{"id":66714,"date":"2021-01-12T12:37:00","date_gmt":"2021-01-12T21:37:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/new-legislature-same-issues-says-juneaus-delegation\/"},"modified":"2021-01-12T12:37:00","modified_gmt":"2021-01-12T21:37:00","slug":"new-legislature-same-issues-says-juneaus-delegation","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/new-legislature-same-issues-says-juneaus-delegation\/","title":{"rendered":"New Legislature, same issues, says Juneau’s delegation"},"content":{"rendered":"
The upcoming legislative session is likely to be dogged by the same issues that have frustrated Alaska politics for years, according to members of Juneau’s delegation, who spoke with city leaders Tuesday at their annual meeting.<\/p>\n
“The dominant issues will be what they have been,” said Sen. Jesse Kiehl, a Democrat and Juneau’s only senator. “In the governor’s budget there are calls for revenue, but it doesn’t say what.”<\/p>\n
The delegation met with the City and Borough of Juneau Assembly to discuss the city’s priorities. Perennial issues such as the Permanent Fund Dividend, the Alaska Marine Highway System and school-bond debt reimbursement were likely to dominate the session, Kiehl said.<\/p>\n
The budget proposed by Gov. Mike Dunleavy in December will require the Legislature to come up with $1.2 billion in additional revenue by the 2023 fiscal year, which starts July 1, 2022, or else state services will have to be reduced to cover the cost. If lawmakers choose revenue such as taxes, legislative fiscal analyst Alexei Painter said at a Jan. 8 meeting, it would be best to pass that legislation this year because it will take time to set such a program up.<\/p>\n
Rep. Sarah Hannan, D-Juneau, pre-filed a state income tax bill<\/a> which she said is similar to past bills, but she noted that other municipalities might favor a sales tax, which Juneau already has, over an income tax.<\/p>\n Neither the House nor the Senate had elected new leadership, Kiehl said, which means that committee assignments have not been given. At the beginning of the last session of the Legislature, lawmakers took more than a month to organize leadership, and on Tuesday Hannan said she didn’t think the House would be able to agree on organization by the start of the session on Jan. 19.<\/p>\n Partisanship was high, said Juneau’s other House Representative, Andi Story, also a Democrat, but she hoped having lawmakers together at the Capitol would lead to more civil conversations. Story said she hoped to find common ground with her colleagues through a mutual love of Alaska.<\/p>\n “I believe our citizens want that,” she said.<\/p>\n