JUNEAU — Incoming members of the Alaska Legislature have up to now filed 63 payments and 5 proposed constitutional amendments forward of the upcoming legislative session, scheduled to start subsequent Tuesday.
The payments vary from establishing October as Filipino American Historical past Month to shielding some low-level marijuana conviction data from public view on the web. There are some widespread themes among the many pre-filed measures, together with proposals to rewrite the state’s election legal guidelines and implement a brand new pension plan for state of Alaska staff.
Ranked-choice voting repeal
Three Republicans are set to introduce payments to repeal Alaska’s new ranked-choice voting and open main election system, which have been narrowly authorised by voters in 2020 by means of Poll Measure 2.
Republican Reps. Sarah Vance and George Rauscher have laws prepared within the Home of Representatives to repeal these modifications; Wasilla Republican Sen. Mike Bathe is ready to introduce the identical laws within the state Senate.
Conservative Republican lawmakers have bristled in opposition to the brand new voting system, saying they’ve heard from constituents who discovered it complicated. Supporters have argued ranked-choice voting and open primaries have led to extra consensus candidates and moderates getting elected and dispute assertions that Alaskans broadly discovered the brand new system onerous to navigate.
Whereas the Home stays unorganized, an effort to repeal ranked-choice voting may face an uphill battle within the 20-seat Alaska Senate. Incoming Senate President Gary Stevens, a Kodiak Republican who heads the 17-member bipartisan majority coalition, stated that it was his desire to maintain the brand new election system.
“I feel that it labored superb,” he stated on Monday. “And I feel that we should always give it an opportunity to see if it really works sooner or later.”
One other set of payments cope with limits on marketing campaign contributions and election legal guidelines extra typically. Final yr, the state’s $500 per individual, per yr donation restrict was struck down by a federal appeals courtroom as an unconstitutional violation of the First Modification.
Within the ultimate hours of the common legislative session final Could, lawmakers scrambled to craft a compromise marketing campaign contribution limits invoice with issues limitless donations may improve the dangers of corruption and a political system that favors big-money donors. It did not go.
“I anticipate one thing may go this yr,” stated Sen. Scott Kawasaki, D-Fairbanks. “All of it form of is dependent upon what the brand new majority seems to be like within the Home.”
Kawasaki has a invoice able to implement a brand new $700 annual per individual marketing campaign contribution restrict, and one other that may create an absentee poll monitoring system, amongst different election modifications. There are a handful of different election payments slated to be launched.
Bathe, who sits within the three-member GOP Senate minority, has lengthy been involved about election safety and the 2020 cyberattack on the Division of Elections that uncovered 113,000 Alaskans’ private knowledge. He led efforts in recent times to rewrite the state’s election legal guidelines and is ready to reintroduce related payments this yr.
One among his payments is geared towards cleansing up the state’s voter rolls after a bipartisan compromise plan did not go. One other set of measures would implement a “multi-factor authentication” safety system for voters, described final yr as probably just like utilizing an ATM card with a pin.
Sen. Jesse Kiehl, a Juneau Democrat, stated he believes that some election-related measures may go, however he hasn’t heard a lot curiosity from his Senate colleagues a couple of wholesale repeal of ranked-choice voting.
”I might be shocked if there have been 11 votes for that,” he stated.
As a substitute, Kiehl is curious about plenty of election-related measures, together with one that may enable Alaskans to repair issues with their absentee ballots to make sure they’re counted — a course of that doesn’t exist in state regulation identified generally as “poll curing,” which additionally seems in Bathe’s and Kawasaki’s laws.
After the particular congressional main election final June, virtually 7,500 absentee ballots have been rejected, with a larger proportion of these rejected ballots coming from elements of the state the place Alaska Natives make up a majority of the inhabitants.
The American Civil Liberties Union of Alaska and two different civil rights regulation corporations sued the state of Alaska in August, demanding {that a} poll curing measure be applied. The case stays open in Anchorage Superior Courtroom.
Colleges and pensions
After years of just about flat funding, incoming lawmakers from throughout the political spectrum have stated that rising college funding will likely be a high precedence through the upcoming legislative session. No payments have been pre-filed up to now to do this.
[Alaska lawmakers say increasing education funding is a top priority]
Rep. Andi Story, a Juneau Democrat, sponsored a invoice final yr to considerably improve the per pupil funding method — often known as the Base Pupil Allocation — nevertheless it did not go. Story, who has served as co-chair of the Home Training Committee, stated there would must be extra conversations in regards to the dimension of a proposed improve to highschool funding earlier than a Home proposal is unveiled.
“I feel individuals wish to actually collaborate and speak about what the quantity must be,” she stated.
The same strategy is being taken within the Senate, whereas Stevens stated there would must be a dialogue of tying elevated training funding to improved outcomes by Alaska college students. He stated one other precedence for the Senate majority coalition is debating a brand new pension plan for state staff and academics.
Lawmakers have heard in regards to the recruitment and retention issues going through the state of Alaska and faculty districts. The juggling act can be ensuring a brand new pension system may work with out inflicting the state to go broke, Stevens stated.
Kiehl prefiled laws that may implement an outlined advantages retirement scheme for all state staff, academics and municipal staff. He stated that there had not been a price evaluation achieved on his invoice not too long ago, however the aim can be for it to be value impartial in the long run.
Lawmakers abolished pensions for brand new state staff in 2006 after going through a multibillion-dollar unfunded legal responsibility. Since then, there have been makes an attempt to reintroduce a defined-benefits scheme however there have been issues about its price ticket.
“I’m optimistic that there’s extra assist for that than there was in a really very long time,” Kiehl stated.
Rep. Andy Josephson, D-Anchorage, launched laws two years in the past that may have applied a brand new outlined advantages pension scheme for regulation enforcement officers, correctional officers and firefighters. The measure, estimated to value between $4 million and $7 million per yr, handed the Home however stalled within the Senate.
Josephson is ready to introduce the identical invoice once more. He stated it will be nice if a brand new pension plan was prolonged to all state staff and academics, however that he’s targeted on public security staff, for now.
Spending cap and social points
A precedence for Home Republicans is passing a tighter legislative spending cap, stated Rep. Cathy Tilton, R-Wasilla, who has served as Home minority chief for the previous two years.
Republican Sen.-elect James Kaufman has reintroduced a spending cap proposal that may tie legislative spending to the efficiency of Alaska’s non-public sector. Shifting from the Home minority to the Senate majority after November’s election, Kaufman stated he obtained a constructive response final yr from his colleagues and the non-public sector within the interim.
Kaufman’s proposal is within the type of laws, and a proposed change to the state structure that may require assist from two-thirds of lawmakers after which a majority of Alaska voters to be authorised.
4 different constitutional amendments have up to now been provided. One, reintroduced by Palmer Republican Sen. Shelley Hughes, who is ready to serve within the Senate minority, would exclude abortion from the Alaska Structure’s privateness protections.
With a various Senate majority coalition, and a fair partisan cut up within the Home, Stevens has stated the Senate shouldn’t be curious about debating payments on divisive social points as a result of there can be little probability of them turning into regulation.
The subsequent set of pre-filed payments is ready to be printed on-line on Friday. The thirty third Alaska Legislature is scheduled to convene its first common session on Jan. 17.
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