Lawmakers seek cheaper digs than Anchorage LIO

Anchorage LIO Seal
The state seal at the Anchorage Legislative Information Office. (Photo by Jeremy Hsieh/KTOO)

Lawmakers are considering alternatives to their expensive and controversial office space in Anchorage.

When the state renewed its lease on the Legislative Information Office in downtown Anchorage last year, it paid about $7.5 million for renovations — and saw its annual rent spike from under $700,000 to more than $4 million per year.

The deal was negotiated by Rep. Mike Hawker, R-Anchorage, and approved by the Legislative Council, which handles the legislature’s administrative business.

But with a budget crisis prompting cuts across the state, the high rent has become an embarrassment for lawmakers.

The question now is whether the state can get out of the deal and find anything cheaper.

On Friday, the Council heard a range of options prepared by its chair, Republican Sen. Gary Stevens of Kodiak. Stevens’ report found the cheapest option — by far — would be to move into the state-owned Atwood Building, a few blocks away.

Moving into the Atwood Building would cost about $10 million over 10 years. Keeping the existing lease would cost an estimated $40 million over 10 years, Stevens found, while buying the current building outright would cost at least $43 million.

But lawmakers expressed concern that breaking the existing lease could prompt expensive litigation. A decision on the building was postponed Dec. 19.

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