The Morning Call

Alaskans’ annual oil check is fuel for debate this year

- By Becky Bohrer

JUNEAU, Alaska — What was once a joyous fall rite in Alaska has become another thing for people to bicker about — the amount of money residents receive from the state’s oil wealth.

Checks of $1,114 are expected to be paid to about 643,000 Alaskans. Some will say politician­s short-changed them; estimates indicated checks would have been in the $3,800-range if a calculatio­n still on the books but last followed in 2015 had been used. But not everyone shares that view.

Some see the check as a nice extra boost regardless.

People use the money in different ways, including for vacations, electronic­s, savings or college funds or necessitie­s. In places like rural Alaska, the money can help with the high costs of fuel and food.

Lisa Sundborg, general manager of Fairbanks-based Alaska Petroleum Distributi­ng, said customers sometimes use their dividends for fuel or put it in their accounts for fill-ups later in the winter.

The company, among other things, delivers heating oil, diesel and gas to an area where temperatur­es can fall well below zero in the winter. She said $1,100 could get about 350 gallons of home heating oil.

“It’s not just all TVs from Costco,” Sundborg said. “We do definitely see an influx or people just putting the money down to use for later if they don’t need it right now.”

Some businesses run sales around dividend-distributi­on time such as Alaska Airlines, a major air carrier.

Joe Manning, who manages the Alaskan Kush Co., a marijuana business, also is planning sales and hoping for a bump in business at the shop in Juneau as

dividends go out. He said there was an influx in sales earlier this year when federal pandemic relief checks were paid. A former chef, Manning sees the dividend as a “cherry on the top” and a way to help stimulate the economy.

Alaskans must meet residency requiremen­ts to qualify for a check. Last year’s check, paid in the summer amid pandemic-related economic concerns, was $992. Checks have been below $1,000 only five times in the last 20 years. Checks in both 2018 and 2019 were around $1,600.

The debate over how much should go to dividends has dominated legislativ­e sessions in recent years, contributi­ng to gridlock and becoming a flashpoint as lawmakers have come to rely on permanent fund earnings, traditiona­lly used for checks, to help pay for government amid flagging oil revenues.

This year’s check draws from general funds and savings and amounts to what many lawmakers said the state could afford without exceeding a limit on withdrawal­s from the earnings of the oil-wealth permanent fund. Others said the withdrawal limit can be breached and argued for

larger checks. As of Aug. 31, $7.3 billion in earnings was uncommitte­d, according to the Alaska Permanent Fund Corp.

Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy has pushed for a 50-50 split of what’s taken from the nest-egg permanent fund for government and dividends. The administra­tion has estimated checks would have been more than $2,300 this year under that approach.

There is interest in settling the dividend debate but no consensus on what the decades-old program should look like going forward.

Simply setting a dividend amount, rather than having it connected to a formula, has been “detrimenta­l” toward “keeping the trust of Alaskans that they’re not last in line,” said Senate President Peter Micciche, a Republican.

The dividend “is a staple that’s actually sort of become a symbol of Alaska, whether people like it or not. That’s just the reality,” he told reporters this week. “And if it feels like it’s too far down the line on priorities by not having a system that pays out what they view as being adequate, we will continue to have this struggle.”

 ?? BECKY BOHRER/AP ?? Joe Manning, manager at a Juneau marijuana business, hopes for a boost in sales after Alaskans receive their annual oil dividend payments from the state.
BECKY BOHRER/AP Joe Manning, manager at a Juneau marijuana business, hopes for a boost in sales after Alaskans receive their annual oil dividend payments from the state.

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