TRUCK FIRE – Firefighters knock down a fire in a Ford Explorer truck in Arrowhead Trailer Park in the 1200 block of Sawmill Creek Road Saturday evening. One person received fire-related injuries and was taken to the hospital, Sitka Fire Department Chief Craig Warren said, and the truck was considered a total loss. The cause of the fire is under investigation, Warren said. The fire hall received the call about the fire at 5:33 p.m., and one fire engine with eight firefighters and an ambulance were dispatched, he said. (Sentinel Photo by James Poulson)
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Alaska Beacon
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March 15
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By SHANNON HAUGLAND
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March 14
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Alaska Beacon
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Alaska Beacon
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SFS, Coliseum
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By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
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By SHANNON HAUGLAND
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Sentinel Staff Writer
The public is invited to a discussion Thursday on the [ ... ]
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Outer Coast executive director
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Vigil on Saturday
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Daily Sitka Sentinel
Gov’s 10-Year Plan More of the Same
By Sentinel Staff
Gov. Dunleavy released his 10-year 2020-2029 fiscal plan for Alaska Thursday.
“The plan is based on projected revenues from the spring 2019 revenue forecast, the administration’s proposed balanced budget, and the enactment of the administration’s legislative package to create a permanent and sustainable fiscal plan,” the governor’s office said in a news release.
“We can’t continue to spend more money than we have,” Dunleavy said in the press statement. “My plan represents a vision of a smaller state government, with more money in the pockets of Alaskans while laying the foundation for new private sector investment and the new jobs that come with it. While reductions in State services are understandably difficult choices to make, Alaska must implement a permanent fiscal plan to get the economy moving again.”
Along with an outline of the budgets for future years, which are similar to the one he has proposed for 2020, the fiscal plan document contains three “alternative approaches,” including broad based taxes and reduction of Permanent Fund dividends, that were included to demonstrate how they would fail to meet Dunleavy’s objectives.
“The additional scenarios do not reduce the size of government,” the news release said. “Instead, those alternatives make up the revenue shortfall over the next decade through PFD cuts, emptying reserve accounts, or imposing broad-based taxes that take billions of dollars from Alaskan families and the private sector economy.
“These alternatives clearly demonstrate there is no easy, simple solution to addressing the state’s budget deficit,” the governor said in the statement. “Every option comes at a cost. I believe the plan my administration put forward is what the people voted for when they elected me.”
The 2020-2029 10-year plan is available on the Alaska Office of Management and Budget website at www.omb.alaska.gov.
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20 YEARS AGO
March 2004
Businesses using the Centennial Hall parking lot testified Tuesday against a proposal to charge them rent in addition to the $200 annual permit fee. City Administrator Hugh Bevan made the proposal in response to the Assembly’s direction to Centennial Hall manager Don Kluting to try to close the $340,000 gap between building revenues and operational costs.
50 YEARS AGO
March 1974
Alaska Native Brotherhood Grand President William S. Paul Sr. will be special guest and speaker at the local ANB, Alaska Native Sisterhood Founders Day program Monday at the ANB Hall.