Friday, November 14, 2025
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Dunleavy proposes state royalty revision to incentivize Cook Inlet gas investment

Could a lower royalty structure attract more private investment back to Cook Inlet for gas production?

Today, Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy proposed to find that out, with the announcement of legislation that would make investment more attractive to a gas field that is proven, and has been productive since just after Statehood.

“Royalty is the main economic lever DNR can adjust in the Cook Inlet Basin to incentivize new activity and increase energy security. Royalty drives economics, and economics drive projects,” explained Department of Natural Resources Commissioner John Boyle.

Cook Inlet gas royalties averaged just 3.6% of state royalty income from FY13-22. In FY22, that amounted to $45.2 million, the governor’s office said. Royalties from this existing production will not be reduced by the proposal, and it will only apply to new pools and fields that are brought online and are not currently generating royalties for the State.

“Given the looming energy supply gap for Railbelt utilities and the level of production under the current regulatory environment, the Governor’s proposal is squarely aligned with the Alaska Constitution’s mandate to develop state resources for maximum use consistent with the public interest,” Commissioner of Revenue Adam Crum said.

The bill will be introduced at the beginning of the 2024 legislative session. If passed, new drilling and development activities would be incentivized immediately and new production from onshore could be realized shortly thereafter. Offshore developments may take several years to come online with the new terms. With the potential to unlock hundreds of additional billions of cubic feet of gas, these new supplies alone could meet our Railbelt’s annual demand of approximately 70 billion cubic feet for several years. 

These volumes will supplement the significant volumes of gas that are already under contract for the next decade. 

The Dunleavy Administration will also be rolling out other energy related initiatives across the state that will lower the cost and increase the stability of energy for Alaskans for both the short term and for years to come, his office said.

Anchorage murder suspect arrested in Wasilla

Alaska State Troopers responded to the area of Joes Drive for a verbal disturbance after 1 am on Thursday. Upon arrival, troopers identified one of the involved individuals as Jesse Lee Jones, who was a wanted man in the killing of Josiah Goecker in Anchorage.

Jones had been on the lam for two days after reportedly killing Goecker, who was reportedly trying to protect a woman who was under assault.

Jones was arrested without incident and handed over to APD. On his voter registration, Jones lists a motel at 3rd and Concrete Street in Anchorage as his home address.

Anchorage police transported Jones to the Anchorage Police Department for questioning by detectives. Once that process has been completed, Jones will be remanded at the Anchorage Jail on his warrant, the department reported on Thursday morning.

The Orwellian use of ‘geofencing’ by government snoopers

By MAGGIE MCFARLAND PHILLIPS

As worshippers gathered at the Calvary Chapel in 2020, they were being watched from above.  

Satellites were locking in on cell phones owned by members of the nondenominational Protestant church in San Jose, Calif. Their location eventually worked its way to a private company, which then sold the information to the government of Santa Clara County.

This data, along with observations from enforcement officers on the ground, was used to levy heavy fines against the church for violating Covid-19 restrictions regarding public gatherings.            

“Every Sunday,” Calvary’s assistant pastor, Carson Atherly, would later testify, the officers “would serve me a notice of violation during or after church service.”

Calvary is suing the county for its use of location data, a controversial tool increasingly deployed by governments at all levels – notably in relation to the U.S. Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021.

While enabling law enforcement to more easily identify potential offenders, the practice, called “geofencing,” has also emerged as a cutting-edge privacy issue, raising constitutional issues involving warrantless searches and, with Calvary Chapel, religious liberty.

“We are in the space between the emergence of this technological practice and courts having ruled on its constitutionality,” said Alex Marthews, national chair for Restore the 4th, a nonprofit organization dedicated to the protection of the Fourth Amendment, which protects Americans’ rights against “unreasonable search and seizure.” 

“Geofencing” often begins with an innocent click. Smartphone apps ask if they can access location to improve service. When users say they yes, they often don’t realize that the apps that help them drive, cook, or pray are likely reselling their information to far-flung for-profit entities. This and other information detailing people’s behaviors and preferences is valuable for businesses trying to target customers. The global location intelligence market was estimated at $16 billion last year, according to Grand View Research.

While it is legal for private companies to broker this information, constitutional questions arise when government accesses data from a third party that it would be prohibited from collecting on its own. The lawsuit filed by Calvary Chapel argues that Santa Clara County carried out a warrantless surveillance of the church when it acquired information in 2020 on the church’s foot-traffic patterns for analysis by a research team from Stanford University. Court documents show the researchers acquired the information, which originated with Google Maps, from the location data company SafeGraph, which Calvary is also suing. 

Geofencing allows users to build a fence around certain areas or points-of-interest such as Calvary Chapel or the area near the Capitol on Jan. 6 and see when people entered that space.

It is becoming routine for law enforcement agencies to use warrants to require companies like Google to hand over location data that may be connected to criminal activity. 

Rep. Jim Jordan recently wrote a letter to Attorney General Merrick Garland saying, “The use of geofence warrants raises serious Constitutional concerns.” Privacy advocates and a bipartisan group of legislators say that acquisition of such information without a warrant presents a troubling and relatively new constitutional dilemma.

Data brokers, including SafeGraph, insist that their information is anonymized. But it is precisely the lack of specificity that worries critics. “There’s no particular individual who the government is suspicious of,” Adam Schwartz of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, told RealClearInvestigations. “It’s a dragnet.”

Moreover, there is no guarantee that the data collected through geofencing stays anonymous. “It is often very easy to take supposedly de-identified data and re-identify a person,” said Schwartz, “And it’s very, very easy to do that with location data.”

At Calvary Chapel, for example, in-person surveillance conducted by the county, as well as numerous in-person depositions of Chapel members and employees during the previous legal contretemps between the county and the church that began in 2020, would have provided local officials with detailed knowledge of who was on the premises, and when.

In any event, critics say, law enforcement’s use of geofencing – even when it is backed by a warrant – violates the Fourth Amendment.

Geofencing proponents argue that it falls under the “administrative search” exception to the Fourth Amendment, which lets regulatory enforcement personnel conduct warrantless searches when the greater good is at issue (i.e., police sobriety checkpoints, airport TSA scans).

In their complaint, Calvary Chapel attorneys assert that the county is arguing in effect “that, as long as they call it research, any level of government can target and spy on any individual or group at any time for any duration and, if they so choose, they can wield the collected data against said individuals or groups who oppose their orders.”

Pushback is mounting against the sharing of location data. In a 2022 letter to Congress, numerous privacy and civil liberties groups petitioned for committee hearings on a bill called the Fourth Amendment is Not For Sale Act. The bill, which has a companion in the Senate introduced in 2021, would prohibit warrantless government purchases of cell phone location data from third party brokers. It passed unanimously through the House Judiciary Committee, 30-0, this past July, and awaits full review by the House. 

This article was adapted from a RealClearInvestigations article published Sept. 26.

Facts on ‘Geofencing’

Linda Boyle: Miss the Alaska Covid Alliance event? Videos are now posted

By LINDA BOYLE

When we held the Alaska Covid Alliance event on Oct. 13-14, many who were unable to attend asked if videos would be available.  

The answer is “Yes”, they are now available on our website, www.AlaskaCovidAlliance.com.  Here is the link to the videos.   

The even better news is they are available to you for free, because we believe this information is so important for all to be able to see and read.  

There is a wealth of information about the “vaccine,” the things the government kept from you, how to treat long Covid and vax Covid, what to do about blood clots caused by both Covid and the vaccines.

Additionally, there is lots of information on how to protect you and your family in the future as government agencies push more propaganda concerning the importance of an ineffective “vaccine” to save grandma.  

Even more importantly is the information about the World Health Organization, what it wants to do, and what other elitists are up to that will dramatically affect your way of life, your personal freedom, and your government’s sovereignty.    

Our Founding Fathers were not perfect. They had their prejudices, their own opinions, there own desires for what should be included or not included in the Constitution. But they found a way to write something that still has the guiding principles for us today. 

Ben Franklin was asked by some citizens after the signing of the constitution what kind of government was created. Franklin responded that it was, “A republic, if you can keep it.” 

That seems to be the struggle still today.  We need to remind our politicians and our elected officials that this form of government isn’t just created or founded by consent of the people—it is dependent on active and “informed involvement of the people for their continued good health”. 

This reality weighs heavily today.  Many at the highest levels of our government and their wealthy donors wish to create their version of utopia.  

So, stay informed on your healthcare and listen to medical experts on the Covid experience.  Hear both sides of the argument and make the best decision for you and your family.  

Be informed concerning the World Health Organization (WHO) and what the elitists have planned for your future.

Linda Boyle, RN, MSN, DM, was formerly the chief nurse for the 3rd Medical Group, JBER, and was the interim director of the Alaska VA. Most recently, she served as Director for Central Alabama VA Healthcare System. She is the director of the Alaska Covid Alliance.

Alaska Airlines had lowest percentage of flight cancellations in August

Alaska Airlines was the best among all lUS airlines for flight completions in August. According to the Department of Transportation, just 0.4% of Alaska Airlines’ flights were canceled. For on-time arrivals, Alaska Airlines had an impressive 80.6% on-time arrival rate, rating third after Hawaiian and Delta.

For all airlines, the first eight months of the year was good for low numbers of canceled flights: From January through August, 1.7% of flights had been canceled, far below the 3.0% cancellation rate for the first eight months of last year and the 2.3% cancellation rate for first eight months of pre-pandemic 2019.

Highest Marketing Carrier On-Time Arrival Rates August 2023

  1. Hawaiian Airlines – 82.1%
  2. Delta Air Lines Network – 81.3%
  3. Alaska Airlines Network – 80.6% 

Lowest Marketing Carrier On-Time Arrival Rates August 2023

  1. JetBlue Airways – 61.6%
  2. Frontier Airlines – 62.1%
  3. Spirit Airlines – 65.6%

August 2023 Flight Cancellations

In August 2023, reporting marketing carriers canceled 1.5% of their scheduled domestic flights, lower than the rate 2.5% in both July 2023 and in 2.5% in August 2022. The year-to-date cancellation rate for 2023 is 1.7%.

Lowest Marketing Carrier Rates of Canceled Flights August 2023

  1. Alaska Airlines Network – 0.4%  
  2. Allegiant Air – 1.0%   
  3. United Airlines Network – 1.1%    

Highest Marketing Carrier Rates of Canceled Flights August 2023

  1. Frontier Airlines – 5.0%    
  2. JetBlue Airways – 2.9%    
  3. Southwest Airlines – 1.6%    

Downing: Generation Blubber — good times create weak men

By SUZANNE DOWNING

As the remnants of the Greatest Generation fade into the annals of history and Baby Boomers grapple with a transforming economy sucking their fixed incomes dry, the fate of America lies in the hands of the younger generations — the Gen Xers and Millennials who will lead, and the younger generations behind them who we would hope will be patriotic enough to deter the enemies of freedom.

The state of the nation, and indeed our world, is fraught with uncertainty as geopolitical tensions rise in Ukraine, Russia, Israel, and the Middle East in general, and as internal challenges grow.

While the external threats are well-documented, an internal crisis is taking hold: the poor physical and mental health of our youth.

Enter “Generation Blubber” – a label that may sound mocking, but the reality it describes is far from a jest. It’s epidemic.

Fat is so fashionable that we celebrate Fat Bear Week, and fat models who cannot see their toes. Commercials celebrate this epidemic in America by pretending that folds upon folds of adipose tissue is normal and even desirable.

The CDC paints a startling picture: One in three young Americans, between the ages of 17 and 24, are too obese to serve in the military. Some 20% of all children are categorized as obese by the Centers for Disease Control. Never before in documented history have we witnessed a generation so physically compromised by their own excesses.

But the challenges are not solely physical. The mental health crisis gripping this generation is perhaps even more concerning. Data from the Department of Health and Human Services suggests that nearly 50% of our nation’s adolescents have had a mental health disorder at some point in their lives.

The mental disorders are evident in the rising number of youths who believe they were born in the wrong body or assigned the wrong gender. These figures don’t merely indicate personal struggles; they highlight a broader societal shift backward in the acceptance of actual science.

The concern is twofold: Not only are the youth facing internal battles with physical and mental health, they are set against an external backdrop of a world in chaos. From ongoing wars to the unmet recruiting goals of our military, it’s a combination that might render America vulnerable in the eyes of our adversaries.

Historically, this isn’t the first time alarm bells have been sounded over the physical condition of American youth. Following WWII, the advent of mechanization and automation prompted a decrease in physically intensive work. This shift was so pronounced that President Dwight D. Eisenhower felt compelled to establish the President’s Council on Youth Fitness in 1956.

President Kennedy continued this push, noting in his article, “The Soft American,” the comparative physical decline of American youth against their European counterparts. 

“The first indication of a decline in the physical strength and ability of young Americans became apparent among United States soldiers in the early stages of the Korean War,” Kennedy wrote. “The second came when figures were released showing that almost one out of every two young Americans was being rejected by Selective Service as mentally, morally or physically unfit.”

But the most startling demonstration of the general physical decline of American youth, Kennedy wrote, came with a 15-year study at the Posture Clinic of New York’s Columbia-Presbyterian Hospital. 

“The findings showed that despite our unparalleled standard of living, despite our good food and our many playgrounds, despite our emphasis on school athletics, American youth lagged far behind Europeans in physical fitness. Six tests for muscular strength and flexibility were given; 57.9% of the American children failed one or more of these tests, while only 8.7% of the European youngsters failed,” Kennedy wrote.

The digital age has further exacerbated it. The combination of an automated workforce and the seductive pull of screen-based entertainment means today’s youth lead increasingly sedentary lives.

Yet, the military’s response has been puzzling. Instead of emphasizing the need for fitness, the standards have been lowered and waivers introduced. This isn’t just a concern for the military; it’s a concern for the nation’s overall health and resilience.

The cyclical nature of societal strength, as outlined by G. Michael Hopf, is particularly apt: “Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.” 

As we enter the “weak men create hard times” phase, it’s crucial to reflect on how we reached here and how we can pivot for the better.

Our nation’s leaders must recognize and address the intertwined challenges of physical and mental health and make a hard turn before hard times set in. While we cannot halt the march of progress and automation, we can invest and ensure our youth are equipped – mentally, physically, and emotionally – to lead, to defend, to protect, and to restore our nation as a mighty beacon of freedom. 

Suzanne Downing is publisher of Must Read Alaska.

Tim Barto: Art Chance’s fond farewell

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By TIM BARTO

Funeral services were held for Art Chance on Oct. 25 for a collection of family, friends, and admirers. It included some great stories and even a violin solo by one of his neighbors. 

 I didn’t know Art well, but I enjoyed reading his columns in Must Read Alaska. He didn’t mince words; just the opposite, actually. Art called it how he saw it, and he called people how he saw them, even – especially – when those people were in positions of power and influence.

Tyler Andrews, Art’s friend for over 28 years, gave a great eulogy full of stories and humor that touched on the many facets of Art’s life.

Art was asked by Suzanne Downing to write theater reviews, a rather niche market. It didn’t contain him for very long though, as he ventured into commentary on all matter of topics, many dealing with labor issues, union tyranny, and government incompetency, but it was rather symbolic of the wide range of interests and talents Art possessed. 

In addition to being a theater buff, Art was a Civil War historian, which the Georgia native often referred to by other names, the politest of which, according to Tyler, was “The War Between The States.” Evidently, once he got to talking details of “The War of Northern Aggression” (a term I learned from another native Georgian), it was impossible to get Art to stop, such was his knowledge and passion about the topic.

But Civil War knowledge was just a hobby. To earn money, Art’s job titles included leather clothing business owner, truck driver, general contractor, clothing salesman, janitor, farmer, union foreman, writer, policy advisor, and Director of Labor Relations.

In his spare time, he raised a family, grew roses, built models, played clarinet in a marching band and symphony, and prepared extraordinary dinners accompanied by copious bottles of wine. When Art first moved to Alaska, he and his young family lived in a trailer park in Muldoon. 

What a fascinating guy.  

He even liked baseball, making mention of the game and his hometown Atlanta Braves in his Must Read Alaska columns, and it was because of the game that I got to know him a little bit. Following one of my baseball-related columns, I received a note from Art, stating how much he liked it and suggesting I write some more on the topic. Receiving a comment like that from a writer like Art Chance was quite a compliment.  

Art Chance epitomized the Alaska experience. He lived a full life — not a perfect one by any means, but a full one. There was mutual hatred between him and the Left. He was smart, fearless, opinionated, loving, irascible, and fun.

Tim Barto is Vice President of Alaska Family council. He is also proud to hold the title of Senior Contributor to Must Read Alaska, because the first person to earn that title was Art Chance. 

Win Gruening: After the election, where do we go from here, Juneau?

By WIN GRUENING

The dust has finally settled on Juneau’s recent municipal election and there’s an expectation that the Assembly will start conducting its business more transparently and begin re-examining its priorities.

With the new Juneau city hall initiative suffering its second electoral setback in two years, it’s time to go back to the drawing board. Some project proponents blame its defeat on a public misunderstanding of the ostensible benefits advanced by city leaders, but that excuse doesn’t hold water. Voters evaluated more than enough information to make their decision on the project merits.

Even after the Assembly authorized $16 million in up-front funding and expended $50,000, to “educate” voters, The city hall initiative received fewer “Yes” votes and failed by a larger margin than in the 2022 election. 

It was a doomed effort from the start. It’s past time to re-think the cost, location, and need for a facility of this size.

The public rebuke of the new city hall should signal to the Juneau Assembly that their other mega-project priority, an expanded arts and culture center, now combined with a revamp of Centennial Hall and dubbed the Capital Civic Center, may be in trouble. $17 million has been appropriated to date even though no one knows the final cost or the extent of the required annual subsidy. Several years ago the price tag was estimated at $75 million. Who knows how much more it will cost now?

It’s interesting to note that while Capital Civic Center boosters maintain that such a grand facility is needed, a recent weekend in Juneau tells a different story. Three very large downtown public events were held simultaneously on a Saturday night at Centennial Hall, Juneau Arts & Culture Center, and at the State Library and Museum.

While those three major events were happening, Juneau’s Crystal Saloon was entertaining yet another audience…and in the Valley, Juneau’s Moose Lodge and Women of the Moose held a fundraiser auction.

Juneau certainly seems to have facilities that can host large, medium and small events.

Even more telling is the trend of cultural performances being staged in smaller Juneau neighborhood venues instead of larger auditoriums.

In November, Theater Alaska is scheduling an Ibsen production in eleven different venues around the city. Only one of those is taking place in the Juneau Arts and Culture Center. Comparable outdoor performances were enjoyed earlier this summer at parks in the Mendenhall Valley, downtown and Douglas during the Alaska Theater Festival. 

According to event organizers, their main focus is to increase accessibility and bring “professional theater and professional artists closer to the community.” A total of 2,259 people attended similar festival shows last year.

Acknowledging that traditional approaches may no longer be useful in contemplating building uses, whether for city employees or theater-goers, requires a complete mind-shift by our city leaders.

Nevertheless, some will interpret the retention of sitting assembly members and the election of the two new members as quasi-approval of these projects and a continuation of business as usual. 

That would be a mistake. 

The power of incumbency, the strength of campaigns, and the sheer number of candidates in the Areawide race played a major role in this election and the results did not truly reflect the amount of public dissatisfaction with a whole host of past and current Assembly actions. Juneau residents have continued to voice their frustration over a number of concerns:

  • Unwarranted, exorbitant increases in property taxes
  • Millions of tax dollars appropriated for projects not approved by the public
  • Non-disclosure of emails constituting public testimony   
  • New city manager selection held almost entirely in secret
  • Continuation of expensive vote-by-mail elections with little benefit

Over the past several years, Juneau city leaders have promoted projects and initiatives without fully vetting them with the public. Appropriating millions of dollars for buildings or projects like vote-by-mail without a clear idea of cost or impacts is not a recipe for gaining public trust in government.

Continuing business as usual will only result in more unnecessary taxes and impacts that will further burden Juneau working families and aging population. JEDC’s 2023 Economic Indicators revealed for the first time in Juneau history, our over-60 citizens outnumber our under-20 young people. This isn’t a positive trend.

Resolving these issues will require creative, perhaps unconventional, thinking but that’s what is needed now, more than ever.

After retiring as the senior vice president in charge of business banking for Key Bank in Alaska, Win Gruening became a regular opinion page columnist for the Juneau Empire. He was born and raised in Juneau and graduated from the U.S. Air Force Academy in 1970. He is involved in various local and statewide organizations.

Open-shut case: Tribe paid families to move to Karluk so school could open, but the families left after a month

The Karluk Tribal Council, which didn’t have enough students to open its school, paid a couple of families from the Lower 48 an all-expense move to the village so it would have enough students to open the school. The families would have all their expenses paid for a year to live in Karluk and enroll their children in the school.

Two families were chosen out of numerous applicants.

On Oct. 24, the Karluk school board met in an emergency meeting and voted to close the school again, after both of the families that were chosen for the honor of living in the village left, and took their children with them after only one month.

The tactic of getting enough children to attract state funding for the school made national news after a social media campaign was placed this summer.

Karluk is located on Kodiak Island and was once a thriving village with a fish cannery. The village is down to about 20 residents and the school closed in 2018.

According to KMXT radio, the district will try to get the State to send money for the students for the weeks they did attend, but other than that, the district is short about $80,000 for the experiment.

More at KMXT.