Current:Home > InvestIndexbit Exchange:Alaska budget negotiators announce tentative deal as legislative session nears deadline -SecureWealth Bridge
Indexbit Exchange:Alaska budget negotiators announce tentative deal as legislative session nears deadline
Oliver James Montgomery View
Date:2025-04-08 17:20:13
JUNEAU,Indexbit Exchange Alaska (AP) — Alaska budget negotiators announced a tentative agreement Tuesday that includes direct payments to residents this year of about $1,655, winding down a budget process that lacked the acrimony of prior years.
Lawmakers face a Wednesday deadline to complete their work, with floor dockets packed with bills. But the atmosphere around the budget conference committee of House and Senate negotiators was bright and upbeat Tuesday morning — in contrast with prior years, when the size of the yearly dividend paid to residents was a major point of contention. This year’s legislative session has been marked by tension around education and energy issues, which remained in play.
The tentative budget deal calls for a roughly $1,360 dividend to residents this year, plus an energy relief payment of $295. Dividends are traditionally paid with earnings from the Alaska Permanent Fund, a state nest-egg seeded with oil money and grown over time through investments. People must meet residency requirements to be eligible for dividends.
The payments are similar to what the Senate proposed in its version of the budget earlier this month, though the energy relief payment is slightly higher. The House version of the budget proposed checks of about $2,275 a person, including a dividend of roughly $1,650, plus energy relief payments of about $625. The conference committee was tasked with hashing out differences between the two proposals.
The agreement is subject to approval by the full House and Senate.
Republican Rep. DeLena Johnson, a co-chair of the House Finance Committee and one of the negotiators, said the level of upfront communication around the budget was different than last year. Late in the session last year, the Senate passed a budget for government operations and infrastructure projects and sent it to the House as a take-or-leave proposition. The House adjourned without voting on it, leading to a one-day special session to finalize a package.
“I think there was an attempt on both sides to make sure that ... the appropriate process was followed and that there was transparency in what we did,” she told reporters Tuesday.
Last year’s dividend was $1,312 a person.
The budget plan also includes a one-time, $175 million boost in foundation funding for K-12 schools. School leaders and education advocates sought a permanent increase in aid, citing the toll that inflation and high energy and insurance costs have taken on their budgets and a need for greater budget certainty. But a bill passed overwhelmingly by lawmakers earlier this session that included a permanent $175 million increase in aid to districts through a school funding formula was vetoed by Republican Gov. Mike Dunleavy, and lawmakers failed by one vote to override that veto.
veryGood! (4)
Related
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Ex-Connecticut police officer suspected of burglaries in 3 states
- Allow Alix Earle's Hair Transformation to Influence Your Fall Tresses
- Rudolph Isley, founding member of The Isley Brothers, dead at 84
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Criminal mastermind or hapless dude? A look into Sam Bankman-Fried's trial so far
- 5 Things podcast: Scalise withdraws, IDF calls for evacuation of Gaza City
- Our 25th Anniversary Spectacular continues with John Goodman, Jenny Slate, and more!
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- An employee at the Israeli Embassy in China has been stabbed. A foreign suspect is detained
Ranking
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- Michael Cohen delays testimony in Trump's civil fraud trial
- Son shoots father in stomach after argument over weed eater in Pennsylvania
- 3 dead after a shooting at a party at a Denver industrial storefront
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- Australians decided if Indigenous Voice is needed to advise Parliament on minority issues
- Nobel Prize-winning poet Louise Glück dies at 80
- NYC lawmaker arrested after bringing a gun to protest at Brooklyn College
Recommendation
Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
The history of skirts (the long and the short of it)
'Curlfriends: New In Town' reminds us that there can be positives of middle school
North Carolina Medicaid expansion still set for Dec. 1 start as federal regulators give final OK
The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
Joran van der Sloot expected to plead guilty in Natalee Holloway extortion case
Jim Jordan wins House GOP's nomination for speaker, but deep divisions remain
How to protect your eyes during the ring of fire solar eclipse this weekend