{"id":77365,"date":"2021-10-25T22:30:00","date_gmt":"2021-10-26T06:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/special-session-trudges-on-with-little-action\/"},"modified":"2021-10-25T22:30:00","modified_gmt":"2021-10-26T06:30:00","slug":"special-session-trudges-on-with-little-action","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/special-session-trudges-on-with-little-action\/","title":{"rendered":"Special session trudges on with little action"},"content":{"rendered":"
By Becky Bohrer<\/strong><\/ins><\/p>\n Associated Press<\/em><\/ins><\/p>\n The Alaska Legislature is in special session but it’s quiet at the Capitol, where many legislative offices have been dark, floor sessions in some cases have lasted seconds and little progress has been made toward resolving the state’s fiscal issues.<\/p>\n Since the session started Oct. 4 in Juneau, House committees have had five meetings on fiscal-related topics, all in Anchorage; the Senate has had no such hearings.<\/p>\n “I don’t think it’s making a lot of sense to be here doing what we’re doing right now. So if we’re not going to do anything, gavel out,” said Republican Rep. DeLena Johnson of Palmer, one of four House members present last week for a so-called technical floor session held to satisfy a meeting requirement but at which no business is taken up.<\/p>\n Outside the first day, there has been one regular floor session. That was in the House and after bill introductions, much of the time was spent on speeches, some memorializing people who died recently, others on topics like COVID-19 vaccines.<\/p>\n There has been interest in finding a long-term solution to a yearly, divisive fight over what size dividend to pay residents from the state’s oil wealth. A legislative working group recommended a constitutional guarantee of a dividend as part of a package with elements including new revenue, budget reductions and a revised spending limit.<\/p>\n The recommendations weren’t binding, and there are different ideas among legislators about the various components.<\/p>\n There was little enthusiasm for this special session, the fourth of the year, which came weeks after the prior one ended. Alaska has a citizen Legislature, meaning some lawmakers have other jobs. Costs for special sessions so far this year weren’t immediately available.<\/p>\n House Speaker Louise Stutes, who leads a bipartisan coalition, had asked Gov. Mike Dunleavy to cancel this special session, citing COVID-19 and cost concerns and calling it unnecessary for lawmakers to continue work on fiscal measures.<\/p>\n Dunleavy, a Republican, said it wasn’t a mistake to forge ahead, even as some legislators said members need a break or have other obligations as regular and special sessions have consumed much of the year and yielded no agreed-upon path forward on the dividend and a fiscal plan.<\/p>\n Dunleavy, who like most legislators faces reelection next year, said lawmakers have plenty of options before them and need to hear and bring bills up for votes.<\/p>\n “They can say they’re tired, they’re old, they’re sleepy, they’re hungry. They can say all that stuff. But in the end, they either did it or they didn’t,” he said.<\/p>\n Dunleavy said he will not call another special session this year.<\/p>\n