RED AT THE ROUNDABOUT  – More than 200 demonstrators rally at the roundabout Wednesday afternoon in support of raising the state’s contribution to public schools. The Sitka School District faces a shortfall of $1.5 million to $3.2 million in the 2025 budget, depending on the amount the Legislature finally approves. The School Board is obligated to submit a budget to the Sitka Assembly by next Wednesday. (Sentinel Photo by James Poulson)

School Budget Crisis Goes to Roundabout
25 Apr 2024 14:32

By GARLAND KENNEDY
Sentinel Staff Writer
    Decked out in matching red T-shirts and waving signs c [ ... ]

Legislators Split on Correspondence School Action
25 Apr 2024 14:29

By JAMES BROOKS
Alaska Beacon
    As the Alaska Senate prepared on Wednesday to launch a legislativ [ ... ]

House Moves to Ban Social Media for Kids
25 Apr 2024 14:28

By JAMES BROOKS
Alaska Beacon
    Late Wednesday night, the Alaska House of Representatives advance [ ... ]

April 25, 2024, Police Blotter
25 Apr 2024 13:43

Police Blotter
Sitka police received the following calls by 8 a.m. today:
April 23
Three vehicles at Se [ ... ]

April 25, 2024, Community Happenings
25 Apr 2024 13:42

School Budget
To be Discussed
Members of the Sitka School Board will hold a community hearing and budg [ ... ]

Tax Break Approved for YAS Building
24 Apr 2024 15:48

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    The Assembly its regular meeting Tuesday approved dou [ ... ]

Public Ideas Sought for School Budget
24 Apr 2024 14:53

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    “We want to hear from the public, what they value i [ ... ]

School Threat Ruled Out
24 Apr 2024 14:52

By Sentinel Staff
Sitka schools were notified at around noon today that the city administrator had re [ ... ]

Lady Wolves Win Ketchikan Track Meet
24 Apr 2024 14:10

By GARLAND KENNEDY
Sentinel Sports Editor
    Sitka High’s track and field athletes faced off aga [ ... ]

2 Alaska Solar Projects Get $125M EPA Grant
24 Apr 2024 14:05

By YERETH ROSEN
Alaska Beacon
    Alaska is getting an infusion of nearly $125 million to build and [ ... ]

On Earth Day, Senate OKs Solar Power Deal
24 Apr 2024 14:02

By JAMES BROOKS
Alaska Beacon
    The Alaska Senate voted unanimously on Monday to make it easier f [ ... ]

House Panel Says No To Raising Age of Consent
24 Apr 2024 13:47

By JAMES BROOKS
Alaska Beacon
The Alaska House’s Rules Committee has eliminated, at least temporaril [ ... ]

More States Join Effort To Limit DEI Programs
24 Apr 2024 13:47

By DAVID A. LIEB
The Associated Press
A conservative quest to limit diversity, equity and inclusion in [ ... ]

Alaska Delegation Backs Proposed Donlin Mine
24 Apr 2024 13:46

By NATHANIEL HERZ
Northern Journal
Alaska’s three-member, bipartisan congressional delegation is sid [ ... ]

April 24, 2024, Sitka Police Blotter
24 Apr 2024 13:11

Sitka police received the following calls by 8 a.m. today:
April 23
At 3:14 a.m. a downtown bar report [ ... ]

April 24, 2024, Community Happenings
24 Apr 2024 13:05

Vaughn Blankenship
Dies at Age 91
Vaughn Blankenship, a longtime Sitka resident, died Tuesday at SEARH [ ... ]

Stedman's Priorities are Budget and Land
23 Apr 2024 15:07

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    With about a month left before the end of the regular [ ... ]

Meeting to Seek Comments on Street Projects
23 Apr 2024 15:05

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    The city will hold a public meeting Wednesday for pub [ ... ]

MEHS Athletes Set for Native Youth Olympics
23 Apr 2024 15:04

By GARLAND KENNEDY
Sentinel Sports Editor
    With only days to go before the statewide Native Yout [ ... ]

Sitka Sentinel, Raven Radio Win Alaska Press Club ...
23 Apr 2024 13:12

By Sentinel Staff
    The Daily Sitka Sentinel and KCAW-FM Raven Radio won awards Saturday at the  [ ... ]

April 23, 2024, Police Blotter
23 Apr 2024 13:10

Police Blotter:  

Senate Looks at Plan For Teen Mental Health Care
23 Apr 2024 13:08

By JAMES BROOKS
Alaska Beacon
    To address a surge in mental health problems among young Alaskans [ ... ]

House Gets Tougher On Labeling Water Tier III
23 Apr 2024 13:07

By JAMES BROOKS
Alaska Beacon
    A bill passed Thursday by the Alaska House of Representatives wou [ ... ]

April 23, 2024, Community Happenings
23 Apr 2024 12:59

City to Conduct
Relay Testing
The city electric department is conducting systemwide relay testing  th [ ... ]

Other Articles

Daily Sitka Sentinel

Sitkans State Alternatives to Gov’s Budget

By THAD POULSON
Sentinel Staff Writer
    “In order for us to do our job we have to know what you folks are thinking,” Rep. Dan Ortiz said Sunday, addressing a gathering of some 200 Sitkans at Harrigan Centennial Hall.
    And the audience obliged, with more than 60 speakers coming forward in the next two and a half hour to comment on the problems they could see from the major spending cuts in Gov. Mike Dunleavv’s budget and to give their ideas for fixing the state’s fiscal problems.
    No one had a good word to say about Dunleavy’s plan to stop draws from the Permanent Fund earnings reserve or his campaign promise to increase payouts to the $3,000 statutory limit.
    Speaker after speaker made impassioned and sometimes emotional appeals for the Legislature to overrule Dunleavy’s planned cuts to schools, the Sheldon Jackson Museum, the ferry system, medical assistance and the Pioneers Home, as well as his plan to stop sharing the million dollars a year in fish landing taxes with the city.
    Ortiz, an independent from Ketchikan, is a member of the majority coalition in the House and chairman of the Finance Committee. Sitka’s Rep. Jonathan Kreiss-Tomkins, also a member of the House coalition, and Sen. Tom Begich, a leader of the Democratic minority in the Senate, sat at the table with Ortiz but did not take part in the proceedings.
    Over the weekend individual members of the Finance Committee were holding town hall-type meetings across the state to gather opinions on the Dunleavy plan for balancing the state’s books.
    Ortiz started the meeting by stating the House majority’s position that the budget could be flat funded at last year’s level without dipping into the state’s rapidly diminishing savings by reducing the PFD this year to $630 instead of the $1,600 last year. On the other hand, the governor’s plan is to make the PFD $3,000, and cover the resulting $1.5 billion budget deficit by cutting services and shifting costs to local governments.
    The view expressed almost without exception by speakers at Sunday’s event was that the PFD should be reduced as much as needed to prevent the Dunleavy cuts from going into effect.
    As for making up the loss from low oil prices, and the reduction of oil flow through the pipeline from the 1990s high of 2 million barrels a day to the present 500,000, speaker after speaker suggested a state income tax.
    Speaking to the Sentinel after the meeting Kreiss-Tomkins reviewed the recent history of that prospect. In the 2017-18 legislative session the House, which had a bi-partisan majority coalition, passed an income tax bill – “and Gov. Walker would have signed it,” Kreiss-Tomkins said – but the bill didn’t survive in the state Senate. The Senate, then as now, had a Republican majority and turned it down by a two-thirds margin.
    That was what the people who elected them wanted them to do: “Elections matter,” Kreisss-Tomkins said.
    No one spoke in favor of the Dunleavy budget Sunday, and every speaker’s comments was followed by enthusiastic applause.
    Some comments:
    Sam Skaggs, who said his career for 35 years has been in finance, warned the Dunleavy budget would cause “the largest deceleration of our economy” around the whole state, and would “hollow out” Southeast. He suggested a compromise on the PFD, saying high dividends could never make up for the damage caused by the proposed state budget cuts.
    Sue Litman said the budget cuts would make people leave town and hurt local business. She called for a reduced PFD and a “fair and graduated income tax.”
    Beth Short-Rhodes said the state did not have a fiscal crisis, but a priority crisis. “Will we allow Gov. Dunleavy and his partnership with multinational corporations to devastate our schools, public infrastructure and economy?” she asked. “We have the right and the power to say no, but we will have to say it loudly and strongly in the weeks and months to come.” She called for smaller PFDs, an income tax and repeal of oil tax credits.
    Cathy Bagley and Rosemary Carleton stressed the importance of the Sheldon Jackson Museum, which Dunleavy’s budget proposed selling.
    Richard Wein, one of two Sitka Assembly member who spoke, called for a state economic policy, saying he found it “problematic that Permanent Fund revenue outruns oil revenue, and that puts the state in an even more precarious position than we are when we are subject to market forces.”
    Kevin Mosher, the other Assembly member who spoke, said he did not favor a full PFD dividend, and while the state should consider an income tax there should be a freeze on government expansion.
    Larry Calvin, who came to Sitka in 1941, said the state must have an income tax, and to fund government before it takes effect the state could borrow from the Permanent Fund.
    Among the teachers who spoke against the education cuts were Joe Montegna, Rebecca Himschoot, Kari Sagel, Steven Courtright, Sarah Ferrency, Susan Brandt-Ferguson, and Phil Burdick.
    Sitka High Principal Laura Rogers, along with School Board member Elias Erickson and board president Jennifer McNichol, also stressed the damage that would result from education cuts of the size proposd by the governor.
    Pat Alexander called for incremental budget cuts instead of the drastic cuts the governor wants. “It took us years to get to this place and it will take years to balance the budget,” she said.
    Kristen Homer, a nurse practitioner at Mt. Edgecumbe High School, said she does not believe PFDs “could make up for the devastation caused by Denleavy’s cuts to education, the ferries, Medicaid and other social services,” and would make the state’s vulnerable people even more vulnerable. She called for reviving the state income tax, repealing oil tax credits, and having a modest PFD.
    Eric Jordan said the state should recognize priorities. “We’re bleeding out because of the state’s oil tax credits – $1.25 billion a year,” he said to a round of applause. “That is the first thing we need to address before we start cutting people’s PFDs, and education and Medicaid.”
    Ortiz said the public comments made at the Sunday meeting would be recorded, transcribed and distributed to the whole Finance Committee, but that they were not “testimony” in the official use of the term. The entire committee will conduct a hearing 7:30-8:30 Tuesday to take testimony from Sitka and Ketchikan on the Dunleavy budget. It will be held by teleconference, with testimony submitted at the Legislative Information Office here.
   
   
   
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20 YEARS AGO

April 2004

Photo caption: Luke Johnson helps Kathy Fournier as she removes trash from Swan Lake Saturday.
The Citywide Spring Cleanup this year included the lake cleanup by volunteers and was organized by Parks and Recreation Coordinator Lynne McGowan.

50 YEARS AGO

April 1974

A 12-hour dance marathon sponsored by Sheldon Jackson College students will be held Saturday at Blatchley Junior High. .... Added attractions include twist and limbo contests. The city curfew will be extended until 1 a.m.

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