded investment earnings, earnings used for our Alaska Permanent Fund dividend with the remainder left in the Permanent Fund Earnings Reserve account, which today contains about $14 billion. This account has always been available for appropriation by our Legislature.

But for years the Legislature has been afraid to spend from the earnings reserve. They’ve been paralyzed by B.S. — that is, the bumper sticker screaming in the next election that he or she is “Raiding our Permanent Fund.” And then next comes the inevitable accusation:

“Hey! You’re stealing my PFD.”

It’s a common reaction, as it should be. The dividend is the people’s money. It’s the result of developing our resources and wisely setting aside 25 percent of the revenue for the people rather than spending it on bigger government.

But back to the earnings reserve, which is the source of the annual dividend check. Let’s look at the effect on the dividend check if we withdraw a certain amount from the earnings reserve account in order to fund services needed for government. The source of the following calculations is a document from the Alaska Permanent Fund Corp. entitled “Financial Projection Comparisons of the Alaska Permanent Fund with Various Appropriation Levels to the General Fund” and is dated April 4, 2017.

It was produced by the corporation and is available from me at [email protected].

Everyone has their own number representing our deficit. My number is somewhere around $2 billion. So, let’s for the next five years take, if needed, $2 billion each year to help fund this shortfall. That amount, maybe with a little help from the constitutional budget reserve if needed, fills the budget hole.

But here comes that Big Question:

“What happens to my PFD check?”

According to the Permanent Fund Corp., these are the answers: 1. The first year it shrinks by less than a dollar; 2. The second year it’s $22 less; 3. Over the five-year period our dividend is a total of $420 less because of the $10 billion withdrawal; 4. Over five years that’s a reduction in your dividend of 3.2 percent. ($13,087 vs. $12,667).

Conclusion? The effect of using a reasonable amount of the earnings reserve account to fund needed government services has little effect on our dividend check.

Now, folks will say, “Well that’s OK for five years, but we’re draining our big savings account.”

That’s certainly cause for concern, but it’s not quite accurate. If we look beyond my five-year example, the documents show if we adopted a spending strategy for longevity by paying a static “half dividend” as we are now and not inflation- proofing unless needed, as we are now, the earnings reserve account lasts until fiscal 2030. There’s a lot of good things that will happen in Alaska in the next dozen years.

But you ask, “How can this be?” Well, it’s because of the enormous effect of $64 billion being invested around the world by the world’s best money managers. It’s the power of earnings. It’s what the late Michael Burns, CEO of the Permanent Fund Corp., said when speaking of the earnings reserve account.

He called it “Alaska’s self-licking ice cream cone.”

So, let’s complete the governor’s sentence by recognizing the true wealth of Alaska’s balance sheet. Let’s use the power of earnings to enable every Alaskan to contribute just a little so the working families of Alaska don’t have to pay a lot.

Gary Wilken is a retired small businessman and a former state senator who represented Fairbanks and Fort Wainwright from 1996 to 2008. He served eight years on the Senate Finance Committee, four years as a co-chairman.

Must Read comment: Free the land up

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Highlighting comments from readers of Must Read Alaska

“Alaska has always been a colony. Mallott is wrong, we don’t need an income tax here.

The state of Alaska sitting on over 600,000 acres of land that it sells off in 5 acre chunks. 5 acres in Alaska is useless to anyone except for recreational cabins.

The average size of a cattle ranch in British Columbia is 1,000 acres. And there are quite a few of them. Release the land to people who want to create farms and ranches or any other business where they can turn a profit.

There is no reason why Alaska cannot be independent, no reason except for people like those we find in Juneau.

As with most problems, the answer isn’t more government. The answer is less.”

– Ken, responding to “Mallot to Alaskans: We need taxes, or we’ll be a colony”

Quote of the day: Mallott on tarped bodies, taxes

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“In rural Alaska, to have a young person be murdered and lay in a rock quarry covered in a tarp for four days because police could not get there in time to begin the process of trying to bring a perpetrator to justice… Where is the bloated budget for that?”

– Lt. Gov. Byron Mallott on Oct. 19, 2017 speaking to the Alaska Federation of Natives.

“I am concerned that the sheer size of State government is making this more and more difficult. I speak from my experience as a staff level State employee, an agency director and member of the Alaska Cabinet when I suggest that much tighter control than currently exists be placed upon the growth of government operations. State employees are public servants in the highest sense and I do not mean to denigrate them. But the bureaucracy  of our government collectively is a powerful institution of a size when juxtaposed against Alaska’s total voting population that even now raises the issue of our real ability to control it.

“Having said that about State government growth (while cleverly not suggesting specific remedies) can I then responsibly move to discuss what more government must do? Absolutely for I believe that it is easily within the capacity of the current level of government operations to significantly increase it service if priorities are rearranged and the bureaucracy restructured. I suggest that the remedies are fairly obvious and known to policy makers. What must be determined is the political will to act.”

– Byron Mallott in 1980, in a booklet titled “Challenge of Plenty,” published by Dave Harbour and Common Sense for Alaska.

 

Department of Corruptions

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CORRRECTIONS IS HAVING TROUBLE AT THE TOP

Without revealing why, the Walker Administration fired two senior executives from the Department of Corrections this month.

One is now-former Director of Institutions Bruce Busby. He was the top dog of the prison system.

The other is now-former Deputy Director Caitlin Price, who was Corrections Commissioner Dean Williams’ go-to person to get things done.

Both were dismissed simultaneously. No one will go on record as to why, but the word among Corrections officers is that there was an inappropriate relationship.

There were trips paid by the State to attend and perform official duties … some of which went unperformed … while certain other duties were performed. At the State’s expense.

There are photos, the folks in Corrections say. There are receipts for hotels and bed-and-breakfasts.

Why is this a scandal? Sworn officers, like police and corrections officers, have control over the lives of prisoners. The prison system puts guards and managers in positions of complete power and control over others, making it easily abused. So, the public wants them beyond reproach.

And there’s something else: Gov. Walker said he cleaned up Corrections in 2015. But after promoting Ron Taylor to commissioner upon taking office, the governor abruptly fired him a few months later, saying that the department was “broken” and “in turmoil.”

Why did Walker fire Taylor? His firing was based on a report written for him by the former director of the McLaughlin Youth Center, Dean Williams. Williams was in Walker’s close circle of advisers.

“I think the department has a hard time investigating itself like many agencies do, so out of our report we’re recommending a separate arm with existing resources,” Walker said in the terse press conference in November of 2015, when he announced that he had fired Taylor and put Walt Monegan in charge of Corrections, temporarily. (Monegan later became Public Safety commissioner.)

“We look at a process or model where we can investigate ourselves with high credibility and high trust. Right now we have a broken system,” Walker said.

The report by Williams called for a third-party investigation of administrative and criminal issues. Williams was a special assistant to the governor when he authored the report. He was just the guy to fix it.

Soon, Williams himself was commissioner.

A year later, Williams started a new internal affairs unit to transform the department to be more accountable. He asked a group to go through his report and help him restructure the department.

But people up and down the chain of command in Corrections had already found deep problems with the report. Some Corrections employees had lost their jobs, perhaps unfairly, due to the allegations by Williams.

The union, ACOA, started raising questions about the process used to generate the report that ultimately had gotten Williams his plum job. Pretty soon, there were too many questions and things got rather uncomfortable for Williams. The turmoil started to erode his credibility.

This is where it gets murky. Parts of this story cannot be written because sources would be revealed. Suffice it to say, what we can report so far appears to be only the tip of the iceberg.

“People felt like he got the job because he wrote the report in his favor, but there are a lot of disputable items in this report,” said one source who spoke on condition of anonymity. “There were some really questionable investigative techniques.”

Must Read Alaska learned from people within the Department of Corrections that the firing of two top officers in the Corrections Department for having an inappropriate relationship was needed, but it left untouched others who are engaged in similar behaviors that compromise the integrity of the department.

“It’s common knowledge among personnel that there are people at the top engaging in this behavior,” the source said, behavior that appears to involve misuse of state funds for inappropriate purposes.

In other words, not much has changed at the Department of Corruptions. Things may have gotten even worse.

 

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