Dunleavy wants Alaska schools to promote resource development in classroom

An industry group called “Alaska Resource Education,” has long been creating materials for Alaska schools to promote the virtues of oil and gas, mining and forestry development.

The materials on its website have value, but the organization doesn’t always reveal that there are valid opinions among Alaskans other than those dear to the hearts of the Resource Development Council and Gov. Mike Dunleavy.

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Dermot Cole Comments
Alaskans deserve a full accounting of the state money already provided to process the Ted Stevens papers before giving millions more

The vast 4,700-box collection of Stevens papers should have remained in Fairbanks at the largest and finest research library in the state, but the heirs of Stevens decided to move the papers to Anchorage in 2015 for reasons they never explained.

If a first-rate biography of Stevens is ever to be written, the author will have to rely on this vast collection and have full access to tell the man’s story—his triumphs as well as his failures.

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Dermot Cole Comments
Salary commission meeting was illegal, contrary to claims by Dunleavy administration

At 1:58 p.m. on Monday, March 13, the Dunleavy administration posted a public notice online that the state salary commission would meet two days later in the Atwood Building.

The meeting was illegal. It should never have been scheduled or held. The law requires 20-day notice. And only one of the five commissioners who got the notice would still be on the body by the day of the meeting.

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Dermot Cole Comments
Sen . Gary Stevens misses the point on state salary subterfuge, appears ready to block legislative vote

Sen. Gary Stevens is getting close to the end of a distinguished legislative career, perhaps with this term, and he shouldn’t sign off on the salary subterfuge engineered by Gov. Mike Dunleavy. Stevens should realize that denying a legislative vote on whether lawmakers and top officials in the executive branch should get raises is unethical.

Refusing to hold a legislative vote will make Stevens a partner with Dunleavy in subverting the public process.

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Dermot Cole Comments
AG Tregarrick Taylor and his political opinions

Tregarrick Taylor, the third attorney general under Gov. Mike Dunleavy, disputes the notion that anything he does from his state perch is motivated by personal opinion or interpretation.

“I don’t get to provide advice based on what the law could or should be; my duty is to provide advice based on what the law is,” Taylor proclaims in a stuffed-shirt document published in the Anchorage Daily News and elsewhere.

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Dermot Cole Comments
AIDEA tries to unload unwanted North Slope road on the state, claiming it’s as good as $13.9 million in cash


Imagine if a fast-talking salesman tried to pay a multi-million-dollar debt by offering to unload property he didn’t want anymore and claiming the asset is worth $13.9 million.

A shell game like that wouldn’t go far before the other party would demand that the salesman produce the cash.

But the Alaska Industrial Development and Export Authority is trying to pull a similar scam right now with its attempt to transfer a North Slope road instead of handing over $13.9 million in cash.

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Dermot Cole Comments
Dunleavy and Legislature stage salary commission coup to give themselves big pay raises

The Alaska Salary Commission coup, engineered by Gov, Mike Dunleavy and legislative leaders, is a prime example of political cowardice.

The brand new members of the commission met for the first time this week and unanimously approved a pay raise for the governor and his top appointees and legislators without any work.

The pay raises will automatically take effect unless the Alaska Legislature rejects the plan, which was obviously worked out in advance in secret.

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Dermot Cole Comments
State election director suggests voting analysis group opposed by Trump may be too costly for Alaska, but it's not

Election Director Carol Beecher, who said she did not know the meaning of the group’s acronym, said there are benefits and drawbacks to ERIC. The main drawback, she said, is that it is expensive, that Alaska is a small state and she doesn’t know if the group provides a good return on the state’s investment and maybe the state can do the work more cheaply. She did not mention and she was not asked what qualifies as “expensive.”

But the membership in ERIC is not at all expensive.

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Dermot Cole Comments
Willow oil production would lead to lower state revenues for years because of state oil tax law

You would never guess it from reading the resolutions and declarations of support about the Willow project from Alaska politicians and businesses, but development of the oil field would cost the state hundreds of millions a year during the early years of construction and production.

That’s because it is on federal land and the state would collect no oil royalties from the field, only production taxes. Equally important, the state oil tax law allows ConocoPhillips to write off the expense of developing Willow against its other operations in Alaska immediately, reducing how much it pays in taxes for up to eight years.

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Dermot Cole Comments
Sen. Dan Sullivan won't say whether he would support Trump if the former president is indicted

In the infamous Pebble tapes from 2020, the chief executive of the proposed mine portrayed Sen. Dan Sullivan as someone who is “gonna try to ride out the election and remain quiet.”

Tom Collier lost his job over his impolitic remarks about Sullivan and Sen. Lisa Murkowski, but truer words have never been spoken about Sullivan.

The junior senator is always trying to ride out the election and duck contentious issues, clearly communicating a position only if he can pose it as an attack on Democrats or if it an issue on which he can’t possibly lose.

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Dermot Cole Comments