The Alaska Permanent Fund Corp. Board of Trustees votes for a new chair and vice chair during a meeting in Fairbanks on Wednesday. (Screenshot from APFC livestream)

The Alaska Permanent Fund Corp. Board of Trustees votes for a new chair and vice chair during a meeting in Fairbanks on Wednesday. (Screenshot from APFC livestream)

Ellie Rubenstein resigns from Permanent Fund board, Ethan Schutt displaced as chair in wake of email allegations

Trustees elect new chair, vice chair Wednesday morning; Rubenstein announces resignation hours later

This story has been updated with the announcement of Ellie Rubenstein’s resignation.

The top two leaders of the Alaska Permanent Fund Corp.’s Board of Trustees were replaced at the beginning of the board’s quarterly meeting on Wednesday in a contentious vote, with displaced Vice Chair Ellie Rubenstein announcing her resignation hours later.

The moves came after months of controversy involving allegations of improper financial actions by Rubenstein, sparking further accusations of politically motivated behavior among some board members.

Ethan Schutt was ousted as the board’s chair and Rubenstein replaced as vice chair in a 4-2 vote by the board during Wednesday’s meeting in Fairbanks. Schutt’s status has been in question since the April leak of an email by Rubenstein stating Gov. Mike Dunleavy told her he did not intend to reappoint Schutt when his term expired June 30.

The email by Rubenstein was part of a wider leak of documents alleging she was improperly arranging meetings between APFC staff and her own business associates, including her billionaire father David Rubenstein. That has resulted in investigations — into the source of the leak as well as the allegations — and calls for further scrutiny from some board members, APFC employees, state lawmakers and members of the public.

Rubenstein, a private equity investment manager, publicly announced her resignation, effective Aug. 1, early Wednesday afternoon.

“Ellie has concluded that the scope and pace of change necessary to fully institutionalize the Permanent Fund are not compatible with the demands of leading her private equity firm,” Christopher Ullman, a spokesperson for Rubenstein, told the Alaska Beacon.

Dunleavy reappointed Schutt to the board last week, more than two weeks after his term expired, but his status as chairman was in question since the election of new officers was the first agenda item on Wednesday’s meeting. Board member Craig Richards, who joined Schutt in casting the dissenting votes against naming new leaders, said the timing was unusual since such elections typically occur at the board’s annual meeting in the fall.

“Once again I find myself figuring out stuff at a meeting that’s already been pre-decided, so I oppose this pretty strongly,” Richards said.

Jason Brune was elected the new chair and Adam Crum the new vice chair. Both have been appointed as commissioners of state departments by Dunleavy, and are seen by APFC observers as part of a majority bloc on the board that is loyal to the governor. Crum is the current Department of Revenue Commissioner who by statute is therefore an APFC board member, while Brune resigned last year as the Department of Environmental Conservation commissioner and was subsequently appointed to the APFC board.

Schutt remains a member of the APFC board.

Rubenstein, just before the leadership vote, said the election of new officers was properly noticed on the agenda and that she nominated Crum for the vice chair position because she is no longer interested in that role.

“You can do another election in September, but I think the staff especially has gone through a weird period and (we owe it to them) to have fresh leadership,” she said in response to objections by Richards.

• Contact Mark Sabbatini at mark.sabbatini@juneauempire.com or (907) 957-2306.

More in News

Brenda Schwartz-Yeager gestures to her artwork on display at Annie Kaill’s Gallery Gifts and Framing during the 2025 Gallery Walk on Friday, Dec. 5. (Mari Kanagy / Juneau Empire)
Alaska artist splashes nautical charts with sea life

Gallery Walk draws crowds to downtown studios and shops.

Downtown Juneau experiences its first significant city-level snow fall of the season as pictured on Saturday, Dec. 6, 2025. (Mari Kanagy / Juneau Empire)
Sub-zero temperatures to follow record snowfall in Juneau

The National Weather Service warns of dangerous wind chills as low as -15 degrees early this week.

A truck rumbles down a road at the Greens Creek mine. The mining industry offers some of Juneau’s highest paying jobs, according to Juneau Economic Development’s 2025 Economic Indicator’s Report. (Hecla Greens Creek Mine photo)
Juneau’s economic picture: Strong industries, shrinking population

JEDC’s 2025 Economic Indicators Report is out.

Map showing approximate location of a 7.0-magnitude earthquake on Saturday, Dec. 6, 2025. (Courtesy/Earthquakes Canada)
7.0-magnitude earthquake hits Yukon/Alaska border

Earthquake occurred about 55 miles from Yakutat

A commercial bowpicker is seen headed out of the Cordova harbor for a salmon fishing opener in June 2024 (Photo by Corinne Smith)
Planned fiber-optic cable will add backup for Alaska’s phone and high-speed internet network

The project is expected to bring more reliable connection to some isolated coastal communities.

Gustavus author Kim Heacox talked about the role of storytelling in communicating climate change to a group of about 100 people at <strong>Ḵ</strong>unéix<strong>̱</strong> Hídi Northern Light United Church on Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2025. (Mari Kanagy / Juneau Empire)
Author calls for climate storytelling in Juneau talk

Kim Heacox reflects on what we’ve long known and how we speak of it.

The Juneau road system ends at Cascade Point in Berners Bay, as shown in a May 2006 photo. (Michael Penn / Juneau Empire file)
State starts engineering for power at proposed Cascade Point ferry terminal

DOT says the contract for electrical planning is not a commitment to construct the terminal.

Most Read