Begich III salutes any flag Trump hoists on crackpot pole--look out Greenland

Nick Begich the Third, eager to please Donald Trump, is excited about the concept of turning Greenland into U.S. property.

Begich is the son of Nick Begich Jr., who now self-identifies as Nick Begich Sr., and the nephew of former Sen. Mark Begich and former state Sen. Tom Begich.

Now the leader of the Begich political family in Alaska, Nick the Third is a sudden convert to the Trump plan to take control of Greenland.

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Dermot Cole Comments
Gasline news coverage echoes distortions from Dunleavy administration

Stripped of double-talk, what’s happening is far less significant than the Alaska Gasline Development Corporation claims. The real “milestone,” if there is one, is that the state has agreed to pay a major pipeline company up to $50 million to complete the next stage of pipeline planning work, the so-called front end engineering and design. That work is necessary to get updated cost estimates.

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Dermot Cole Comments
Alaskans deserve plan to stem decline in state services

While staffing shortages have received national attention and have been a problem across Alaska, we need to hear from the governor about the real decline in state services on his watch, what he’s doing to fix the growing problems, the impact on Alaskans and how much it will cost to turn things around. He hasn’t provided a recovery plan

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Dermot Cole Comments
AIDEA made its $50 million gasline study pledge before getting legislative approval

The idea is not to draw from AIDEA’s hundreds of millions in cash reserves to potentially pay for a gas pipeline study, but to get the Legislature to add $50 million to AIDEA’s cache of $600 million.

It turns out that AIDEA, AGDC and the Dunleavy administration did not tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth about the $50 million.

They will be asking legislators for forgiveness, not permission. I doubt they will get it.

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Dermot Cole Comments
Dunleavy missing from the campaign to keep the lights on

“The window for making decisions is closing,” says Bob Pickett, a longtime member of the Regulatory Commission of Alaska.

“If things just sort of slide and there’s no leadership, and we’re in the same position 12 months from now, we are looking at a dire, dire, situation. And people should get angry.”

Herz mentions how the potential shortfall in fuel supplies has the natural gas utility, the electric utilities, regulators and legislators worried about the immediate future.

Indecision is the biggest problem right now.

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Dermot Cole Comments