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We remodeled, redesigned, relaunched Must Read

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Readers will notice that Must Read Alaska took on a new look over the weekend. It went from a blog to a sleek news site.

Like anything, it will take some getting used to, especially on the production side of things, but will allow this one-woman news operation to have a more rapid response to events of the day.

I’ll continue to refine the categories over the coming weeks, and while I work at it night and day, want to extend my thanks to everyone who has donated to the cause of giving an alternative view of what is presented in the mainstream media.

Feel free to join in the fun and send a donation to:

Must Read Alaska
3201 C Street Suite 308
Anchorage, Alaska 99503

or use the PayPal Portal at the right.

Thank you!

Suzanne Downing, editor
(in the wee hours)

Homer ethics complaint aired

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An ethics complaint against three Homer City Council members, originally lodged by the constitutional group Heartbeat of Homer on July 3, will go forward into the judicial process, at least through October.

The complaint says the three council members should have declared a conflict of interest instead of voting to essentially certify the results of the June 13 recall, where all of them prevailed in the polls in a controversial special election. To opponents of the recall effort, it may seem like a picky detail set upon by a disgruntled few. But to Homer conservatives, it’s a matter of holding firm on the conduct of public officials.

The original complaint against council members Donna Aderhold, David Lewis and Catriona Reynolds became tangled because it was made public to KBBI radio, which was a violation of a Homer city code guranteeing confidentiality of ethics complaints.

Homer City Code 2.80.040 states  “a person filing a complaint of potential violation shall keep confidential the fact that the person has filed the complaint with the city, as well as the contents of the complaint of potential violation.” A complaint under this guidance would be dismissed if made public.

A second ethics complaint, essentially the same as the first, was then filed by Homer resident Larry Zuccaro and was kept confidential until the three respondents decided to allow it to be made public this week.

The three council members have hired an attorney.and a final decision from the judge is expected by mid-November. Opening briefs in the case are due Oct. 2.

The council members waived confidentiality, which allows the complaints to now speak to the media about their grievances, if they choose.

 

Norway, not so much

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By CRAIG MEDRED
CRAIGMEDRED.NEWS

Commentary

Norway’s version of the Alaska Permanent Fund hit the $1 trillion mark last week.

That’s $1,000 billion, or about 16 times the $61.2 billion the state of Alaska is now sitting on. The Norwegians created their account in 1990. Deposits into the Alaska Permanent Fund began in 1977. 

Cue the discussion about how Alaska, which is now suffering through the worst recession since the 1980s, would be better off if it was more like Norway. This idea has popped up so many times in recent years it has almost become a cliché.

Only months ago, the Alaska Dispatch News ran a story headlined “Norwegians and Icelanders let Alaskans in on the secrets to economic prosperity.”

Beneath that story, reporter Jeannette Lea Falsey wrote that Norwegian economist Morten Brugard had a plan that “might appeal to Alaskans all along the political spectrum: Efficient government and a strong social safety net are the keys to Norway’s economic prosperity.”

Oh, if it were only so simple.

Certainly Alaska’s government could be more efficient. But it’s unlikely there’s a government of which that can’t be said. Not to mention that government efficiency is a hard thing to score.

When it is scored, Norway ranks from third to 11th in a comparison of various indices pulled together by the Institute for Government, a United Kingdom think tank. The highest U.S. ranking is seventh.

“The disparities in performance highlight a key problem with these cross-national studies: they may see the job of government differently, use different variables, and even measure the same thing differently,” the Institute notes.

[Read more at CraigMedred.news]

Senate to vote on National Defense bill, beef up missiles, icebreakers

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The full Senate is expected to vote today on the National Defense Authorization Act, which has several provisions for Alaska, including authorization for up to six polar-class ice breakers and 28 additional ground-based missile interceptors, 14 of which could be based at Fort Greeley. There’s also funding for furthering an Arctic port.

“I spoke at the deployment ceremony of 425th as they headed to Afghanistan,” said Sen. Dan Sullivan of Alaska. “I told them we have your back when you’re gone and this bill focuses on making sure we have the backs of our men and women.”

The bill helps rebuild the military, which was cut by nearly 24 percent during the Obama Administration, and it spends $700 million more to focus on readiness, Sullivan said, including increasing numbers of troops.

The authorizations are one thing. The appropriation process is where the last icebreaker authorizations were spiked. But Sullivan said he thinks there is a greater understanding of the need for them, and it’s bipartisan support.

The authorization came as an amendment in the Senate Armed Services Committee, which was offered by Sen. Sullivan earlier this year, as well as a request of the Government Accountability Office to study how to get the most bang for the buck for the icebreakers, which can cost $1 billion apiece.

This week in Congress

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The U.S. Senate and House will return to work on Monday, Sept. 25. There’s talk about another vote on repealing Obamacare before the end of September. Republican Senators Graham, Cassidy, Johnson and Heller have a bill that includes the block grants to states that would replace the tax credits now in the Affordable Care Act, and there would be cost sharing payments to insurers, and further expansion of Medicaid. The opportunity to pass the bill under a reconciliation that requires just 51 votes will expire Sept. 30.

Sen. Dan Sullivan was scheduled to hold a press conference at 1 pm Monday to talk about the FY 2018 National Defense Authorization Act, legislation that is expected to pass the Senate with several important provisions for Alaska.

Ethics committee targets Wilson, ignores Guttenberg, Wool

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The Legislative Ethics Committee decided last week that Rep. Tammie Wilson of North Pole violated the Ethics Act because in January of 2014 she sent a postcard out to people who were in and out of her district to tell them about some air quality issues.

Air quality is a big issue in the Fairbanks area, and Wilson has been one of the most prominent advocates to protect the rights of people to burn wood for heat.

Wilson admits she used the Legislative Information Office as a return address, but she used her own funds to produce and mail the post cards.

But evidently there is value to a return address: “Regardless of intent, the committee recognizes the fact that state resources were used to produce and distribute an air quality postcard to individuals not in Rep. Wilson’s current legislative district,” the committee wrote.

The action provided a private benefit to Wilson, the committee said, and could be construed as campaigning.

The instance took place over three and a half years ago. Wilson was never given the opportunity to address her side of the story with the committee, as required by statute.

If that is campaigning, then what is this web site, produced by Rep. David Guttenberg of Fairbanks, who is trying to improve broadband in Fairbanks?

Guttenberg’s web site is not limited to his Goldstream district, but is clearly aimed at all of Fairbanks, and is was produced by his legislative office.

A website like this, complete with video, is far more of a public resource drain than a post card where the only violation was using the Legislative Information Office as the return address.

And then there’s Rep. Adam Wool. On April 22, the Fairbanks representative invited Revenue Commissioner Randall Hoffbeck and other state officials to the “Blue Loon,” his establishment, for a state meeting.

During that meeting, he sold them food and beverages, making a profit off of those sales to state officials and anyone else who attended. He also used state resources to create a poster advertising the townhall meeting at his watering hole.

Heads and Tails: Quake rattles expo in Juneau; Zinke orders expansion of hunting range

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JUNEAU’S CONVENTION JINKS?

In April, a convention of fire investigators was convening in Juneau when two miscreant teens set a beloved playground ablaze. The timing was uncanny.

On Saturday, a gathering of disaster preparedness experts were winding up their expo in Juneau when a medium-sized quake rattled the Capital City.

Residents in northern Southeast Alaska, and in homes as far as the Yukon felt the magnitude 5.2 earthquake at 3:38 pm. No damage was reported.

“Sitting in my house. There was a quick shake, then a few seconds pause, then more intense shaking for maybe 30 seconds. Didn’t notice any rolling or swaying.  Dishes rattled and house creaking,” reported one Whitehorse resident on a local forum.

Another stoically observed: “The leaves are now really falling off the trees in my backyard. I blame the earthquake.”

The quake was centered 81 miles from Whitehorse, Yukon at a depth of 6 miles.

If fire and earthquakes are not enough, the next big convention in Juneau is on Oct. 23 and it has to do with taxes. The fourth special Session of the Alaska Legislature is when lawmakers will entertain once again the governor’s proposals for new “broad-based revenue.”

Taxpayers may want to bolt everything down in advance in case the dishes start rattling.

TAKU BID EXTENSION PASSES, HIGH BID $300K

The State of Alaska has a blue ferry to sell cheap, but will there be a buyer? In March, the Alaska Marine Highway System listed the 54-year-old Taku, with a minimum bid of $1.5 million. There were no takers by the May 9 deadline, and the minimum bid was dropped to $700,000. The auction was extended to June, then July, and August, and again to Friday, Sept. 15 and no minimum bid listed, although the state set a secret reserve price.

Must Read Alaska has asked the Alaska Marine Highway System if there is a qualified bidder on this latest round and what the next steps are. We received a prompt reply: “The state received three bids and will be reviewing them for completion and relocation plan over the coming days. The high bid was for $300,000 from a Portland-based company. A decision to accept or deny the bids will be made next week.”

We’ll update this story when we find out the latest fate of the 54-year-old blue canoe, which remains tied up in Ward Cove in Ketchikan.

TILLERSON SAYS CHINA NEEDS TO CUT OFF OIL TO PRNK

On Face the Nation this morning, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said that China has a big role to play in diminishing the nuclear ambitions of North Korea:

“There are two particular economic revenue streams to the North Koreans are quite important to their ability to fund their weapons programs, and to maintain their economic activity just within their own country.

“One, of course, is energy. No economy can function if it does not have access to energy. China is the principle supplier of oil to North Korea and they have cut off oil supplies in the past when things got bad. We’re asking China to use that leverage they have with North Korea to influence them. In the case of Russia, it’s foreign laborers. Russia has over 30,000 foreign laborers from North Korea. Those wages all go back to the regime in North Korea.”

ZINKE ORDERS EXPANSION OF HUNTING ACCESS

U.S. Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke on Friday issued a directive ordering his agency to expand access for hunters and fishermen.

“Hunting and fishing is a cornerstone of the American tradition and hunters and fishers of America are the backbone of land and wildlife conservation,” said Secretary Zinke. “The more people we can get outdoors, the better things will be for our public lands. As someone who grew up hunting and fishing on our public lands – packing bologna sandwiches and heading out at 4AM with my dad – I know how important it is to expand access to public lands for future generations. Some of my best memories are hunting deer or reeling in rainbow trout back home in Montana, and I think every American should be able to have that experience.”

Secretarial Order 3356 directs bureaus within the department to:

  • Within 120 days produce a plan to expand access for hunting and fishing on BLM, USFWS and NPS land.
  • Amend national monument management plans to ensure the public’s right to hunt, fish and target shoot.
  • Expand educational outreach programs for underrepresented communities such as veterans, minorities, and youth.
  • In a manner that respects the rights and privacy of the owners of non-public lands, identify lands within their purview where access to Department lands, particularly access for hunting, fishing, recreational shooting, and other forms of outdoor recreation, is currently limited (including areas of Department land that may be impractical or effectively impossible to access via public roads or trails under current conditions, but where there may be an opportunity to gain access through an easement, right-of-way, or acquisition), and provide a report detailing such lands to the Deputy Secretary.
  • Within 365 days, cooperate, coordinate, create, make available, and continuously update online a single “one stop” Department site database of available opportunities for hunting, fishing, and recreational shooting on Department lands.
  • Improve wildlife management through collaboration with state, Tribal, territorial, and conservation partners.

“For too long, sportsmen’s access to our federal lands has been restricted, with lost opportunity replacing the ability to enjoy many of our best outdoor spaces. This extension to Secretarial Order 3356 will go a long way to reversing that trend and help grow the next generation of hunters, fishermen, and recreational shooters,” said Senator Lisa Murkowski, Chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee.

“I appreciate this new order and am committed to working with Secretary Zinke and my colleagues to do everything we can to expand and enhance access to our federal lands for all Alaskans, and all Americans, so that we can continue our rich sportsmen’s heritage,” she said.

Nome Native Corp. adds fourth name to lawsuit

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Sitnasuak Native Corporation filed a lawsuit last month to remove three of its 11 directors for breaking corporate election law. Now it has added a fourth name to the lawsuit — Marie Tozier of Nome.

Tozier is not on the board, but is a candidate for a board seat in the scheduled Sept. 30 election.

The Nome-based corporation says the three board members breached their fiduciary duties to the corporation and its shareholders when they coordinated to send out anonymous mailings to corporation shareholders. Tozier knew of the mailer, the corporation alleges.

If true, that would be a violation of Alaska banking and securities law, which Native Corporations must follow. The corporation is asking that the court decide if the four broke the law.

Charles Fagerstrom, one of the three board members the corporation is seeking to remove, said he alone was responsible for the anonymous mailer that was sent prior to the June 3 meeting. That meeting failed to reach a quorum and has been rescheduled for Sept. 30.

The mailer in question was sent from the unidentified “SNC Shareholders for Free Speech” to 1,000 shareholders. The mailer supported board members Barbara Amarok and Helen Bell for reelection. It opposed the reelection of Jason Evans, who is running for his second term and is the corporation treasurer.

It also gave the readers false and misleading information regarding voting and how the discretionary proxy voting system works, the lawsuit alleges.

With discretionary proxy voting, shareholders cast all their votes for the board of directors’ nominees, essentially signing over their votes to the board to appoint proxies for. A ballot like this is typically signed but not marked.

One of the three accused of violating the board election process and attempting to remove Evans is Edna Baker, who is a former Division of Elections supervisor.  Until last year, Baker oversaw elections in Western Alaska. She retired from her position prior to the voting fraud scandal that rocked District 40.

The other two that Sitnasuak is requesting be removed for colluding on the mailer are Barbara Amarok and Fagerstrom.

“Our number one priority is to protect the rights of all shareholders and we cannot do that if our elections are compromised,” said Sitnasuak Chairman Bobby Evans, who is the brother of Jason Evans.  “Today, we must look to the future and work together to protect our shared legacy while strengthening our values.”

The lawyer from Holland & Knight said it was about complying with banking and securities laws.

“In order to comply with state securities law, Sitnasuak Native Corporation needed to take appropriate legal actions to protect shareholders’ rights and the integrity of future elections,” said Howard Trickey of the law firm representing Sitnasuak.

The lawyer for the defense said it was about power, and the “litigation is a last-ditch effort by the current majority of the Sitnasuak board of directors to retain political control by silencing directors and shareholders speaking out against discretionary proxy voting practices.”

But the corporation’s lawsuit appears to be more about the manner that shareholders would influence elections and whether board elections will be done in a transparent manner. Without calling a halt to anonymous mailings, board elections could devolve into a war of unsigned accusations that besmirch the reputation of those running for a seat.

The new date for the Sitnasuak annual meeting is Sept. 30. On the agenda is the election of four directors to the board. But the timing of the lawsuit could push that date into the future.

Sitnasuak shareholders number more than 2,800 and most originated in Nome and villages in the Bering Strait region of Northwest Alaska.  The are Iñupiaq, Yup’ik and St. Lawrence Island Yupiks. The corporation paid more than $2 million in  economic benefits to shareholders in 2016, including special elder dividends, bereavement benefits, heating fuel and rent discounts, and regular dividends.

Breaking: Reimposing sentences for crimes to be part of special session

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Gov. Walker today placed a rollback of provisions of SB 91 onto the call of his October special session.

For first-time offenders, who now don’t get any jail time for many second-time theft offenses, it will allow for five-year jail time. For Class C felonies, it would be up to one year.

“These are minor tweaks to SB 91,” said Attorney General Jahna Lindemuth, saying that unintended consequences include an increase in crime across the state.

In a press conference today, Walker, Lindemuth, and other public officials claimed that SB 91 has led to  a crime spree. SB 54 returns the power to prosecutors, law enforcement, and judges, the Walker Administration said.

“For law enforcement and officers we’re seeing a lot more crime,” Lindemuth said, adding that the opioid crisis is stressing state resources. “SB 54 returns tools to prosecutors, law enforcement, and judges that was one of the unintended consequences.”

However, there was no explanation offered about how such “minor tweaks” would actually reduce crime in Alaska.