Gov. Mike Dunleavy asked all commissioners to “investigate options available for reducing the state’s assets by identifying properties that could be sold, or sold and then leased by the state, in order to realize short-and long-term savings.”
Read MoreLike many other ill-conceived elements of the Dunleavy budget, the Legislature won’t accept this one, but the governor has the power to veto and the Legislature may have enough contrarians to prevent an override.
Read MoreIt’s not clear there is a dividing line between Gov. Mike Dunleavy and Americans for Prosperity, the primary political action arm of the Koch Brothers.
Read MoreThe Dunleavy administration offered a “what-if” scenario for a $75 million cut to the Fairbanks campus. Coupled with other Dunleavy cuts to K-12 education, the borough and health care, the governor’s budget would take $150 million or more out of the Fairbanks economy.
Read MoreA representative of Gov. Mike Dunleavy claimed last week that the state doesn’t have a constitutional duty to fund the University of Alaska. Anchorage Rep. Zack Fields was being polite when he said that was absurd and ludicrous.
Read MoreLegislators are accustomed to those who give answers without answering, deflecting and distracting by stringing random sentences together long enough to make everyone in the audience start thinking about lunch. The future of the university is too important to Alaska to accept that.
Read MoreSometime after the election the governor decided that he wanted to squeeze up to $15 million more out of Pioneer Home residents who are not already indigent.
Read MoreEnding dairy inspections won’t harm public health in Alaska, the Dunleavy administration says. Why? Because the one dairy still in business won’t be permitted to sell milk to consumers as soon as inspections end.
Read MoreUAF chancellor Dan White says, “we are actively looking at ways we can manage our budget that are consistent with how we want to position ourselves for the future.”
Read MoreDunleavy’s attack on higher education in Alaska presents a “clear danger that UA’s reputation would be so damaged that it would never fully recover.”
Read MoreThe state has a $2 billion backlog of neglected maintenance work, a problem that goes unacknowledged until the plumbing fails, the roof leaks or the heating system calls it quits. The Dunleavy budget pretends this problem is not a big one.
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