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Education formula funding hike leaves committee, halved via amendment

House Bill 65, an increase to a state funding formula for schools called the Base Student Allocation, was voted out of the House Education Committee. Voting yes on the bill were Reps. Justin Ruffirdge, C.J. McCormick, Andi Story, and Mike Prax. Voting against the bill were Rep. Jamie Allard and Rep. Tom McKay.

The original bill, offered by Rep. Daniel Ortiz of Ketchikan, would have added $1,250 to the BSA, but the bill has been revised down to an $800 increase. The current state contribution in the formula is $5,960 per enrolled student per year, but the Legislature has awarded extra funds year after year, just not baked into the BSA formula. There are no incentives in state funding that are tied to performance in schools. Alaska’s schools currently rank 49th in the nation, although in the 1970s, they were in the top three.

Base Student Allocation is not the only funding that schools get. They also receive funds from the federal government and, for those schools in organized boroughs in Alaska, funds from the local municipal or borough taxes.

The BSA has various calculation levers, including multipliers for special needs students and things like whether a district has a different cost of delivering education than it costs to educate students in Anchorage, which is considered the baseline.

For a primer on how the Base Student Allocation is funded, click this Legislative Finance link.

House Education Committee members heard public testimony for five hours on Thursday, taking calls from teachers, principals, and superintendents around the state who said their schools are not keeping up with maintenance, recruitment, and basic supplies. There were 36 Alaskans who had flown to Juneau to testify against the BSA increase, which they believe needs to be addressed structurally instead of simply adding more money to what is considered a broken formula. But the chair of the committee, Rep. Justin Ruffridge, ran the clock out and did not allow most of them to speak, even though they had flown hundreds of miles to do so. Instead he turn to the callers who had been prearranged by union representatives to testify in favor of an increase to the BSA and who were calling from their homes. Only three who testified by phone were in opposition to the bill.

Cosponsors to HB 65 are the entire Democrat-nonpartisan minority, including Reps. Zack Fields, Maxine Dibert, Ashley Carrick, Cal Schrage, Jennie Armstrong, Rebecca Himschoot, Cliff Groh, Andi Story, Andy Josephson, Andrew Gray, Sarah Hannan, Alyse Galvin, and Genevieve Mina.

The bill will next appear in House Finance, where the deliberations will continue, including how to fund the increase during a time when the governor’s FY 2024 budget appears to lack over $600 million in funding, even without the extra funding.

In the Senate, Senate Bill 52, which is sponsored by the Senate Education Committee, has a $1,000 increase to the BSA, which has remained flat since 2017.

Gun rights protection during state emergencies? Speaker Cathy Tilton has a bill for that

A few years ago, legislation to protect Americans’ civil rights during emergencies might have been thought redundant. After all, there is the U.S. Constitution.

Then came Covid-19, and Americans watched their civil rights of free speech and the right to move and associate freely dissolve in lockdowns, shot mandates, and business shutdowns.

Now, lawmakers in Alaska want to make sure that such executive emergency orders in the future do not infringe on Alaskans’ Second Amendment rights, if ever a governor in Alaska decided that was a good idea.

The Alaska House Community and Regional Affairs Committee this week moved House Bill 61 to the House State Affairs Committee for consideration. There are no other committees of referral before it reaches the floor for a vote.

The bill sponsor, Speaker Cathy Tilton, is joined by Reps. Kevin McCabe, Sarah Vance, Craig Johnson, Ben Carpenter, Mike Prax, Stanley Wright, George Rauscher, Tom McKay, Mike Cronk, Justin Ruffridge, and Dan Saddler as cosponsors.

House Bill 61 prohibits state and local governments from closing lawful firearm businesses or restricting an individual’s access to firearms, ammunition, and component parts during declared states of emergency, unless closures and limitations apply to all forms of commerce equally.

The bill will prevents anti-gun officials in liberal enclaves from interfering with Second Amendment rights under the cloak of a declared emergency, when citizens may need guns and ammunition the most. Further, the bill provides legal recourse for people who experience unjust infringements on their Second Amendment rights.

Uh-oh: State comes up short in revenue this year and next

The Department of Revenue’s Spring 2023 Revenue Forecast brought tough news for Alaska on Tuesday. The projected price of oil is down, leaving a hole in the budget for this fiscal year, as well as for FY 2024, which starts in July. The hole looks like about $925 million in total, and there seems to be little agreement on how to make ends meet. Almost certainly, it will mean a bite out of Alaskans’ Permanent Fund dividends.

Gov. Mike Dunleavy has proposed a full $3,700 dividend, at a cost of $2.47 billion, while the House Republican majority is now looking at a $2,700 dividend and the Senate majority is discussion one that is closer to $1,300.

Unrestricted General Fund revenue, before accounting for the transfer from the Permanent Fund Earnings Reserve Account, is forecast to be $3.6 billion for Fiscal Year 2023 and $2.7 billion for Fiscal Year 2024. 

The Permanent Fund is set to transfer $3.4 billion to the General Fund for FY 2023 and $3.5 billion for FY 2024, according to the Department of Revenue. These amounts include funds that are available for general government spending and the payment of dividends to Alaskans. 

Permanent Fund transfers remain a large source of funding to the General Fund, and are now responsible for 44% of undesignated general fund spending for 2022. The Permanent Fund is projected to contribute 48% to 64% of the FY 2024 to 2034 budgets.

In 2022, Alaska North Slope oil prices averaged $91.41 per barrel. The revenue forecast incorporates the most current indications from financial markets and is based on an annual average ANS oil price of $85.25 per barrel for FY 2023 and dropping down to $73 per barrel for FY 2024. Prices are expected to decline beyond FY 2024, stabilizing at $70 per barrel by FY 2032. 

In FY 2022, ANS oil production averaged 476,500 barrels per day. ANS oil production is expected to average 485,200 barrels per day for FY 2023 and 496,400 barrels per day for FY 2024, before climbing to 542,900 barrels per day by FY 2032. with the Willow Project coming online.  

In comparison to the Department’s Fall 2022 Revenue Forecast, which was released in December 2022, the ANS oil price forecast has decreased by $3.20 per barrel for FY 2023 and $8 per barrel for FY 2024. 

The ANS oil production forecast decreased by 6,500 barrels per day for FY 2023 and by 7,200 barrels per day for FY 2024. 

Driven by this lower outlook for oil price and production, the Unrestricted General Fund revenue forecast has decreased by $246 million for FY 2023 and $679 million for FY 2024, the Department of Revenue said.

The Spring Revenue Forecast is an annual update to the Fall Revenue Sources Book, providing basic information about state revenue, as well as a forecast of state revenue over the next ten years. The Revenue Forecast is available on the Department’s website at www.tax.alaska.gov.

The announcement came on the same day that a House Education Committee hearing attracted numerous teachers and principals who asked the the House pass House Bill 65, which would increase the school spending formula. The state spends about $1.23 billion on education every year. If the Base Student Allocation is increased by another $1,250 per student, as proposed by HB 65, the cost to the state budget would be more than $164 million per year, according to some estimates that are based on 131,212 enrolled students.

HB 65, sponsored by Rep. Daniel Ortiz, would give a set formulaic increase to school districts, which have great latitude as to how they spend the money the state gives them.

Alaska Humanities Forum promoting drag queens for kids because it will make the ‘world a better, safer place’

By DAN FAGAN

What children need today is more exposure to drag queens is the subject of an upcoming event put on by the taxpayer-funded Alaska Humanities Forum. 

The April 5 event at Williwaw Social in Anchorage is titled: “Kids need to be around more drag queens, and other ways to make the world a better, safer, place.” 

The speaker, Kendra Arciniega, describes herself as a culture-focused creative, community organizer, storyteller, producer/showrunner of Arciniega productions.” 

Arciniega productions produces and hosts mostly drag queen shows that are sexually charged in nature. Arciniega is also a drag queen performer. 

The Alaska Humanities Forum website promoting the upcoming event features Arciniega describing herself this way: “Together with her wife Mercedes, she produces local community-building entertainment that focuses on Latine, BIPOC, and LGBTQ+ artists and their respective community intersections. Much of Arciniega’s programming is developed to include queer youth, families, and allies in meaningful ways to promote more unity and safe spaces in Anchorage – and yes, that includes family friendly drag shows.” 

The Alaska Humanities Forum received more than $2.1 million in 2021, according to the nonprofit’s IRS 990 form. Most of the money came from taxpayers. Corporations and individuals donated less than $100,000 of the $2.1 million.  

Anchorage Assembly member Kameron Perez-Verdia is the president and CEO of the Alaska Humanities Forum. He’s paid $176,306 in salary and benefits annually. 

Emily Edenshaw, one of 20 board members for the nonprofit, is also Executive Director of the Alaska Native Heritage Center. Edenshaw hosted a drag queen story hour at the Alaska Native Heritage Center last year. 

A video of that show reveals drag queens making sexually suggestive dance moves and asking toddlers about bisexuality. One drag queen told the kids that Alaska Natives originally did not have a word for gender. 

The nonprofit sector has become big business and a fertile dumping ground for taxpayer dollars. It’s especially true in Alaska.  

Close to 10,000 people work in the nonprofit sector in Alaska, according to the watchdog organization, Tax Exempt World, which reports there are 8,631 nonprofits in Alaska, taking in more than $10 billion annually. Most of that money comes from taxpayers through one avenue or another. Alaska nonprofits currently have more than $20 billion in assets, according to the group. 

Nationally, 80 percent of all nonprofit revenue comes from taxpayers, according to Zippia.com. Total revenue of nonprofits in the United States last year was close to $2.6 trillion, a number that has doubled in the past 10 years. 

Dan Fagan is a reporter for Must Read Alaska. Email [email protected]

Personal data of 250,000 Medicare recipients compromised by federal subcontractor during ransomware attack

By CASEY HARPER | THE CENTER SQUARE

Hundreds of thousands of Americans’ personal information is at risk after Medicare’s data was breached. Now, lawmakers want answers.

House Committee on Oversight and Accountability Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., and House Committee on Energy and Commerce Chair Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Wash., sent a letter demanding a range of documents and communications from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.

Lawmakers said that in October of 2022, Healthcare Management Solutions, a subcontractor to ASRC Federal Data Solutions, which works for CMS, suffered a ransomware attack. CMS “determined with high confidence that the incident potentially included personally identifiable information and protected health information for some Medicare enrollees.”

“However, it was not until December 1, 2022, that CMS made the determination that the data breach constituted a ‘major incident,’ as defined in the Federal Information Security Modernization Act of 2014,” the letter said.

Lawmakers blasted CMS, saying they dragged their feet in response to the hack.

“In other words, bad actors had access to Medicare beneficiaries’ information for two months before CMS determined this ransomware attack was a ‘major incident,’ triggering a legal obligation to inform Congress of such incident,” the letter said. “The compromised information potentially includes the following personally identifiable information (PII) and protected health information (PHI): name, address, date of birth, phone number, Social Security Number, Medicare beneficiary identifier, banking information, including routing and account numbers, and Medicare entitlement, enrollment, and premium information.”

CMS said in December it was sending a letter to notify those affected and investigating the matter.

“The safeguarding and security of beneficiary information is of the utmost importance to this Agency,” said CMS Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure. “We continue to assess the impact of the breach involving the subcontractor, facilitate support to individuals potentially affected by the incident, and will take all necessary actions needed to safeguard the information entrusted to CMS.”

Here’s an excerpt from that letter:

After careful review, we have determined that your personal and Medicare information may have been compromised. This information may have included the following:

  • Name
  • Address
  • Date of Birth
  • Phone Number
  • Social Security Number
  • Medicare Beneficiary Identifier
  • Banking information, including routing and account numbers
  • Medicare Entitlement, Enrollment, and Premium Information.

No claims data were involved in this incident.

This isn’t the only time Americans’ data has been mishandled by the federal government in recent years. Lawmakers are still pressuring the Internal Revenue Service for answers after it leaked the tax information of thousands of Americans to a nonprofit journalism group.

Lawmakers are investigating that leak but so far have gotten few answers. 

Casey Harper is a Senior Reporter for the Washington, D.C. Bureau. He previously worked for The Daily Caller, The Hill, and Sinclair Broadcast Group. A graduate of Hillsdale College, Casey’s work has also appeared in Fox News, Fox Business, and USA Today.

Grassroots group has boots on ground in Juneau on same day a dire revenue forecast is predicted to hit

A group of grassroots activists from across the state came to Alaska’s Capitol to visit lawmakers on Tuesday and speak in support of conservative budget principles, in opposition to state pension plans being reintroduced, why jacking up spending on schools with more “Base Student Allocation” commitments is a bad idea right now, and the importance of the “No Patient Left Alone Act.”

Americans for Prosperity Alaska hosted the group of 36 Alaskans from places like Fairbanks, North Pole, Kenai, Homer, Palmer, and Anchorage, and the Alaskans spent the day engaging with lawmakers. Some had never been to Alaska’s capital city, and so they are getting the full picture of the compact downtown, the smell of marijuana wafting through the streets, and the center of government’s college campus-like atmosphere.

Their timing could not have been more perfect. In addition to a relatively beautiful spring day in Juneau, a very gloomy financial forecast from the Department of Revenue was set to be announced; appears that there is a significant gap and that the State may come up short in this fiscal year alone, which ends June 30.

Gov. Mike Dunleavy has scheduled a press conference for later in the day on the Revenue Forecast topic, but the buzz around the Capitol is that the amount could be as much as a $250 million shortfall.

Alaska’s budget is tied in part to how high the price of Alaska North Slope crude oil remains, the tax formula tied to that oil, as well as how many barrels are produced. The budget increasingly relies on transfers of funds from the Alaska Permanent Fund Earnings Reserve Account. The ERA currently has nearly $14 billion in it, but all but $3.9 billion are dollars already committed. A budget patch would likely come from the Constitutional Budget Reserve.

Also a hot topic today is pending legislation that would raise the salaries of legislators and the governor. On Monday, the governor vetoed a bill from the Legislature that disapproved the proposed 67% pay raise for lawmakers, 20% pay raise for the governor, and 20% pay raise for commissioners. The governor fired the members of the compensation commission and appointed a new commission, which has made the current salary recommendations.

Legislators have not had a pay raise since 2010 and those supporting large families may be nearly eligible for SNAP benefits at this point, since inflation has been aggressive in recent years.

The Americans for Prosperity Alaska group met for 20 minutes with House Speaker Cathy Tilton of Wasilla before fanning out across the building in groups on Tuesday. The Alaskans have over 50 meetings scheduled with Republicans, Democrats, and nonaligned members of both the House and Senate. Only a handful of legislators said they were too busy to take a meeting.

LGBTQ special protections sought in HB 99

A House bill that adds lesbian, gay, bisexual, transexual and queer (LGBTQ+) people as a protected class in Alaska was the subject of public comment hearing on Monday, during the bill’s review in the Alaska House Labor and Commerce Committee.

In a change from prior years that has been unrecognized by left-run media, the House is giving a respectful ear to bills offered by minority caucus Democrats.

The bill was offered by Rep. Jennie Armstrong, who ran for office as a pansexual, (a person who is variously sexually attracted to any manner of gender identities.) It’s a vague virtue-signaling term that allows people to be gay or not gay, depending on the day or time, or depending on the audience.

For over 90 minutes, people from Alaska and beyond called in to testify in favor of House Bill 99, which has the support of leftist groups such as Planned Parenthood. Only two people called in to oppose the bill.

In addition to sponsor Armstrong, Reps. Andrew Gray, Ashley Carrick, Rebecca Himschoot, Genevieve Mina, Andi Story, Cliff Groh, Andy Josephson, Alyse Galvin, Zack Fields, Donna Mears, Neal Foster, C.J. McCormick, Sara Hannan, Bryce Edgmon, and Calvin Schrage have cosponsored the bill.

Committee Chair Mat-Su Rep. Jesse Sumner has received over 900 letters supporting the bill — all of them contained the exact same wording, also urging members to oppose the governor’s parental rights bill, which would prohibit schools from being able to rename students or re-gender students without their parents’ knowledge.

HB 99 says that it would be unlawful for a real estate broker or sales person or any other entity to say in any way that a person who is LGBTQ would be an undesirable person in a neighborhood, and would lower the surrounding property values or create a decline in the quality of nearby schools. That protection as a special class would be extended to “gender identity or expression,” “sexual orientation,” or gender preference in sexual relationships, among other things.

According to a report submitted to the committee, a 2012 Gallup poll show that 3.4% of people in Alaska identify as LGBT. 

Would a new state pension plan cost the state? Significantly, Reason Foundation analysts say

Defined benefits plans for government workers are expensive for taxpayers. With attempts to return state employees to a defined benefit plan of one sort or another, the state is staring down what could be billions of dollars in unfunded liabilities.

In a deeper dive into the fiscal crisis that could result from bills now being considered that would return some state workers to a pension retirement program, analysts from the Reason Foundation testified before the House Ways and Means Committee on Monday evening, telling lawmakers the pension plan would have to earn an average of 7.25 percent over 30 years in order to avoid putting the state into a deeper fiscal hole than it’s already in from to the previous pension plan, which was discontinued starting in 2006. The average return, they said, is just below 7% right now. Even .25% makes a huge difference, they said.

Ryan Frost and Leonard Gilroy of the Pension Integrity Project of the Reason Foundation also said that with SB 88, the costs that were given by the bill sponsors are not transparent.

So far, there hasn’t been an accurate fiscal note provided for SB 88. Frost and Gilroy said if the pension fund suffered any kind of fiscal stress at all, the state could take on an increase unfunded liability of $8.6 billion over the next 30 years.

The two said the stress test they used in their analysis was what has been observed over the past 20 years in market returns.

The two also said that in their analyses performed for governments all over the country, they’ve found that there is no correlation between employee retention and defined benefits. Employees are different in this era, and move around for various reasons, they said. Retention is a problem all over the country. The average employee holds vastly more jobs than their parents did, an average of 7 to 8 jobs over the course of their career.

Rep. Cliff Groh, an Anchorage theoretical nonpartisan representative who caucuses with Democrats, scoffed at the two analysts and said that because they are from outside the state (Oregon and Utah), they don’t understand Alaska. He said he knows many people who think that a lack of defined benefits is what is making it hard to hire firefighters and troopers.

Rep. Jamie Allard, a Republican from Eagle River, disputed Groh’s claim that because the analysts are from out of state their data is invalid. She said the field of policing has changed and many people are not willing to go into the field of law enforcement for various reasons.

For their part, the Reason Foundation analysts took Groh’s patronizing in stride. They had had much worst treatment in Senate Labor and Commerce Committee earlier in the day, where they were met with stone cold glares from public employee union surrogates.

In Senate Labor and Commerce, a teacher called into the committee and shushed her classroom so that she could testify in favor of SB 88 — during class.

Rep. Andrew Gray, a Democrat, kept going back to previous slides that the two had presented and appeared to be reading questions that were being provided to him from someone coaching him from outside the room, likely the bill sponsor or her staff.

SB 88 would allow some employees of the state — public safety workers — and teachers from across the state who are in the defined contribution plan the opportunity to choose between the pension plan (defined benefit) and the current defined contribution plans of the Public Employees’ Retirement System of Alaska and the teachers’ retirement system.

It is sponsored by Sen. Cathy Giessel, a Republican who now primarily identifies with Democrats, and Republican Senators Click Bishop, Gary Stevens, and Democrat Senators Jesse Kiehl, Scott Kawasaki, Loki Gale, Bill Wielechowski, Elvi Gray-Jackson, Forrest Dunbar, and Matt Claman.

The bottom line from the Reason Foundation is that transferring years of service from a defined contribution plan to a defined benefit plan (pension) creates new liabilities for the state, and immediately exposes the state to potential pension debt if returns fall below the bill sponsor’s unrealistic assumptions.

Undoing the reforms of 2006, which were led by Sen. Bert Stedman of Sitka, could generate hundreds of millions in new costs after even just one year of poor market returns.

SB 88 and HB 22 could cost upwards of $8 billion or $800 million, respectively, in coming decades. Since most employees leave before being able to take advantage of a pension, this could be a costly move that only benefits a relatively small group, Frost and Gilmore said.

Watch the presentation by Reason Foundation’s Frost and Gilroy at this link.

Muni clerk’s office puts thumb on scale for incumbents

The Anchorage Election Office “Find Your Dropbox” feature on its website gives incumbents an advantage by showing visitors the name of the incumbent of each district.

Critics point out that this constitutes a partisan/political activity, since it could be construed to favor the election of the incumbent.

If a voter is looking for where the drop box is in his or her district, the map will pinpoint one, but in doing so adds the extra information on a second tab that gives voters the names of only one of the candidates on the ballot.

Dropbox map: https://muniorg.maps.arcgis.com/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=218a434eff2c42b49e06932d56d2e862

The Anchorage Municipal Election is under way, with ballots having arrived in mailboxes last week. They are due into a drop box or must be postmarked by April 4 at 8 pm to be counted.

The election office has received over 900 ballot envelopes as of Friday night.