Alaska | Economy | Military | National politics | Veterans

Alaska Officials Pledge to Oppose Base Closures

By Dan Joling | AP
ANCHORAGE—Defense Secretary Leon Panetta’s announcement that the Pentagon will seek new rounds of military base closures drew a swift response from Alaskans who watched a similar process nearly gut Eielson Air Force Base in 2005.

Alaska’s congressional delegation and Gov. Sean Parnell issued a joint statement saying they will stand together to resist attempts to close or shrink Alaska bases.

Read more in the Peninsula Clarion.

Alaska | Alaska Politics | Oil & Gas

Committee takes up bill to separate oil, gas taxes

By Becky Bohrer | ADN
JUNEAU — Alaska’s revenue commissioner doesn’t anticipate a repeat of 2010, when Gov. Sean Parnell vetoed a measure that would have changed the state’s system of taxing oil and gas production together.

Bryan Butcher told the Senate Finance Committee he’s thinks Revenue can work with lawmakers to develop a plan that’s agreeable to both sides.

Read the full story in the Anchorage Daily News.

Alaska | Alaska Politics | Oil & Gas

Alaska Senate President Kills Oil Tax Bill

Alex DeMarban | ALASKA DISPATCH
Alaska Senate President Gary Stevens said Thursday that the Senate will soon hold a hearing on its own oil-tax reform bill, essentially declaring dead House Bill 110, legislation passed last year by the state House and fervently backed by Gov. Sean Parnell.

Read full story in the Alaska Dispatch.

Economy | Federal Regulation | Oil & Gas | Transportation

Opinion: Keystone Pipeline
A Key Ingredient Missing from Obama’s Economic Recovery Recipe

The Heritage Foundation
President Obama’s State of the Union address laid out his long-term economic recovery plans, which he claims will “work for everyone, not just a wealthy few.” That is, unless it is the pipeline construction business. President Obama’s politically intoned decision to reject TransCanada’s permit application to construct a 1,700-mile pipeline from Alberta, Canada, to Texas refineries last week sent a clear message that special-interest demands are more important than more energy and much-needed job creation.

Read full opinion piece at the heritage.org.

Alaska | Energy | Federal Regulation | Oil & Gas | Tourism

Some of Their Own Medicine?…
Alaskans propose fed takeover of Central Park to make ANWR point.

By Becky Bohrer | AP
JUNEAU–Some Alaska lawmakers, hoping to make a point about federal encroachment on state rights, are urging the federal government take over New York City’s Central Park and designate it as a wilderness area.

Read more in the Anchorage Daily News.

Alaska | Federal Regulation | Opinion | Tourism

Safety adviser: Cruise disaster ‘wake-up call’ for AK
Local pilots, shipboard drills and safety gear make similar wreck unlikely.

By Michelle Theriault Boots | ADN
In a state that expects to see more than 400 cruise-ship sailings with nearly a million passengers this summer, it’s difficult to look at the images of the Costa Concordia and not wonder: Could it happen in Alaska?

“It kind of gives us a little wake-up call,” said Rick Janelle, a civilian U.S. Coast Guard employee based in Juneau who acts as an adviser on cruise ship safety.

Read full story in the ADN.

Alaska | Alaska Politics | Oil & Gas

Upcoming Debate Over Alaska Oil Taxes
Parnell sets stage for bruising fight

By Amanda Coyne | ALASKA DISPATCH
In a wide-ranging State of the State address Wednesday night, Alaska Gov. Sean Parnell told Alaskans that much of the future of this state will be determined by the actions of legislators in the upcoming session.

Read full story in the Alaska Dispatch.

Alaska | Alaska Politics | Entertainment | Transportation

New texting ban among 30 bills filed for legislative session

By Becky Bohrer | AP
JUNEAU — An explicit ban on texting while driving and a proposed constitutional amendment that would cap state spending and force saving were among the 30 measures filed Friday in advance of this month’s legislative session.

The ban on texting or typing while driving is from Reps. Les Gara and Bill Thomas. It comes as the state’s intended ban, passed in 2008, faces a legal challenge, with a magistrate in Kenai recently saying the Legislature should have been explicit if it truly meant to prohibit the activity.

Read the full article in the Anchorage Daily News.

Alaska | Alaska Politics | Economy

Labor: Moderate 2012 Job Growth in Alaska

AK DOL Press Release
JUNEAU—The Alaska Department of Labor and Workforce Development’s annual job forecast is 1.2 percent job growth in 2012, a modest gain in Alaska for a third straight year. The state’s employment levels dropped briefly in 2009 due to the national recession. Read more->

Alaska | National politics

A Look Back…
On this day in 1959 Alaska became a state.

By Richard E. Mooney | NY TIMES
Washington, Jan. 3, 1959 — Alaska became a state today. By the clock on the mantel in the Cabinet Room at the White House, it was two minutes past noon. In Juneau, capital of the forty-ninth state, it was 9:02 A.M., Pacific Standard Time.

Read full article from 1959 in the New York Times.

Alaska | Alaska Politics | Oil & Gas | Opinion

The Future of Alaska’s Economic Engine

By Andrew Halcro
JUNEAU–According to the Alaska Department of Revenue, the state will depend on oil & gas revenues to fund 92% of state spending this coming fiscal year. With increasing government costs and decreasing oil production, Alaska’s economic engine needs an overhaul.

In 2007, just weeks after successfully pushing through the largest tax increase on the oil & gas industry in the state’s history (ACES), the Palin administration proudly predicted that oil production would be 675,000 barrels per day in 2011. The actual production number turned out to be 603,000 barrels per day.

In fact, according to the optimistic projections after the tax increase was adopted, the Palin administration didn’t forecast Alaska’s daily oil production would drop to current day levels until 2022.

Looks like we arrived at their projected decline destination ten years early.

Read Halcro’s full editorial opinion at AndrewHalcro.com

Alaska | Alaska Politics | Economy | Oil & Gas

Mailing glitch results in early Permanent Fund filings

by Jeff Richardson | FAIRBANKS DAILY NEWS-MINER
FAIRBANKS — Filing for an Alaska Permanent Fund dividend check is a happy ritual for most Alaskans, but this year some residents have been a little too eager to get their paperwork in the mail.

The Alaska Department of Revenue has received hundreds of applications this week for the 2012 PFD and expects as many as 1,000 could arrive in Juneau by the end of the year.

That prompt attention comes with a drawback: Applications aren’t valid unless they’re signed and delivered after Jan. 1.

Read more: Fairbanks Daily News-Miner – Mailing glitch results in early PFD filings

Alaska | Economy | News | Politics

Alaska is 3rd fastest-growing state, says Census Bureau

By Hope Yen | AP
Texas, Utah and Alaska were the fastest-growing states in 2011, according to new Census Bureau estimates. Alaska’s population grew 1.8 percent from April 2010 through June 2011, double the nationwide average. Alaska’s estimated population on July 1, 2011, was 722,718, a gain of about 12,500, reports the Census Bureau.

Read full story in the Anchorage Daily News.

Federal Regulation | Tourism | Transportation

Obesity rise prompts Wash. ferry capacity change

SEATTLE (AP) — The Washington state ferry service isn’t going to start turning away hefty passengers, but it has had to reduce the capacity of the nation’s largest ferry system because people have been packing on the pounds.

Coast Guard vessel stability rules that took effect nationwide Dec. 1 raised the estimated weight of the average adult passenger to 185 pounds from the previous 160 pounds, based on population information from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

…The new stability rules may have a bigger impact on the smaller charter fishing boats, such as those that take anglers fishing out of the Pacific Ocean ports of Westport and Ilwaco, Young said. Any vessel that carries more than six paying customers has to be inspected and certified by the Coast Guard as a passenger vessel.

Read full article in the Seattle PI.

Economy | Energy | National politics | Oil & Gas

Oil Prices Predicted to Stay Above $100 a Barrel Through Next Year

By Diane Cardwell and Rick Gladstone | NY TIMES
The United States economy managed to cope this year despite triple-digit prices for barrels of oil. The lessons may come in handy, economists say, because those prices will probably be sticking around.

With Iran threatening to cut off about a fifth of the world’s oil supply by closing the Strait of Hormuz and unrest in Iraq endangering the ability to increase production there, financial analysts say prices for two important oil benchmarks will average from $100 a barrel to $120 a barrel in 2012.

Read full article in the New York Times.

Alaska | Alaska Politics | Economy | Environment

Coastal management would cost est. $5.4 million

AP | ADN
JUNEAU — Lt. Gov. Mead Treadwell estimates a proposed coastal management program would cost $5.4 million a year. The program is being proposed as a ballot initiative.

Read more in the Anchorage Daily News.

Alaska | Endangered Species | Federal Regulation | Fishing

Epic battle expected to pit Alaska fishing jobs against sea lion protection

Jill Burke | ALASKA DISPATCH
It’s nearly guaranteed to be a monumental showdown, the kind Alaska seems to spawn regularly. On Wednesday, a handful of lawyers will volley before a federal judge over whether the U.S. government properly chose to shut down cod and mackerel fisheries in Southwest Alaska, giving the well being of an endangered marine mammal preference over the livelihood of scores of fisherman.

Read the full article in the Alaska Dispatch.

Alaska | Alaska Politics | Environment | Mining

If at first you don’t succeed, lie, lie again

by Andrew Halcro
Bristol Bay–The recent television ads created by the opponents of Pebble Mine have reached an absurdly new low. Unfortunately, that’s not surprising for this crowd.

Read Halcro’s opinion at andrewhalcro.com.

Alaska | National politics

Senators to Justice Dept: Sack prosecutors, apologize.

Sen. Ted Stevens

By Jordy Yager | THE HILL
A bipartisan group of senators is calling on the Justice Department to apologize to the family of the late Sen. Ted Stevens and fire the attorneys accused of the withholding of evidence that contributed to his criminal conviction.

The former colleagues of the long-serving Alaskan Republican told The Hill that the DOJ’s prosecution of Stevens was a disgrace.

Read full article in The Hill.

Alaska | Economy | Endangered Species | Federal Regulation

Ribbon seals on track for Endangered Species listing
More more climate speculation to feed endless parade of “endangered” species

Alex DeMarban | ALASKA DISPATCH
The National Marine Fisheries Service has renewed plans that may lead to a listing of the ribbon seals under the Endangered Species Act, bringing to three the number of ice-dependent seals in Alaska that could be protected by the act.

The agency rejected a ribbon-seal listing in 2008 but said new information warrants a second look. That’s disappointing news, said Rick Rogers, executive director with the pro-industry Resource Development Council in Anchorage.

The combined population of ribbon, bearded and ringed seal populations in the Beaufort and Chukchi seas exceed 1 million animals, so why should they fall under the act’s protections, he wondered.

Read full article in the Alaska Dispatch.

Redistricting | Southeast AK

Judge rules against Petersburg in redistricting

By Becky Bohrer | AP
JUNEAU–A state court judge on Monday ruled against the city of Petersburg in its challenge to Alaska’s newly drawn political boundaries.

Petersburg argued that the new House District 32 in southeast Alaska is not “compact” under the state constitution. But Superior Court Judge Michael McConahy, in a written order, said it is compact enough to satisfy constitutional requirements, and he found in favor of the Alaska Redistricting Board.

Read more in the Juneau Empire.

Alaska | Alaska Politics

Budget Prioritizes Emergency Preparedness

Press Release
December 9, 2011, Juneau, Alaska – Governor Sean Parnell today announced that his Fiscal Year 2013 budget will prioritize disaster and emergency preparedness. The governor’s budget proposal will include $4.9 million for emergency food supplies to be distributed and securely stored in several locations throughout the state. This appropriation, in conjunction with funding provided in last year’s capital budget for emergency power and water purification, will help communities prepare and provide critical emergency services. Read more->

Alaska | Federal Regulation | Tourism | Transportation

Alaska, Feds again at odds over Yukon River access rights

by Craig Medred | ALASKA DISPATCH
Alaska’s Fed-wary political leadership tried to challenge National Park Service oversight of the Yukon River after rangers took down Interior elderly riverboat operator Jim Wilde in an ugly show of force in the fall of 2010, but they backed off after a federal magistrate ruled he wasn’t going to buy state ownership of the river as a defense against charges levied against Wilde.

Now, though, state officials seem to think they’ve found the perfect vehicle to challenge federal authority in a lawsuit filed by moose hunter John Sturgeon. A former state forester who’s now an executive with Koncor Forest Products, Sturgeon has sued the federal government, charging it has gone well beyond its legal authority to regulate navigable waters in Alaska parks and preserves. By law, Alaska’s navigable waters were supposed to pass into state ownership at statehood.

Read the full story in the Alaska Dispatch.

Economy | Military | National politics | Oil & Gas | Transportation

Can U.S. lawmakers stomach the cost of new icebreakers?

Mia Bennett | ALASKA DISPATCH
The U.S. Congressional Subcommittee on Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation, part of the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, held a hearing earlier this month on U.S. Coast Guard operations in the Arctic. The chief topic of concern was icebreakers. As I reported back in February, the U.S. will be without heavy icebreakers for at least two years.

Read full article in the Alaska Dispatch.

Environment | Haines | Hydropower | Local Politics | Skagway

AP&T: On the Connelly Lake Hydroelectric Project
An Open Letter to the Residents of Haines and Skagway

Connelly Lake outlet, photo by Danny Gonce

Paid commentary:
As you all probably know, AP&T has filed an application for a preliminary permit from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) for the Connelly Lake Hydroelectric Project (Project). We have read all of the comment letters that have been submitted to FERC as of November 21, 2011, and it seems like there are a few misconceptions about our plans. We’d like to take this opportunity to clarify a few matters regarding our interest in the Connelly Lake site. We have structured this as a series of questions and answers.  Read more->

Nate Beeler
The Columbus Dispatch
May 16, 2012
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Alaska Alliance for Commerce, Inc. (AAFC)
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Editor:

Roger L. Maynard
P.O. Box 784
Haines, Alaska 99827
editor@hainesnews.net

The Haines Alaska News is a public information service of the Alaska Alliance for Commerce, Inc., a grassroots movement organized to advocate for small business and a free market economy in Alaska.

The AAFC is organized under section 501(C)(4) of the U.S. Tax Code; contributions are not tax deductible.