Lawmakers take oil tax debate down to the wire

Mike Dunleavy and Pete Kelly 2016 05 19
Sen. Mike Dunleavy, R-Wasilla, and Sen. Pete Kelly, R-Fairbanks, talk after a Senate session on Wednesday. (Photo by Rashah McChesney/KTOO)

Lawmakers are taking the contentious oil tax debate down to the wire.

On Wednesday afternoon, the Senate passed its version of the oil tax bill — handing it off to the House with less than 12 hours left in the session.

The Senate legislation left out key elements of the House bill that passed last Friday.

Both bills would end subsidies for small companies operating in Cook Inlet, which have cost the state hundreds of millions of dollars a year.

But the House bill would also change the tax regime on the North Slope by raising the minimum tax and making it impossible for large producers to use losses in one year to reduce taxes in future years.

Senate Finance co-chair Anna MacKinnon, R-Eagle River, said the House version went too far — and the Senate approach isn’t ideal, she said, even as she urged fellow lawmakers to vote for it.

“Mr. President, companies don’t like this bill. They absolutely don’t like this bill. I don’t like this bill either,” MacKinnon said. “I think it doesn’t incentivize production like we want it to do. But we can’t afford to continue to pay credits, based on our cash flow.”

But Rep. Paul Seaton, the Homer Republican who brokered the bipartisan compromise in the House, said the Senate simply didn’t go far enough.

“I’m disappointed that they cut it down that much,” he said. “Really, they’re just affecting Cook Inlet, which is a small piece of the whole oil tax credit problem.”

Both bills would be phased in over several years. Neither would have any major impact on the budget for this coming year.

The House is scheduled to debate whether to accept the Senate’s bill this evening.

The House’s Democratic minority caucus blocked an attempt to extend the session for up to 10 days, which required a two-thirds vote. That still leaves the possibility of a special session to continue work.

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