Legislature(2015 - 2016)HOUSE FINANCE 519

01/22/2016 01:30 PM House FINANCE

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01:32:31 PM Start
01:34:00 PM Overview of the Governor's Fy17 Budget & 10-year Plan: Office of Management and Budget
03:26:56 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
-- Recessed to Monday 1/25/16 at 1:30 p.m. --
+ Overview of the Governor's FY17 Budget & 10-Year TELECONFERENCED
Plan by Pat Pitney, Director, Office of
Management & Budget & Commissioner Randall
Hoffbeck, Dept. of Revenue
                  HOUSE FINANCE COMMITTEE                                                                                       
                     January 22, 2016                                                                                           
                         1:32 p.m.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
1:32:31 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CALL TO ORDER                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman  called the House Finance  Committee meeting                                                                    
to order at 1:32 p.m.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative Mark Neuman, Co-Chair                                                                                            
Representative Steve Thompson, Co-Chair                                                                                         
Representative Bryce Edgmon                                                                                                     
Representative Les Gara                                                                                                         
Representative Lynn Gattis                                                                                                      
Representative David Guttenberg                                                                                                 
Representative Scott Kawasaki                                                                                                   
Representative Cathy Munoz                                                                                                      
Representative Lance Pruitt                                                                                                     
Representative Tammie Wilson                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
None                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
ALSO PRESENT                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Randall Hoffbeck,  Commissioner, Department of  Revenue; Pat                                                                    
Pitney, Director,  Office of  Management and  Budget, Office                                                                    
of    the   Governor;    Representative   Andy    Josephson,                                                                    
Representative Dan Ortiz, Representative Louise Stutes.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
SUMMARY                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
OVERVIEW  OF  THE GOVERNOR'S  FY17  BUDGET  & 10-YEAR  PLAN:                                                                    
OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Neuman  announced  that  the  committee  would  be                                                                    
hearing an overview of the governor's 10-year fiscal plan.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
^OVERVIEW  OF THE  GOVERNOR'S FY17  BUDGET  & 10-YEAR  PLAN:                                                                  
OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
1:34:00 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
RANDALL  HOFFBECK,  COMMISSIONER,   DEPARTMENT  OF  REVENUE,                                                                    
introduced  the  PowerPoint presentation:  "New  Sustainable                                                                    
Alaska  Plan:  Pulling Together  to  Build  Our Future."  He                                                                    
indicated  he would  be talking  about  the new  sustainable                                                                    
Alaska plan  and distinguishing  it from the  Permanent Fund                                                                    
Protection  Act.   He  would  be  clarifying   some  of  the                                                                    
confusion and  complexity in trying  to understand  how they                                                                    
fit together  in terms of  balancing the budget in  both the                                                                    
short-term and the long-term.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative Gattis asked if  the new sustainable plan was                                                                    
different from an old sustainable  plan. In other words, she                                                                    
wondered if there was an older plan that was updated.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck replied in the negative.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Gattis surmised  the  new plan  was the  old                                                                    
plan. Commissioner Hoffbeck  indicated Representative Gattis                                                                    
was correct.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck moved to  slide 2: "Fiscal Challenge."                                                                    
He  relayed that  the state  was looking  at a  shortfall of                                                                    
around $3.6 billion to $3.8  billion in unrestricted general                                                                    
funds (UGF)  for the FY 17  budget. The question was  how to                                                                    
close a gap of such size.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Representative Gara commented that  the legislature had been                                                                    
talking about  a $3.5 billion  deficit and the price  of oil                                                                    
currently was at  $28/bbl (per barrel). He  wondered if, for                                                                    
the current fiscal  year, the state was at  a projected $3.5                                                                    
billion deficit  based on the  average price of  oil through                                                                    
the present day or from an old projection of oil prices.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck answered that  the deficit was growing                                                                    
because of the  reality of the price of  oil. The Department                                                                    
of Revenue  (DOR) forecast was  based on $50/bbl.  The state                                                                    
was at the  forecast at the end of the  year. However, since                                                                    
then, the  price of oil  has dropped to $25/bbl  or $30/bbl.                                                                    
The  department was  projecting less  revenue than  when the                                                                    
official forecast was projected.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Gara  asked   if  the   state  was   really                                                                    
projecting more  than a $3.5  billion budget deficit  for FY                                                                    
16.                                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Thompson  corrected   Vice-Chair  Gara   by                                                                    
clarifying that he meant FY 17.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Representative Gattis  clarified that  he was  talking about                                                                    
FY 16 because the year was not over.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
[A technical issue occurred requiring  the committee to take                                                                    
an "At Ease"].                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
1:36:55 PM                                                                                                                    
AT EASE                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
1:38:21 PM                                                                                                                    
RECONVENED                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
PAT  PITNEY,  DIRECTOR,  OFFICE OF  MANAGEMENT  AND  BUDGET,                                                                    
OFFICE  OF THE  GOVERNOR, introduced  herself. She  answered                                                                    
that based  on the  fiscal summaries  provided by  Mr. Teal,                                                                    
director of  the Legislative Finance Division,  if the state                                                                    
chose to do nothing remaining  with the status quo, then the                                                                    
FY  17   budget  deficit  would  equal   $3.5  billion.  She                                                                    
explained  that  the  budget  deficit for  FY  16  was  $3.8                                                                    
billion. The projected  revenue for FY 16  was $1.6 billion.                                                                    
However, in the previous  spring, revenue had been projected                                                                    
at  $2.2  billion.  She  furthered  that  $3.8  billion  was                                                                    
compounded by the drop in  oil prices not counting transfers                                                                    
and other items.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Hoffbeck  discussed  the  graph  on  slide  3:                                                                    
"Fiscal  Challenge."  He  noted  that  the  chart  was  very                                                                    
simplified. However, for the point  of discussion, the chart                                                                    
showed what happened if the state  did nothing. By FY 18 the                                                                    
Constitutional Budget  Reserve (CBR)  would be  depleted. By                                                                    
FY  20  the Permanent  Fund  (PF)  Earnings Reserve  Account                                                                    
(ERA)  would be  depleted. The  state  would be  in a  place                                                                    
where its revenues would not  be sufficient to provide basic                                                                    
public services.  He added that the  Permanent Fund Dividend                                                                    
(PFD) would no  longer exist. The question was  how to solve                                                                    
the problem of insufficient  revenues to sustain service and                                                                    
depleted savings.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
1:40:04 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Munoz asked, in reference  to slide 3, if the                                                                    
commissioner had calculated the  projected rate of return on                                                                    
the corpus of  the PF and the state's ability  to use the PF                                                                    
earnings beyond the slide's four-year projection.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck  responded that  the chart  showed the                                                                    
status quo  approach. The earnings  had always been  used to                                                                    
pay  dividends.  Going  forward there  would  be  a  balance                                                                    
between  using the  funds to  continue paying  dividends and                                                                    
funding  government.  He  thought   that  status  quo  money                                                                    
flowing  out of  the corpus  and  into the  ERA would  equal                                                                    
about $1 billion to $2 billion.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Munoz  stated   that  the  corpus  generally                                                                    
earned  around $3  billion per  year. She  did not  see that                                                                    
amount reflected in the slide.  She wondered how far out the                                                                    
projection would stretch  into the future if  the state were                                                                    
to use excess earnings on an annual basis.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Hoffbeck   clarified,  "Before  it   would  be                                                                    
depleted?"                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Munoz   responded  if  DOR  had   done  some                                                                    
analysis on the subject.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Hoffbeck responded  that it  would not  affect                                                                    
the depletion;  however, there would be  additional revenues                                                                    
going  forward. He  reported  that the  slide  needed to  be                                                                    
cleaned up; it was for visual purposes only.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
1:41:41 PM                                                                                                                    
AT EASE                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
1:42:35 PM                                                                                                                    
RECONVENED                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman  invited Commissioner Hoffbeck  to continue.                                                                    
He added  that he  suspected the  committee would  engage in                                                                    
discussions on the PFD in greater depth.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner   Hoffbeck  scrolled   to   slide  4:   "Fiscal                                                                    
Challenge":                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
   · Take action now, not later:                                                                                                
        Government must be cut further                                                                                          
        Protect essential services                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
   · Use of Permanent Fund earnings is acceptable if:                                                                           
        · Protect the Permanent Fund Corpus                                                                                     
        · Preserve a Dividend Program                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
   · New Revenues are acceptable if:                                                                                            
        · They support right-sized government                                                                                   
        · The burden is shared equitably                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck explained  that the administration had                                                                    
taken the information  from the slide and  discussed it with                                                                    
the  public over  the prior  summer. The  administration had                                                                    
been looking for feedback as  to what people were willing to                                                                    
do to solve  the state's fiscal problem. He  relayed that he                                                                    
and  Ms. Pitney  had  conducted over  50 community  meetings                                                                    
throughout the  state. There were certain  clear messages as                                                                    
a  result  of  the  meetings.  First,  after  attending  the                                                                    
meetings,  people understood  the  state's fiscal  situation                                                                    
needed  to  be  addressed  immediately  rather  than  later.                                                                    
Attendees  also  made  it  clear that  that  they  were  not                                                                    
convinced  the  government  was operating  efficiently.  The                                                                    
individuals were  clear they wanted  to see further  cuts to                                                                    
the  budget,  but  they also  wanted  to  protect  essential                                                                    
services.  He  noted  that different  groups  had  different                                                                    
ideas  about  what  essential services  were.  There  was  a                                                                    
balance between protecting  services and smaller government.                                                                    
Attendees had also made clear  they understood the necessity                                                                    
of using  the PF  earnings but they  believed the  corpus of                                                                    
the fund  had to be  protected no matter what.  He explained                                                                    
that people were not willing  to spend the state's future to                                                                    
balance the budget.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
1:44:33 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Gattis remarked  that  the commissioner  had                                                                    
glossed  over  the  point that  government  needed  to  make                                                                    
further  cuts.  She  did  not believe  the  state  had  made                                                                    
further reductions. She wondered why  the state had not made                                                                    
additional reductions.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Hoffbeck replied  that the  administration had                                                                    
made  cuts in  the  amount  of $140  million  and about  $40                                                                    
million in new investment.  Reductions were selected in such                                                                    
a way that the services  people were asking for could remain                                                                    
intact.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Representative Gattis  understood that  some cuts  were made                                                                    
but  other  items  had  been added  back  into  the  budget,                                                                    
resulting  in a  larger overall  budget. She  had a  problem                                                                    
with the  administration not making further  reductions even                                                                    
after receiving  feedback from people around  the state that                                                                    
government needed to make additional cuts.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Hoffbeck  appreciated  the comment  and  would                                                                    
discuss the subject at another  time. He continued to report                                                                    
on the messages the  administration had received from people                                                                    
throughout  Alaska's  communities.  People were  willing  to                                                                    
talk  about  new  revenues, but  only  after  "right-sizing"                                                                    
government. They also  conveyed that they wanted  to see the                                                                    
burden  shared   equitably  rather   than  falling   on  one                                                                    
particular constituency or industry.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
1:46:29 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner   Hoffbeck  advanced   to   slide  5:   "Fiscal                                                                    
Challenge: Alaska  Permanent Fund Protection Act  - Defining                                                                    
the Problem."  He posed  the question as  to what  the state                                                                    
was facing in  its current challenge. Some  of the responses                                                                    
included the belief that: the  enemy of fiscal stability was                                                                    
oversized  government;  the oil  and  gas  industry was  not                                                                    
paying  enough; the  legislature was  not doing  its job  in                                                                    
controlling  spending;  and,   the  administration  was  not                                                                    
controlling  government  spending.  He  suggested  the  real                                                                    
enemy of  fiscal stability  was not having  a solid  plan on                                                                    
how  to move  forward.  He commented  that  the state  never                                                                    
really had a  plan for declining oil  prices. Currently, the                                                                    
state  saved  25 percent  to  30  percent of  the  royalties                                                                    
moving it  into the PF. Any  monies left over at  the end of                                                                    
the  year went  into the  CBR which  was intended  to bridge                                                                    
short-term  oil  revenue  fluctuations. He  added  that  the                                                                    
state had  been chasing  oil prices up  and down.  The slide                                                                    
depicted state  revenue versus  petroleum revenue.  He noted                                                                    
that with  a one year  lag there was a  significantly strong                                                                    
correlation  between  oil price  and  the  state budget.  He                                                                    
suggested there were always people  wanting to use available                                                                    
monies. The governor had advocated  that there was no reason                                                                    
to blame anyone  for the condition Alaska was  in, except to                                                                    
attempt   to  replicate   the   situation.  He   paraphrased                                                                    
President  John  F. Kennedy  that  it  was  not a  time  for                                                                    
despair,  it was  a time  to  act. He  underscored that  the                                                                    
right solution was needed.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:49:13 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Neuman asked  the commissioner  to  return to  the                                                                    
slide. He  thought the problem  was that there was  only one                                                                    
line  representing revenue  from petroleum.  He thought  the                                                                    
state  had not  diversified  its economy  enough. The  state                                                                    
depended  on  one revenue  stream:  the  development of  its                                                                    
resources.  He   wanted  to  know  how   the  administration                                                                    
evaluated the  effects the  bill would  have on  the state's                                                                    
economy. He  maintained that what  was getting lost  was the                                                                    
financial impacts  on Alaska. He  asked the  commissioner to                                                                    
respond.  He wondered  if  there was  a  program that  could                                                                    
produce revenue and if the  administration had considered it                                                                    
more carefully.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
1:50:17 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Pitney  replied  that  one  of  the  considerations  in                                                                    
developing  the  budget  was looking  at  bringing  in  more                                                                    
revenue to the state.  The administration looked to programs                                                                    
within  the  Department  of   Natural  Resources  (DNR)  for                                                                    
possibilities.  However,  the  state had  one  main  revenue                                                                    
stream, oil.  Although the administration was  examining the                                                                    
economy and  the impacts every  decision it made  would have                                                                    
on  each sector,  the reality  was  that the  change in  the                                                                    
state's  economy was  due to  the  change in  the price  and                                                                    
production  of  oil.  Part  of  the  recommendation  in  the                                                                    
overall  plan   was  to  begin  to   link  broader  economic                                                                    
diversity and broader gains in  industries outside of oil to                                                                    
state revenue.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman  remarked, "I  am sure we  will see  more of                                                                    
them coming."                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Hoffbeck  indicated  there had  been  research                                                                    
done  on the  "resource curse."  There were  other countries                                                                    
and states that had a  single resource base that supported a                                                                    
large portion  of services. Alaska  was really  no different                                                                    
than any other state that had been in the same situation.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
1:52:01 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner   Hoffbeck  turned   to  slide   6:  "The   New                                                                    
Sustainable Alaska Plan":                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
   · Alaska Permanent Fund Protection Act                                                                                       
   · FY17 Budget and Future Spending Reductions                                                                                 
   · Revenue Increases                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner   Hoffbeck  relayed   that  there   were  three                                                                    
components  to the  new sustainable  Alaska  plan. He  would                                                                    
spending  some time  clarifying  the  Alaska Permanent  Fund                                                                    
Protection Act.  He had included  the slide to  clarify that                                                                    
the  act  did  not  include budget  line  items  or  revenue                                                                    
increases, which  were contained in separate  bills. The act                                                                    
created a structure  for how to use the  state's earnings in                                                                    
a  sustainable fashion.  All  three items  made  up the  new                                                                    
sustainable Alaska plan.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Edgmon commented  that  from a  mathematical                                                                    
point the state  had more than one year's  worth of reserves                                                                    
left to  continue business as  usual assuming the  state had                                                                    
the  same budget  level as  it  had in  FY 16  and into  the                                                                    
future. Looking  at the  sheer numbers the  state had  up to                                                                    
four  years of  reserves  if  the earnings  of  the PF  were                                                                    
included. However,  the legislature  continued to  hear that                                                                    
it  was paramount  to act  in  the current  session for  the                                                                    
betterment of Alaska's fiscal future.  He commented that the                                                                    
legislature  was  discussing  state government  spending  as                                                                    
well as  the overall  confidence of  the Alaska  economy. He                                                                    
wanted to  hear about  why it  was absolutely  paramount the                                                                    
legislature  acted   in  the   current  session   and  about                                                                    
potential repercussions  of not acting right  away. He asked                                                                    
how savings and Alaska's economy would be affected.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck  responded that  the more  savings the                                                                    
state spent,  the less it  would have to invest  to generate                                                                    
income. The  sustainable draw  would shrink  with less  of a                                                                    
base  for earning.  He  suggested that  it  would have  been                                                                    
better to have implemented the plan two years prior.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
1:54:44 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Edgmon  suggested Commissioner  Hoffbeck only                                                                    
partially   answered   his   question.   He   provided   the                                                                    
hypothetical  scenario  where  the state  could  reduce  the                                                                    
budget by $500 million and  still have enough in reserves to                                                                    
continue for  two more years. He  felt there was a  sense of                                                                    
urgency being  generated. The average person  could see that                                                                    
the  state had  $15 billion  or $16  billion in  savings and                                                                    
could conclude that  the governor's plan did not  have to be                                                                    
executed in one  year. It could be implemented in  a span of                                                                    
two  to  three   years.  He  was  trying  to   open  up  the                                                                    
discussion.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Hoffbeck   believed  the   presentation  would                                                                    
clarify the  reasons for avoiding spending  down the state's                                                                    
savings.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman  stated that he thought  most members echoed                                                                    
Representative   Edgmon's   sentiments   about   wanting   a                                                                    
sustainable  plan but  wanted it  to be  right. He  asserted                                                                    
that it  was important  to inform the  public and  make sure                                                                    
they are part of the discussion.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Hoffbeck  remarked  that there  were  separate                                                                    
bills for each  of the elements of the plan.  There would be                                                                    
extensive  analysis on  how the  administration reached  the                                                                    
draw  amount  and  what would  happen  without  the  savings                                                                    
behind it.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck  turned to slide 7:  "Alaska Permanent                                                                    
Fund Protection Act":                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
   · A fiscal framework for using our wealth to:                                                                                
        · Help resolve this year's fiscal challenge                                                                             
        · Sustainably fund government operations into the                                                                       
          future                                                                                                                
        · Provide the maximum benefit to the broader                                                                            
          economy                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
   · Main components of the framework:                                                                                          
        · Royalties and production taxes into the Permanent                                                                     
          Fund                                                                                                                  
        · Endowment draw                                                                                                        
        · Royalty dividend                                                                                                      
        · Periodic review                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck  relayed that one of  the messages the                                                                    
administration  had  heard  from businesses  was  that  wild                                                                    
swings  impacted their  ability to  invest. He  reviewed the                                                                    
main  framework  components  of the  Alaska  Permanent  Fund                                                                    
Protection  Act. He  noted he  had  a slide  further in  the                                                                    
presentation  that detailed  the first  component: royalties                                                                    
and  production  taxes into  the  PF.  He offered  that  the                                                                    
second component  was an endowment  draw - a fixed  draw for                                                                    
government spending. The third piece  of the framework was a                                                                    
royalty dividend,  which would  be tied to  royalties rather                                                                    
than PF  earnings. The last  piece was a periodic  review to                                                                    
ensure that the plan remained sustainable over time.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
1:57:47 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck pointed to the  flow chart on slide 8:                                                                    
"Alaska Permanent  Fund Protection Act." He  referred to the                                                                    
slide as  a plumbing picture.  He raised the  question about                                                                    
what the plan did. First, if  the state was going to rely on                                                                    
earnings from  the PF corpus  as the primary  funding source                                                                    
for  state government,  the state  needed to  strengthen the                                                                    
corpus of the fund. The plan  proposed to change the flow of                                                                    
revenues  coming in.  All production  taxes would  flow into                                                                    
the corpus of  the PF rather than flowing  directly into the                                                                    
General  Fund. Half  of the  royalty  revenues [50  percent]                                                                    
would flow  into the corpus  of the fund; currently,  it was                                                                    
only 30  percent. The corpus of  the fund would be  built up                                                                    
in  order  to  sustain   government  expenditures  into  the                                                                    
future. It  placed the  volatility into the  PF and  took it                                                                    
out of the budgeting process.  Essentially, the PF was a $50                                                                    
billion  money-sink   that  could  absorb   fluctuations  in                                                                    
revenue  from  year-to-year.  He   reported  that  when  the                                                                    
administration modeled it  they looked at both  high and low                                                                    
projected  years of  earnings to  determine the  sustainable                                                                    
draw. He continued that the  other 50 percent of the mineral                                                                    
royalties  would   flow  into   the  earnings   reserve  and                                                                    
eventually drop out  to pay dividends. He  furthered that 50                                                                    
percent  of  the  prior  year's   royalties  would  pay  the                                                                    
dividend in  any given year.  Monies would then flow  out of                                                                    
the  PF  corpus  into  the  earnings  reserve  as  they  did                                                                    
currently with  statutory net income  - realized  gains such                                                                    
as royalties  on investments, rents on  state properties, or                                                                    
the sale of assets at a profit.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck explained  that the administration had                                                                    
looked at more  of an endowment model - a  Percent of Market                                                                    
Value (POMV) model - but thought  it would create more of an                                                                    
obstacle  in passing  legislation. He  believed people  were                                                                    
comfortable that  the proposed plan protected  the corpus of                                                                    
the fund  and provided a  strategy they were  accustomed to.                                                                    
He reported that the earnings  reserve account was currently                                                                    
at  about $7  billion. Approximately  $2 billion  would flow                                                                    
into the ERA. The earnings  reserve would also earn money on                                                                    
its  investments. However,  the amount  was not  quite large                                                                    
enough. The administration  was asking for was  a $3 billion                                                                    
transfer from  the CBR  into the  earnings reserve  to bring                                                                    
the  balance to  about  $10 billion.  He  detailed that  the                                                                    
state should be able to  transfer $3.3 billion annually into                                                                    
the General Fund for government  services if the ERA balance                                                                    
was $10 billion  (resulting from money that flowed  in on an                                                                    
annual basis and the earnings of the reserve itself).                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
2:01:48 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Gara  asked if the  $3.3 billion was  flat or                                                                    
in real  dollars. Commissioner  Hoffbeck responded  that the                                                                    
figure  was flat  through 2020  and then  it would  begin to                                                                    
grow with inflation.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative Gara asked if the  plan would require cuts to                                                                    
the  budget  every  year  for  20  years  in  real  dollars.                                                                    
Commissioner Hoffbeck responded through 2020 (three years).                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Neuman commented  that  there  were sweepable  and                                                                    
non-sweepable   funds  that   got   mixed.   He  asked   the                                                                    
commissioner to expand on the topic.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Hoffbeck explained  that concerns  were raised                                                                    
within  the  Legislative  Finance  Division  as  to  whether                                                                    
monies that  were deposited into the  earnings reserve would                                                                    
be swept back into  the CBR at the end of  the year. Part of                                                                    
what  the administration  was trying  to  accomplish was  to                                                                    
create the stability of knowing  how much could be withdrawn                                                                    
each  year.  Ultimately,  the  state  was  spending  savings                                                                    
whether from  the CBR  or the  ERA. A  steady fund  draw was                                                                    
possible  if the  money was  in the  ERA. There  was concern                                                                    
that the character of a fund  draw would change if an annual                                                                    
sweep to  repay a debt  to the  CBR was required.  He shared                                                                    
that he  had spoken  with the  attorney general's  office to                                                                    
confirm  what  would happen  with  the  funds. The  attorney                                                                    
general's office had  the opinion that both the  ERA and the                                                                    
PF corpus would not be swept back into the CBR.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:04:06 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Neuman  wanted  to   make  members  aware  of  the                                                                    
discussion.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Kawasaki asked  about the  predictability of                                                                    
putting money  in the  PF corpus. He  mentioned that  the PF                                                                    
value over the  previous two months was  fairly volatile. He                                                                    
thought  it sounded  like the  state would  be changing  one                                                                    
volatile system for  another volatile system -  the price of                                                                    
oil  versus   the  stock  market  activity.   He  asked  the                                                                    
commissioner to comment on the topic.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Hoffbeck responded  that there  was volatility                                                                    
in  the   investment  earnings.   However,  in   the  model,                                                                    
volatility  would  be  accounted   for  in  both  investment                                                                    
returns  and  in  oil  and   gas  production  and  price  in                                                                    
establishing a  $3.3 billion sustainable  draw. Most  of the                                                                    
volatility would  reside in the  corpus of the PF.  As money                                                                    
moved into the ERA there  would be less volatility. In other                                                                    
words,  all of  the oil  and gas  volatility would  be taken                                                                    
out. There would still be  some investment volatility in the                                                                    
ERA but the earnings reserve  would be managed for an annual                                                                    
withdraw  of $3.3  billion. The  administration  would do  a                                                                    
couple of things to deal  with the volatility going forward.                                                                    
The first would be to set  the goal of having four times the                                                                    
annual draw residing in the  earnings reserve. It would take                                                                    
away a portion  of the volatility because even  if there was                                                                    
a low return  year there would still be enough  money to pay                                                                    
the $3.3 billion draw.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman suggested covering the information later.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:06:59 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck  reiterated the robust  modeling which                                                                    
included an  ERA balance of  at least four times  the amount                                                                    
of the draw, and a periodic  review. There would be a review                                                                    
in the  following calendar year,  another review in  2020 to                                                                    
see if  the administration's  assumptions were  still valid,                                                                    
and a review  every four years after that.  He asserted that                                                                    
both  measures took  away some  uncertainty. He  noted there                                                                    
was a  toggle within the bill  that if the ERA  balance went                                                                    
below the  equivalent of four  times the amount of  the draw                                                                    
the  production  taxes  in   all  but  the  constitutionally                                                                    
mandated royalty payments  would flow into the  ERA. Only 25                                                                    
percent would go  into the corpus until the  ERA balance was                                                                    
up to the required amount. He  relayed that when DOR did its                                                                    
modeling it  found that $3.3  billion draw had a  30 percent                                                                    
failure  rate by  2040. A  failure rate  meant the  earnings                                                                    
reserve would reach a balance  of zero. He emphasized that a                                                                    
failure rate  meant that the earnings  reserve balance would                                                                    
go to zero rather than the  corpus of the fund. The earnings                                                                    
reserve would  go to zero 30  percent of the time  which was                                                                    
why  a review  process  every four  years  was necessary  to                                                                    
eliminate  the  possibility  of   failure.  After  a  review                                                                    
process  the  state  cold  adjust   as  necessary  to  avoid                                                                    
failure.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:09:10 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Kawasaki  asked if Commissioner  Hoffbeck had                                                                    
stated there was  a 30 percent failure rate  in the modeling                                                                    
conducted by the department.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck  explained that if the  state launched                                                                    
the modeling in the current year  and did not touch it again                                                                    
until  2040 there  was a  30 percent  chance of  failure. He                                                                    
confirmed that the  $3.3 billion draw could take  the ERA to                                                                    
zero,  30 percent  of the  time  which was  the impetus  for                                                                    
having a four-year review.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Kawasaki asked  how  the  dividend would  be                                                                    
calculated  if  it  was  based   on  50  percent  royalties.                                                                    
Commissioner  Hoffbeck  answered that  if  the  state saw  a                                                                    
recovery in oil  prices in the $60 range  the dividend would                                                                    
likely bounce between $800 -  $1,100, whereas, if oil prices                                                                    
remained at  $25/bbl then the  dividend could drop  to about                                                                    
$400.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman asked for  information about the assumptions                                                                    
DOR had  used to run  its model (including  assumptions that                                                                    
worked  and  ones  that   did  not).  Commissioner  Hoffbeck                                                                    
answered that he would provide the information.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:11:10 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Kawasaki commented  that in  looking at  the                                                                    
model it appeared  that all of the production  tax went into                                                                    
the corpus of  the fund. He understood that  there would not                                                                    
be any  more drawn from the  corpus to the ERA;  it depended                                                                    
mostly on the mineral royalty, a  fixed rate. He asked if he                                                                    
was accurate.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck  responded that  the PFD would  be 100                                                                    
percent based on the mineral royalties.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Kawasaki  commented  that the  dividend  was                                                                    
independent  of  the  price of  oil.  Commissioner  Hoffbeck                                                                    
disagreed. He  explained that the  royalty was  a percentage                                                                    
of  the sale  of oil;  as the  price increased,  the percent                                                                    
paid in royalty was worth more.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Gara    understood   the   administration's                                                                    
reasoning in  its approach  without having  a constitutional                                                                    
amendment. The  Legislative Finance Division  concluded that                                                                    
the modeling did not work.  He furthered that by putting all                                                                    
of the  money into the  ERA to spend on  general government,                                                                    
the  state faced  a situation  where  the money  in the  ERA                                                                    
would  be swept  into the  CBR annually.  He furthered  that                                                                    
every  year a  three-quarter  vote would  be necessary.  The                                                                    
constitution was  very clear; it  stated that the  amount of                                                                    
money  in the  General Fund  available for  appropriation at                                                                    
the  end of  the  year would  be deposited  in  the CBR.  He                                                                    
stated  that the  bill turned  the earnings  reserve into  a                                                                    
spending  fund.  It  was  no longer  a  Permanent  Fund  and                                                                    
inflation  proofing fund,  but rather  a spending  fund used                                                                    
for schools,  roads, etc. He continued  that the Legislative                                                                    
Finance  Division  in its  overview  had  stated that  money                                                                    
available  for general  appropriation went  into the  CBR at                                                                    
the end of the year. He  believed it was clear that a three-                                                                    
quarter vote would  be needed annually to get  the money out                                                                    
of the CBR to make the  plan work. He was uncomfortable with                                                                    
a plan  that was  going to  require an  annual three-quarter                                                                    
vote to fund basic services.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck  explained that he had  posed the same                                                                    
question  to  the  attorney  general.  He  deferred  to  the                                                                    
attorney  general's explanation  to  provide more  assurance                                                                    
that the  sweep would not  occur. He added that  in reality,                                                                    
the ERA had always been a  spending fund and had always been                                                                    
available for expenditures.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:14:40 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Gara mentioned a  court ruling that was based                                                                    
on a  time where  the ERA  was only  used for  dividends and                                                                    
inflation proofing. He  noted that it would  change with the                                                                    
bill. He wanted  a plan to work but he  thought that LFD was                                                                    
in  a  much  stronger  position in  its  analysis  than  the                                                                    
attorney general  at present. He expressed  concern with the                                                                    
need  for  an  annual   three-quarter  vote  to  fund  basic                                                                    
services. He  was aware of  what was stated by  the attorney                                                                    
general, but  he reasoned that the  constitution stated what                                                                    
it stated.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Hoffbeck  answered  that he  would  make  sure                                                                    
someone  came  before  the committee  to  walk  through  the                                                                    
analysis.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman agreed  that it was a critical  piece of the                                                                    
governor's legislation.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Saddler understood  the investment guidelines and                                                                    
directions to the PF were  different regarding whether funds                                                                    
were aimed  at being  available immediately or  invested for                                                                    
the   long-term.  He   asked  if   the  current   guidelines                                                                    
appropriate to the  model or would there have  to be changes                                                                    
to those.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck responded that  a certain amount of PF                                                                    
investments   were  short   that  were   in  cash   or  cash                                                                    
equivalents, characteristic of a  balanced portfolio. In the                                                                    
previous year $1.4 billion was used  to pay for the PFDs; it                                                                    
was a larger  draw. He thought it would  take an adjustment,                                                                    
but  indicated it  would likely  be more  in the  allocation                                                                    
than in a mandate.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:17:23 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Saddler asked why the  raw number of $3.2 billion                                                                    
was used rather than a percentage.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Hoffbeck  commented  that  the  administration                                                                    
found that  a fixed  draw provided the  most sustainability.                                                                    
If  the draw  became larger  in high  return years  it would                                                                    
take away  building up the  size of  the corpus of  the fund                                                                    
and  potentially   would  leave   more  volatility   in  the                                                                    
budgeting cycle.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Saddler  asked, given inflation and  increases in                                                                    
health  care  costs,  whether  the  model  allowed  for  any                                                                    
systemic increase in the  cost of government. Alternatively,                                                                    
he  asked   if  the   four-year  renewal  was   the  state's                                                                    
opportunity to allow for inflation.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Hoffbeck responded  that after  2020 it  would                                                                    
grow  with  inflation.  Government  expenditures  that  grew                                                                    
faster than inflation, such as  medical costs, would have to                                                                    
be  addressed with  additional reductions  or other  revenue                                                                    
sources. He  reported that one  of the goals was  to extract                                                                    
as much as  possible annually moving forward.  The amount of                                                                    
$3.3  billion was  as much  as could  be pulled  out of  the                                                                    
system for funding government services.  He asserted that if                                                                    
the  state  tried  to  chase   expenditures  with  the  draw                                                                    
eventually the corpus would start  to be depleted. The issue                                                                    
remained that Alaska had a  very limited number of resources                                                                    
feeding government  services. The  current structure  of the                                                                    
bill  was that  $3.3 billion  could be  reduced in  order to                                                                    
preserve sustainability.  However, the  toggle switch  to go                                                                    
higher was  purely inflation, even on  the four-year review.                                                                    
An  exception would  be some  sort of  quantum shift  in the                                                                    
state's economy.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:20:24 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Saddler  asked the commissioner to  reiterate how                                                                    
the structure allowed for inflation.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Pitney  explained that 2.25  percent was  the assumption                                                                    
on inflation.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Pruitt asked  about  the balance  of the  PF                                                                    
corpus in 2040 based  on the analysis. Commissioner Hoffbeck                                                                    
responded that the balance would  be at whatever the current                                                                    
corpus was  plus inflation.  He offered  to provide  a chart                                                                    
that would show an amount.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Pruitt asked  about the  30 percent  failure                                                                    
rate  and the  periodic reviews.  He thought  the state  had                                                                    
limited its  choices around dealing with  failure especially                                                                    
since  50  percent  of  the  production  taxes  and  mineral                                                                    
royalties  would go  into the  corpus and  the remaining  50                                                                    
percent would go to the  dividend. He wondered what the plan                                                                    
was  to adjust  if the  state were  to get  to the  point of                                                                    
failure rate.  He asked how  the state would adjust  and pay                                                                    
for government under the proposed plan.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck relayed that  it depended on the level                                                                    
of failure.  If there was  a short-term cash flow  issue due                                                                    
to  multiple bad  years in  a  row, the  toggle would  place                                                                    
production taxes  and all constitutionally  mandated royalty                                                                    
payments into  the earnings reserve  to bolster  the account                                                                    
and  to enable  further payments.  If it  appeared that  the                                                                    
long-term forecast  of returns on  invest and oil  price and                                                                    
production   would   not   support   the   draw   then   the                                                                    
administration would  recommend to the  legislature reducing                                                                    
the  size of  the  draw. He  noted  that the  administration                                                                    
would not  want to take  more out of  the ERA than  it could                                                                    
provide.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:23:14 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Pruitt asked  about the  $3.3 billion  draw.                                                                    
The proposed budget  was about $5.2 billion.  He pointed out                                                                    
there was  a $1.8  billion gap. He  asked whether  the state                                                                    
had enough  revenues to  fill the gap  without having  to go                                                                    
forward  with some  of the  newly  proposed revenue  sources                                                                    
such as an income tax.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck  responded that on slide  8 the barrel                                                                    
labeled  "All Other  Taxes" represented  taxes and  fees the                                                                    
state  currently collected  - about  $850 million  per year.                                                                    
The administration  expected the state would  be making some                                                                    
return on the CBR investments.  He relayed that $3.3 billion                                                                    
plus $850  million, plus $135 million  totaled approximately                                                                    
$4.2  billion  to $4.25  billion.  The  state was  about  $1                                                                    
billion short. He  asserted that the other parts  of the new                                                                    
sustainable  Alaska  plan,  revenues and  reductions,  would                                                                    
help to fill the remaining gap.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Pruitt concluded  that  the  state would  be                                                                    
about $1 billion short.  Commissioner Hoffbeck concurred. He                                                                    
reiterated that revenues and reductions,  the other parts of                                                                    
the  new sustainable  Alaska plan,  would help  to fill  the                                                                    
gap. In other  words, the state could get  within $1 billion                                                                    
using its existing financial assets.  The Permanent Fund was                                                                    
not large enough to fill the gap alone.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Representative Pruitt  asked if the administration  was done                                                                    
making cuts.  He wondered if  the legislature would  have to                                                                    
find other  sources of  revenue in the  current year  and in                                                                    
future  years such  as a  sales  tax, income  tax, or  other                                                                    
things.  He wondered  if the  administration would  continue                                                                    
with cost  reductions and resizing.  He also  wondered about                                                                    
inflationary  growth   and  the  potential  the   gap  would                                                                    
increase.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:25:51 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Hoffbeck   flipped  to   slide  9:   "The  New                                                                    
Sustainable  Alaska  Plan."  The slide  showed  the  various                                                                    
pieces  of  the  new  sustainable Alaska  plan.  The  Alaska                                                                    
Permanent Fund  Protection Act was  a $3.3 billion  draw and                                                                    
existing taxes and fees and  earnings on savings brought the                                                                    
number to  $4.285 billion. The  numbers were  forecasted out                                                                    
to FY 19,  as it would take  three years to get  the plan in                                                                    
balance.  The  slide showed  spending  reductions  in FY  17                                                                    
through FY  19 in the  amount of $240 million  ($140 million                                                                    
in FY 17  and $50 million the following  two years). Another                                                                    
reduction of $400  million was connected to the  oil and gas                                                                    
tax credit  reform. He noted  about $40 million  in priority                                                                    
investments  was  placed  back   in.  The  net  in  spending                                                                    
reductions was $600  million, $500 million of  which were in                                                                    
FY 17.  He anticipated about  $457 million in  new revenues.                                                                    
He concluded that the $1  billion shortfall was covered with                                                                    
$600  million  in the  form  of  reductions and  about  $400                                                                    
million in the form of new revenues.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Pruitt   thanked   the   commissioner   for                                                                    
answering  his  question. He  asked  if  the capital  budget                                                                    
would  be  limited to  $50  million  or  if there  would  be                                                                    
additional  capital  spending.  He  asked  if  there  was  a                                                                    
commitment  from  the  administration to  continue  reducing                                                                    
spending,  He also  wondered if  the legislature  would have                                                                    
hit the administration's goal in a single year.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck  suggested that  where cuts  were made                                                                    
would   dictate  his   response   to  the   representative's                                                                    
question. However, the governor had  made it very clear that                                                                    
the  plan was  in pencil;  if the  legislature believed  the                                                                    
proper balance  included additional  cuts and  less revenues                                                                    
he  was  amenable to  that.  He  relayed that  the  governor                                                                    
intended to work with the  legislature to find the necessary                                                                    
balance; he was  only using the plan as a  template and left                                                                    
the door open  to modify it. The only  thing unacceptable to                                                                    
the  governor  was  no  plan   at  all.  The  administration                                                                    
expected greater reductions that what was proposed.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
2:28:55 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Thompson  referred to  slide 8  and the  PF corpus.                                                                    
The way the plan was set  up 50 percent of mineral royalties                                                                    
and 100  percent of production  taxes would go into  the PF.                                                                    
He  noted that  the remaining  50 percent  of the  royalties                                                                    
would go  towards the dividend.  He mentioned  the potential                                                                    
gas line  in 10 years and  suggested that 50 percent  of gas                                                                    
royalties and 100  percent of gas production  taxes could be                                                                    
added to  the PF. There would  be a much larger  royalty and                                                                    
potentially a much larger dividend.  He stated that possibly                                                                    
the dividend could grow to $3,000  or $4,000. He asked if he                                                                    
was correct.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck responded  affirmatively. The dividend                                                                    
would follow the economic health of the state.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Representative Edgmon reiterated  his earlier question about                                                                    
why the  plan needed to be  formed in one year.  He wondered                                                                    
how  the  legislature would  sell  the  plan to  the  Alaska                                                                    
voters in such a short amount  of time. He asserted that not                                                                    
only did  the state  have a  fiscal problem,  it also  had a                                                                    
political problem. The plan had  come about sometime in late                                                                    
October  or early  November of  the prior  year when  it was                                                                    
presented to  the legislature. He was  trying to rationalize                                                                    
how  he  was going  to  explain  to  a  group of  people  in                                                                    
Dillingham that  the state was  going to cut  their dividend                                                                    
in half,  consolidate all of  the state's  savings accounts,                                                                    
and  continue to  make major  reductions  to K-12  education                                                                    
funding  and  several  other  programs.  He  suggested  that                                                                    
whatever  plan was  adopted would  be  a cooperative  effort                                                                    
between  the legislature  and the  governor. It  was already                                                                    
the end  of January. He  appreciated the work that  had gone                                                                    
into the  model and  thought it had  promise. He  also liked                                                                    
the  way  the  governor  was  trying  to  take  a  judicious                                                                    
approach  to reducing  the budget.  However, he  wondered if                                                                    
there was  any other  reason for hurrying  the model  out in                                                                    
the current  year. He mentioned  looking at the  M/V Susitna                                                                    
in Ketchikan five  years earlier. He recalled  it had looked                                                                    
pretty good  on dry  dock. He wondered,  though, how  it was                                                                    
going  to  work   in  the  water  and  the   rigors  of  ice                                                                    
conditions. He  emphasized the importance  of needing  to be                                                                    
able to explain  the model to the voters in  Alaska in order                                                                    
for the legislature to decide to go forward with the plan.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck  said he would bring  in some matrixes                                                                    
that showed  what the  sustainable draw  would look  like if                                                                    
the legislature waited one year  to take action. The impacts                                                                    
of  waiting  could  be  seen in  the  information  he  would                                                                    
provide.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:32:47 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Edgmon suggested that  the inference was that                                                                    
the administration would be working  with the general public                                                                    
between the present day and the  end of session to help them                                                                    
understand why it was that the  state had to take action and                                                                    
why it would be  beneficial for the long-term sustainability                                                                    
of the state.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck  responded, "Absolutely, we  will talk                                                                    
to anybody, anywhere, anytime about it."                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman  remarked that  the administration  had been                                                                    
going  around the  state frequently.  He added  that he  had                                                                    
been putting  the presentations on  Facebook and  was trying                                                                    
to get  them to the public  as much as possible.  He assumed                                                                    
Representative   Edgmon  was   doing  the   same  with   his                                                                    
constituents.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative Edgmon  responded that he did  not understand                                                                    
the model well enough yet  to sufficiently explain it to his                                                                    
constituents.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman stated that it  would take a while to better                                                                    
understand  it,  as it  was  a  very complicated  plan  with                                                                    
several  pieces. The  goal for  the current  meeting was  to                                                                    
provide a 50,000-foot view.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Hoffbeck  returned  to slide  9  and  reported                                                                    
there were  separate bills for  each of the  components. The                                                                    
components included  the Permanent Fund Protection  Act, the                                                                    
spending  reductions  in  the  budget  bills,  and  the  new                                                                    
revenue  components in  the form  of a  series of  tax bills                                                                    
introduced  by  the  governor  -  mining,  fishing,  tourism                                                                    
[motor  fuel],  alcohol  and  tobacco,   oil  and  gas,  and                                                                    
individual income tax legislation.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:34:52 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Saddler   referenced  that  new   revenues  were                                                                    
acceptable if  the burden was  shared equitably on  slide 4;                                                                    
however, a sales  tax was not included on slide  9. He asked                                                                    
why a sales tax was not put forward.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Hoffbeck   replied  that   the  administration                                                                    
thought  it  was  an  "either/or"  scenario  -  it  believed                                                                    
proposing both would have been  too much. The administration                                                                    
concluded that  an income  tax was  more appropriate  than a                                                                    
sales tax because  of the federal deductibility  of the tax,                                                                    
the ease  of implementation and auditing,  and feedback from                                                                    
communities. Many  communities were already using  sales tax                                                                    
as  a major  source  of funding;  they  were concerned  they                                                                    
would have to pull back if  a state sales tax was added onto                                                                    
a municipality sales tax.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Gara   referred   to  slide   4   regarding                                                                    
equitability. He  opined that  equitability would  really be                                                                    
the topic of  discussion in the current year. He  spoke to a                                                                    
study from Institute of Social  and Economic Research (ISER)                                                                    
that showed  if the  dividend was reduced  to the  level the                                                                    
administration was suggesting, 50  percent of Alaskans (some                                                                    
of  the least  wealthy  Alaskans in  the  state) would  have                                                                    
their income reduced by about  20 percent. On the other hand                                                                    
the  proposed income  tax would  be about  1 percent  of the                                                                    
income  of  the  wealthiest  Alaskans. He  added  that  most                                                                    
corporations  in the  state did  not pay  corporate tax.  He                                                                    
suggested requiring  corporations that earned  over $250,000                                                                    
per year to pay a tax. He  also alluded to the fact that the                                                                    
state  had an  oil tax  policy  in which  every field  after                                                                    
2002, at  oil prices  below $60  or $70  per barrel,  paid a                                                                    
zero percent  production tax. He  asked how he would  tell a                                                                    
constituent in Fairview  or Mountain View or in  some of the                                                                    
poorer parts of  the state that they would be  paying at tax                                                                    
equaling 20 percent of their income.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Hoffbeck  responded  that first  there  was  a                                                                    
balance by having both the PFD  and an income tax. The state                                                                    
was  aware that  a  smaller PFD  would  impact lower  income                                                                    
families more. He  conveyed that by tying the  income tax to                                                                    
the federal  tax liability  so that it  embedded all  of the                                                                    
credits and exemptions within the  federal tax structure the                                                                    
lower 40 percent  or 50 percent of individuals  would not be                                                                    
paying a  state income tax or  a very small one.  The income                                                                    
tax   would   disproportionately  affect   higher   earners.                                                                    
Conversely,  the  dividend  would  disproportionally  affect                                                                    
lower earners. He concluded that  by having the structure of                                                                    
the PFD and  an income tax it created  some balance although                                                                    
he realized it was not  perfect. He continued that the issue                                                                    
with  the corporate  income tax  payers was  not with  the C                                                                    
corporations but  with the S corporations  and partnerships.                                                                    
The  personal  income  tax would  become  the  mechanism  to                                                                    
capture  those.  The  income   would  flow  through  to  the                                                                    
underlying  partners. By  having a  personal income  tax the                                                                    
state  would   be  able  to  capture   revenues  from  those                                                                    
corporations.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:39:35 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Gara suggested  that the  corporate tax  for                                                                    
the other corporations  would become 1 percent  or 2 percent                                                                    
because  of the  income tax  amount. He  continued that  the                                                                    
corporate  tax  for  C  corporations  was  9.4  percent.  He                                                                    
relayed that the administration's  plan would have the other                                                                    
corporations paying about a sixth  of the rate. He suggested                                                                    
measuring  the rate  against  the 20  percent  of income  of                                                                    
Alaskans  not in  the top  50  percent of  wage earners.  He                                                                    
asked the commissioner if he thought it was equitable.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Hoffbeck suggested  that by  tying the  income                                                                    
tax  to  the  federal  income tax  structure  it  removed  a                                                                    
portion of  the debate.  The simplest way  to get  an income                                                                    
tax into play was to charge  a percentage of the federal tax                                                                    
rate. If  the state wanted to  change to a structure  of its                                                                    
own it  could put  one into  place in  the future.  He added                                                                    
that within  the oil and gas  tax credit reform there  was a                                                                    
provision that did  not allow the new oil to  drop below the                                                                    
floor. In  the hardening  of the floor  the minimum  tax for                                                                    
new oil would be the floor rather than zero.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Pruitt mentioned that  all of the new revenue                                                                    
proposals  except   for  an  income   tax  already   had  an                                                                    
infrastructure in  place. He wondered  what the  costs would                                                                    
be to  build and maintain  the infrastructure for  an income                                                                    
tax.                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Hoffbeck responded  that the  upkeep would  be                                                                    
about 3  percent of  taxes collected. He  would have  to get                                                                    
back to the committee with the costs for implementation.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:42:40 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair   Saddler    asked   if   the    department   had                                                                    
macroeconomic information  as to  how the  revenue generated                                                                    
from the  reduction in the  PFD would compare to  the amount                                                                    
of revenue  generated by the  proposed income tax  which the                                                                    
commissioner  had indicated  was about  equal. He  wanted to                                                                    
see additional breakout numbers.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Hoffbeck   suggested  that  with   an  assumed                                                                    
dividend of about  $1,000 in the current year  and $2,000 in                                                                    
the  previous year  the amount  would be  $700 million.  The                                                                    
income tax would be $200 million in revenues.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck discussed the  chart on slide 10: "The                                                                    
New  Sustainable Alaska  Plan: Per-Capita  Broad-Based State                                                                    
Tax Revenues, by State 2014."  He pondered what Alaska would                                                                    
look like if  all of the levers within the  fiscal plan were                                                                    
pulled.  Currently  Alaska  had the  lowest  individual  tax                                                                    
burden in  the country  at about $500  per person.  He noted                                                                    
that the slide  he was presenting was an ISER  slide. If all                                                                    
levers were  pulled the tax  would increase to  about $1,000                                                                    
per  person. The  national average  was  $2,300 per  person.                                                                    
Alaska would remain either the  first or second lowest taxed                                                                    
state in  terms of an  individual broad-based tax  burden in                                                                    
the nation. He  contended that the state was  not creating a                                                                    
situation in  which Alaska's tax  level was so  onerous that                                                                    
people  would simply  leave the  state. There  was no  other                                                                    
state where  they would  pay less.  He understood  that when                                                                    
the tax  burden went  from zero to  something it  would feel                                                                    
like   a  significant   amount.  He   wanted  to   put  into                                                                    
perspective how  Alaska taxes would rate  in comparison with                                                                    
other states.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:44:42 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Saddler  commented that  because taxes  were paid                                                                    
on the  commonly owned oil  wealth, the per capita  tax paid                                                                    
either  by  or  on  behalf   of  Alaskans  would  likely  be                                                                    
different from the chart.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson asked if  property taxes were included                                                                    
in the  amount of  taxes listed  on the  chart. Commissioner                                                                    
Hoffbeck responded in the negative.  The property taxes were                                                                    
local taxes and therefore not on the slide.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson  speculated that the chart  would look                                                                    
much  different if  the comparison  between states  included                                                                    
both taxes  and cost  of living  expenses. Alaska  would not                                                                    
appear at  the bottom.  She disagreed with  the commissioner                                                                    
about his  comment that adding  a tax would not  be onerous.                                                                    
She  wanted to  be  careful about  adding  another tax.  She                                                                    
asked if  any studies had been  done on the impacts  of each                                                                    
of the proposals to the economy.  She asked if there was any                                                                    
documentation  showing  why  the  administration  chose  the                                                                    
proposals  it  had. She  needed  to  be  able to  take  that                                                                    
information back to  her district because she did  not see a                                                                    
reduction in  government included in the  plan. She wondered                                                                    
if the  information would  be provided  to the  committee in                                                                    
order to better understand the administration's direction.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck responded  that the administration had                                                                    
contracted with  ISER and Gunner  Knapp was doing  the study                                                                    
about the  impacts of the  various components of  the fiscal                                                                    
plan. He  thought the study  would be completed by  early to                                                                    
mid-February. He thought  it would be available  by the time                                                                    
the  topic  of revenue  was  brought  up in  committee.  The                                                                    
administration thought that it was  better to have the study                                                                    
completed externally to give  it additional credibility. The                                                                    
Office  of Management  and  Budget and  DOR  stood back  and                                                                    
allowed  ISER to  do  the study  without  input from  either                                                                    
agency.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:48:07 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson wondered if  the study would include a                                                                    
recommendation  for a  sustainably sized  government without                                                                    
making changes to the Permanent  Fund or imposing additional                                                                    
taxes.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck  thought the  report would  answer her                                                                    
question - it  would include the impact of  various cuts and                                                                    
the impact of  various taxes. He was certain  that Mr. Knapp                                                                    
would not  be recommending the  right balance, but  he would                                                                    
be  providing  the  information  necessary  to  compare  the                                                                    
relative impacts  between cuts and taxes.  Ultimately, there                                                                    
were two pieces;  math and politics. He thought  it would be                                                                    
more difficult  to answer the  question about  what Alaskans                                                                    
wanted.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson  did not  know  what  entity DOR  was                                                                    
using or  its background.  She wondered if  it had  done any                                                                    
studies for other states doing  something similar. She asked                                                                    
about  the  chosen  entity's expertise.  She  thought  there                                                                    
might  be  an  economic   group  that  had  more  nationwide                                                                    
experience.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck replied that  one of the advantages of                                                                    
ISER was  that it  had done similar  types of  analysis over                                                                    
the years; it would have the  ability to recheck some of its                                                                    
previous assumptions. He noted that  the agency had the best                                                                    
knowledge of Alaska as well.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson  remarked  that Alaska  was  not  the                                                                    
first  state to  experience a  budgetary crisis.  She agreed                                                                    
that Alaska  was unique in  many instances but did  not feel                                                                    
this was one of those  instances. She stressed that if there                                                                    
were  better experts  available, the  state should  be using                                                                    
them to  tell the  legislature what had  been done  right or                                                                    
wrong. She believed  the department thought the  state had a                                                                    
revenue problem,  but she disagreed.  She thought  the state                                                                    
had a  spending problem.  She thought ISER's  experience was                                                                    
too  specific  to  Alaska  and  she  wanted  to  ensure  the                                                                    
legislature  was   making  the   right  decisions   for  its                                                                    
constituents.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:51:48 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Hoffbeck  scrolled  to   slide  11:  "The  New                                                                    
Sustainable Alaska Plan." He conveyed  that if every part of                                                                    
the fiscal plan went into  effect it would leave Alaska with                                                                    
the lowest  or second lowest  taxes in the  nation; Alaskans                                                                    
would still  receive a  dividend; the  state would  still be                                                                    
growing its savings  over time; the state  would continue to                                                                    
provide  the majority  of  government  services that  people                                                                    
enjoyed;  the state  would still  have  money available  for                                                                    
investing in the  future through oil and gas  tax credits at                                                                    
a  lower level;  and,  the state  had  an Alaska  Industrial                                                                    
Development and  Export Authority (AIDEA) loan  fund to help                                                                    
support oil  and gas development  in Alaska. He  opined that                                                                    
it was not the worst place the state could land.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:53:09 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Guttenberg agreed  with Representative Wilson                                                                    
about a  couple of things.  He mentioned that  the disparity                                                                    
between the cost of fuel (cost  per gallon) and the price of                                                                    
oil was problematic. If the  state simply wanted to increase                                                                    
the ability of the economy  to function more efficiently the                                                                    
administration would find  an answer to the  problem. He was                                                                    
unsure if  the proper statutes  were in place to  enable the                                                                    
administration to  do so.  The price of  oil had  dropped by                                                                    
about 80 percent.  The price of motor fuel  and gasoline was                                                                    
nowhere near  that. In  rural Alaska it  was much  worse. He                                                                    
relayed that  it affected the  economy every time  the state                                                                    
filled  up a  vehicle  or a  piece of  equipment  such as  a                                                                    
grader  to plow  the  roads.  He wanted  to  comment on  the                                                                    
analysis presented  in the  flow chart and  the CBR  where a                                                                    
super majority would  not be needed. He did  not believe all                                                                    
funds should  be easily accessible  to everyone.  He thought                                                                    
there should be an account  in existence that was not easily                                                                    
accessible  regardless  of politics.  He  did  not want  the                                                                    
administration's  plan to  fail  because it  had focused  on                                                                    
eliminating  a CBR  vote  which he  thought  was clearly  in                                                                    
conflict  with  the   constitution.  He  hoped  Commissioner                                                                    
Hoffbeck had a  backup plan. He was  concerned with spending                                                                    
significant  time on  a plan  that may  not be  supported by                                                                    
Alaska's constitution.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:56:11 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Pitney explained  an  LFD  graph on  slide  12: "FY  17                                                                    
Budget Overview:  Total Agency Operating  Budgets, Statewide                                                                    
Items  and Capital  Budget Compared  to Revenue  (UGF Only--                                                                    
$billions)."  She transitioned  from the  governor's numbers                                                                    
to  the legislature's  numbers.  She reported  that in  most                                                                    
cases  OMB  and  LFD  agreed  on  the  numbers.  There  were                                                                    
potential differences  in how  the numbers  were categorized                                                                    
or what they  were compared to. However, OMB  and LFD agreed                                                                    
on the individual numbers, the  directional changes, and the                                                                    
order  of  magnitude  of the  changes.  She  suggested  that                                                                    
rather than focusing on whether  the number was 5 percent or                                                                    
4.3  percent she  would be  using LFD  documents to  explain                                                                    
where  OMB had  slightly different  interpretations and  the                                                                    
reasoning  behind them.  She reemphasized  that OMB  and LFD                                                                    
agreed on 99 percent of  the interpretations, 100 percent of                                                                    
the individual  numbers, and  there were  only a  few places                                                                    
where they disagreed on the  comparisons. She pointed to the                                                                    
spending change  overtime. The Legislative  Finance Division                                                                    
reported  a 30  percent  reduction over  time. She  reported                                                                    
people  saying  that  the  administration  had  not  reduced                                                                    
government.  She countered  that it  had reduced  government                                                                    
significantly.  She reported  nearly $400  million had  been                                                                    
reduced from the  operating budget from FY 15 to  FY 16. She                                                                    
mentioned that in FY 16 to  FY 17 there were $150 million in                                                                    
reductions  and $40  million  in  priority investments.  She                                                                    
explained   that   the   priority  investments   were   very                                                                    
important.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Pitney  furthered that  $38 million  of the  $40 million                                                                    
represented  operating   funds  to  support  the   gas  line                                                                    
development  project. The  Office of  Management and  Budget                                                                    
and  LFD fundamentally  disagreed on  the comparison  of the                                                                    
governor's  budget in  FY 17  to FY  16. In  FY 17,  for the                                                                    
first time, $700 million in  dividend checks was placed into                                                                    
the total for  general funds. In the  governor's version OMB                                                                    
showed that the  earnings reserve cost was  similar to prior                                                                    
years. If dividend  check payouts in FY 16  were added, $1.3                                                                    
billion would  be added  on top of  $5.4 billion,  which was                                                                    
clearly a  reduction. She was  trying to  compare apples-to-                                                                    
apples. She  continued that the  reality was that  there was                                                                    
$5.5 billion in spending in FY 17.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Pitney  discussed  the four  major  components  of  the                                                                    
sustainable plan: 1) the amount  and the method of using the                                                                    
earnings reserves; 2) the amount  of the PFDs and the method                                                                    
in  which to  accommodate them;  3) the  amount of  spending                                                                    
reductions; and 4)  the amount of new  revenues to generate.                                                                    
She contended that the largest  component was the use of the                                                                    
earnings reserves.  She continued  that all  four components                                                                    
interplayed and had  a balance. She pointed out  that one of                                                                    
the main  priorities during the current  legislative session                                                                    
was  to enact  oil  and  gas tax  credit  reform. If  reform                                                                    
legislation passed it would require  an estimated $1 billion                                                                    
to  be transferred  from savings  into the  oil and  gas tax                                                                    
credit  fund  to  pay  all   earned  credits  to  date.  She                                                                    
continued that $200  million would be placed in  a loan fund                                                                    
to  continue  the  program.  She  concluded  that  the  $5.5                                                                    
billion  would   become  $6.7   billion  with   reform.  She                                                                    
explained that  the oil and  gas tax credit  transition fund                                                                    
would allow  for the state  to get  to a steady  position of                                                                    
paying about $100 million in  annual oil and gas tax credits                                                                    
instead of $600 million or $700 million currently.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
3:01:48 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman asked what ramifications  would occur if the                                                                    
legislature  did not  implement the  governor's change  from                                                                    
the tax  credits to  a small loan  program. He  relayed that                                                                    
many of the tax credits  sunset in January 2016. He wondered                                                                    
about the cost to the state.  He noted that the governor had                                                                    
vetoed $200  million in tax  credits from the budget  in the                                                                    
previous  year.  He asked  how  many  tax credits  had  been                                                                    
applied for to date, the cost  to the state, and the time in                                                                    
which they would need to be paid.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner   Hoffbeck   responded   that   in   terms   of                                                                    
applications almost  the entire  $500 million had  been paid                                                                    
out to  date. Most of  what would come  in now would  not be                                                                    
due  until FY  17. He  estimated that  there would  be about                                                                    
$700 million  in credits  in the  current year.  He reported                                                                    
that only  a few of the  credits expired in FY  16 including                                                                    
the exploration tax credit. They  were only a small fraction                                                                    
of the total tax credits  being paid. The largest credit was                                                                    
the net  operating loss (NOL)  credit which would  remain in                                                                    
the program  due to the  discussions the  administration had                                                                    
with companies that  felt that NOLs were  critical in moving                                                                    
forward. The administration had  put other provisions in the                                                                    
tax  credit  reform bill  that  would  limit the  amount  of                                                                    
credits that  could be cashed in  and by whom. The  idea was                                                                    
to limit  the outflow  of state  funds while  still allowing                                                                    
for  the  NOL credit  to  exist.  The smaller  credits  were                                                                    
expiring.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman  remarked that he wanted  the information on                                                                    
record.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
3:04:00 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Gara  suggested  that  when  discussing  tax                                                                    
credits the  governor was primarily  focused on  tax credits                                                                    
for new  oil for companies  that did  not make a  profit. He                                                                    
relayed  that  companies  that  made  a  profit  received  a                                                                    
different type  of tax credit:  a deduction. He  relayed the                                                                    
prices at which companies were  paying the profits tax under                                                                    
SB  21 [oil  and gas  legislation  passed in  2013]. At  oil                                                                    
prices of  $70 to $80 per  barrel, the oil companies  paid a                                                                    
tax of about  70 percent and at $100 per  barrel the tax was                                                                    
about 20  percent. The percentage  would not increase  to 35                                                                    
percent until oil  reached about $160 per  barrel. No matter                                                                    
what  percentage  companies paid,  they  were  getting a  35                                                                    
percent  deduction for  all of  their capital  and operating                                                                    
costs;  the  deduction  was essentially  a  tax  credit.  He                                                                    
wondered  why the  administration did  not look  at changing                                                                    
the  deduction. He  asserted that  the state  was trying  to                                                                    
save   money   on  tax   credits.   He   wondered  why   the                                                                    
administration  was only  targeting small  companies, rather                                                                    
than asking the  larger companies to help  solve the state's                                                                    
budget deficit.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Hoffbeck  explained  that  the  administration                                                                    
left  the  NOL  credit  of 35  percent  intact,  essentially                                                                    
leaving  a  balance in  place  where  the smaller  companies                                                                    
received a 35 percent credit while developing their fields.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Gara commented  that legislature  was trying                                                                    
to  decide what  the state  could and  could not  afford. He                                                                    
reported that  when he  paid his  income his  deduction rate                                                                    
matched roughly  his income tax  rate. He continued  that in                                                                    
most income tax systems the  deduction was about the same as                                                                    
the income  tax. He  thought the state  had a  very generous                                                                    
provision  that  was costing  it  a  significant amount.  He                                                                    
suggested  that  Exxon, Conoco,  and  BP  were paying  a  20                                                                    
percent  tax  and  receiving  a  35  percent  deduction  for                                                                    
capital  costs. He  wanted to  understand how  the situation                                                                    
was sustainable  when the  state was  trying to  balance the                                                                    
budget.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Hoffbeck thought  it was  a larger  discussion                                                                    
than the governor  wanted to tackle in  the current session.                                                                    
The governor  made a conscious  decision to ask  everyone to                                                                    
participate, but he did not  want to put an excessive burden                                                                    
on  any one  particular sector  or industry.  He had  made a                                                                    
mindful choice  that the underlying  oil and gas  tax credit                                                                    
reform  would  not  be  part of  the  discussion,  only  the                                                                    
credits.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
3:07:06 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Neuman communicated  that the  committee would  be                                                                    
addressing the issue when the  subject of tax credit came up                                                                    
at a later time.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Gara  remarked  that from  his  perspective,                                                                    
everyone was not contributing.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Thompson  understood that production taxes  and tax                                                                    
credits  were being  discussed. However,  he wanted  to make                                                                    
the point  that oil companies  paid a 25 percent  royalty up                                                                    
front.  Commissioner Hoffbeck  corrected  that  it was  12.5                                                                    
percent.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Thompson  continued that in addition  the companies                                                                    
paid corporate  taxes to the state.  He hoped to be  able to                                                                    
look at the taxes more in depth at another time.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Gattis asked  if the  $5.5 billion  included                                                                    
the  PFDs, whereas,  previous years  did not.  She concluded                                                                    
that  the legislature  was  not comparing  apples-to-apples.                                                                    
Ms. Pitney affirmed that she was correct.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Representative Gattis  asked where the tax  credits that the                                                                    
governor  had  vetoed in  the  previous  year fit  into  the                                                                    
budget. Ms. Pitney  pointed to the chart  and explained that                                                                    
the  $5.4 billion  in FY  16  included $500  million in  tax                                                                    
credits, which  was reflected in  the middle yellow  bar (on                                                                    
slide 12); the amount was $73 million in FY 17.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck  added that the $200  million would be                                                                    
in the transition fund.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
3:09:33 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Pitney reviewed  graph on  slide 13:  "Real Per  Capita                                                                    
Unrestricted  General  Fund  Revenue/ Budget  History  (2014                                                                    
dollars Per Person)."  She pointed to the size of  the FY 17                                                                    
budget. She drew  attention to the dark blue  portion of the                                                                    
vertical bars representing agency  operations. She noted the                                                                    
cost  of  agency operations  was  among  the lowest  in  the                                                                    
previous 30  years. The governor's plan  included additional                                                                    
operating  reductions  in  FY  18  and  FY  19.  There  were                                                                    
reductions of $140 million in  the current year, $50 million                                                                    
in the following  year, and an additional  $50 million after                                                                    
that.   She   noted   inflation   increases   were   planned                                                                    
thereafter.  She explained  that statewide  obligations were                                                                    
depicted  in   light  blue   and  included   retirement  and                                                                    
pensions. In  FY 17, unlike  previous years, there  was $700                                                                    
million in  PFDs. The debt  service and  pension obligations                                                                    
were  past  debts  as  well as  credits.  She  reported  the                                                                    
capital budget  being very constrained  in the  current year                                                                    
as opposed  to growing  in high revenue  years. There  was a                                                                    
limit to  how much  the capital budget  could be  reduced in                                                                    
the  down  years.  Although the  capital  budget  showed  an                                                                    
increase  in the  current year,  it  essentially funded  the                                                                    
same priorities and  projects proposed in FY  16 including a                                                                    
transportation match and  deferred maintenance. She reported                                                                    
that the  state had  the opportunity of  reappropriations in                                                                    
the FY 16  budget. The state used them in  the previous year                                                                    
and they  did not  exist. Part of  the difference  between a                                                                    
$118 million  capital budget in  the previous year  and $195                                                                    
million  had  nothing  to do  with  the  projects  included.                                                                    
Instead, it  had to  do with a  lack of  reappropriations in                                                                    
the current year to cover costs.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
3:11:50 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Thompson relayed he would  talk to Ms. Pitney later                                                                    
about  the  capital  budget. He  was  handling  the  capital                                                                    
budget and had  noticed some items that  he thought belonged                                                                    
in the operating budget. Ms.  Pitney concurred. There were a                                                                    
couple  of items  in the  capital budget  that LFD  believed                                                                    
should be in the operating budget.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Pitney  advanced to  slide 14:  "State of  Alaska Fiscal                                                                    
Summary -  FY16 and  FY17 (Part  1) ($millions)."  She noted                                                                    
that  the summary  had been  used by  Mr. Teal  the previous                                                                    
day. She pointed to line  23 titled "Debt Service" and noted                                                                    
a debt service increase in  the governor's FY 17 budget from                                                                    
$206  million  to  $436  million.  The  number  reflected  a                                                                    
proposal put  forth by the administration  for financing the                                                                    
state's existing  and projected retirement payments  for the                                                                    
following 25 to 30 years.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Pitney scrolled  to slide  15: "Pension  Payments." She                                                                    
explained  that Mr.  Teal had  stated that  it would  be $58                                                                    
million more in  the current year to  finance the retirement                                                                    
system   rather  than   paying   the  actuarially   required                                                                    
contribution.  She  noted that  the  green  bar was  without                                                                    
financing  and represented  the status  quo. The  yellow bar                                                                    
depicted   a  scenario   where   the   state  financed   the                                                                    
obligation. She  relayed that  the administration  had asked                                                                    
its  debt manager  to  look  at a  structure  that left  the                                                                    
state's required  payment as flat as  possible understanding                                                                    
the state was  headed into a very  flat revenue environment.                                                                    
The idea  was to reduce  the increase structuring  such that                                                                    
the state was paying the same  amount as it was paying in FY                                                                    
16.  Overtime the  yellow  bar became  less  steep than  the                                                                    
green bar,  but the  savings between the  two (based  on the                                                                    
actuarial findings) was  $1.7 billion. If the  state did not                                                                    
realize  the return  it anticipated  the cumulative  savings                                                                    
could  drop to  $1  billion in  savings.  However, the  $100                                                                    
million increase would be avoided  in 10 years because there                                                                    
would not  be a revenue  structure to follow.  The rationale                                                                    
behind the  pension obligation bonds  was to flatten  it and                                                                    
to take advantage of the savings.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
3:15:28 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson  asked  about the  payment  into  the                                                                    
pension fund  because of the  possibility of  bonding, aside                                                                    
from going from  $500 million in tax credits  to $73 million                                                                    
in tax credits.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Pitney responded  in the  affirmative.  She pointed  to                                                                    
line 28  on slide 14.  The state  went from $262  million to                                                                    
$48  million in  direct  payments. There  was an  offsetting                                                                    
increase  in  the  debt service  column.  Between  the  debt                                                                    
service increase and  the $48 million the  total equaled the                                                                    
level from the prior year.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson thought  the $262  million would  not                                                                    
stay constant because the state  had more debt. She wondered                                                                    
if she was correct.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Pitney   answered,  "Correct."  She  added   that  with                                                                    
financing  the  increase would  be  more  gradual and  there                                                                    
would  be savings  in the  long-term. She  relayed that  six                                                                    
years out  there would be  a savings  of $60 million  and in                                                                    
ten years the savings would be around $100 million.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
3:17:21 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman  added that  he thought  there was  about $8                                                                    
billion  available  in   the  Public  Employees'  Retirement                                                                    
System (PERS) and the Teachers'  Retirement System (TRS) and                                                                    
a debt  of about $10  billion, making it 80  percent funded.                                                                    
He had heard from some  of the state financial advisors that                                                                    
Alaska had one  of the best, most  stable retirement systems                                                                    
in the  nation. He spoke  of the state taking  the available                                                                    
money, investing  it into Wall  Street, paying  the PERS/TRS                                                                    
debt,  and  using  the  remaining   profits  to  fund  state                                                                    
government.  He   wondered  if  that  was   what  was  being                                                                    
discussed.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Hoffbeck replied in  the negative. He explained                                                                    
that with the particular plan  the state would borrow money,                                                                    
deposit it  into the  PERS/TRS fund, and  allow it  to grow.                                                                    
The state  would pay the  debt service from  GF, essentially                                                                    
substituting the  state's obligation to the  retirement fund                                                                    
for an obligation to debt  service. The state was not adding                                                                    
a new  obligation. The  state was not  placing the  money in                                                                    
the fund where the fund  was responsible for paying back the                                                                    
debt.  If the  market  did  not respond  the  fund would  go                                                                    
backwards. The  administration had indicated that  no matter                                                                    
what happened the  fund would be better off  if it contained                                                                    
an extra  $1 billion or  $2 billion. The state  would simply                                                                    
be  switching one  obligation for  another. The  state would                                                                    
achieve  savings  over  time which  would  benefit  the  UGF                                                                    
spending. He added that there  was no pulling money back out                                                                    
of the pension fund.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
3:19:28 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Gara  indicated  it was  very  difficult  to                                                                    
understand.  He  wondered  how  far out  the  state  was  in                                                                    
balancing  its retirement  debt  if the  current course  was                                                                    
maintained. He  wondered if it was  20 years or 30  years or                                                                    
another number.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Pitney answered  that  based on  the  schedule she  had                                                                    
looked at, the number exceeded 25 years.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Representative Gara  disputed that  if the timeframe  was 25                                                                    
years,  by extending  the  payments the  state  would pay  a                                                                    
lesser amount each year. However,  the state had been paying                                                                    
approximately  $262  million  per  year  for  25  years.  He                                                                    
reasoned the state  could not merely pay $50  million or $60                                                                    
million for 25 years and  reach the same point. He suggested                                                                    
that the state could not  just finance and reduce the amount                                                                    
that it paid.  He did not understand how the  state would go                                                                    
from $262  million per  year for the  following 25  years to                                                                    
financing at $60 million per  year. He wondered how long the                                                                    
state would have to pay the debt.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Pitney reported  that the  administration  had set  its                                                                    
first  combined  debt service  and  direct  payment at  $262                                                                    
million. She  detailed the amount  would grow  slowly, which                                                                    
was reflected  in the yellow  bar on  slide 15; by  2030 the                                                                    
number  would be  about  $400 million.  She  added that  the                                                                    
green would be  at $500 million; if the state  stayed on its                                                                    
current system the  green bar would be what  the state would                                                                    
pay  every year  to  meet its  obligation.  However, if  the                                                                    
state financed the  obligation the state would  pay what was                                                                    
reflected by the yellow bar.  The difference was the savings                                                                    
[that would  occur] by financing  at present for what  was a                                                                    
scheduled obligation for the next 30 years.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:21:38 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Gara  asked  if  the state  would  still  be                                                                    
paying  of  $200  million per  year.  Ms.  Pitney  responded                                                                    
affirmatively, adding  that it  did not increase  as quickly                                                                    
and there was a strong potential for savings.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Gara  clarified  that the  scenario  bet  on                                                                    
beating  the market.  Commissioner  Hoffbeck responded  that                                                                    
there  had been  some work  done several  years back  on the                                                                    
potential of not  beating the market over  a 20-year period.                                                                    
He  was  still  trying  to pull  the  numbers  together.  He                                                                    
reported the chance of making  less than the state's cost of                                                                    
debt was  within the range of  5 percent and even  if it did                                                                    
make less the  difference would be de  minimis. He concluded                                                                    
there was a much greater upside than downside.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman referred back to  slide 4. He stated that he                                                                    
understood the  governor wanted to increase  revenue sharing                                                                    
to  distribute $60  million per  year to  municipalities. He                                                                    
wondered where he could find  the related appropriations. He                                                                    
was  aware of  $35  million being  in  the supplemental.  He                                                                    
wondered  where  the  money would  come  from  (another  $80                                                                    
million) in FY 17.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Pitney indicated that $35  million was circled in red in                                                                    
the  supplemental appropriations  section on  slide 14.  She                                                                    
reported   that  the   $35  million   in  the   supplemental                                                                    
appropriation assured  a $50 million  payout for FY  17. The                                                                    
intent would be to add $60  million in as an amendment or as                                                                    
a  supplemental in  the following  year. The  administration                                                                    
did  not  anticipate  paying out  $60  million  immediately.                                                                    
Instead, it  anticipated a contribution of  $60 million each                                                                    
year that would bring community  revenue sharing back to the                                                                    
$60 million  over time. She  suggested that it  could really                                                                    
be 4.86 percent rather than 4.8 percent.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Neuman interjected  that the  figures would  be in                                                                    
the  supplemental  budget.  Ms.  Pitney  answered  that  the                                                                    
supplemental brought the payout amount to $50 million.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman asked  about in FY 17.  Ms. Pitney responded                                                                    
that in  FY 17  it would  be offered as  an amendment  or as                                                                    
part of  the supplemental  budget. The  intent was  to bring                                                                    
community revenue  sharing to $60  million over  time rather                                                                    
than by the following year.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:24:22 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman  clarified that the administration  would be                                                                    
asking  for  the   appropriation  through  the  supplemental                                                                    
budget.  He  thought  normally  it  would  be  an  operating                                                                    
expenditure  so the  legislature knew  what was  coming. Ms.                                                                    
Pitney  would  suggest  putting   it  in  beforehand  as  an                                                                    
amendment.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair   Neuman   commented   that  there   were   planned                                                                    
expenditures   and   he   did  not   feel   a   supplemental                                                                    
appropriation should be used.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Pitney  remarked that  the administration  had addressed                                                                    
the $700 million  in dividends and how that  differed from a                                                                    
comparison  standpoint. Her  final point  pertaining to  Mr.                                                                    
Teal's fiscal summary  was shown at the bottom  of slide 14.                                                                    
She  detailed that  under the  governor's plan  there was  a                                                                    
deficit of  approximately $400 million. She  anticipated the                                                                    
deficit in the  following year's budget to be  down to about                                                                    
$25 million. The  remaining balance would be  reduced in the                                                                    
FY 19 budget. The two  components necessary to close the gap                                                                    
were continued reductions  and time for some  of the revenue                                                                    
plans to  take effect.  Currently under the  governor's plan                                                                    
there  would be  an  additional draw  from  savings of  $400                                                                    
million  beyond  the  CBR  draw   into  the  Permanent  Fund                                                                    
Protection Act.  She concluded  her presentation  by stating                                                                    
that without the plan the state's deficit was $3.5 billion.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Neuman addressed  the schedule  for the  following                                                                    
week. He recessed the meeting  to Monday, January 25 at 1:30                                                                    
p.m.                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
RECESSED                                                                                                                      
3:26:56 PM