- Associated Press - Tuesday, June 20, 2017

Here is a sampling of Alaska editorials:

June 17, 2017

Ketchikan Daily News: Round 3

We’re headed into Round 3.

The Alaska House adjourned Thursday without compromising with the Senate on a state operating budget and coming to a solution to the budget deficit.

The House majority simply adopted its own version of the budget, combining the operating and capital documents, and, by moving out of session, basically told the Senate to “deal with it.”

This hasn’t been received well by the Senate, nor did the House minority applaud the process.

People, whether it’s Alaskans or others, don’t respond well to just-deal-with-it statements. It smacks of a dictatorship, of which Alaska isn’t, and, of course, it fails to endear the ruler to the ruled over.

It appears the House leadership is maneuvering to gain politically with its adjournment. House Speaker Bryce Edgmon, a Dillingham Democrat, told The Associated Press that the House majority acted to prevent a government shutdown.

Ending the session as the House did won’t prevent a shutdown. The Senate didn’t accept the House’s budget version before session’s end, and it won’t find it more palatable because of a grandstand move by the House.

Edgmon also stated the Senate refused to consider any deficit-reduction opportunities other than reducing Alaska Permanent Fund dividend payouts. But both bodies proposed dividend reductions in the course of the legislative session.

The House’s proposed budget restores the full amount of the permanent fund dividend and the $69 million taken out of K-12 education by the Senate.

As for the deficit, it remains at $2.5 billion.

If the House and Senate were coming to a compromise as Sen. Pete Kelly indicated following the House’s adjournment, the House majority’s move possibly will reduce the likelihood of that and add to an already tense situation.

Even Gov. Bill Walker admits neither body will get it all its own way; there must be a compromise. It won’t come easy, given the House is controlled by Democrats and the Senate by Republicans.

In the meantime, a July 1 government shut down looms.

Walker called a second special session Friday, but until Alaskans squawk about lost services, the likelihood of further sessions producing a budget appear remote.

The situation isn’t sufficiently real to legislators’ constituents yet. Services are still being provided. But when they aren’t, and if Alaskans feel affected as a result, that’s when legislators will become more willing to work across party lines to prepare budgets, reduce the deficit and relieve the distress of displeased constituents.

Round 3 - the special session that started Friday - might not be the last.

___

June 18, 2017

Fairbanks Daily News-Miner: Legislature must act now to avoid government shutdown

In his shortest press release this year, Gov. Bill Walker said it best.

“We were surprised by the House majority’s actions tonight,” the governor wrote. “They did not get the job done for Alaska. A compromise is required to protect Alaskans and put the state on a stable fiscal path.”

An 11th-hour drop-dead move Thursday by the House majority coalition, rolling all budgets into one and gaveling out of the first special session, was provocative and unproductive. It gave the Senate two options: Take it or leave it. Unsurprisingly, the Senate left it.

On Friday, a second special session began, with two weeks until a government shutdown lays waste to a fragile state economy.

For more than two years, on this page and in its news coverage, the News-Miner has laid out the consequences of failing to act on the state budget and enact a revenue solution to Alaska’s fiscal crisis. The stakes are clear. Thousands of Alaskans’ jobs and many important services hang in the balance.

Plenty of finger-pointing could be done. Legislators have already started, with members of each chamber blaming those in the other for their collective failure. We’re past that point.

All parties involved have engaged in fruitless brinksmanship at the expense of their constituents. No one is blameless and no one holds the moral high ground.

As the governor signaled when he included only one item - the budget - on the second special session call, there’s only one thing that matters most: avoiding the catastrophe of a shutdown.

Legislators in both houses and parties should get over themselves, act in the state’s best interest and pass a budget.

Following that action, they should reconvene immediately and hammer out a compromise on a fiscal plan to right Alaska’s finances. Only by accomplishing these items will lawmakers have any hope of being able to face their constituents and say they got their jobs done.

It’s time to pass a budget. Now. Or there will be hell to pay.

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