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Alaska Senate Passes $1,100 Dividend, Waits For Governor To Approve It

Matthew Faubion
/
Alaska Public Media

The Alaska Senate approved a roughly $1,100 dividend on the last day of a special session on Sept. 14. This came after the House canceled its floor and left the Senate with what amounted to a take-it-or-leave-it decision on the check for residents that the House had previously passed.

The Senate Finance Committee sent the House version of the bill to the Senate floor on Sept. 14, where it passed 12-7 after efforts to amend the bill in favor of a higher payout failed.

Sen. Bert Stedman, the committee co-chair, had said that if the Senate adopted any changes, the bill would die.

House Speaker Louise Stutes, in announcing the House floor cancellation earlier in the day, said that the House had completed its work.

The Kodiak Republican said in a statement that legislative rules bar concurrence the same day the other chamber passes legislation, and that there was no time left for a conference committee if the Senate made any changes.

Legislators could waive those rules with two-thirds support in each chamber, but Stutes did not believe she had those numbers in the House, said House majority press secretary Joe Plesha.

Stutes said that the bill was “safe in the capable hands of the Senate.”

Gov. Mike Dunleavy told reporters earlier on Sept. 14 that he wanted to see what the Senate did. He has advocated for a check of around $2,350.

There have been different views on whether some of the funds targeted for use for the dividend in the House bill are readily available. Without those, the dividend would be estimated at $585, according to the Legislative Finance Division.

The House bill would use general funds and money from the statutory budget reserve fund for this year’s dividend. The reserve fund was long considered among the accounts subject to being swept into the constitutional budget reserve to repay it for money that had been used from it. Lawmakers can reverse the sweep and restore funds to their original accounts, but failed to secure the votes to do so earlier this year.

The director of Legislative Legal Services has said that a recent court decision suggests that the statutory reserve is not subject to the sweep. Last month, Dunleavy spokesperson Jeff Turner said that the fund “has been swept,” and that the Legislature could change that with a three-quarters vote.

Dividend checks are typically paid in the fall.

Earlier this year, lawmakers proposed an $1,100 check, using funds cobbled together from various pots and tying strings to that amount. It failed to win enough support, and what remained was estimated to be a $525 check that Dunleavy vetoed.