Alaska legislators advance stopgap spending bill intended to address construction and disasters

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Alaska legislators advance stopgap spending bill intended to address construction and disasters
Alaska BeaconAlaska LegislatureMike Dunleavy
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The Alaska Legislature is preparing to re-vote on a key spending bill that will cover millions of dollars in disaster response and construction projects in the current fiscal year

JUNEAU, Alaska - The Alaska Legislature is preparing to re-vote on a key spending bill that will cover millions of dollars in disaster response and construction projects in the current fiscal year, according to James Brooks with the On Monday, a bicameral conference committee voted 5-1 to send an amended version of the bill to final votes in the House and Senate.

Those votes may take place Wednesday. The state’s fast-track supplemental budget contains $449.3 million in spending — expenses accrued since legislators and Gov. Mike Dunleavy adopted the state budget last year. Legislators are separately working on a budget for the next fiscal year, which begins July 1. A vote on that is expected at the end of the legislative session in May. It also includes tens of millions for the state response to last year’s wildfire season and millions more as a down payment for the state’s response to ex-Typhoon Halong, which devastated Western Alaska last fall.As long as prices remain high through June 30, the end of the fiscal year, legislators expect there will be enough general-purpose money to cover the expenses, plus a smaller package of budget amendments already proposed by Dunleavy.If oil prices don’t match expectations, the bill contains language that would allow the state to use the Constitutional Budget Reserve, the state’s principal savings account, to cover the difference plus $20 million in “headroom.” That clause may run into problems in the House, where the 19-person House Republican minority caucus has voted several times against spending from the reserve. It takes 30 votes in the House and 15 in the Senate to spend from the reserve; while the Senate has met that threshold and is expected to do so again this week, The 21-person, predominantly Democratic coalition that controls the House would need to attract at least nine minority votes, and in earlier votes,Rep. Will Stapp, R-Fairbanks and the minority’s negotiator on the conference committee, was the only lawmaker to vote against the revised bill on Monday, saying he doesn’t believe any kind of spending from the reserve is necessary at this point. Members of the House majority have argued that allowing reserve spending — if necessary — would provide surety for construction businesses making summer plans. They have also argued that time is of the essence: Delaying action on the bill would mean those companies might have to defer purchasing and hiring decisions ahead of the summer construction season. Members of the House minority argued that as previously written, the bill would have allowed members of the majority to direct the spending of hundreds of millions from the reserve, even if it wasn’t needed to balance the supplemental budget.When the House failed to pass the reserve vote, lawmakers there sent the bill to the conference committee for further work. While that committee was able to finalize a draft compromise, it won’t be clear until later whether that compromise can pass out of the Legislature.Sled dog dies on Iditarod trail en route to Elim checkpoint, officials say2026 Iditarod Live Blog ‘Every fiber of me wishes I could change it all’: Veteran musher posts tribute to dog who died during IditarodGrit, tradition and community spirit: Prizes, awards given to Iditarod finishers‘They have bonded together forever’: Kenai all-girls hockey squad wins co-ed state tournament

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