There is a lot of babbling about a budget crisis in Alaska. We have a crisis, but it’s one created by a lack of leadership in the governor’s office, not by a lack of solutions.
Read MoreThis attempted sleight-of-hand, which candidate Dunleavy never mentioned, has almost been lost in the ballyhoo about his plans to deal with the so-called $1.6 billion deficit.
Read MoreThe Dunleavy education script, which he recites like the Pledge of Allegiance, doesn’t include anything about why average scores on the NAEP test are low. It doesn’t deal with the reasons that Alaska spends what it does on schools or the high rate of teacher turnover. It doesn’t mention the relationship between poverty and academic success.
Read MoreFormer Sen. Bill Stoltze, who worked for Gov. MIke Dunleavy for less than three weeks, resigned Dec. 21 as director of the Mat-Su office. One of the unanswered questions is whether the governor knew of this case when he hired Stoltze.
Read MoreFor some reason, the Buckeyes didn’t care for a column in which I said their conclusion that Alaska needed no taxes to solve its fiscal problem was something that Carnac the Magnificent could have divined in advance.
Read MoreDunleavy’s script hasn’t changed, although his overly simplistic arguments don’t hold up under critical examination. The constant repetition of nonsense does nothing to turn it into something other than nonsense.
State health commissioner Adam Crum said Monday that the state had decided a “couple of weeks ago,” to pull out of a no-bid contract with Wellpath for privatizing the Alaska Psychiatric Institute. But that’s not what he told legislators 11 days ago.
Read MoreMy guess is that state attorneys concluded that they were about to lose in court Monday because of a contract violation—the failure to do a feasibility study or allow the union a chance to respond with a counter-offer in 30 days—and the state had no option but to halt the handover of API to Wellpath.
Read MoreGov. Mike Dunleavy has a habit of oversimplifying complex matters and while I’m sure that computer coding is a good career for some people, I suspect Dunleavy is making the 12-week path to a $75,000 job sound a lot easier than it is.
Read MoreA misleading advisory vote is worse than doing nothing. It would serve to perpetuate a myth. The truth is, you can have your cake and eat it too — you just have to pay for the cake.
By Larry Persily
Read MoreThe contradictory comments by the health commissioner are significant because he is supposed to be in charge of health care policy. The Dunleavy administration has proposed reductions of more than a half-billion dollars without examining or explaining the impact on the Alaska health care system.
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