Alaska Legislature adopts budget, averts government shutdown

Update | 12:33 p.m. June 11, 2015

The Alaska Legislature has approved a budget and funded it with its rainy day budget reserve, avoiding a partial government shutdown and 10,000 layoffs.

Today’s adoption sends the budget to the governor, who has said he will approve it. It also marks the beginning of the end of the legislative session long overdue for adjournment.

The legislature still has House Bill 44, the Alaska Safe Children’s Act, on its plate today. The bill would require age-appropriate sexual abuse and dating violence education in public schools.

Original Post | 1:42 a.m. June 11, 2015

Lawmakers strike budget deal

Signs posted around Town Square Park protesting budget cuts to education. (Photo by Anne Hillman/KSKA)
Signs posted around Town Square Park in April protesting budget cuts to education. (Photo by Anne Hillman/KSKA)

The Alaska House and Senate have reached a deal on the state’s operating budget.

For weeks, the two bodies have been at an impasse over whether to fund cost-of-living raises for public employees. House Democrats argued that the state should not go back on its contract with state workers, while Senate Republicans held that it was inappropriate to grant them a pay increase when the state faces a multi-billion-dollar deficit. The House’s Republican majority acted as a go-between.

The stalemate finally ended on Wednesday night, when a conference committee between the two bodies agreed to pay for the contracts this year, but placed limits on future increases. Their bill instructs the governor to keep salaries flat when bargaining with the public employee unions, and has a clause that allows contract negotiations to be reopened if oil goes above $95 per barrel or drops below $45 per barrel.

The committee directed Gov. Bill Walker to cut $30 million in agency operations at his own discretion as a way of offsetting the cost-of-living increases.

The compromise also adds $16 million in formula funding for schools, as well as some additional money for early education, the ferry system, senior benefits, and the Office of Children’s Services.

As the result of the deal, Democrats in the House Minority have agreed to support a withdrawal from the state’s rainy-day fund to pay for the $5 billion operating budget. A three-quarter vote is needed to access the Constitutional Budget Reserve.

The House and Senate have floor sessions scheduled for Thursday morning, and a spokesperson for the House Majority say a vote on the budget is anticipated.

 

Sign up for The Signal

Top Alaska stories delivered to your inbox every week

Site notifications
Update notification options
Subscribe to notifications