It is debatable whether it would have been appropriate for the state to officially “preserve” the 112,445 acres near the Pebble site for at least 99 years. But the Dunleavy administration should not have kept this idea secret and lied about it to Alaskans.
Read MoreWhat’s most striking about the mitigation plan is that Pebble felt secure enough to make all sorts of promises to the Corps of Engineers about future actions by the state to preserve 112,445 acres for 99 years, apparently based on secret assurances from the Dunleavy administration withheld from the public.
Read MoreI suspect one reason the mine has kept the new mitigation plan secret is that it may be attempting to protect Gov. Mike Dunleavy and ward off complaints about the lack of public review and what action or agreements the state is considering to help Pebble.
Read MoreSen. Lisa Murkowski always operates as if the yellow caution flag is flying, but at last she has called out the efforts by President Trump to steal the election. Sen. Dan Sullivan is quiet in the corner, hoping to ride another one out.
Administration Commissioner Kelly Tshibaka, already behaving like a candidate running for office, has not explained her vision of a 50 percent state budget cut, a reduction that is impossible without wholesale layoffs, and the elimination of many state services and programs.
Read MoreOne of the dying gasps of the Trump administration is a proposed regulation sought by Alaska’s Congressional delegation that purports to force banks to make loans to support Arctic oil investment even if they don’t want to.
Read MoreDespite claims to the contrary by the Dunleavy administration, the state is an active partner with the Pebble Mine in crafting a mitigation strategy like the one revealed on the Pebble Tapes. This may be why the mitigation plan is still a secret.
Read MoreThis going-out-of-business sale has all the credibility of Rudy’s seminar at Four Seasons Total Landscaping. Add it to the Trump catalog of Pyrrhic victories around the world, all of them as phony as a degree from Trump University.
Read MoreGov. Mike Dunleavy’s refusal to follow 35 other states and issue a mask mandate sends a strong signal to his supporters that wearing a mask is optional and that he isn’t serious.
Read MoreThe bureaucratic language borders on indigestible and some of this is speculation, but the Dunleavy administration appears to be aiming at a future for state government in which key functions are privatized, with low-priced contract workers elsewhere in America or around the world.
Read MoreThe state revenue department made a loan to an oil company LLC that didn’t get paid back. At the request of the revenue department, the Alaska Industrial Development and Export Authority paid the principal and back interest, taking the loan off the hands of the revenue department. A new audit says the 2015 loan should never have been made.
Read MoreI suspect the reason the sale didn’t happen is that the industry made it clear to the Trump administration that a lease sale would not attract the giant bids envisioned by Alaska politicians and a sale could prove to be an embarrassment—not of riches, but of paltry bids from companies without financial muscle.
Read MoreThe state doesn’t have a dime to spare, but Gov. Mike Dunleavy refuses to give up on the excessive contract with President Trump’s lawyer that has already cost Alaska more than $500.000, pursuing an anti-union crusade that is failing in the courts.
Read MoreIt’s about time that the Alaska election division, supervised by Lt. Gov. Kevin Meyer, found out how other states are able to be more prompt in reporting vote totals and what steps they take to keep the process secure.
Read MoreIn Ketchikan, editor Sid Charles made the same mistake in 1948 that the Chicago Tribune did. He published the immortal headline, “Dewey Next U.S. President.”
Read MoreInadequate management by the state of Alaska—thanks to the political tradition of not caring about the election process for more than a few hours once every two years—means that the review and counting of absentee ballots in Alaska is delayed. The delay in counting the votes of more than 110,000 Alaskans is a serious failure.
Read MoreGov. Mike Dunleavy has refused so far to call a special session to extend key provisions of the COVID disaster declaration beyond Nov. 15, keeping up the pretense that it’s not his problem.
Read MoreAlaska’s U.S. senators, Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan, have mostly stayed quiet in the corner during Trump’s reign, allowing him to destroy the credibility of one institution after another, all for the greater glory of Trump.
Read MoreThe oil companies, spending $25 million to tell Alaskans how to vote, are claiming that defeat of Ballot Measure No. 1 will “save jobs and the PFD.” If Ballot Measure No. 1 is defeated, that is a PFD promise to remember.
Read MoreOn March 9, two days before Rep. Sara Rasmussen took a trip to Utah, House Speaker Bryce Edgmon advised legislators to not travel Outside Alaska because of the growing COVID-19 crisis. She ignored that advice and missed the most important votes of the 2020 session. It’s only natural that her opponent, Stephen Trimble, has made it an issue in the campaign.
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