The longer this ridiculous bureaucratic battle goes on, the more money and time will be wasted and the more uncertainty will be created about which road projects will move ahead and which will be delayed or cancelled.
Read MoreFormer Anchorage Rep. Tom McKay should not be drawing his state paycheck as a legislator. Under state law he is no longer a legislator, regardless of House Speaker Caythy Tilton’s claims.
Read the state law—a legislator who resigns immediately cannot withdraw that resignation. McKay resigned when Gov. Mike Dunleavy rewarded him with a new job that McKay is ineligible to take for at least a year.
Read MoreReporter Richard Fineberg won a national business journalism award for a meticulous investigation of an early version of the Alaska gas pipeline dream in 1979.
Fineberg’s trip to New York City to collect the $5,000 cash prize left a lasting impression on Howard Weaver, the Alaska newspaperman who at the time was the editor of “The Alaska Advocate,” where Fineberg’s treatise had appeared.
“Richard, a banjo-playing railroad buff, flew as far as Seattle but then hopped freights from there to New York and back. He told me he kept the check in his shoe for safekeeping on the return leg,” Weaver wrote in his autobiography.
Read MoreRepublican Congressional candidate Nick Begich the Third has tried hard to distance himself from a company owned by his father, Nick Begich Jr., an enterprise that remains one of Begich the Third’s largest income sources.
Begich the Third claims he has nothing to do with Earthpulse Press or any of the ideas promoted on its defunct website about mind control, weather control, government conspiracies, etc. He merely collects money from the company as a 17 percent owner.
That’s not exactly true. For the past 12 years, Begich the Third has been a company director, treasurer and secretary of Earthpulse Press.
Read MoreThe state Board of Education, which has been down two members for months, now lists a resident of Palmer as the representative on the board from the Second Judicial District, which is Northwest Alaska.
On July 29, Gov. Mike Dunleavy appointed Kimberly Bergey to the state board, writing to her address in Palmer.
Read MoreGov. Mike Dunleavy has spent $9,640 of state money on partisan political ads, many of which referred to “petitions'“ on education reforms and parental rights.
There were never any petitions. It was a scam.
He was simply collecting names and addresses of people who could be called upon for political support.
Read MoreThe funeral service for Dick Olson, long a mainstay of KJNP radio and television, will be Friday at 11 a.m. at True North Church, followed Saturday by a memorial potlatch at the David Salmon Tribal Hall.
I always enjoyed talking to Dick when our paths crossed in Fairbanks, as they often did for decades. He attended many public events representing the Gospel Station at the Top of the Nation and always did so with a friendly smile and a welcoming presence.
Read More“The Alaska Department of Transportation & Public Facilities (DOT&PF) concludes the 2024 federal fiscal year with the successful delivery of over $1B of transportation related projects,” the department claims.
Well, that’s part of the story.
The department is still not telling the whole truth about the State Transportation Improvement Plan and the August redistribution debacle.
The DOT deception machine is working overtime, trying to conceal failures by pretending they didn’t happen and simply proclaiming victory.
Read MoreBillionaire Jeff Hildebrand is more likely to show up in the news for his exploits in exclusive polo clubs across the country or for raising money for Donald Trump than for any of the details on what his company, Hilcorp, has in mind for Alaska.
Hilcorp certainly likes it that way.
Even in Houston his limited name recognition is such that on April 3 this year, the Houston Chronicle headlined a short profile this way: “Who is little known billionaire Jeffery Hildebrand? What to know about the richest man in Houston.”
Read MoreAlaska news organizations and political leaders have never paid enough attention to Jeff Hildebrand, though he is the single most important player in the Alaska economy and one of the richest men in America.
Presidential candidate Donald Trump asked the oil and gas industry this year to give $1 billion to Trump’s campaign as a “deal.” He promised to reward industry owners with tax cuts and other government actions—an exchange that sounds exactly like bribery.
Hildebrand was one of four oil tycoons who hosted a Houston fundraiser for Trump in May at which the host committee members gave $250,000 each or $500,000 per couple, the Financial Times reported.
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