SB 26 makes a critical change for Alaska’s future

  • By LT. GOV. BYRON MALLOTT
  • Sunday, June 17, 2018 7:42am
  • Opinion

A generation ago, Alaska’s leaders made a once-in-a-lifetime decision that set our state on a unique course. To some, the new wealth flowing through Alaska’s oil pipelines seemed unlimited. Others took a more honest perspective. Alaska’s oil was finite: its value would change over time, before one day running out. To avoid falling off the cliff of prosperity that Alaska had just settled on, those leaders invested in our future by establishing the Permanent Fund.

The Fund, which belongs to every Alaskan, has continued to grow for 40 years. As oil prices rose and fell, and production boomed and busted, Alaska’s fund invested and earned, paying dividends to all of us. Today, its annual revenues exceed the amount Alaska earns from any other source.

We are not career politicians: a carpenter from Valdez, and a fisherman from Yakutat, we’ve each had other careers, married wonderful women, and raised amazing children and grandchildren. We’re proud of them. We want them to succeed in the state our families have helped build, rebuild, and called home for generations.

We signed on four years ago to protect the honest vision of Alaska the Permanent Fund represents. We faced opponents on the right and on the left who told us we should cut the budget to the bone, get others to foot our bills, and promise record-sized dividends for political points, knowing they would decay future dividends, and eventually wipe out the Permanent Fund itself. We stuck to our guns. Using Permanent Fund earnings was the best compromise to stabilize Alaska’s fiscal future. Living up to the honest vision of the fund, we could fix the deficit and lay a foundation for the future Alaskans deserve — with good schools, safe communities, and new economic opportunities — while making sure dividends continue in perpetuity.

But we also knew the biggest risks to the fund would be ad hoc withdrawals, and the temptation to let short-term political priorities overwhelm concerns for the fund’s long-term health. That meant having a plan, and sticking to it, and never pruning the earnings of the fund too far to stop its growth. We wanted leaders who refused to sacrifice Alaska’s future for short-term fixes, political expedience or attract votes.

Signing Senate Bill 26 into law this week, we are proud to stand among such leaders. The Permanent Fund Protection Act is the biggest single step Alaska has taken to fix the deficit that has eaten away at our savings and services since the price of oil crashed in 2014, and the biggest single step Alaska has taken to ensure we will not deprive our grandchildren of dividends by emptying the fund for ourselves.

The new law is a compromise that was three and a half years in the making, while wrestling with some of the toughest decisions in our state’s history. The law keeps the Permanent Fund truly permanent by requiring all future legislatures maintain the long-term value of the Fund. And the law ends our unilateral dependence on the price of oil, laying a foundation for a strong and diverse economic future.

The Permanent Fund Protection Act closes 80 percent of our deficit. It ensures adequate funding for essential services from kindergarten teachers to firefighters to state troopers, while guaranteeing sustainable annual dividends for every Alaskan. It has already improved Alaska’s credit forecast, and creates a climate of stability for investment by businesses, individuals and for the fund.

We’d like to thank the legislators who stuck this out with us, on both sides of the aisle, in the House and Senate. Thank you for valuing an honest vision over convenience, and compromise over partisanship.

We are looking forward to sharing a future for Alaska in which we control our economic destiny. We’re looking forward to passing on that vision of a safe and healthy state to our children, just as it was handed down to us by the leaders that came before.

 


 

• Gov. Bill Walker, elected in 2014, is the only independent governor in the United States. Lt. Gov. Byron Mallott is a former director of the Alaska Permanent Fund Corporation.

 


 

More in Opinion

Web
Have something to say?

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

(Juneau Empire file photo)
My Turn: Take time to reflect and reach out during Mental Health Awareness Month

Upon reflection of growing up in the household that I did, I… Continue reading

A crowd gathers at the steps of the Alaska State Capitol on Friday, May 5, 2023, for a rally and march to recognize Missing and Murdered Indigenous Peoples Awareness Day. (Clarise Larson / Juneau Empire file photo)
My Turn: A call to action during Missing and Murdered Indigenous People month

Hello, my name is Patricia Graham. May is Missing and Murdered Indigenous… Continue reading

(Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities photo)
Opinion: The Alaska Marine Highway System’s battered reputation

“Before you can make a decision, you need information” Craig Tornga said… Continue reading

Juneau School District Superintendent Frank Hauser addresses the Board of Education during a meeting Dec. 12, 2023, at Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
My Turn: Juneau School District repositioned for the future

I wrote the following back in January: “This district must make both… Continue reading

(Juneau Empire file photo)
Letter: Fond memories and a sad farewell to Thunder Mountain High School

The closing of Thunder Mountain High School is the closing of a… Continue reading

Kim Kiefer, a former city manager and Parks and Director for the City and Borough of Juneau, uses a shovel to clear vegetation from the Kingfisher Pond Loop Trail on Saturday, June 3, 2023. (Mark Sabatini / Juneau Empire file photo)
My Turn: Exploring Juneau’s wealth of trails as Walk Southeast begins

Liam Nyssen is a Trail Mix veteran who began working for the… Continue reading

Most Read