{"id":7887,"date":"2018-03-04T15:37:52","date_gmt":"2018-03-04T23:37:52","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spijue.wpengine.com\/news\/three-new-lawmakers-face-big-adjustments-and-high-stakes\/"},"modified":"2018-03-04T15:37:52","modified_gmt":"2018-03-04T23:37:52","slug":"three-new-lawmakers-face-big-adjustments-and-high-stakes","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/three-new-lawmakers-face-big-adjustments-and-high-stakes\/","title":{"rendered":"Three new lawmakers face big adjustments and high stakes"},"content":{"rendered":"
As a pilot for FedEx, Mike Shower<\/a> is used to picking up a bag and jetting out on a moment’s notice. He keeps one packed with clothes, toiletries, and anything else he needs to stay in a place for a week or two.<\/p>\n Last weekend, Shower picked up his traveling bag and jetted off to Juneau for a new job. On Monday, he was sworn in as the Legislature’s newest senator, replacing Mike Dunleavy of Wasilla.<\/p>\n In his bag, he packed a pair of new suits and other things he thought he would need in Juneau. He didn’t pack ice cleats, and that oversight — as he told the Empire in a Thursday interview, led to a quick welcome from Sen. Dennis Egan, D-Juneau.<\/p>\n “Monday night, so my first night out of the building, it was late, again like 10 o’clock at night. So I was walking back to the Baranof from here. I made it out the front steps and down to the corner, and I hit a patch of ice and I had my nice dress shoes on … so boom, I went right to the ground with my bag,” he said.<\/p>\n Coincidentally, on the opposite side of the intersection, was Jesse Kiehl, aide to Egan, who rushed over to make sure Shower was OK.<\/p>\n “Next day, what shows up here but a card from Sen. Egan on a pair of YakTrax<\/a> and it says something to the effect of … ‘Welcome to Juneau. Glad you slid into town.’”<\/p>\n This year in the Alaska Legislature, Shower isn’t the only person getting his feet under him. In January, Rep. John Lincoln, D-Kotzebue<\/a>, replaced Dean Westlake in representing House District 40. On Friday, Tiffany Zulkosky will replace Zach Fansler in House District 38.<\/p>\n While these replacements make up only 5 percent of the Legislature’s 60 members, the tight margins in the House and Senate means the new arrivals will have critical roles to play as the state grapples with a multibillion-dollar budget deficit. In the Senate, Shower has not yet decided whether he will join the 13-member majority. That majority is two members shy of the critical supermajority needed to spend from the Constitutional Budget Reserve that will help balance the budget this year.<\/p>\n In the House, the coalition House Majority has only 22 members, just one more than the bare minimum majority of 21 required to pass legislation.<\/p>\n