Wednesday, July 23, 2025
Home Blog Page 1670

Governor to ask Permanent Fund Board for $1 billion special investment

0

DETAILS EMERGE: FORMER AG RICHARDS PROPOSING HIGH-RISK ALLOCATION

Craig Richards, when he was law partner of Bill Walker, speaks to a conference about LNG in 2012 in Valdez.
Craig Richards, when he was law partner of Bill Walker, speaks to a conference about LNG in 2012 in Valdez. YouTube video screen shot.

The Permanent Fund Board of Directors is about to endure an unprecedented attempt by a governor of Alaska to influence the direction of its investments.

The meeting is Friday, Sept. 2 at the Atwood Building in Anchorage, and is available by teleconference.

Sources inside the Administration tell Must Read Alaska that our earlier report is spot on, but there’s more: Governor Bill Walker will request a $1 billion plus Permanent Fund investment into a high-risk, highly concentrated allocation that is centered on an specific industry and a specific geography.

The Permanent Fund has an allocation like this already, but with nowhere near the concentration that is being proposed.

The industry and the geography would be oil and gas companies in Alaska, particularly in Cook Inlet, which are suffering because Gov. Walker vetoed the tax credits that their company business models depended on and that they were owed.

The Permanent Fund buying oil tax credits as an investment to prevent companies operating in alaska from going bankrupt would be an unprecedented risk of Alaskans’ savings account. So far, the governor has been silent on this move, not releasing a press release or a statement about his intentions.

Although Walker was advised even by members of his administration not to veto the payments owed to explorers, he cut $774 million over the past two years. Some companies are now in bankruptcy proceedings, and the downstream effect on other businesses is being felt throughout the Alaska oil patch economy.

The Walker Administration had already made a similar run at the Alaska Retirement Management Board with such a proposal, which was soundly rejected, according to Administration sources.

Two of the commissioners on the retirement board are also on the Permanent Fund Board. They are Commissioner of Administration Sheldon Fischer and Commissioner of Revenue Randall Hoffbeck; it’s likely this proposal is familiar to them already.

Former Attorney General Craig Richards served on the Permanent Fund board until he suddenly — and quite mysteriously — quit as AG in June and had to leave the board. He then received a $50,000 (renewable) contract with the governor, which was retroactive and which avoids the procurement process. He’ll now appear before the board to argue the governor’s proposal.

The Carlyle Group is one of several “private equity and special opportunity” fund managers used by the Permanent Fund Corporation, and it manages 5 percent of the $54 billion fund.  The Carlyle Group has designed custom program of private asset investment strategies, that focuses on natural resource investment.

Richards has been in talks with the Carlyle Group as he prepares to make the case to the Permanent Fund directors on how the structure of the proposed fund would work.

A small economic development working group inside the Walker Administration may also have a role. In June, the governor announced two new additions to his staff who are tasked with working on economic development issues.

The two recent hires are the state’s former chief economist, John Tichotsky, who is one of the architects for restructuring the Permanent Fund, and Ed King, who was a commercial analyst for the Alaska Department of Natural Resources.

The group within the Governor’s Office is said to be attempting to create a venture capital market in Alaska, possibly encouraging it by using state assets.

A previous story on this topic is here.

The KTVA story on it is here.

 

 

 

Bright, shiny objects: Governor’s fair booth pics, Halcro picks

0
Governor Bill Walker's booth at the Alaska State Fair, August 2016
Governor Bill Walker’s booth at the Alaska State Fair, August 2016

THE GOVERNOR’S DEFICIT BOOTH

There were no Governor’s Family Picnics this year, because the optics are just terrible for an event like that when your budget deficit is $3.5 billion. But the governor is getting his image out at the Alaska State Fair, where he has purchased a booth to spread the message. What message you ask? The message that he needs half of Alaskans’ Permanent Fund dividends to pay for state government, and that he’ll need some of their paychecks, too.

ANDREW HALCRO SELF-AWARENESS POST

Andrew Halcro Facebook post. So wrong on so many levels.
Andrew Halcro Facebook post. “seriously wrong here, for any number of reasons.”

Andrew Halcro, who lost his bid for mayor of Anchorage but immediately signed on with the new mayor with a $100,000-plus job, just doesn’t like Rep. Liz Vazquez. He’s said so many times over. He’s found people to run against her and backed them. He’s ranted on Facebook about how much he dislikes her.

Now he’s mad that David Nees, who ran against Liz in the primary, has gone to work for her as staff. Halcro’s Facebook post clucks that it is wrong for many reasons.

Halcro might be the wrong person to criticize, but at least he almost waited until after business hours to do so, unlike all the campaign-oriented posts he made during the primary election season.

OK, almost, but not quite.

So many political opinions, so few municipal hours.
So many Halcro political opinions, so few municipal hours.
Shell ship being guided through the Panama Canal this month.
Shell LNG shipment being guided through the Panama Canal this month.

FIRST SHIPMENT OF LOUISIANA LNG MAKES IT TO CHINA

The first shipment of liquefied natural gas to pass through the expanded Panama Canal has arrived in China, according to Shell.  This is a game-changer for LNG, which is plentiful in the Gulf of Mexico states.

“The expansion has significant implications for LNG trade, reducing travel time and transportation costs for LNG shipments from the U.S. Gulf Coast to key markets in Asia and providing additional access to previously regionalized LNG markets,” according to a release from the Energy Information Administration.

Japan and South Korea demand is falling mainly due to increasing reliance on coal and overall drop in power demand. Buyers in those two countries have LNG contracts that will last another decade or more, which means China is the biggest potential growth province in the region.

BANG BANG, WILL WALKER’S SILVER HAMMER COME DOWN ON BP?

Governor Walker has given BP until tomorrow to give over its natural gas marketing plan for its Prudhoe Bay gas. If the company doesn’t give it over, then the governor might refuse to allow it to continue to develop oil at Prudhoe Bay. That’s the threat, but will he do it? Read what Dave Harbour has to say about it:

If Alaska governor Bill Walker’s predecessor governors wished to demand competitive producer information, they would have put that demand in the original Prudhoe Bay Lease Sale — and future lease sale — requirements. Adding requirements — especially those that violate federal laws — after a lease sale, after investors pay their bonus bids, after exploration and development and construction of transportation facilities and after nearly 50 years of precedent is tantamount to expropriation.” Northern Gas Pipelines, Aug. 3, 2016.

More at AKHeadlamp, a news and commentary site.

FEWER HOMELESS PEOPLE IN ANCHORAGE?

The mayor of Anchorage’s homeless coordinator says there are fewer homeless living on the streets in Anchorage than there were in January. But the chatter in the coffee shops disputes that claim. So far, the count from this morning has not been released, but in January there were 87 people living under bushes and in the woods of Anchorage.

The municipality has been clearing out the homeless camps, and housing vouchers are more readily available. More at KTVA.

Union money, the PACs, and union dues

39880995_s

PART 1: FOLLOW THE UNION MONEY

By ART CHANCE

Money: Unions have lots of it, and it comes in two basic forms, plus a third for some unions. Some of the money they even acquire and use legally.

First the generally legal money: Unions have political action committees (PACs) that raise unrestricted “hard” money that they can legally spend on direct political contributions to campaigns.

The predicate of a legal PAC is a voluntary contribution to that PAC.

Many union PAC authorizations are of questionable legality, as they are often combined with dues deduction authorizations, and unions are wont to at least insinuate that employees or members must make the contribution to keep their jobs.

Even with the pressure, only a small minority of State employees authorize the PAC contribution. Teachers unions have the reputation of both confusing employees about their rights and pressuring those same employees.

The state of the law is somewhat different with private sector unions but they all have PACs, and the AFL-CIO and the NEA have over-arching national PACs as well. There is a serious question as to whether public employers can legally withhold a PAC contribution and transmit it to the union or the PAC.

First, any coercion from the employer to authorize the contribution violates several statutes. I don’t believe that any employer representative should even hand out the PAC or dues authorization forms, but most employers take the path of least resistance and have their human resource staff do it.

The reality is that if the employees were forced to actually go to the union hall to sign up, many, probably most, wouldn’t. The employer would be faced with having to enforce the union’s “compelled-dues” clause all the time; not worth the bother to most.   And when you consider that almost all the states with unionized public employees or a heavily unionized private workforce are irredeemably Democrat, there really isn’t much interest in whether the money collection is legal.

The biggest source of union money is dues, and most dues are compelled as a condition of continuing employment. Funny thing: Not many employees will voluntarily pay dues – 20-30% at most. Compelled dues are a creature of statute; the Federal Labor-Management Relations Act for private sector employees, Federal law and Executive Orders for Federal employees, and state and local laws for public employees.

Compelled dues have been upheld as Constitutional by the US Supreme Court and state supreme courts where the question has been put, including Alaska. Like most questions put to a court, the answer depends on how the question is asked, so I believe there is room for a challenge in Alaska based on the constitutional requirement that the State maintain a “merit system” of employment. It is a question whether payment of dues is a measure of merit.

It is black-letter law that use of compelled dues for the “social, political, or fraternal” activities of a union is illegal if the employee objects to such use.

Few employees realize this; few employers make any attempt to notify employees of their right to object.

Even if the employee(s) object, the game is rigged against them. Unions offer a small deduction, a few percent, usually in the single digits, from full dues for objectors, called an “agency fee,” which is supposed to represent the cost of actual collective bargaining activity such as negotiating contracts and pursuing grievances as well as very limited lobbying.

When the Evergreen Foundation sued the Washington Education Association over chargeable costs, the WEA could only substantiate 17% of its dues going to collective bargaining, and the remainder went to non-chargeable “social, fraternal, and political” activities.

The Washington Supreme Court turned the 1st Amendment on its head to protect the union money for Democrats but the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the state court ruling, though I doubt much has changed since Washington remains in Democrat hands.

The Alaska State Employees Association was found in the late ‘90s to have a Constitutionally impermissible dues system. ASEA’s solution for years was to let objectors “free ride” rather than institute record keeping systems that would adequately record chargeable costs. They operated under court supervision for several years, but were finally told to go forth and sin no more; I don’t think anything really changed except the calendar and the level of interest.

When I became the State’s head of Labor Relations in 2003, we still had compelled union membership in several of our agreements, even though they’d been illegal since 1986.  I made them agree to “agency shop” language that was facially legal, but I’ll admit that I did nothing to peek under their skirts to see if they were actually maintaining a legal system. If you’re going to challenge a union’s dues system, you are provoking an existential battle. If you provoke the battle, you’ll be better off running for office and getting elected to fight the battle, as Gov. Scott Walker in Wisconsin did.

If you don’t have that backing from the public that Scott Walker had, you get your head handed to you as Anchorage Mayor Dan Sullivan did, and you risk turning your state over to the unions and Democrats. This is a battle you really, really don’t want to lose.

Next:   How unions use the money and how union “trusts” influence politics.

Art Chance is a retired Director of Labor Relations for the State of Alaska. He is the author of the book, Red on Blue, Establishing a Republican Governance, available at Amazon.

Nageak getting legal help for election irregularities

Ben Nageak of Barrow speaks on the front steps of Alaska's Capitol in this file photo
Ben Nageak of Barrow speaks on the front steps of Alaska’s Capitol in this file photo.

BEN NAGEAK HIRES ELECTION ATTORNEY

As the State Election Review Board prepares to put its stamp of approval on an improperly conducted election in District 40, Rep. Ben Nageak has retained an attorney. And he went with the big one.

Anchorage attorney Tim McKeever has been tasked with representing the Barrow legislator, who is monitoring the work of the review board and looking at the options for what the next steps would be. Nageak is receiving donations to help him defray the expense.

Those options include the first step of asking for a recount. Generally, the state will pay for the recount if there is less than a 20-vote margin. The margin in the Dean Westlake-Ben Nageak race is 21 votes.

 

Either the candidate or a group of 10 voters with stake in the outcome would also have a right to request a recount.

The Alaska Republican Party has sent a letter to Division of Elections Director Josie Bahnke asking her to not certify the District 40 outcome if she cannot be positive about who won. That letter legally established the party as an interested stakeholder in the outcome. Bahnke has indicated that the certification will likely go forward.

Another option is to file a lawsuit with the Alaska Supreme Court, which would then refer the matter to a master, who would do a general review of the election process.

This happened in 1978 with the Hickel and Hammond race. The Superior Court granted summary judgment, finding that there was malconduct on the part of election officials “sufficient to impeach the integrity of the election process and place the true outcome in doubt.”

Tim McKeever
Tim McKeever

McKeever is a well-known go-to attorney for election law. He provides legal services relating to campaign finance and election law before the Federal Election Commission and the Alaska Public Offices Commission. This work has brought him in front of the Alaska Superior and Supreme Courts on behalf of clients that range from local candidates to members of Alaska’s Congressional Delegation and their campaigns. He has also been tapped by groups and individuals involved in offering ballot measures,

Hiring McKeever is a clear signal to the Division of Elections that it could face more than just a showdown with the Republican Party. If it certifies the election, it may face an aggrieved candidate as well in Ben Nageak.

Any voter in District 40 who has a complaint about their vote being suppressed, or if they witnessed irregularities, should contact  [email protected].

The Republican Party is concerned with the fact that all Democrats in Shungnak were allowed to vote on its ballot. It’s such an important issue to Republicans, that they fought it all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court back in the 1990s, and won the right to a ballot separate from other parties in primary elections, so that organized political parties are not able to change the outcome of the Republican primary by mobbing the GOP ballot.

The Democratic Party has been silent on the matter; The Alaska Democratic Party, the governor of Alaska, and the lieutenant governor of Alaska, who oversees elections, have publicly thrown their support to Nageak’s challenger.

To assist with the legal expenses of Ben Nageak, checks of any amount may be sent to:

Ben Nageak
PO Box 914
Barrow, Ak 99723

The $500 campaign limit does not apply to this effort.

 

Anchorage safety plan: Shelter in place?

Valley of the Moon Park in Anchorage
Valley of the Moon Park in Anchorage

POLICE WARN PEOPLE TO BE WARY

The dead number 26,* depending on how you count them. However they started their journeys in life and whatever their dreams, stone cold on an Anchorage street is how they ended their days in 2016.

Four of the 26 were found on urban trails, and another was found on a deadend road close to trailheads to Far North Bicentennial Park.

The latest two bodies were found in the darkest hours of the morning in Valley of the Moon Park, between the Spenard neighborhood and Downtown, on a popular bike trail. Like two others found dead on another urban trail in July, who killed them is unknown. The method of the murders has also not been released by police, as the investigation is active and releasing information too early can hurt a case they are trying to solve.

Most of the homicides are men, most are young, and most killings seem to be late at night. Many seem to be drug-related or people settling scores with each other.

But the trail killings — 19 percent of the violent deaths this year — send up a warning flare to citizens, especially when the police issue an alert to citizens to stay off the trails at night when there’s no one around. The statement from Anchorage Police Department in full:

The Anchorage Police Department is alerting citizens to be extra aware of their surroundings and to report any suspicious person(s) or activity immediately to police.

Since June 27, 2016 there have been 15 homicide victims. Of those victims, six were engaged in high risk behaviors and/or lifestyles such as drugs, guns and criminal activity.  Several of the homicides have involved individuals under the age of 21.  There have been four deaths associated with domestic violence and five deaths of individuals that have been outside in the late night/early morning hours; most of which were in isolated areas such as a bike trails, parks and unoccupied streets.

APD wishes to remind our citizens that if you are experiencing domestic violence or are aware of someone that is, please contact police so we can intervene; there are resources available to help victims of DV. 

Also, criminal activity often increases late at night and during early morning hours.  APD wants to remind our citizens to be cautious when they are out during these hours, especially if they are in isolated areas like our parks, bike trails or unoccupied streets. If you plan to be out late at night, make sure you travel with several friends and not alone.  

APD asks citizens to report suspicious or dangerous activity by calling APD Dispatch at 786-8900 or 911 in the case of an emergency. To provide an anonymous crime tip, please contact Anchorage Crimestoppers online at www.anchoragecrimestoppers.com or call 561-STOP.

STAY OUT OF ISOLATED AREAS SUCH AS BIKE TRAILS, PARKS, UNOCCUPIED STREETS

It’s a tall order to ask Alaskans to stay out of isolated areas, since that’s what makes Alaska different from, say, Chicago.

But it’s also unusual for Alaska police to issue a warning to not travel alone late at night, when so many people must do so for work, and since Anchorage is going to great lengths to become a bike-friendly, ski-trail-friendly city. In most urban areas of the country, people take these kinds of precautions as a part of urban life in 2016, but it’s unsettling for Alaskans who want more than Chicago offers.

So far, there has been no comment from the Mayor’s Office on the murderous trend. Mayor Ethan Berkowitz, who ran for office on the platform of “Safe and Secure,” now has the ignominious record of governing during a record-breaking year for violent crimes in Anchorage.

Mayor Ethan Berkowitz, second from right, takes part in the grand opening of Krispy Kreme in East Anchorage this week.
Mayor Ethan Berkowitz, second from right, takes part in the grand opening of Krispy Kreme in East Anchorage this week. Donuts are plentiful in East Anchorage, but with not enough police to keep residents safe, Berkowitz has his work cut out.  

Berkowitz, who has been an Anchorage resident since moving here from San Francisco in 1990, promised during his campaign for mayor in 2015: “Together, we can make Anchorage a safe place to do business and raise a family. When I came to Alaska 25 years ago and served as a young prosecutor, I learned that a successful strategy to reduce crime and recidivism links prevention, policing and prosecution,” he wrote in 2015 as he made his case for running Alaska’s largest city.

San Francisco has had 32 homicides so far this year among its 837,000 residents. Anchorage, with 26 homicides among its 301,000 residents is experiencing close to two and a half times the rate of murders as San Francisco.

More police and prosecution is Mayor Berkowitz’ answer for the violent crime problem in Anchorage, but he’s been silent on the issue since taking office. Leadership also means talking to the people and being proactive.

Berkowitz has his work cut out for him to reassure the public of his progress on this front, as police tell people to be aware of their surroundings, stay out of isolated areas, and to not travel alone at night.

It’s time for Berkowitz to give the public an update on his progress for making Anchorage safe and secure.

*Must Read Alaska counts the homicides as 26, because we count the Glenn Highway hit-and-run death of 22-year-old Joshua Goodlataw on Aug. 6 as a homicide.

 

Republicans to Election Division: Don’t certify District 40

CHAIRMAN SENDS A DETAILED LETTER

Exactly two weeks after the polls closed for the Alaska Primary Election, the Alaska Republican Party has weighed in on the illegal voting procedures that have been identified across District 40 and 38.

Tuckerman Babcock
Tuckerman Babcock, Alaska Republican Party chairman.

Republican Party Chairman Tuckerman Babcock sent a letter to Division of Elections Director Josie Bahnke, in which he told Bahnke that certifying the election in District 40 would be a serious mistake. The entire letter is found at the Alaska Republican Party website.

“While the numerous errors and illegal procedures are deplorable, thankfully only one election decision hangs in the balance.  Who actually won the State House Democratic Primary in District 40?  The voters tried, but the election was handled so poorly that now no one knows.

“If you cannot actually determine the winner of a primary, you must not certify the election.  That would be a travesty and it would condone the repeated illegal instructions given by the official election clerks,” the Alaska GOP letter reads.

The letter was a clear indication that Alaska Republicans are serious about keeping their primary ballot from becoming a political tool of opposing Democrats who would jump over and vote that ballot in order to advance a weak Republican candidate into the general election.

Alaska law allows political parties to select who may participate in their party’s primary. To change their primary participants, parties must submit a written notice to the Division of Elections before Sept. 1 of the year prior to the year in which the primary election is to be held.

There are currently two separate ballot choices, unless there is a ballot measure, in which case a third ballot is provided.

  • ADL ballot, which contains the Alaska Democratic Party, Alaska Libertarian Party and Alaskan Independence Party Candidate. All registered voters may vote this ballot.
  • Alaska Republican Party Candidate ballot. Registered Republican, Nonpartisan or Undeclared voters may vote this ballot; and
  • the Ballot Measures Only ballot – any registered voter may vote this ballot.

WHAT WILL BAHNKE DO? WHERE IS THE LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR?

Lieutenant Governor Byron Mallott was in Yakutat, but was said to be in travel status and unavailable for the hearing on voting irregularities.
Lieutenant Governor Byron Mallott was in Yakutat, but was said to be in travel status and unavailable for the hearing on voting irregularities.

Earlier this week, Director Bahnke said she would have the election certified by this Friday. Meanwhile, her boss, the lieutenant governor, has been nowhere to be seen.

He was traveling to a Federal Reserve meeting in Wyoming, and then was spotted with a group of people in Yakutat, flying around on a private jet.

But he did not make himself available to the following day’s meeting of the House and Senate State Affairs Committee, which conducted a hearing about the voting irregularities.

The Governor of Alaska, Bill Walker, has also been completely silent on the election, although the governor himself flew to Kotzebue earlier this summer to raise money for candidate Dean Westlake, who currently has a 21-vote lead over Ben Nageak.

The lieutenant governor, the governor and his private-sector surrogate, lawyer Robin Brena, raised tens of thousands of dollars for Westlake and are now in the awkward position of having their first statewide primary election end badly with allegations of incompetence or fraud, and possibly be headed for a do-over.

HISTORY OF BLANKET BALLOT VS. PARTY BALLOT

In 1992, the Alaska Republican Party of Alaska challenged the constitutionality of Alaska’s “blanket primary” sytem. Through a series of court cases that ended in the U.S. Supreme Court in 2000, the matter was finally settled so that Republicans could maintain their voting strength with their own party ballot. The case ended hinging on the First Amendment right of the freedom of association: Political parties have the right to offer voting to members of the party, and not to the general electorate. Democrats have kept their ballot open to all parties because without additional voters from the Green Party, Alaska Independence Party or Libertarians, the Democrats would not be able to advance enough candidates.

Republicans open their ballots to those who are undeclared or nonaligned.

Other stories on this election are here:

District 40 election ‘illegal’ — may be certified anyway

Unbelievable: Byron Mallot declares election a success

 

Bright, shiny objects: Harriet loves vacancies; Craig Richards comes knocking

0

Screen Shot 2016-08-30 at 11.30.52 AM

THERE GOES THE NEIGHBORHOOD?

Rep. Harriet Drummond holds a sign accusing fellow lawmakers of corruption / YouTube video screenshot.
Rep. Harriet Drummond holds a sign accusing fellow lawmakers of corruption / YouTube video screenshot.

Rep. Harriet Drummond was so glad to be rid of the Alaska Republican Party headquarters in her neighborhood that she posted — not once but twice — a photo of the Republicans’ now-vacant former digs, a historic building that survived the earthquake of 1964 and was once a family home on Fireweed Lane.

But really, who celebrates commercial properties in District 18 going vacant?

The Alaska Republican Party had occupied the site for nearly 20 years and had done more than its share of cleaning up old hypodermic needles in the gutters outside and litter along the streets.

But Drummond did not get rid of the Grand Opportunity Party — it has moved to 2504 Fairbanks Street, inside the Don Young Headquarters…still in District 18 and able to keep an eye on the Democrats at their headquarters one block over.

Who can forget other Drummond missteps, such as the time she held a sign pointing to “Corrupt Bastards Club Third Floor,” when describing her fellow lawmakers who were present for the signing of SB 21, oil tax reform.

Drummond is being challenged by business owner Mike Gordon, who owned Chilkoot Charlie’s in Spenard for many years. He served on the Anchorage City Council and Borough Assembly in the 1970s.

Drummond didn’t post a similar celebratory note over the Blockbuster a few blocks over on Northern Lights.

WORKING OVERTIME?

A certain Juneau school board candidate who works for the Alaska Department of Revenue has been putting pressure on his coworkers during the work day to sign his petition for candidacy? That’s what they are telling Must Read Alaska. Not a good move. Advice: Candidates, don’t be doing that on State of Alaska government time.

AGDC TAKES ITS PR WORK TO  HOUSTON

The Alaska Gasline Development Corporation is said to have canceled its marketing contract with a local Anchorage firm and moved the work to a Houston company. Which one? Marketing was dealt with in executive session in the July meeting of the AGDC board. We’re digging.

 HEARD ON THE STREET

craig richards
Craig Richards

Word is the Governor’s Office has approached Alaska Permanent Fund board members in advance of a meeting on Sept. 2, and asked that former Attorney General Craig Richards be allowed time on the schedule. We’ve been told the board gave pushback, so maybe next meeting. Richards served on the board while he was the governor’s attorney general, but had to step down when he suddenly quit in June. Richards is now on contract with the governor to advance his gasline. Why on earth would the gasline adviser need to speak with the Permanent Fund Board of Directors?

It’s the first time in the fund’s history that any governor has so blatantly played politics with the fund.

Marty Rutherford, who took Richards’ place on the Permanent Fund board, appears to be standing firm with the private sector members of the board. However, Larry Cash’s seat comes up for renewal in one year. Will he survive or will the governor finally take control of the board of the Alaska Permanent Fund.

The amount of this year’s Permanent Fund dividend will be announced in just a few days. It will be less than half of what Alaskans would have gotten before Governor Walker taxed them about $1,300 each to make ends meet in the State’s budget.

 

District 40 election ‘illegal’ — may be certified anyway

Division of Elections Director Josie Bahnke / screen shot of KTVA interview
Division of Elections Director Josie Bahnke / screen shot of KTVA interview.

DISASTROUS TV INTERVIEW CUT SHORT BY DIVISION DIRECTOR

Division of Elections Director Josie Bahnke struggled to answer basic questions put to her by a joint Senate and House State Affairs Committee Monday. The questions were narrowly posed and pertained solely to glaring voting irregularities in Shungnak, Chefornak, and Newtok during the Aug. 16 primary. Other voting anomalies in Buckland, Bethel, and Barrow were not brought up in the hearing.

Only in Shungnak were the irregularities so profound that they might invalidate the results and force the state to call for a new election, the committee noted. On the ballot in District 40 was Dean Westlake challenging Rep. Ben Nageak.

Both are Democrats, and Westlake holds a 21 vote lead as the public waits for verification be completed in Juneau.

While Director Bahnke stammered, shuffled papers, and nervously laughed through her answers to the committee, at least she showed up telephonically to the hearing, noted Sen. Lesil McGuire. Lieutenant Governor Byron Mallott did not appear, although ensuring fair elections is his only job in addition to guarding the state seal.

KTVA later interviewed Bahnke later, but she cut the interview short after drawing a blank on the question of how one would choose which ballots to count in a district where people had illegally voted more than one ballot and the ballots had since been commingled. She said the State will still certify the election even though it knows it was illegal.

During the two-hour committee meeting, Bahnke described the training her staff and temporary staff receives before elections but was unable to say how many workers simply choose to not receive training. That appeared to be the case in Shungnak, where the precinct leader said she had not received training for several years. Bahnke said it had been two years, but “if they don’t attend, there are no ramifications for them.”

Senator McGuire cautioned the director about certifying an election that she knows has so many provable missteps that can be directly linked to the outcome: “I encourage you to consider what your choices and options are and reach out to the Department of Law, the Department of Justice, the Attorney General, [because] there will be challenges if you don’t leave every stone unturned.”

Bahnke said she intends to certify the election by Friday but no later than Sept. 6.

In a letter to Bahnke dated Aug. 30, the chairman of the Alaska Republican Party also sent a warning shot: “The primary election of 2016, unfortunately, was subject to some critical, illegal, mistakes. These improprieties were made by numerous official precinct election clerks, but they were not your improper or illegal actions that you made personally. Now however, the buck stops with you.  If you certify that you can determine the actual winner of the House District 40 primary election for state representative, that will be…your reputation on the line.”

Babcock went further and called for a new election in District 40:

“While the numerous errors and illegal procedures are deplorable, thankfully only one election decision hangs in the balance. Who actually won the State House Democratic Primary in District 40? The voters tried, but the election was handled so poorly that now no one knows. If you cannot actually determine the winner of a primary, you must not certify the election. That would be a travesty and it would condone the repeated illegal instructions given by the official election clerks.

“This dilemma can be solved justly, simply, and properly by allowing voters in District 40 to determine the winner of the election by legal votes cast rather than a tainted improper and unknowable primary vote. There are no Republican candidates in the general election and there are no third party candidates in the general election. A legal and fair election can be held on November 8 and the voters of District 40 allowed to cast legal votes for their state representative.” – Tuckerman Babcock, Alaska Republican Party Chairman

BARROW RESIDENT DESCRIBES VOTER SUPPRESSION

Luke Welles of Barrow testified to the committee on Monday that residents in Barrow who were Republicans were denied access to the open ballot that has Alaska Independence, Libertarian and Democrats listed.

He described the frustrations and he and his wife experienced at the polls when election workers denied them ballots, saying they would have to vote a questioned ballot. They persisted and were finally allowed to vote. That problem also occurred in other parts of the state, but in District 40 it may have influenced the outcome of the close race.

The Republican Party contacted Bahnke on Election Day to report instances of voter suppression that were experienced by Republican voters in other parts of the state. Bahnke said she was aware of the problem.

ANCHORAGE RESIDENT DESCRIBES LOST VOTER REGISTRATION

Deborah Brollini testified that her son’s voter registration, completed earlier this year and documented by family photographs, was not found in the system by election workers on Aug. 16. The office of Sen. Lesil McGuire was able to locate the records and solve the problem so the  young man could vote, but Brollini said it placed a doubt in her son’s mind about the fairness of the election system.

District 40 questioned ballots: Another odd twist

Sen. Bill Stoltze
Sen. Bill Stoltze, chairman of State Affairs Committee, holds a hearing this morning on the recent primary elections.

WHERE ARE THE QUESTIONED BALLOTS THIS YEAR?

In the last four primaries, District 40 had far more questioned ballots than absentee ballots.

In fact, questioned ballots exceeded absentees by 118 percent for the four primaries before this year.

But in 2016’s primary, Aug. 16, the questioned ballot count drastically dropped — it fell to 62.8 percent, nearly half of the historical count.

This is a radical change in voting behavior, especially since there was a hotly contested race between Rep. Ben Nageak and Dean Westlake who has evidently won the battle.

Voting irregularities in District 40 and 38 have led to what may be an interesting set of explanations from the Division of Elections, which is under pressure because of over-voting, non-private voting, and strangely high numbers of proxy ballots cast.

A hearing at 10 am today may explain some of it. The hearing is scheduled to take place at the Anchorage Legislative Information Offices in Anchorage.

Documents for the hearing are now posted. The hearing will also be teleconferenced. Some of those who have been called to appear include Josie Bahnke, Division of Elections director, and Byron Mallott, lieutenant governor, who oversees elections.

Pertaining to the strange drop in questioned ballots in an election where those ballots were expected to fall toward Nageak, there are questions:

  • Did half of the questioned ballots just never show up in Nome to be counted? Were they thrown out on the spot?
  • Did widespread voter suppression take place, as we heard on Election Day, when election workers told Republicans they would have to vote a questioned ballots, which may have led them to leave in disgust?
  • In addition, is the Division of Elections saying that not a single questioned ballot for District 40 was cast outside the district, such as in Fairbanks or Anchorage? Remarkable.