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Fish and Wildlife takes 77 million acres

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Areas in the Aleutian chain that are subject to the new rule preventing predator control by the State of Alaska.
Areas in the Aleutian chain that are subject to the new rule preventing predator control by the State of Alaska. More than 77 million acres have been taken away from State predator management by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

STATE STAYS SILENT WHILE FEDS TAKE CONTROL

It’s our land, the feds say. And with the swoosh of a pen, another 77 million acres is now off limits to State of Alaska wildlife management practices.

The final ruling came yesterday from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The State remained silent as it yielded the sovereignty it was guaranteed at Statehood to federal control.

By taking management of fish and wildlife away from the State, the federal government broke another of its Statehood Act promises, and rural Alaskans lost even more access to subsistence.

The State of Alaska stood by and kicked at the dirt.

Fish and Wildlife’s action came on top of the 20 million acres already taken by the U.S. Park Service just a few months ago. In October, the Park Service overrode Alaska regulations pertaining to fish, wildlife and, specifically, to predator control. The Bureau of Land Management jumped in on the action and took yet another million acres in the Fortymile Area last month.

Nearly one hundred million acres gone from state management in six months.

The State of Alaska has fought this in the past because comprehensive management of fish and game is, quite clearly in law, a State right promised by the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act (ANILCA).

But in 2016, the State seems to have lost its will to fight the federal government on just about anything. Under the Gov. Walker Administration, the federal bureaucracy has moved in, and State sovereignty has stepped back.

Strangely, the final rule by Fish and Wildlife Service applies only to Alaska refuge land, not to other states. While the congressional delegation had asked FWS for an exemption for Alaska, what the agency instead did was make an example out of the state. Similar rules in other states will likely follow.

The Walker Administration remained mute. Why not file an injunction? Attorney General Craig Richards, who stepped down in June, said that no one had been harmed by this rule, therefore no legal action could be taken. One would need another John Sturgeon to step forward and file a lawsuit, he implied.

Another John Sturgeon will be hard to find. Most people aren’t willing, nor do they have the resources, to fight the federal government all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Brown bear sow with cub at sunrise in Kodiak Photo Credit Lisa Hupp/USFWS
Brown bear sow with cub in Kodiak. Photo, Lisa Hupp/USFWS

THIS PREDATOR, NOT THAT PREDATOR

Alaska has more than half of the wildlife refuges in the nation. When ANILCA was written, it was done so in such a way that refuges encompassed huge ecosystems. The priority, as intended by ANILCA, was to ensure that wildlife remained abundant and subsistence hunting could continue. And that management would be comprehensively run by the State of Alaska.

But under the new FWS rules, the interpretation is to prioritize preservation without human intervention. With no predator management, the equilibrium will now shift in favor of wolves, coyote, and bear. Their population will take priority over human subsistence. The State can no longer intervene to manipulate a population, such as thin a pack of coyotes so that more Dall sheep lamb will survive to reverse the currently declining sheep populations in large areas of Alaska, or thin a wolf pack to ensure more moose or caribou.

Alaska game managers know that without predator control, the moose and caribou populations will actually decrease.

The new rules say that if a population wanes for whatever reason, including too many wolves or global warming for example, the federal government will end subsistence hunting.

WHY SO SILENT, GOVERNOR WALKER?

Gov. Bill Walker
Gov. Bill Walker

Within the last six months, 100 million acres has been simply taken away from hunters by the three federal agencies: Park Service, BLM and FWS.

Alaskans expect their government to defend State’s rights. They expect a maverick like Gov. Walker to throw down the gauntlet and actually engage in civil disobedience himself to stand for State’s rights. Wally Hickel would have.

But the governor didn’t bother to beat his chest. He didn’t even shoot out a press release.

The reason Gov. Walker is silent is simple: He needs the cooperation of these very agencies to get federal permitting for the gasline he is attempting to build, which crosses vast areas of federal land. He cannot afford to irritate the Washington bureaucracy that will rule on his access.

And so, with the gasline as the No. 1 priority for Walker, Alaskan hunters and subsistence users are watching federal control encroach into the majority of our fish and game management areas, because our governor is too fearful to challenge Washington, and too obsessed with his one big plan for Alaska.

DELEGATION REACTS

Congressman Don Young issued a swift rebuke to the ruling yesterday:

“Make no mistake – the size, scope and impact of this rule is enormous. With over 76.8 million acres of wildlife refuges in Alaska – an area equaling the size of New Mexico – this unilateral power grab fundamentally alters Alaska’s authority to manage wildlife across all areas of our state.

“Not only does this rule undermine promises made in the Alaska Statehood Compact, it violates the law by ignoring provisions Senator Stevens and I secured within the Alaska National Interest Lands Claims Act (ANILCA) to protect Alaska’s sovereignty and management authority.

“This newest attempt to exert federal authority over Alaska has not gone unchallenged and I will continue to work every angle in Congress to strike this rule, and a similar proposal by the National Park Service, from the federal register. If this rule is allowed to stand, we could see an opening for future jurisdictional takings by the federal government – transforming a cooperative relationship between Alaska and the Fish and Wildlife Service to one of servitude.”

Senator Lisa Murkowski weighed in:

“The Fish and Wildlife Service has once again decided that it knows what is best for us, and is trampling Alaska’s long-standing right to manage wildlife in refuges,” Murkowski said. “What we know, from experience, is that this will not end well for anything but predator populations. I find it shocking that this administration’s policies are pointing to a future where we can fill our freezers with genetically engineered salmon, but not the moose and other game we have traditionally harvested in a sustainable manner from our refuges.”

“The FWS rule was accompanied by an unusual opinion piece written by Director Dan Ashe, which attempts to make a case for the new rule but does not contain a single statistic to demonstrate that state wildlife management practices are ineffective. The piece is titled ‘Keep Public Lands Public—And The Wildlife They Protect!’ – which is ironic, as the agency initially sought to extend the maximum length of temporary closures from 12 months to three years, and in its final rule extended the maximum length of emergency closures.”

Earlier this year, Sen. Dan Sullivan described the rule change this way, as he introduced an amendment to try to block the takeover:

“These proposed regulations, as currently written by the Fish and Wildlife Service, would fundamentally alter not only how we now manage wildlife refuges and the Fish and Wildlife habitats on them. [They] will also change the relationship between Fish and Wildlife and individual states from one of cooperation – which it should be – to subservience.”

The final rule will be available for public inspection today, August 4, and will publish in the federal register Friday, FWS will post the website links. Here the draft final rule, which goes into effect on Sept. 6.

Uh-oh: LNG heading for China from Louisiana

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The first LNG tanker transits the expanded Panama Canal last week, heading for China.

HOW WILL THIS IMPACT ALASKA’S LNG MARKET?

As Alaska ponders the quickly changing global market for liquified natural gas (LNG), Asia has always been the obvious customer.

Alaska has a geographic advantage with its direct shipping routes to Japan and its steady, uninterrupted supply to that island nation for decades. The relationship with Japan remains strong, and Japan’s energy requirements are steady.

But nearby China is the big prize, and that prize is being claimed early by Cheniere Energy. Last week, a ship loaded with LNG exited the newly expanded Panama Canal and headed for China.

Shell’s Maran Gas Apollonia loaded up at the Sabine Pass LNG plant on the Gulf Coast of Louisiana early last week and by Friday had  transited Panama. Shell does not publicize where its ships are bound. The industry, however, has determined the destination is China and according to real-time maritime tracking software, that’s in the neighborhood.

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The expanded Panama Canal reduces transit time from the Gulf Coast from 16,000 miles to 9,000 miles. For comparison, Nikiski, Alaska to Japan is about 3,000 miles.

Sabine Pass, a Cheniere property, has been exporting from its first terminal since February to South America, India, the Middle East and Europe. But the game is changing with Panama.
A surge in U.S. gas production from shale in the Lower 48 has prompted massive investments in export terminals on the Gulf Coast. Sabine Pass, for example, is expected to start shipping from its new second terminal this month.

ALASKA’S NATURAL GAS CHIEF’S CONNECTION

The Alaska Gasline Development Corp. recently hired an expert in Gulf Coast exports, and that may turn out to be a big advantage to Alaska’s understanding of global trends.
Keith Meyer was previously the president of Cheniere LNG, where he headed up the development of the Sabine Pass receiving terminal.  He also was president of LNG America, a natural gas logistics company he founded.
AGDC, over which he is now president, carries the State of Alaska’s interest in a hoped-for natural gas project that would ship 20 million tonne per year to Asian markets from Prudhoe Bay via an 800-mile line. It’s the largest project in North American history.
The controversial project is completing its preliminary front-end engineering (pre-FEED) phase this year and will face a decision point about  moving forward. The pre-FEED work has been managed by ExxonMobil and will provide a new cost estimate, which is expected to be higher than the initial $50 billion projected price. Observers speculate that Gov. Bill Walker is positioning the agency to take over the lead position in the project and turn the gasline into a state-owned and state-run entity.
If the project proceeds, the next step would be the full engineering of the project, which could cost as much as $2 billion. The private sector partners in the project — ExxonMobil, BP and ConocoPhillips — have indicated they may not be ready to move ahead now, because of the long-term economics of the project don’t pencil out due to competition and lower gas prices.
Exxon reported a 59 percent decline in profit for the second quarter, while CP reported a loss of close to $1 billion.
Companies are repositioning themselves for a long-term period of low prices, making decisions based on that assumption.
And that’s where the new Sabine Pass terminals in Louisiana factor in, along with the expanded Panama Canal. This is a major sea change for Alaska LNG.

Bright, shiny objects: Public Assistance office closes

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FLOODING CLOSES OFFICES…INDEFINITELY

As of Aug. 1, the Muldoon Office of Public Assistance at the Muldoon Mall in Anchorage, has been closed until further notice. The closure notice went up on the Alaska.gov web site today, but no explanation was given and the phone message gave no clues.

The offices were closed last week due to flooding and clients were referred to the Gambell Street offices at 400 Gamble Street and at the Frontier Building, at 3601 C Street.  The statewide toll-free line is  1-877-326-5551.

Treasury warrant that purchased Alaska from Russia.
Treasury warrant that purchased Alaska from Russia.

THE CHECK WAS GOOD

We can’t let the day pass without noting the check signed Aug. 1, 1868 for $7.2 million for the purchase of Alaska from Russia. On July 7, 1958, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed the Alaska Statehood Act, allowing Alaska to become the 49th US state. But the land had been purchased nearly a century before.

In 1866, the Russian government offered to sell the territory of Alaska to the United States. The deal was struck the following year and for 2 cents an acre, the United States grew by 600,000 square miles.

ALASKA AIRLINES PASSENGERS GET ANOTHER RARE SIGHT

Earlier this year, passengers on an Alaska Airlines flight to Hawaii were treated to seeing a solar eclipse. The airlines shifted its path and even its departure time so passengers could see that once-in-a-lifetime astronomical event.

But this may top it. Today, the Blue Angels Navy flying crew sought and got permission to descend to 28,000ft so that passengers aboard Alaska Airlines Flight 80 could see them refueling mid air as they headed down to Seattle for Seafair. The video is here. Better than Board Room privileges.

 

 

Marijuana Control Board member dumped by Walker

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BRUCE SCHULTE SHOWN THE DOOR

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Bruce Schulte, commercial pilot, architect, stand-up comedian and now-former member of the Marijuana Control Board.

Republican activist, pilot, and marijuana legalization advocate Bruce Schulte received his pink slip from Gov. Bill Walker on Friday.

Schulte is not only no longer the chair of the Marijuana Control Board — he was voted out of that seat a couple of months back; now he’s off the board altogether.

Schulte was appointed to the board by Gov. Walker a year ago, and serves in a seat reserved for someone intending to go into the business. As a professional pilot, he doesn’t use marijuana, but he’s thought it would be a great business opportunity and he has been making plans for starting a retail store.

Now, with his departure from the board, he’s not so sure. He doesn’t think he’d ever be able to get a license in the political climate of the day.

“The governor has decided that voters be damned. They’re going to slow-roll the regulations until next year when the governor can propose legislation to repeal legalized marijuana operations. They’ve already tried to delay implementation by six months,” said Schulte. “The board interceded and kept that from happening. Then they tried to give the executive director more control over the board to prevent implementation. Then they got rid of me.”

Asked his advice to those who are preparing to start commercial operations in Alaska, Schulte said: “My advice would be to save your money. Put your money someonewer else, because you cannot trust this administration.”

Schulte’s open position was posted today at the governor’s Boards and Commissions home page. The appointment by the governor requires legislative confirmation.

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New board chairman Peter Mlynarik, who is Soldotna’s chief of police, has been actively working to get signatures on a petition that would put a commercial marijuana prohibition on the borough’s fall ballot.

While he has been working to ban pot on the peninsula, Schulte has been working on starting a commercial operation.

Several localities including the Mat-Su Borough, Wasilla and Palmer have already opted out of commericalized pot. The Kenai Peninsula ban would only pertain to areas outside of city limits.

Alaska Business Report Card

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The Alaska Business Report Card released its annual grades publicly today. Lawmakers received them on Friday. Here are how legislators scored:

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The report is issued every two years. At the beginning of each session, legislators receive notification about what issues they will be graded on by the consortium. Grades are then given based on a broad range of legislation that affects Alaska businesses and the economy.

The project is a combined effort of the Resource Development Council, Prosperity Alaska, Alaska Support Industry Alliance and the Alaska Chamber of Commerce.

According to the news release by the group, the ABRC was formed in 2010 in an effort to inform the participating organizations’ member companies, who employ tens of thousands of Alaskans, on how elected officials are performing to ensure Alaska remains an attractive place for private sector investment, jobs and economic growth.”

For more information, visit alaskabusinessreportcard.com.

Governor targets Nageak through surrogate hit squad

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BELOVED LEGISLATOR OPPOSED BY WALKER & COMPANY

Rep. Ben Nageak
Robin Brena

Lawyer Robin Brena is hosting a fundraiser tonight to raise cash to replace Reps. Benjamin Piniqluk Nageak, D-Barrow, and  Bob Herron, D-Bethel, with two more malleable Democrats.

To be clear, this is Gov. Walker going after Nageak through his close longtime Anchorage law associate Brena, and the Democrats.

Brena would not be doing this without the governor’s approval.

Just as Republicans are targeting Rep. Jim Colver for being too complicit with Democrats, Democrats have found two among their herd who are unacceptable.

Except in the case of the Republicans, the entire party held a vote. 100 percent of the leaders and bonus voters from every district in the state decided Colver was simply a bad actor.

The Democrats went through no such process. Their targets were decided at the top.

Here we have a governor and his Democrat cronies going after an Alaska Native because he’s not toeing their line and hauling their Democratic water.

They claim they want a bipartisan coalition, but refuse to admit there already is such a thing. What the leading Democrats don’t like is that Herron and Nageak are part of the bipartisan coalition, whereas Reps. Chris Tuck and Les Gara are not.

Make no mistake, this is about power. Nageak is chair of the powerful House Natural Resources Committee.

Brena, you’ll recall, is a close legal associate of Gov. Bill Walker. So close, that when Walker was forced to drop his lawsuit against the State over the Point Thomson settlement with Exxon, he simply transferred it over to Brena.

Brena, who eventually dropped the lawsuit, was also the oil and gas director on Walker’s transition team in 2014-2015. He was part of the leadership of the Governor’s Tax Camp in Fairbanks in June, 2015.

Brena bought Bill Walker’s firm for an amount that Walker did not disclose fully when Walker became the “nonpartisan” governor.

The governor’s anti-Nageak fundraiser is cohosted by: Mark Begich, Casey Steinau (chair of Alaska Democrats), Kay Brown (executive director, Alaska Democrats), Stephen Blanchett, Colin McDonald, Agatha Erickson, Kate Consenstein, Chris Tuck (Democratic House minority leader), and these Democratic legislators: Les Gara, Andy Josephson, Harriet Drummond, Geran Tarr, Sam Kito, Adam Wool, Scott Kawasaki, and Ivy Spohnholz. The cohosts include union reps. Joelle Hall, Tom Wescott, Joey Merrick, plus names you’ll recognize from their Begich connections: Forrest Dunbar, Eric Croft, David Ramsuer, Susanne Fleek, Schawna Thoma, and Elvi Gray-Jackson.

Democrat Les Gara, wrote this: “These are CLOSE elections and GREAT candidates. Busy? Then please HELP ON-LINE – websites below. Whether you’re from rural or urban Alaska, we are all in this together. A better legislature helps us all! I’m joining friends from Western Alaska and Northwest Alaska to help.”

Evidently we’re not ALL in this together.

Nageak is the most beloved sitting legislator and being targeted by his fellow Democrats who prefer to eat their elders.

And the “GREAT” guy they are putting up against Nageak? We checked his Courtview record and it’s not pretty. Not pretty at all.

DEMOCRATS PULL SWITCHAROO:  The Democrats are also going after Bob Herron, the Marine Corps veteran who has served the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta region. Herron’s campaign is largely self-funded.

His challenger, Democrat Zachary Fansler, raised nearly all of his money from the Alaska Democratic Party (Anchorage).

Bob Herron is a life-long Democrat.

Zach Fansler, however, switched to being a Democrat so he could run against Herron.

Colver caught partying while others work

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Jim Colver partying in Nome during regular session.
Jim Colver partying in Nome during regular session.

INCUMBENT IN THE MIDDLE IN NOME DURING REGULAR SESSION

In March, a lot of work was being done by legislators at the Capitol in Juneau. It was the middle of session, with a month to go, and a budget crisis was looming. House and Senate had produced their budgets and were now tackling other big items pertaining to revenues.

SB 128, the restructuring of the Permanent Fund, was being heard in committee; the bill affected every Alaskan. Negotiations were under way on oil and gas tax credits. HB 156, protecting parents’ rights in education, was up in the Education Committee.

But the guy pictured above with the horrible attendance record was partying in Nome.

Jim Colver, representative from District 9, was at the Iditarod Sled Dog Race finish line, and from the social media pictures out there, he was having a ball, missing important work in the Education Committee and Labor and Commerce Committee that week, all for the thrill of the chase.

This past session, Must Read was able to document at least 12 instances where Colver was gone missing or straggled into House floor sessions looking like he’d been out riding the range. His attendance record earns him the fifth worst in the House; the others had either health crises or family deaths that took them away.

The photo above, and others we uncovered from the weekend away, are unusual, in that Colver is typically more careful about covering his tracks. Although there are plenty of anecdotes about him in the Capitol leaning in a bit too close to young female aides, the most family-friendly description that we can repeat is that he is simply a one-man mood ring. He runs hot and cold — hot on the trail of some things at the Capitol, but cold when it comes to helping his fellow Valley Republicans.

In fact, he’s the king of sandbags — he is known for ambushing his fellow Republicans on their legislation, not in committee, but after

Right now, his mood is cold. He’s attacking one of his constituents who has the nerve to challenge him for his seat. The race for House District 9 is turning out to be a political scuffle in front, and a brawl in the back as Colver looks for a way to remain in power.

POLLS, SURVEYS, MUSK OX

In a recent straw poll by the Mat-Su Business Alliance, challenger and outsider George Rauscher prevailed strongly over Colver, with Rauscher winning the debate forum 34 to Colver’s 7.

That’s about it for polls on this race. As far as anyone can tell, there are no official surveys being done in the area because the district is extremely difficult to poll, stretching from Palmer-Fishhook precinct all the way to Valdez and Whittier.

But from the material that Colver is producing, he may have his own Big Labor-produced poll, and he’s worried. The evidence he thinks this district is slipping from his fingers is that he’s gone to the extent of naming his opponent in his literature hitting the mailboxes now — a rarity for an incumbent.

Colver this week is pushing his name as the true conservative, while social media has him pegged as the leading liberal in the Musk Ox Caucus.

The other members of the caucus represent fairly liberal districts, but Colver represents what is arguably the most conservative district in the state, making him the anomaly among the musk ox.

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Bryce Edgmon (D-District 37) Neal Foster (D-District 39) Cathy Munoz (R-District 34) Gabrielle LeDoux (R-District 15) Louise Stutes (R-District 32) Jim Colver (R- District 9) Paul Seaton (R- District 31)

Sex ed: HB 156 protects parents’ rights

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GOVERNOR OPTS FOR ‘NO ACTION PLAN’ ON HB 156

Governor Bill Walker made what for his partisan administration is a painful decision today. But he made the right decision, even following the No Action Plan that he accuses the Legislature of doing.

He allowed to go into law without his signature a bill that prevents groups like Planned Parenthood from being allowed to control school curriculum without the prior knowledge and approval of the local school board.

HB 156 is: “An Act relating to a parent’s right to direct the education of a child; relating to the duties of the state Board of Education and Early Development, the Department of Education and Early Development, school boards, and school districts; relating to public school curriculum and assessments; relating to compliance with federal education laws; relating to public school accountability; relating to a statewide assessment plan and review of education laws and regulations; repealing the minimum expenditure for instruction for school districts: relating to sex education, human reproduction education, and human sexuality education; relating to suicide awareness and prevention training; relating to contracts for student assessments; relating to questionnaires and surveys administered in public schools; relating to physical examinations for teachers.”

This bill catapults Alaska to the forefront of the parental rights movement in this country, said Sen. Mike Dunleavy. Parents can now remove their children from classrooms if they object to the specific curriculum being taught — and that is an important right, unless you want to relinquish all your authority as a parent and put your trust in Planned Parenthood.

The teaching of sexual content allows the public education system to develop a child’s attitudes, values, norms, and beliefs about sexuality. For many parents, that’s something they don’t want Planned Parenthood anywhere near.

HB 156 is a significant bill. Its sponsors, including Reps. Wes Keller, Lynn Gattis, Tammie Wilson, Lora Reinbold, and Sens. Mike Dunleavy and Peter Micciche, get the credit for fighting for parents’ rights, not the rights of a special interest group.

Planned Parenthood will probably sue, but the group has no real grounds. The new law simply requires that the organization — and other organizations — enter the school curriculum through the front door, in the light of day and with the guidance of locally elected school board members, rather than having health teachers kick open the back door and allow this controversial group — or any other special interest group — to take over their classroom for hours at a time.

Although Gov. Walker weaseled out of signing the bill, at least he did not block it. We need to give him credit for protecting parents, even while his progressive loyalists shrieked in opposition.

Addictions: Sen. Sullivan champions the battle

Screen Shot 2016-07-28 at 3.45.25 PM ALASKA-SIZED PROBLEM WITH OPIOID ADDICTION

U.S. Senator Dan Sullivan was a champion for women when he was Alaska’s Attorney General, a solid supporter of the Choose Respect campaign against domestic violence.

He was a champion for resource development as Alaska’s commissioner of the Department of Natural Resources.

Now, as a U.S. senator, he’s joined the battle against opioid addiction. And what a battle it is. Alaska paces national trends in that heroin overdose deaths have continued to increase steadily every year since 2010 and are now ten-fold from 2010.

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As Sullivan tells it, last fall a group of Alaskans gathered in his office and told him their personal stories of addiction. As they spoke of the pain and suffering that opioids had caused in their lives and in their families, “there was not a dry eye in the room.”

Sullivan decided to take what action he could to help them and the thousands of other Alaskans who are enslaved by addiction. Next week, he will convene his first summit since taking office, and the focus is on Wellness — helping Alaskans conquer opioid and heroin addiction.

SPEAKERS INCLUDE SURGEON GENERAL

The conference is open to all — caretakers, medical professionals, family members, friends, neighbors, or those in recovery.

Surgeon General Vivek H. Murthy
Surgeon General Vivek H. Murthy

Sullivan is bringing in U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Deputy Secretary Mary Wakefield as the keynote speaker. 

The U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy is also attending, as part of his tour of the nation to meet with doctors and talk about the role that opioid prescriptions are playing in the epidemic of addiction.

Dr. Jennifer Lee, Veterans Health Administration Deputy Undersecretary for Health Policy and Services, and Dr. Karen Drexler, VHA Acting National Mental Health Program Director for Addictive Disorders will bring the focus to veterans and their families.

“I am committed to focusing our time together at the summit to produce tangible solutions that the attending federal officials and I can take back to DC,” Sullivan said. 

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 In 2012, Alaska’s prescription opioid pain reliever overdose death rate was more than double the rate in the United States, while heroin deaths were more than 50 percent higher than the national rate.
Do conferences help? Not exactly. But government does have a role to play in public health, and this is one of the growing public health crises of our state, driving problems of violence, homelessness, and crime.
Tackle it through public health efforts, or Alaska will have to absorb the repurcussions through the criminal justice system. The Wellness Summit is the start we need with the leadership this problem deserves.