It’s time for solutions, not politics

  • By REP. DAVID GUTTENBERG
  • Sunday, May 21, 2017 10:35am
  • Opinion

For the last four months, the new Majority Coalition in the Alaska House of Representatives have worked on a responsible solution to Alaska’s fiscal crisis. The ongoing crisis has stymied investment and perpetuated a recession that threatens jobs, public safety and the education of our children. In crafting our plan, we consulted experts, heard from Alaskans and have refused to shrink from political risks.

Unfortunately, our balanced plan has been the focus of simplistic attacks from the leadership of the Senate Majority, which is the same group that has held power before, during and after the sudden drop in oil prices that prompted the current state of affairs. The Alaska House Majority Coalition is trying to fix the problems that emerged under the Senate Majority’s watch, not the other way around.

The budget shortfalls of the last few years are unsustainable and the economic well-being of the entire state is at risk. Just a few years ago, revenue from Alaska’s abundant oil resources paid upwards of 90 percent of the costs of state government. Now it’s only paying for about a third. Many experts believe that oil prices will remain low well into the future. These factors should have pushed the Alaska Legislature into action. Instead of action, we got continued dysfunction and inaction. That’s why Republicans, Independents and Democrats came together to form the Alaska House Majority Coalition. The members of the Coalition recognize the risks of continued complacency, which is why we put aside politics in favor of solutions by passing a comprehensive fiscal plan.

The rhetoric coming from the leadership of the Senate Majority is that state government is too big. It’s not, and they know it. We have cut the budget by 44 percent in the past few years and this year the Senate Majority could only find $185 million in proposed cuts. Over $30 million of those cuts are fake and will come back in next year’s supplemental budget. Of the actual reductions proposed by the Senate, the largest two are an unacceptable 5.7 percent ($69 million) cut to public education, which has resulted in students in several communities staging protest walkouts, and a $22 million cut to the University of Alaska, which university officials have labeled as devastating. The leadership of the Senate Majority is using public education as a bargaining chip to get what they have always wanted, a dividend reduction-only plan that gives them the ability to use the earnings of the Alaska Permanent Fund to pay for government and reduce the need for revenue from the oil industry. Their plan cuts Permanent Fund Dividends in half and is based on optimistic projections that will force them to quickly come for the other half of your dividend. The Senate’s plan is also unfair because only Alaskans get PFDs and only those who get PFDs will be asked to contribute. Outsiders, tourists and those who use our resources but don’t live here won’t be asked to contribute a cent to filling the $2.7 billion budget gap.

It gets even worse. The Senate Majority is asking every Alaskan, including fixed income seniors and every child, to contribute just as much as oil industry executives. It isn’t fair to hard-working, middle-class Alaskans to tax the janitor who cleans the bathrooms the same amount as the person in the corner office of those big glass high-rises in Anchorage.

The plan put forward by the Alaska House Majority Coalition asks everyone to contribute, including the oil industry, the wealthy and the politically well-connected, and the less fortunate. Our plan puts an end to years of instability and provides for a state government that can afford public safety, the education of our children, maintaining pioneer homes, and other important services.

As the Alaska Legislature heads into a special session, who do you trust? The same old group of Senators — who have been in power for years — spouting the same tired political rhetoric, or the group of lawmakers who came together across party lines and made tough political choices to create hope for Alaska’s fiscal future. Right now Alaska needs solutions, not more politics.


• David Guttenberg, D-Fairbanks, is a member of the Alaska House of Representatives, serving the 4th District.


 

More in Opinion

Web
Have something to say?

Here’s how to add your voice to the conversation.

Dr. Karissa Niehoff
OPINION: Protecting the purpose

Why funding schools must include student activities.

A sign reading, "Help Save These Historic Homes" is posted in front of a residence on Telephone Hill on Friday Nov. 21, 2025. (Mari Kanagy / Juneau Empire)
OPINION: The Telephone Hill cost is staggering

The Assembly approved $5.5 million to raze Telephone Hill as part of… Continue reading

Win Gruening (courtesy)
OPINION: Eaglecrest’s opportunity to achieve financial independence, if the city allows it

It’s a well-known saying that “timing is everything.” Certainly, this applies to… Continue reading

Gov. Mike Dunleavy gestures during his State of the State address on Jan. 22, 2026. (Photo by Corinne Smith/Alaska Beacon)
OPINION: It’s time to end Alaska’s fiscal experiment

For decades, Alaska has operated under a fiscal and budgeting system unlike… Continue reading

Atticus Hempel stands in a row of his shared garden. (photo by Ari Romberg)
My Turn: What’s your burger worth?

Atticus Hempel reflects on gardening, fishing, hunting, and foraging for food for in Gustavus.

At the Elvey Building, home of UAF’s Geophysical Institute, Carl Benson, far right, and Val Scullion of the GI business office attend a 2014 retirement party with Glenn Shaw. Photo by Ned Rozell
Alaska Science Forum: Carl Benson embodied the far North

Carl Benson’s last winter on Earth featured 32 consecutive days during which… Continue reading

Van Abbott is a long-time resident of Alaska and California. He has held financial management positions in government and private organizations, and is now a full-time opinion writer. He served in the late nineteen-sixties in the Peace Corps as a teacher. (Contributed)
When lying becomes the only qualification

How truth lost its place in the Trump administration.

Jamie Kelter Davis/The New York Times
Masked federal agents arrive to help immigration agents detain immigrants and control protesters in Chicago, June 4, 2025. With the passage of President Trump’s domestic policy law, the Department of Homeland Security is poised to hire thousands of new Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents, and double detention space.
OPINION: $85 billion and no answers

How ICE’s expansion threatens law, liberty, and accountability.

Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon
The entrance to the Alaska Gasline Development Corp.’s Anchorage office is seen on Aug. 11, 2023. The state-owned AGDC is pushing for a massive project that would ship natural gas south from the North Slope, liquefy it and send it on tankers from Cook Inlet to Asian markets. The AGDC proposal is among many that have been raised since the 1970s to try commercialize the North Slope’s stranded natural gas.
My Turn: Alaskans must proceed with caution on gasline legislation

Alaskans have watched a parade of natural gas pipeline proposals come and… Continue reading

Win Gruening (courtesy)
OPINION: Juneau Assembly members shift priorities in wish list to Legislature

OPINION: Juneau Assembly members shift priorities in wish list to Legislature

Letter to the editor typewriter (web only)
LETTER: Juneau families care deeply about how schools are staffed

Juneau families care deeply about how our schools are staffed, supported, and… Continue reading