Legislature(2015 - 2016)HOUSE FINANCE 519

01/20/2016 01:30 PM House FINANCE

Note: the audio and video recordings are distinct records and are obtained from different sources. As such there may be key differences between the two. The audio recordings are captured by our records offices as the official record of the meeting and will have more accurate timestamps. Use the icons to switch between them.

Download Mp3. <- Right click and save file as

Audio Topic
01:33:06 PM Start
01:34:13 PM Fy17 Governor's Budget & Fiscal Summary: Legislative Finance Division
03:32:54 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ FY17 Governor's Budget & Fiscal Summary by TELECONFERENCED
David Teal, Legislative Fiscal Analyst,
Legislative Finance Division
                  HOUSE FINANCE COMMITTEE                                                                                       
                     January 20, 2016                                                                                           
                         1:33 p.m.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
1:33:06 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CALL TO ORDER                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman  called the House Finance  Committee meeting                                                                    
to order at 1:33 p.m.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative Mark Neuman, Co-Chair                                                                                            
Representative Steve Thompson, Co-Chair                                                                                         
Representative Dan Saddler, Vice-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                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
David  Teal, Director,  Legislative Finance  Division; Lacey                                                                    
Sanders,  Fiscal  Analyst,   Legislative  Finance  Division;                                                                    
Kelly  Cunningham,   Fiscal  Analyst,   Legislative  Finance                                                                    
Division; Danith Watts,  Fiscal Analyst, Legislative Finance                                                                    
Division; Amanda Ryder,  Fiscal Analyst, Legislative Finance                                                                    
Division;   Representative   Cathy  Tilton,   Representative                                                                    
Daniel Ortiz, Representative  Andy Josephson, Representative                                                                    
Adam Wool, Senator Pete Kelly, Senator Mia Costello.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
SUMMARY                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
FY17  GOVERNOR'S   BUDGET  &  FISCAL   SUMMARY:  LEGISLATIVE                                                                    
FINANCE DIVISION                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Neuman  reviewed  the  schedule  for  the  current                                                                    
meeting.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
^FY17  GOVERNOR'S  BUDGET   &  FISCAL  SUMMARY:  LEGISLATIVE                                                                  
FINANCE DIVISION                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
1:34:13 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DAVID   TEAL,   DIRECTOR,  LEGISLATIVE   FINANCE   DIVISION,                                                                    
introduced  himself  and  invited  his  staff  to  introduce                                                                    
themselves.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
LACEY   SANDERS,   FISCAL   ANALYST,   LEGISLATIVE   FINANCE                                                                    
DIVISION, introduced herself.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
KELLY  CUNNINGHAM,   FISCAL  ANALYST,   LEGISLATIVE  FINANCE                                                                    
DIVISION, introduced herself.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
DANITH WATTS, FISCAL  ANALYST, LEGISLATIVE FINANCE DIVISION,                                                                    
introduced herself.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
AMANDA RYDER, FISCAL  ANALYST, LEGISLATIVE FINANCE DIVISION,                                                                    
introduced herself.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Teal  introduced the PowerPoint  presentation: "Overview                                                                    
of the  FY17 Budget" (copy on  file). He turned to  slide 2:                                                                    
"Unrestricted  General  Fund   Revenue/  Budget  History  ($                                                                    
millions)." He indicated that the  chart was a familiar one.                                                                    
He  thought  it was  the  best  introduction to  the  budget                                                                    
because by  providing a  40 year  history of  state spending                                                                    
and  revenue  it provided  some  perspective  to the  FY  17                                                                    
budget. He explained that the  chart showed revenue depicted                                                                    
in the  green background  and agency  budgets in  dark blue.                                                                    
Statewide   items   such   as   debt   service,   retirement                                                                    
assistance,  and fund  capitalization  were  shown in  light                                                                    
blue.  He continued  that the  capital budget  was shown  in                                                                    
yellow,  the red  bars above  the line  represented surplus,                                                                    
and the  red bars below  the line depicted deficits.  One of                                                                    
the take-a-ways from the chart  was that spending correlated                                                                    
with revenue. In  other words, the budget was  flat when the                                                                    
state did not have any money,  and when it did have money it                                                                    
spent  it.  In  recent  years   after  2005  the  state  had                                                                    
exceptional increases in revenue.  There were also increases                                                                    
in  expenditures. The  increases and  expenditures were  not                                                                    
just  capital. Typically,  when there  was extra  funding it                                                                    
went towards  capital projects. The  first things  that were                                                                    
reduced when money  was tighter was the  capital budget. The                                                                    
operating  budget increased  rapidly  as  well. He  reported                                                                    
that the  state went from a  budget of $2.5 billion  to $7.8                                                                    
billion by  FY 13. It did  not seem bad at  the time because                                                                    
there  were surpluses  in every  year  despite the  enormous                                                                    
increase in  spending. Revenue  began to  decline in  FY 13.                                                                    
The decline  was not  seen until  FY 14.  The response  to a                                                                    
declining budget in FY 13 was a smaller capital budget.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Neuman  asked  about  slide  2  and  about  agency                                                                    
operations.  He  wondered if  the  budget  was adjusted  for                                                                    
inflation.  Mr.   Teal  replied  that  and   adjustment  for                                                                    
inflation could be seen in the next slide.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:38:52 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Teal  advanced  to slide  3:  "Total  Agency  Operating                                                                    
Budgets,  Statewide Items  and  Capital  Budget Compared  to                                                                    
Revenue (UGF Only-$billions)." He  explained that it was not                                                                    
necessary to  adjust for inflation  when comparing FY  16 to                                                                    
FY 17 or  FY 15 to FY  17. If the numbers  were not adjusted                                                                    
for inflation  the years would  not be comparable  and would                                                                    
distort the  picture. However, in  looking back 40  years it                                                                    
was critical  to adjust for  inflation. The  chart reflected                                                                    
from  FY 13  forward.  In  FY 14  revenue  declined by  $1.5                                                                    
billion. The  FY 15 capital  budget was reduced  in response                                                                    
to  lower revenue.  Statewide items  continued  to grow.  He                                                                    
noted  that  in  FY  15 revenue  crashed  significantly.  In                                                                    
reaction to the  crash the state lowered  the capital budget                                                                    
even  further and  cut the  operating budget  for the  first                                                                    
time for  FY 16.  He reported  that FY  17 would  be another                                                                    
year  of  low projected  revenue  and  the operating  budget                                                                    
would  be about  $100  million lower.  The statewide  budget                                                                    
would be higher as would be  the capital budget by about $75                                                                    
million.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson   asked  about  the   previous  three                                                                    
budgets and  what price per  barrel they were based  on. She                                                                    
also  asked about  the  actual price  per  barrel. Mr.  Teal                                                                    
would provide  the information at  a later time.  The budget                                                                    
was based on prices much higher than actuals.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson asked about  the price per barrel that                                                                    
the  governor   used  in  his   current  budget.   Mr.  Teal                                                                    
responded, "$56."                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman asked  about the difference in  the value of                                                                    
income  to the  state with  oil prices  between $30  and $50                                                                    
oil. Mr.  Teal had  a slide later  in the  presentation that                                                                    
would provide the answer to his question.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Representative Edgmon  mentioned that  $400 million  was cut                                                                    
from the operating budget and  $400 million was cut from the                                                                    
capital  budget.  He  asked about  the  reduction  of  state                                                                    
employees  within the  past 2  years. He  was thinking  of a                                                                    
presentation by Neal Fried made  to a committee in Anchorage                                                                    
in early December  [2015]. He reported 1400.  He was unclear                                                                    
if Mr.  Fried's number included vacancies  or actual bodies.                                                                    
Mr. Teal responded that Ms.  Pitney had given a presentation                                                                    
in  the  Senate Finance  Committee  earlier  in the  morning                                                                    
reporting that 600 people had  been laid off since December.                                                                    
He clarified he was talking  about people rather than vacant                                                                    
positions.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative Edgmon asked if it was the last year.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Neuman  indicated Ms.  Pitney  would  be making  a                                                                    
presentation to the committee later in the week on Friday.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative Edgmon  clarified that  it was 600  people in                                                                    
the previous  calendar year. Mr.  Teal answered that  it was                                                                    
from  the December  2014 payroll  run to  the December  2015                                                                    
payroll  run.  Although it  did  not  really reflect  fiscal                                                                    
years  one to  another  but provided  a  good comparison  of                                                                    
employment.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Representative Gattis  reported that in the  current day the                                                                    
price  of  oil was  $26/bbl.  She  also commented  that  the                                                                    
governor's budget  in FY  17 looked  larger than  the budget                                                                    
passed in  FY 16  - a budget  the legislature  really worked                                                                    
diligently  to reduce.  She remarked  that $5.5  billion was                                                                    
more  than $5.4  billion. Mr.  Teal responded  that she  was                                                                    
correct.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman  remarked that Ms.  Pitney was  currently in                                                                    
the audience  and would be  prepared to answer  the question                                                                    
on Friday.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:44:33 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Gara asked Mr. Teal  to run through the top 4                                                                    
items on page  2 for statewide operations in  light blue. He                                                                    
also wondered  if the  items could be  cut. Mr.  Teal stated                                                                    
that  it   was  possibly   "cut-able."  He   concurred  that                                                                    
statewide operations was primarily  composed of debt service                                                                    
and state  assistance through retirement  programs including                                                                    
PERS  and TRS.  Once debt  was  issued there  would be  debt                                                                    
service payments  for the following 20  years. Debt services                                                                    
payments could be  cut by a small amount  by refinancing and                                                                    
getting   a  lower   interest   rate.   However,  the   only                                                                    
significant way to  reduce the debt service would  be to pay                                                                    
it off with cash. Since the  state did not have the cash the                                                                    
debt  service   was  "uncut-able."  The  same   applied  for                                                                    
retirement costs. The state was  paying for what happened in                                                                    
the past. State  employees and retirees had not  seen any of                                                                    
the money  lost in the  stock market,  but the state  had to                                                                    
put  it   back  into   the  retirement   system.  Retirement                                                                    
assistance could  be cut if  the January stock  markets were                                                                    
reduced. There was  nothing the legislature could  do to cut                                                                    
the debt service.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative Gara  wondered, aside from debt  services and                                                                    
retirement payments,  if there  were any other  larger items                                                                    
that   could   possibly   be   cut.   Mr.   Teal   responded                                                                    
affirmatively and would address it in an upcoming slide.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman asked  Mr. Teal to review  the $5.4 billion.                                                                    
He stated  that it was  comprised of $2 billion  formula, $2                                                                    
billion non-formula,  $1.2 billion statewide  including $650                                                                    
million  for Medicaid,  $228 million  for debt  service, and                                                                    
$268  million for  retirement.  Mr. Teal  spoke  of the  big                                                                    
crash in  FY 15 and in  the FY 16 budget  process. The first                                                                    
concern  LFD had  was burning  through reserves  at a  rapid                                                                    
rate. The  prior year  was the first  year that  the concern                                                                    
spread throughout the legislature  and to the public. People                                                                    
were  currently more  aware of  the  fiscal problems  Alaska                                                                    
faced than there  used to be. The budget was  up $65 million                                                                    
and was reflected  as $100 million on the  chart. The bottom                                                                    
line  was that  the state  was running  deficits of  roughly                                                                    
$3.5 billion per year. The  deficits would drain the state's                                                                    
reserves by the end of  2020. The reserves were comprised of                                                                    
more than  just the Constitutional Budget  Reserve (CBR): it                                                                    
included  the Earnings  Reserve Account  (ERA) as  well. The                                                                    
state did  not have time to  look at the problem  as much as                                                                    
legislators wanted  to. He suggested legislators  would need                                                                    
to take action.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
1:50:03 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Munoz  noted that on the  page containing the                                                                    
operations line from  FY 05 to FY 17  there was considerable                                                                    
growth. She wondered  how much of the  growth was attributed                                                                    
to K12  education and Medicaid.  Mr. Teal relayed  that they                                                                    
were large  cost drivers. He  had individual graphs  on each                                                                    
of the agencies. He did not  have the numbers dating back to                                                                    
FY 05 with  him but they would all be  seen in subcommittee.                                                                    
He agreed Representative Munoz was  correct that the drivers                                                                    
were  K12  education  and  Medicaid.   The  next  was  state                                                                    
employee costs including retirement expenditures.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative Munoz  asked to  be provided with  the amount                                                                    
of growth  in the two  areas and  how much it  accounted for                                                                    
the  growth  in the  budget  starting  in  FY 05.  She  also                                                                    
remarked  that in  paying down  the  unfunded liability  the                                                                    
state's  annual  payment  went from  $500  million  or  $600                                                                    
million to $250  million. She asked how it  was reflected in                                                                    
the graph. Mr. Teal stated  that it would be discussed later                                                                    
in the presentation  when looking at the  fiscal summary. He                                                                    
commented that  the state assistance  cost for PERS  and TRS                                                                    
was  over  $700  million  per year.  In  the  current  year,                                                                    
without the payment, it would  have exceeded $1 billion. The                                                                    
legislature  had  a  cash  infusion of  $3  billion  to  the                                                                    
retirement fund along with some  other reforms which cut the                                                                    
retirement assistance  payments down  to about  $250 million                                                                    
and in  the current year  to about $215 million.  He thought                                                                    
the new evaluation would reduce the number further.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Representative Munoz asked  why it was not  reflected in the                                                                    
turquoise [light blue] color on  the graph. It appeared that                                                                    
the amount  for the cost  was not reflective of  the change.                                                                    
Mr.  Teal responded  that  she had  a  good observation.  He                                                                    
explained that beginning in FY  17 under the governor's plan                                                                    
Permanent Fund  Dividends (PFD) were  paid from  the General                                                                    
Fund  (GF). Because  they appeared  as unrestricted  general                                                                    
fund  (UGF)   expenditures,  they   were  placed   into  the                                                                    
turquoise  bar reflecting  $700  million.  It explained  the                                                                    
growth Representative  Munoz pointed  out. He  would discuss                                                                    
it  further  when  he  reached the  fiscal  summary  in  the                                                                    
presentation.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Saddler  mentioned hearing from  his constituents                                                                    
about running out of money  within 2 years. He wondered what                                                                    
was different  presently. Mr. Teal  thought it was  a matter                                                                    
of philosophy  and how  a person  saw the  need to  fill the                                                                    
deficit. He  posed the question  as to whether the  cause of                                                                    
the deficit had  to do with expenditures  rising or revenues                                                                    
falling.  Clearly  expenditures  had  risen  rapidly.  Also,                                                                    
clearly revenue  had fallen rapidly.  Some might say  it was                                                                    
not  worth  arguing  about.  The  point  Vice-Chair  Saddler                                                                    
brought  up was  important because  the person  who saw  the                                                                    
deficit  a  certain  way  would  determine  how  they  would                                                                    
respond to  it. If a person  saw it as temporary  oil market                                                                    
craziness  then they  would be  justified in  doing nothing.                                                                    
The  world would  return to  normal and  all involved  would                                                                    
just have to  ride out the storm. However, after  3 years of                                                                    
$3.5   billion   deficits,   reclassifying   the   temporary                                                                    
situation as a more permanent one  might be in order. He did                                                                    
not  think  the  situation  could  be  considered  temporary                                                                    
especially  given the  forecast for  a continued  $2 billion                                                                    
revenue stream  and a $5  billion budget. He suggested  if a                                                                    
person thought  the problem  was due  to spending  then cuts                                                                    
would  likely  be  in order.  He  directed  the  committee's                                                                    
attention to the next slide.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
1:55:40 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Teal scrolled to the chart  on slide 4: "Real Per Capita                                                                    
Unrestricted  General  Fund  Revenue/ Budget  History  (2014                                                                    
dollars Per  Person)." He explained that  the graph adjusted                                                                    
for both inflation and population  growth. He suggested that                                                                    
when  adjusting for  inflation and  population growth  there                                                                    
might  be 4  or  5  agency operating  budgets  lower in  the                                                                    
previous 40 years.  However, on a real per  capita basis the                                                                    
state  was  spending less  than  in  any point  in  history.                                                                    
Capital was  also small relative  to past years.  He relayed                                                                    
that  statewide numbers  were up  but reminded  members that                                                                    
the state  was paying  for the past.  He surmised  that even                                                                    
cutting  to the  $4.8 billion  mark, a  cut of  roughly $700                                                                    
million,  filled only  20 percent  of  the deficit.  Cutting                                                                    
spending would not fill the  state's fiscal gap. If a person                                                                    
thought  the state  had a  longer-term  revenue problem,  he                                                                    
would  say facts  were on  that person's  side. He  conveyed                                                                    
that per  capita inflation adjusted  revenue was  the lowest                                                                    
it  had  ever been.  He  queried  about taxing  citizens  to                                                                    
replace  lost  oil  revenues. It  would  take  approximately                                                                    
$5000 per  capita. He emphasized  that per capita  was every                                                                    
man,  woman, and  child.  On  a per  worker  bases it  would                                                                    
likely have to  be tripled to cover the costs  - an unlikely                                                                    
solution. He  concluded that the  traditional ways  to close                                                                    
deficits,   cut    spending   or   increase    taxes,   were                                                                    
insufficient.  The state  could not  cut  its way  out of  a                                                                    
deficit  or  tax  its  way   out  of  the  deficit.  Even  a                                                                    
combination would bring massive economic shocks.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman  asked Mr.  Teal to  clarify how  many years                                                                    
the state  could sustain a  $3.5 billion with  the available                                                                    
pots of  money for  appropriations. He  wanted the  value of                                                                    
each  of the  different funds  and  the total  value of  all                                                                    
funds. Mr. Teal responded that  when he talked about running                                                                    
out of reserves the CBR  contained roughly $7 billion. Those                                                                    
monies  would be  gone after  FY 18.  Next, the  legislature                                                                    
would turn to the ERA  which contained about the same amount                                                                    
of money. That money could be  expended in 2 years. Once the                                                                    
ERA was  exhausted people might advocate  cutting the budget                                                                    
down  to  $2   billion  in  cash  flow   revenue.  By  then,                                                                    
legislators would not be talking  about using Permanent Fund                                                                    
reserves, they would  be forced to use  them. Essentially it                                                                    
would be  unlikely that  dividends could be  paid at  all or                                                                    
the fund  inflation proofed. The  entire fund  balance would                                                                    
be about $40 million. If the  fund were to earn 6 percent on                                                                    
investment  the  state  would have  about  $2.5  billion  to                                                                    
spend. However,  the scenario  would place  the state  in an                                                                    
extremely  dangerous situation.  This was  due to  not being                                                                    
able to  account for  $2.5 billion  in interest.  There were                                                                    
some years the  state could lose on its  investments and not                                                                    
have  any  income other  than  the  $2  billion or  so  from                                                                    
traditional sources.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Neuman  recited  some estimated  figures.  He  was                                                                    
trying to place an emphasis on the timeline.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:01:27 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson referred to slide  3. She asked if the                                                                    
figures reflected  the state's  total actual spend  for each                                                                    
year. Mr.  Teal confirmed  that the totals  reflected actual                                                                    
dollars without any inflation adjustments.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman  asked if the  totals included  the deposits                                                                    
into the CBR. Mr. Teal responded, "No."                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson queried  how  much  was generated  in                                                                    
Permanent Fund reserves. Mr. Teal  clarified whether she was                                                                    
asking on an annual basis.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson  responded  affirmatively.  Mr.  Teal                                                                    
answered that the  state earned 6 percent or  $3 billion. He                                                                    
explained that  of the $3  billion, the state  was currently                                                                    
inflation  proofing using  $1 billion.  The  state was  also                                                                    
paying dividends.  He added  that of  the $31.4  billion. Of                                                                    
the  three  billion  that  might  come  in,  the  state  was                                                                    
spending  about $2.4  leaving  her with  a  surplus of  $600                                                                    
million in earnings.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson  agreed  that  the  state  could  not                                                                    
maintain  a  $3.5 billion  deficit.  She  furthered that  by                                                                    
lowering  the  budget to  $4.5  billion  or $4  billion  the                                                                    
legislature would  use less  from the  CBR in  the following                                                                    
year. She wondered  if such a course would get  the state to                                                                    
where it needed  to be fiscally. She did not  believe it was                                                                    
possible for the state to  maintain its level of spending at                                                                    
$5.5 billion.  She thought  the budget needed  to be  at the                                                                    
$4.5  billion  level or  lower.  She  asked for  his  expert                                                                    
opinion  about a  sustainable budget  amount without  adding                                                                    
the taxes being proposed.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Teal could not say  what the state spending level should                                                                    
be.  He commented  that  the people  of  Alaska thought  the                                                                    
legislature  was spending  irresponsibly. He  suggested that                                                                    
Rasmussen  was getting  feedback  that the  growth of  state                                                                    
government had been  very high and people  assumed money was                                                                    
being  wasted, as  they saw  nothing  for it.  He thought  a                                                                    
budget  of $4.5  billion was  too high  if nothing  else was                                                                    
done  in  tandem. The  legislature  would  continue to  burn                                                                    
through its reserves,  just not as quickly,  and the problem                                                                    
would  remain  unresolved. He  opined  that  a $2.5  billion                                                                    
deficit was absolutely unsustainable.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
2:05:00 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson  referred to slide 2.  She wondered if                                                                    
the  state should  lower its  spending level  to the  levels                                                                    
seen in  FY 04 and  FY 05.  She had received  several charts                                                                    
from different  entities regarding population growth  and it                                                                    
being minimal.  She was unclear  how to justify  the current                                                                    
levels of  spending. She wondered  if it was  more realistic                                                                    
to use the spending levels in FY  04 and FY 05 as numbers to                                                                    
strive for.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Teal responded  that the  Legislative Finance  Division                                                                    
(LFD)  had   been  providing  the  graphs   to  the  finance                                                                    
subcommittees for  the previous  4 years. He  suggested that                                                                    
if  the  legislature needed  to  cut  back it  should  begin                                                                    
looking at unwinding  some of the previous  increases to the                                                                    
budget.  He continued  that in  taking inflation  population                                                                    
growth into account the operating  budget shrunk rather than                                                                    
grew. He was uncertain people  knew the facts. In looking at                                                                    
the numbers, the budget was  not growing rapidly like people                                                                    
thought.  There was  a $7.8  billion  budget in  FY 13.  The                                                                    
budget was currently at $5.5  billion, a $2.3 billion budget                                                                    
cut in the previous 4 years  (30 percent). He queried if the                                                                    
public was aware  of the facts. One of  the perspectives was                                                                    
that  the legislature  was only  cutting the  capital budget                                                                    
rather than  imposing agency reductions. However,  as far as                                                                    
the deficit  was concerned  whether $1  dollar was  spent on                                                                    
capital or  on operations it did  the same thing -  it added                                                                    
$1  dollar  more  to  the deficit.  The  problem  was  total                                                                    
spending which had fallen by  30 percent. He did not believe                                                                    
the  public understood  the facts.  He suggested  the public                                                                    
thought  additional cuts  were  necessary.  However, it  was                                                                    
very  difficult  to find  cuts  in  agency budgets.  Capital                                                                    
costs  were  cut to  a  little  more than  federal  matching                                                                    
dollars. Statewide, if  the state could not  unwind the debt                                                                    
service and the  retirements cost not much would  be left to                                                                    
cut. He  posed the question  about where to  find additional                                                                    
reductions. He  relayed that a  $700 million cut  would move                                                                    
the level  of state  spending down substantially  lower than                                                                    
ever  before   which  would   result  in   reducing  certain                                                                    
services.  It   was  the  legislature's   responsibility  to                                                                    
determine which agencies would spend  less and what services                                                                    
would  be   cut.  He  concluded   that  the   decisions  the                                                                    
legislature had  to make would  likely take 90 days  or more                                                                    
to determine.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Wilson   understood   that   it   was   the                                                                    
responsibility of the legislature  to figure out a direction                                                                    
to take.  However, she  wanted to know  a monetary  level of                                                                    
sustainability. She  relayed that  the people in  North Pole                                                                    
thought the state was overspending  because they were paying                                                                    
property taxes  and high energy costs.  Adding more expenses                                                                    
for constituents would likely be  devastating to some in her                                                                    
district. She requested a graph  showing only the population                                                                    
growth.  She thought  it  would  be easier  to  show to  her                                                                    
constituents.   She   believed   the  state's   growth   and                                                                    
operations had increased substantially  compared to how many                                                                    
people the state was actually serving.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:10:29 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Teal responded  that the  population had  approximately                                                                    
doubled from  just under 400  thousand people to  just under                                                                    
800  thousand currently.  He would  provide  members with  a                                                                    
graph  that   was  just   population  adjusted.   The  total                                                                    
adjustment  for  population   would  be  doubled.  Inflation                                                                    
equaled  about   $3  to  $3.50  which   tripled  things.  He                                                                    
suggested that population  was responsible for approximately                                                                    
2/5 of  the increase [Note: Mr.  Teal pointed to a  place on                                                                    
the graph  but it was  unclear where  on the graph  based on                                                                    
the audio].                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:11:38 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Gara  believed  that  all  legislators  were                                                                    
hired to lead even if they  could not get the message across                                                                    
to the public concerning the  budget. He referred to page 4.                                                                    
He wondered, in  looking at the budget  adjust for inflation                                                                    
and  population growth,  if the  state  was somewhere  below                                                                    
where it was in FY  08. Mr. Teal responded affirmatively. He                                                                    
explained that  there were a  few years including FY  03 and                                                                    
FY 99  in the past 40  years that the state  budget had been                                                                    
as low as the current level of the budget.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Gara  wondered if  the  state  was in  worse                                                                    
shape than the year Mr. Teal  was pointing to. He noted that                                                                    
legislators  talked  in terms  of  the  $3.5 billion  budget                                                                    
deficit.   The  figure   really   depended   on  oil   price                                                                    
projections. He  wondered what oil price  projection LFD was                                                                    
working from  and whether the  deficit could be  larger than                                                                    
$3.5 billion.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman  asked Mr.  Teal to  clarify whether  he was                                                                    
working  from  DOR's  estimate  of  oil  pricing.  Mr.  Teal                                                                    
confirmed  that LFD  was using  DOR figure  of $56/bbl.  The                                                                    
price of oil  had been less than $30/bbl.  The average price                                                                    
for oil currently was about $40/bbl.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Teal skipped  to the sensitivity chart  on slide 7:"FY17                                                                    
Unrestricted General Fund Revenue  - Fiscal Sensitivity." He                                                                    
thought it addressed the question  about whether the deficit                                                                    
was  larger  than  $3.5  million. He  believed  it  was.  He                                                                    
explained  that  if  the  price of  oil  was  $100/bbl  then                                                                    
revenue  would  equal roughly  $4  billion.  If oil  reached                                                                    
$110/bbl  revenues would  reach about  $5 billion.  He noted                                                                    
that a $10/bbl price change  provided $1 billion in revenue.                                                                    
He  highlighted  that  at  $30/bbl   revenue  was  about  $1                                                                    
billion. At $40/bbl revenue would  reach about $1.2 billion.                                                                    
He continued to explain that  because production was low and                                                                    
because  of the  way the  tax  structure worked  it did  not                                                                    
matter  whether oil  prices were  at  $30, $40,  or $50  per                                                                    
barrel  the  gain  in  revenue   was  less  significant.  He                                                                    
indicated  that at  about  $80/bbl  revenues increased  more                                                                    
rapidly.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Representative Gara asked if the  oil tax structure affected                                                                    
the curve.  He wondered about  the 4 percent minimum  tax up                                                                    
to about $70 or $80 per barrel.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Teal  responded  that  the   state  was  at  the  floor                                                                    
currently. He was unclear whether  the state would be at the                                                                    
floor for the  entire year. It was not  completely the floor                                                                    
but just  that the tax rates  went very low. At  the current                                                                    
price it was difficult to generate revenue.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:15:50 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Guttenberg mentioned that  the public saw the                                                                    
price of oil dropping. However,  they were not seeing prices                                                                    
reflected at  the gas pump.  Legislators had to  explain the                                                                    
circumstances to  the public. He  reported that some  of his                                                                    
constituents  relayed that  they were  just waiting  for the                                                                    
price of  oil to return  to $100/bbl. In the  meantime, they                                                                    
relied on  short-term fixes. Once  the price of oil  went up                                                                    
things  would return  to normal.  However, in  the graph  on                                                                    
slide 4  or slide 2,  he wondered  what the bump  would look                                                                    
like with the current tax  regime. Mr. Teal replied that the                                                                    
state would balance the budget if  oil went to an average of                                                                    
$113/bbl  in FY  17  given the  governor's expenditures.  He                                                                    
pointed  out  that  at  $113/bbl   revenues  were  about  $5                                                                    
billion. It  was a different  way of saying the  same thing.                                                                    
Higher oil prices increased revenue.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Guttenberg asked  if  spikes  would be  much                                                                    
higher looking at FY 07 and  FY 11 at comparable prices. The                                                                    
revenue  sensitivity  chart  reflected   only  one  year  of                                                                    
balancing  the  budget  as compared  with  those  years  the                                                                    
public  thought  money  could  be placed  in  the  bank  and                                                                    
stretched out. He suggested that  it would not happen at the                                                                    
oil price  of $110/bbl.  Mr. Teal stated  that if  the price                                                                    
reached $110  there would  not be  any money  to put  in the                                                                    
bank. At $113/bbl the state  would break even. It would take                                                                    
oil priced  higher than $113/bbl  before there would  be any                                                                    
money to  put in  the bank.  The amount  of money  the state                                                                    
could put  in saving would  depend on  the price of  oil. At                                                                    
$120/bbl there would be roughly  $1 billion extra in revenue                                                                    
which could be placed in the  bank. If the price of oil were                                                                    
to stay at $120/bbl the state  would not have a deficit, but                                                                    
rather a sustainable  budget. As a result of  having a large                                                                    
deficit the  state needed  to pull  money from  reserves. He                                                                    
emphasized  that  the faster  the  state  pulled money  from                                                                    
reserves,  the faster  the reserves  would be  depleted. The                                                                    
state's problem  was spending a limited  reserve balance. In                                                                    
FY 16 one-third of the  state's reserves would be exhausted.                                                                    
There  were only  about  two years  to  correct the  problem                                                                    
unless there  was a  significant drop  in expenditures  or a                                                                    
substantial  increase in  revenues.  He opined  that it  was                                                                    
unreasonable to  expect expenditures to fall  to $2 billion.                                                                    
Some people would  argue that revenue would  not increase to                                                                    
$5.5 billion  either. Finding a balance  between revenue and                                                                    
expenditures to  reach a sustainable budget  was a difficult                                                                    
challenge.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:21:47 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Edgmon  asked about economic  shocks relative                                                                    
to making  substantial cuts to  the budget. He  wondered who                                                                    
the legislature  should turn to  in order to  understand the                                                                    
ramifications  of  cutting $700  million  or  more from  the                                                                    
budget. He  suggested that  if a  person looked  at Alaska's                                                                    
gross domestic  product (GDP) in  its totality it  was about                                                                    
$57  billion. There  were economic  consequences to  cutting                                                                    
the state's  budget because it  was a large part  of overall                                                                    
wealth in Alaska.  He queried how to  better understand what                                                                    
it would mean  to Alaska's economy if the state  were to cut                                                                    
an  additional  $700  million  from  its  budget.  Mr.  Teal                                                                    
responded with a question about who remembered the 80s.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Neuman  referred to  page  11  indicating that  it                                                                    
helped him to see what $700 million looked like.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Teal thought that Representative  Edgmon was asking what                                                                    
a substantial  cut would mean  to the economy.  He explained                                                                    
that  from  the  treasury's   perspective  the  problem  was                                                                    
solvable because  it would not  be considering  services. In                                                                    
looking at  the problem  from an economic  perspective other                                                                    
things  would need  consideration such  as jobs  and housing                                                                    
prices.  He  mentioned  that the  Institute  of  Social  and                                                                    
Economic  Research (ISER)  and the  McDowell group  had done                                                                    
some  work   with  economic  input/output  models.   If  the                                                                    
legislature cut  the operating budget  it had a  much larger                                                                    
impact  than  cutting capital.  In  looking  at the  capital                                                                    
budget  it had  a much  lower multiplier  in economic  terms                                                                    
than the  operating budget did because  the operating budget                                                                    
created  an immediate  job and  immediate money  in people's                                                                    
pockets.  The  capital  expenditures  immediately  left  the                                                                    
state  and  did  not  get  re-spent. In  the  80s  when  the                                                                    
legislature  cut the  capital budget  severely, construction                                                                    
workers left, people walked away  from their houses, and the                                                                    
markets became flooded. Things became more complicated.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:26:31 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Gattis noted that in  the 80s there were some                                                                    
differences including bank failures,  and other things going                                                                    
on  at  the time.  She  agreed  that  there was  an  economy                                                                    
problem but  did not agree that  a bank failure was  part of                                                                    
the   current    challenge.   Mr.   Teal    responded   that                                                                    
Representative Gattis  had a valid point.  He suggested that                                                                    
with  internet mortgages  and other  changes in  the banking                                                                    
industry.  Banks tended  to sell  their  mortgages and  held                                                                    
their mortgages much more than they did presently.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Edgmon  agreed that  the  budget  had to  be                                                                    
reduced. However,  he was concerned  that if the  budget was                                                                    
cut  in one  place,  the responsibility  would  be moved  to                                                                    
another  agency. He  suggested  that  cutting small  schools                                                                    
would  lead to  students moving  to Anchorage  and Fairbanks                                                                    
and would result in a  redistribution of costs. He wanted to                                                                    
have  a better  sense of  the impacts  on the  economy as  a                                                                    
whole  as well  as the  downstream effects  on a  cost basis                                                                    
elsewhere  in  the  budget.  He referred  to  Article  7  of                                                                    
Alaska's  Constitution.  If  the  legislature  was  to  make                                                                    
several  hundred million  dollars in  cuts, it  would likely                                                                    
violate  its  own health  education  welfare  clause of  the                                                                    
state constitution.  He appreciated  the latitude to  have a                                                                    
wider range  of discussion. He  felt it was important  to be                                                                    
aware of  the savings when the  legislature made reductions.                                                                    
He supposed that there would not always be a savings.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman  interrupted that  ISER would  be presenting                                                                    
to  the committee.  They were  economists  that would  delve                                                                    
specifically  into  the  effects   of  the  budget  and  the                                                                    
economy. He  spoke to the  issue of job losses.  He reported                                                                    
that for every $100 million  cut from the capital budget 900                                                                    
jobs  were lost  and, for  every $100  million cut  from the                                                                    
operating budget  850 jobs were  lost. In the  previous year                                                                    
the legislature  reduced about $1  billion which  equated to                                                                    
about 8000  to 10,000  jobs lost.  He continued  that people                                                                    
turned  to drugs  and alcohol  during difficult  times which                                                                    
would  create different  strains  on the  state budget.  The                                                                    
state would  see increased demands within  the Department of                                                                    
Public Safety  (DPS), the Department of  Law, the Department                                                                    
of  Health and  Social  Services (DHSS),  the Department  of                                                                    
Corrections (DOC),  and the Alaska Court  System. Currently,                                                                    
the  state  was experiencing  hard  economic  times and  the                                                                    
legislature would have to make  some difficult decisions. He                                                                    
would try to get Gunnar Knapp before the committee.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
2:30:52 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Teal   discussed  slide  5:  "AGENCY   OPERATIONS  2014                                                                    
Inflation  Adjusted  $  (GF  Only)."   He  stated  that  the                                                                    
spreadsheet, adjusted  for inflation,  was a way  of showing                                                                    
that  the  operating budget  was  not  as excessive  as  the                                                                    
public  might  think.  He explained  that  the  past  budget                                                                    
closest  to  the  FY  17 budget  was  highlighted  for  each                                                                    
department. He commented  that a few of  the highlights were                                                                    
more  recent than  FY 12  but  most of  the highlights  fell                                                                    
within the  years of FY  07, FY 08,  and FY 09.  The overall                                                                    
average for the  operating budget was at the FY  10 level of                                                                    
funding. On a  per capita basis the highlighted  area was in                                                                    
FY 08.  He expressed  his concern  about whether  the public                                                                    
was aware  of the state's  fiscal situation and  mentioned a                                                                    
recent   lunch-and-learn   sponsored    by   the   Rasmussen                                                                    
Foundation.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman noted that members  had a larger copy of the                                                                    
fiscal summary in their packets.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Teal  reported that the Rasmussen  lunch-and-learn posed                                                                    
the  question about  whether the  public was  aware that  30                                                                    
percent was  cut from  the budget  in the  last 4  years. He                                                                    
furthered  that on  a per  capita adjusted  basis the  state                                                                    
budget  was  as low  as  it  had  ever been.  The  Rasmussen                                                                    
Foundation  was aware  of  a problem  but  the public  still                                                                    
thought  the budget  was growing  at 7  percent per  year or                                                                    
more. The other  question posed was whether  the public felt                                                                    
the  pain of  the reductions.  He surmised  that the  public                                                                    
could not  tell. In the past  many of the cuts  were related                                                                    
to the capital budget for  projects that were funded but had                                                                    
not yet began. The backlog  of capital projects made it such                                                                    
that no one was aware of the cuts to the budget.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Neuman  reported  monies that  still  remained  in                                                                    
place. He  noted he would  be talking more  about horizontal                                                                    
and  vertical  types  of construction.  Horizontal  projects                                                                    
included  roads and  highways.  Buildings  were examples  of                                                                    
vertical  projects.  He  suggested  that  vertical  projects                                                                    
would  not be  covered and  the related  trade groups  would                                                                    
feel the economic impacts first.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:35:12 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson completely  disagreed with  Mr. Teal.                                                                    
She pointed  out that  regulation played  a large  role. She                                                                    
suggested looking at  the budget from the  standpoint of how                                                                    
the money  was being utilized.  She elaborated that  a small                                                                    
section of the  state's population used up  a larger portion                                                                    
of  resources compared  to the  majority of  the population.                                                                    
She referred to social services  and education. She spoke to                                                                    
looking  at  regulations  and their  associated  costs.  She                                                                    
opined  that  the public  made  a  connection between  being                                                                    
regulated   and  state   government  being   too  big.   She                                                                    
speculated that  without decreasing  regulation it  would be                                                                    
difficult to  understand the budget.  She wondered  if there                                                                    
was a  way to better  understand how much of  the population                                                                    
in  Alaska was  using  the majority  of  its resources.  She                                                                    
provided  a personal  example.  The taxes  she  paid on  her                                                                    
house were  used primarily  to provide her  with a  place to                                                                    
take her  trash. She  no longer had  children in  school and                                                                    
did not  live within a road  service area. In her  view, she                                                                    
was  paying  too   much  for  taxes  because   of  what  she                                                                    
personally used.  She wondered  if she  was accurate  in her                                                                    
assessment that only  a small portion of  the population was                                                                    
using the majority of the resources.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Teal  answered that  former  Senator  Rick Halford  had                                                                    
published an  article on  Representative Wilson's  point. He                                                                    
explained Senator  Halford's position was that  a particular                                                                    
person might  not use  certain services  but used  the roads                                                                    
and  other resources  and previously  attended school.  That                                                                    
person  was  paying  for the  next  generation  rather  than                                                                    
themselves. The  article covered the  notion of how  to view                                                                    
services used versus taxes paid.  He agreed that there was a                                                                    
large  disconnect between  what  people  believed they  were                                                                    
getting  and what  they believed  they were  paying for.  He                                                                    
also thought  what people missed  were things like  the cost                                                                    
of  Medicaid expansion.  He reported  that the  average cost                                                                    
per recipient  of Medicaid  was less  than $6000.  His first                                                                    
thought  was  that  it  would be  cheaper  for  every  state                                                                    
employee  to  go on  Medicaid  because  presently they  paid                                                                    
$14,000  for  insurance  premiums.   He  answered  that  the                                                                    
elderly and  infants burned  most of  the money.  Some would                                                                    
argue  that the  purpose of  government was  to redistribute                                                                    
income and to  provide services to those that  needed it. He                                                                    
furthered that the right side  of government depended on the                                                                    
individual. Mr.  Teal could  not tell  Representative Wilson                                                                    
what the right size of government was.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:39:21 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair    Neuman    asked    for    clarification    about                                                                    
Representative  Wilson's   question.  Representative  Wilson                                                                    
reasoned that  unless the  legislature could  understand who                                                                    
utilized  most of  the  services it  would  be difficult  to                                                                    
identify the  breaking point for  constituents if  the state                                                                    
were  to add  all of  the  extra that  had to  be paid.  She                                                                    
mentioned the  discrepancies throughout the state  having to                                                                    
do  with   affordable  energy.   She  thought   that  making                                                                    
reductions in certain areas might  have more of an impact in                                                                    
a  particular district.  Whereas, additional  taxation might                                                                    
have a more devastating effect  in a different district. She                                                                    
wondered how to balance the issues she mentioned.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman  invited Representative Wilson  to formulate                                                                    
her question and provide it to  his office. He would take it                                                                    
to  the Institute  of Social  and Economic  Research (ISER).                                                                    
Representative   Wilson    responded   that    perhaps   the                                                                    
legislature  should use  the  constitution  as a  guideline,                                                                    
funding only those things the constitution required.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Teal indicated he would begin his overview of FY 17.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman agreed  that the overview of FY  17 was very                                                                    
critical  to  Mr. Teal's  presentation.  He  noted that  the                                                                    
largest differences could be seen  in the columns associated                                                                    
with revenue.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Teal spoke  to the fiscal summary that had  10 lines for                                                                    
revenue.  He  would  not be  talking  about  the  governor's                                                                    
fiscal plan  in the current  meeting. In FY 16  revenue came                                                                    
from  the traditional  sources. The  new revenue  lines were                                                                    
related to the governor's fiscal  plan which he would not be                                                                    
looking  at to  evaluate  the FY  17  budget. Typically  LFD                                                                    
looked  at  the  budget  as   being  the  expenditure  plan.                                                                    
However, in  FY 17  the budget was  not just  an expenditure                                                                    
plan. The  budget, submitted by  the governor,  included the                                                                    
appropriation bills  (expenditures), the revenue  bills, and                                                                    
his fiscal plan. The governor's  budget was comprised of all                                                                    
three elements. He  could not leave taxes out  of his budget                                                                    
because  they were  a part  of it.  Mr. Teal  clarified that                                                                    
they  were  looking  at  the   governor's  budget,  not  the                                                                    
legislature's  budget,  or  a  budget  reflecting  what  LFD                                                                    
thought should happen to the budget.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman commented  that the budget was  based on all                                                                    
of  the governor's  proposed  legislation  being enacted  in                                                                    
their  current  form.  Mr.   Teal  concurred  with  Co-Chair                                                                    
Neuman.  He continued  that the  governor's budget  included                                                                    
revenue  measures, Permanent  Fund re-plumbing,  and all  of                                                                    
the things  that would be  discussed in the  following week.                                                                    
He  noted that  revenue was  up  from $1.6  billion to  $1.8                                                                    
billion but  was based  on oil  priced at  $57 /bbl.  If the                                                                    
market  price was  less,  revenue would  be  less. He  again                                                                    
referenced the  sensitivity chart and reminded  members that                                                                    
revenue was not  that sensitive to price.  He furthered that                                                                    
if $30  /bbl was used rather  than $57 /bbl the  state would                                                                    
be approximately $200 million sort in revenue.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
2:44:43 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Gara asked  if he  could present  a question                                                                    
from another legislator.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman asked that the  other legislator to pass the                                                                    
question  through his  staff to  him  and he  would ask  the                                                                    
question. He  remarked that it  was the  Finance Committee's                                                                    
meeting. He would try to do what he could.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr.   Teal  turned   to  the   fiscal  summary   looking  at                                                                    
expenditures.   He  pointed   to   the  non-formula   agency                                                                    
operations (representing the  typical day-to-day operations)                                                                    
on line  14. The change in  UGF reflected a decrease  of $60                                                                    
million.   The  $60   million  included   the  $30   million                                                                    
unallocated  fund  reduction  the legislature  took  in  the                                                                    
prior  year. The  legislative intent  was that  the agencies                                                                    
received the funding in FY 16  but would not receive them in                                                                    
FY 17. The money was taken  out, put back in, and then taken                                                                    
as an  unallocated reduction at  the agency level.  The next                                                                    
question  was  would  the  finance  committee  allocate  the                                                                    
unallocated  cuts in  the governor's  amendment process.  In                                                                    
theory the legislature  would want to apply  the cuts rather                                                                    
than   leaving  them   unallocated  for   the  agencies   to                                                                    
determine.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Teal  referred to line  15 representing  K-12 Foundation                                                                    
formula monies.  The monies  were down  $4.5 million.  FY 17                                                                    
was the  last year of the  $50 increase in the  base student                                                                    
allocation (BSA). He  reported that the $50  increase in the                                                                    
BSA equated to  $12 million in expenditures.  The amount was                                                                    
down $5  million because the  governor added $17  million of                                                                    
earnings  from  the Public  School  Trust  and replaced  $17                                                                    
million of general funds (GF) with the trust money.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman clarified, "One-time."                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Teal  responded that all  of the earnings that  had been                                                                    
built up over  the years were gone.  The governor apparently                                                                    
had a  bill changing the way  the school trust paid  out. At                                                                    
the present  time the  trust had a  balance of  $600 million                                                                    
without purpose.  He thought most  people believed  that the                                                                    
school trust  was supposed  to be  spent on  K-12 education.                                                                    
However, for every  dollar that came from  the school trust,                                                                    
the  general  fund  was  reduced  by  $1.  The  trust  never                                                                    
supplemented and  had no  purpose. He  suggested eliminating                                                                    
the trust  for all  the good it  did education.  He recapped                                                                    
that there  was a $12  million increase due to  the increase                                                                    
in the  BSA offset  by $17 million  resulting in  being down                                                                    
about $5 million.  Medicaid, found on line 16,  showed a $32                                                                    
million  reduction.  Most,  if   not  all  of  the  Medicaid                                                                    
expansion savings  were taken in  FY 16. He  understood that                                                                    
the  $32  million  came  from  reforms  that  were  not  yet                                                                    
identified. In other words, the  governor was hoping to save                                                                    
$32 million on Medicaid.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Teal reviewed  the statewide  obligations beginning  on                                                                    
line 23 reflecting  the state's debt service. In  FY 16 debt                                                                    
service was  $206 million in  GF and jumped to  $436 million                                                                    
reflecting a $230 million increase in FY 17.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:50:10 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman  asked how many  years the state  had before                                                                    
it could  no longer  pay the  Permanent Fund  Dividend (PFD)                                                                    
assuming  that the  CBR and  the  earnings reserve  accounts                                                                    
(ERA) would  be used to pay  for a yearly budget  deficit of                                                                    
$3.5 billion. Mr. Teal responded roughly 4 years.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Edgmon  suggested  there was  a  statute  in                                                                    
place that  stated only half  of the earnings  reserve could                                                                    
be used to pay for dividends.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Teal   explained  the  formula  which   determined  the                                                                    
dividend. The formula  took the earnings for  the previous 5                                                                    
years multiplied  by 21  percent and divided  by half.  In a                                                                    
year where the PF lost money  it was possible that the state                                                                    
could be  in a situation  where it was paying  dividends but                                                                    
the earnings  reserve account was  empty. There was  a time,                                                                    
in 2009, when the state came  close to not being able to pay                                                                    
dividends. The  dividend equated to  half of the  previous 5                                                                    
years' earnings -  which might not be there  because those 5                                                                    
years of  earnings were paid  out as inflation  proofing and                                                                    
dividends already.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Representative Gara wanted to  put into perspective how much                                                                    
money had  been spent  on the  education budget.  He relayed                                                                    
that two  years prior,  when HB  278 [Legislation  passed in                                                                    
2014 -  Short Title:  Education] passed,  it passed  with an                                                                    
additional $43  million that was  distributed as if  it went                                                                    
through the  BSA. The $43  million was gone, but  since then                                                                    
the state had added $12.5 million  to the BSA for two years.                                                                    
He  concluded that  the state  had funded  $18 million  less                                                                    
than  two  years prior  under  the  governor's proposal.  He                                                                    
wondered  if  he  was  accurate.  He  did  not  account  for                                                                    
differences in student numbers. Mr.  Teal could not reply to                                                                    
his question in a simple  way because it depended on student                                                                    
counts and many  other factors. It was not  merely the total                                                                    
amount that went to the K-12  formula. It had to do with how                                                                    
much of  it was GF.  The school  trust kicked in.  It showed                                                                    
the state  spent less for  education for the  year, however,                                                                    
the  state did  not. The  numbers appeared  the state  spent                                                                    
less.  The bottom  line was  that the  state probably  spent                                                                    
less per  student in the  current year than couple  of years                                                                    
previously.  He  did  not  have the  numbers  with  him  and                                                                    
admitted they were difficult to put together.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman  added that  the amount  of money  the state                                                                    
spent on education up to  the previous year had continued to                                                                    
increase.  Mr.  Teal  responded affirmatively  if  a  person                                                                    
considered what the state was  spending and not just the UGF                                                                    
portion. He  suggested including  the school trust  fund and                                                                    
adjusting for the student count.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Teal remarked  that the debt jumping up  by $230 million                                                                    
might seem like  a huge increase. He explained  that most of                                                                    
the amount was comprised  of pension obligation bonds. There                                                                    
was  about  $12  million  in general  obligation  bonds  and                                                                    
another  $4  million  in   school  debt  reimbursements.  He                                                                    
highlighted line 28 which showed  retirement costs of $262.5                                                                    
million in  state assistance dropping to  $50 million. There                                                                    
was a $121.3 million reduction  in the retirement costs. The                                                                    
items  went  together  because in  the  governor's  plan  he                                                                    
intended to  issue pension obligation bonds,  depositing the                                                                    
proceeds in  the trust  fund. As  a result  the contribution                                                                    
rate would  fall as  would the  state assistance.  The state                                                                    
assistance would be replaced with debt service.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:55:20 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Teal  scrolled to the table  on slide 10: "PERS  and TRS                                                                    
Costs ($  million)." He  explained that in  FY 17  the state                                                                    
was currently projected to pay  $99 million if the state did                                                                    
not  issue pension  obligation bonds,  retirement assistance                                                                    
to the  state and to  the municipalities. If the  state were                                                                    
to issue pension obligation bonds  the rate would fall to 22                                                                    
percent  and   it  would  no   longer  have  to   pay  state                                                                    
assistance.  The state  would have  to pay  $7.2 million  to                                                                    
issue the debt, of which  the debt service payments would be                                                                    
about $129 million. The state  would pay $37 million more if                                                                    
the state issued bonds than if  it did not. In the Teachers'                                                                    
Retirement  System  (TRS) a  similar  thing  would happen  -                                                                    
state assistance would drop but  not vanish. The state would                                                                    
continue to  pay $50  million. There  would also  be issuing                                                                    
costs and the debt service  equal to another $22 million. In                                                                    
short,  issuing pension  obligations  would  cost the  state                                                                    
about  $60 million  in FY  17. The  reasons for  considering                                                                    
pension  obligation  bonds were  to  take  advantage of  the                                                                    
spread, borrow  money at  5.5 percent,  make 8  percent, and                                                                    
over the  life of the bonds  come out ahead. His  office had                                                                    
run a bunch of scenarios and  the state came out ahead after                                                                    
20 years.  If the bonds  were sold in the  previous December                                                                    
when  the stock  market fell  10 percent  it did  not pencil                                                                    
out.  It was  a question  of risk  assumptions. He  conveyed                                                                    
that   pension  obligation   bonds  were   built  into   the                                                                    
governor's budget  presently. He pointed out  that the group                                                                    
of numbers  were one possibility for  debt service payments.                                                                    
There were  hundreds of ways  to structure debt.  There were                                                                    
several  other approaches  that would  have the  same effect                                                                    
without issuing pension obligation bonds.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman  remarked that  the House  Finance Committee                                                                    
would  be having  an  in-depth discussion  on  the topic  in                                                                    
future meetings regarding the governor's bill.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Pruitt referred  to  the  fiscal summary  on                                                                    
slide  6. He  highlighted  under the  column labeled  "Other                                                                    
State  Funds" the  figure  of  $2.5 billion  for  FY 16.  He                                                                    
wondered  if  it  was  the governor's  intent  to  sell  the                                                                    
obligation  bonds   in  the  current  year.   He  wanted  to                                                                    
understand where  the money received  on the bonds  would be                                                                    
placed. He wondered  if the money would go  to the Permanent                                                                    
Fund,  into a  savings account,  or used  over the  next few                                                                    
years.  Mr. Teal  explained  that  the administration  would                                                                    
expect to sell  the bonds in FY 16 which  was the reason the                                                                    
cost of issuance could be  found in the supplemental budget.                                                                    
The proceeds  would be deposited into  the Public Employees'                                                                    
Retirement System  (PERS) and TRS  trust funds,  which could                                                                    
only be  used to pay benefits.  The money would be  gone and                                                                    
the state could not retrieve  it. The next question would be                                                                    
who  would pay  the  debt  service. The  hope  was that  the                                                                    
retirement system  would pay it.  However, the  debt service                                                                    
would be paid with the state's UGF.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
2:59:41 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Pruitt commented  that  the  state had  been                                                                    
burned by investments in the  stock market with its pensions                                                                    
in the past.  He asked about the risk. The  state would have                                                                    
been in a  difficult situation had it sold the  bonds in the                                                                    
previous December.  He queried  about the long-term  risk to                                                                    
the people receiving the pensions  from the state system. He                                                                    
also asked  if the risk  would be shifted. Mr.  Teal replied                                                                    
that if  the state  issued pension  obligation bonds  the GF                                                                    
would pay  a fixed debt  service schedule. If the  state did                                                                    
not  make  an  8  percent  return it  would  be  faced  with                                                                    
returning  to  state  assistance  in addition  to  the  debt                                                                    
service.  In terms  of risk,  he  posed the  question as  to                                                                    
whether Representative  Pruitt was  the type of  person that                                                                    
would  mortgage his  house, borrowing  it at  4 percent  and                                                                    
placing  it  into the  stock  market.  If so,  then  pension                                                                    
obligation   bonds   might    be   attractive   investments.                                                                    
Otherwise, they might not be so appealing.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Munoz  wanted  to  respond  to  a  statement                                                                    
Representative   Pruitt   made   about   being   burned   by                                                                    
investments. She  thought the return on  the investments had                                                                    
been  favorable and  that the  Alaska Retirement  Management                                                                    
(ARM)  Board  had  been   very  successful  in  investments.                                                                    
However,  the  decision  about underfunding  the  obligation                                                                    
lead to the unfunded liability as  well as the high costs of                                                                    
the  Tier  I  Retirement  Plan  and  early  retirement.  She                                                                    
understood  there were  3  or 4  things  that happened  that                                                                    
resulted in the large unfunded  liability but, the nature of                                                                    
the investments and  the return on the  investments were not                                                                    
part  of  the  issue.   She  furthered  that  the  actuarial                                                                    
recommended deposits  into the  trust funds were  lower than                                                                    
what  the  state  should  have  invested  which  led  to  an                                                                    
underfunding of the state's obligation.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman  informed the committee that  there would be                                                                    
a more detailed discussion on the  topic at a later time. If                                                                    
members needed more information  they could contact Co-Chair                                                                    
Thompson, as his office was working on related legislation.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman referred  back to slide 3.  He remarked that                                                                    
in the previous year the  legislature had made reductions to                                                                    
the  operating  budget  of  more   than  $400  million.  The                                                                    
reductions  translated to  a 9  percent reduction  in agency                                                                    
operations, the  largest operations decrement over  a period                                                                    
of  one year  in the  state's history.  Last fall  the state                                                                    
spent  an  additional  $150  million  for  the  gasline.  He                                                                    
thought  the  additional  appropriation made  the  operating                                                                    
budget  cut for  FY  16 look  smaller. He  asked  if he  was                                                                    
correct.  Mr. Teal  confirmed the  chairman was  correct. He                                                                    
offered that there were one-time  appropriations such as the                                                                    
gasline which took  $157 million from the  budget last year.                                                                    
He did  not know if the  amount would be sufficient.  It was                                                                    
possible  that money  would have  to  be added  in 2017.  He                                                                    
expounded  that the  governor's  figures  were $157  million                                                                    
lower due  to one-time expenditures  in 2016. If  there were                                                                    
supplemental budgets in 2017,  then the numbers would change                                                                    
because of spending additional monies in FY 17.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair   Neuman   commented    that   the   $157   million                                                                    
appropriation was an anomaly. He  wanted to make sure it was                                                                    
highlighted.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
3:04:40 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson  asked about how much  the legislature                                                                    
had cut  prior to  appropriating money  for the  gasline and                                                                    
other things  that had been  added. Co-Chair  Neuman thought                                                                    
it was  about $5.2 billion.  Mr. Teal answered that  the gas                                                                    
line was the large expenditure.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson thought the  legislature was closer to                                                                    
a budget of  $5.0 billion rather than $5.4  billion when the                                                                    
legislature concluded last year.  If her number was accurate                                                                    
then the  budget the legislature  would be looking  at would                                                                    
be  $500 million  higher  for  the FY  17  budget. Mr.  Teal                                                                    
replied that the  number could be greater  than $500 million                                                                    
depending on whether  there was a supplemental  budget in FY                                                                    
17. He was  almost certain there would  be additional costs.                                                                    
He  reported that  the state  was about  $30 million  to $35                                                                    
million short  for fire suppression in  FY 16 and in  FY 17.                                                                    
Representative  Wilson was  looking at  the "normal"  budget                                                                    
for  FY  16.  However,  LFD  did  not  identify  budgets  as                                                                    
"normal"  but, rather,  added the  numbers to  determine the                                                                    
current  numbers.  He  furthered that  LFD  identified  what                                                                    
amounts were  appropriated and placed  on a chart.  He could                                                                    
only use the numbers available.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson  mentioned that she had  heard several                                                                    
comments  from  constituents  about  agencies  making  large                                                                    
expenditures at  the end of  each fiscal year. She  asked if                                                                    
it   could  be   tracked.  Mr.   Teal  explained   that  the                                                                    
information  could  be  tracked in  the  accounting  system.                                                                    
However, he thought many managers  did the same thing he did                                                                    
which was  to make sure  staff was paid and  avoided running                                                                    
short  on payroll.  He provided  a  hypothetical example  of                                                                    
spending  money to  purchase new  computers in  July at  the                                                                    
beginning of the  fiscal year but later  finding out payroll                                                                    
was short in the following June.  As a manager he would wait                                                                    
to ensure  that payroll and  other costs for the  year would                                                                    
be met.  If money was left  over then it would  be spent. In                                                                    
other words, it was not a  matter of having a spending spree                                                                    
at the end  of the year, it was about  making sure money was                                                                    
available for  spending. He understood  the myth  brought up                                                                    
by Representative  Wilson. It was a  common misconception of                                                                    
the public.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Neuman  suggested  asking the  commissioners  when                                                                    
looking  at  their   agency  budget.  Representative  Wilson                                                                    
replied, "I have,  they denied. But I have  asked." Mr. Teal                                                                    
responded, "Probably  for the same  reasons." Representative                                                                    
Wilson  responded that  she  did not  think  she would  ever                                                                    
know.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
3:09:13 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Teal  turned  to slide  8:  "Agency  Operating  Budgets                                                                    
Percentage  Change  from FY16  Mgt  Plan  to FY17  Gov  (UGF                                                                    
Only)." He made the minor point  that the slide showed in FY                                                                    
17  that  virtually every  agency  was  taking a  reduction.                                                                    
There was  a small increase  in Department of  Revenue (DOR)                                                                    
and  the Department  of Natural  Resources (DNR)  related to                                                                    
the  AKLNG  Project.  There  was also  an  increase  in  the                                                                    
Department of  Military and  Veterans Affairs  (DMVA) having                                                                    
to  do with  the  expansion  of the  rural  presence of  the                                                                    
Alaska Scouts.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Teal advanced  to slide  9:  "Agency Operating  Budgets                                                                    
Change  from FY16  Mgt  Plan  to FY17  Gov  (UGF Only)."  He                                                                    
relayed that  the slide  showed the  same information  as in                                                                    
slide 8 but in percentages.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Teal returned  to the  fiscal  summary on  slide 6.  He                                                                    
pointed  to line  24 representing  fund capitalization.  Oil                                                                    
and Production  tax Credits appeared as  a sub appropriation                                                                    
under  fund capitalization.  There was  $500 million  in the                                                                    
previous  year  and $73  million  in  the current  year.  He                                                                    
reminded members the  state had started out FY  16 with $700                                                                    
million in  expected tax  credit expenditures.  The governor                                                                    
vetoed  $200 million.  In FY  17 credits  were projected  to                                                                    
claim about  $625 million.  If the  $200 million  in credits                                                                    
that were  not paid in the  previous year were added  to the                                                                    
credits  anticipated in  the current  year, the  state would                                                                    
have  $825  million  of outstanding  credits.  However,  the                                                                    
governor's  budget only  paid for  $73 million  of them.  He                                                                    
returned to Representative Wilson's  point about whether the                                                                    
budget was really  equal to $5.4 billion,  especially if the                                                                    
state ended up paying the  remaining $700 million in oil and                                                                    
gas tax credits  that did not appear in  the fiscal summary.                                                                    
He  concluded  that  the  budget would  be  greater  if  the                                                                    
legislature  did not  do  something related  to  a bill  the                                                                    
governor  submitted that  changed the  tax credits  and took                                                                    
$1.2  billion from  the  CBR to  pay some  of  them. In  the                                                                    
legislation the  funds would come  from the CBR  rather than                                                                    
from  UGF. However,  in his  opinion, the  tax credits  were                                                                    
state expenses and  were understated in terms  of the amount                                                                    
of state money  being spent. There were a lot  buried in the                                                                    
budget that were not visible on the surface.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Teal discussed  line 26,  the  Permanent Fund  Dividend                                                                    
Fund. In FY 16  the amount was zero and in  FY 17 the amount                                                                    
equaled  $700 million.  He explained  that the  numbers were                                                                    
due  to  a re-plumbing.  He  detailed  that  in FY  16  $1.4                                                                    
billion  in PFDs  went out  the door.  The state  classified                                                                    
them as  coming from  the ERA,  part of the  PF and  did not                                                                    
show up  as GF  expenditures. Under  the governor's  plan 50                                                                    
percent of  royalties would go  to dividends. He  added that                                                                    
royalties were UGF. The  Legislative Finance Division looked                                                                    
at it  as if  dividends would  now be paid  from the  GF. He                                                                    
believed the  payouts would  continue to  be referred  to as                                                                    
PFDs.  He suggested  that no  one would  begin calling  them                                                                    
royalty dividends even  though that was what  they would be.                                                                    
He added  that he  looked at the  dividend checks  as checks                                                                    
from  the   government  whether  from  the   permanent  fund                                                                    
earnings or  the GF. He  thought the  governor's re-plumbing                                                                    
made it very  clear that PFDs competed with  K-12, and other                                                                    
GF  expenditures. He  thought it  might change  legislators'                                                                    
views of dividends as well  as the public view of dividends.                                                                    
Also,  the $700  million would  show as  revenue because  it                                                                    
came into  the GF. He  would discuss the re-plumbing  in the                                                                    
following week.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
3:14:09 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Edgmon  asked if  it  was  cheaper to  spend                                                                    
money from the CBR because  the account was invested in long                                                                    
term investment  vehicles rather  than using money  from the                                                                    
ERA that had  a target return of 7 percent.  Mr. Teal stated                                                                    
that   the  CBR   was  no   longer  invested   in  long-term                                                                    
investments  because  DOR  had instructions  that  if  there                                                                    
could be  a call on  the funds (a likely  possibility), then                                                                    
they  could not  be invested  long-term. The  state was  not                                                                    
earning as much  on the CBR as it could  be because the cash                                                                    
had to be readily available.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Edgmon  stated that in  order to go  into the                                                                    
ERA  the legislature  would  be  extricating or  liquidating                                                                    
investment vehicles but it was  not with the CBR. He thought                                                                    
it  was   important  to  look   at  the   opportunity  costs                                                                    
associated  with reaching  into the  PF versus  taking money                                                                    
out of the  CBR. Mr. Teal responded that  the fiscal summary                                                                    
reflected  the governor's  plan. The  governor's plan  would                                                                    
take the CBR  away and place the money in  the ERA. It would                                                                    
sort  of  address  Representative Edgmon's  issue  with  the                                                                    
difference  in earnings  because there  would not  be a  CBR                                                                    
under  the  governor's  plan.  He  clarified  that  the  CBR                                                                    
currently  received  settlements  between $120  million  and                                                                    
$150 million per year from  disputes with oil companies over                                                                    
taxes. There  would be  a continued flow  into the  CBR, the                                                                    
balance never  going to zero.  However, the  governor's plan                                                                    
was to take the existing balance and place it into the ERA.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Edgmon had  additional  questions but  would                                                                    
save them for another time.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Teal  continued that the questions  about the governor's                                                                    
plan should  probably wait until  the following week  due to                                                                    
time constraints.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Teal reported  that the capital budget was  up from $118                                                                    
million to  $195 million,  an increase  of $75  million. The                                                                    
total authorization  increased to  $5.4 million, with  a net                                                                    
increase  of about  $65  million  noted on  line  41 of  the                                                                    
fiscal summary. He mentioned that  there was a complication.                                                                    
He pointed to line 42 in  the first column that showed an FY                                                                    
16 deficit  of roughly $3.8  billion. The revenue  covered a                                                                    
little  less than  30 percent  of the  expenditures in  that                                                                    
year.  Line  44  was  included in  anticipation  of  members                                                                    
asking about  what it  would do  if it  did not  execute the                                                                    
governor's  plan doing  business as  usual. The  Legislative                                                                    
Finance Division  tried to adjust  as best as  possible. The                                                                    
dividend would  be about $3.5  billion as shown on  line 44.                                                                    
State  revenue  would  then cover  about  one-third  of  its                                                                    
expenditures.  He pointed  to line  42 and  highlighted that                                                                    
under the  governor's plan  the deficit  would fall  to $440                                                                    
million.  With its  plan, the  administration was  aiming to                                                                    
eliminate the  deficit. It  would not happen  in FY  17, but                                                                    
within a couple  of years. He suggested that  if the numbers                                                                    
in the  model were correct,  the plan seemed  reasonable. He                                                                    
knew dividends would  fall by $200 million  in the following                                                                    
year if they  were based on 50 percent of  royalties and the                                                                    
state did not  prop the payment to $1000.  The payment would                                                                    
be about  $700 per person  and cost about $500  million. LFD                                                                    
also knew that  there were a number of things  that were not                                                                    
covered. The income tax, for instance,  in FY 17 would be in                                                                    
effect for  half a year  which would generate  an additional                                                                    
$100  million  in  revenue.   The  deficit  would  hopefully                                                                    
decline and  eventually vanish if  all went well.  He stated                                                                    
that  legislators  might  ask  why it  might  be  the  wrong                                                                    
direction to turn.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
3:20:21 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Teal  discussed  slide  11:  "FY17  Governor's  Request                                                                    
Agency Operating Budget, Statewide  Items and Capital Budget                                                                    
(Formula   &  Non-Formula)   (UGF  Only--$   millions)."  He                                                                    
indicated  that the  diagram  showed the  FY  17 request  in                                                                    
declining  order of  expenditures. There  were many  ways to                                                                    
look  at the  chart. First,  the state  had $1.8  billion in                                                                    
revenue with  oil priced at  $56/bbl. It  was coincidentally                                                                    
about the same  $1.8 billion for all of  the agencies except                                                                    
for the Department of Education  and Early Development (K-12                                                                    
education), statewide appropriations,  and the Department of                                                                    
Health and  Social Services.  It could  also be  argued that                                                                    
the   state   would   spend  $1.3   billion   on   statewide                                                                    
expenditures   including    retirement,   assistance,   debt                                                                    
service, and in FY 17 PFDs  and $200 million for the capital                                                                    
budget totaling  $1.5 billion. If  revenue was  $1.8 billion                                                                    
and $1.5 billion was accounted  for, only $300 million would                                                                    
be left  to spend  on education,  Medicaid, and  every other                                                                    
agency. There  were a number  of other  ways to look  at the                                                                    
budget but, the bottom line was  that the state did not have                                                                    
enough money  to do what it  wanted to do. He  observed that                                                                    
the cuts  were difficult  to identify. It  was one  thing to                                                                    
suggest  reducing  the  budget   by  a  certain  percentage.                                                                    
However, it  was harder to  be specific. He listed  a number                                                                    
of things that  would be a challenge to cut.  He thought the                                                                    
chart was interesting because  it demonstrated how difficult                                                                    
it  was to  begin balancing  the budget  by reducing  it. He                                                                    
referred back  to the Rasmussen Lunch-and-Learn  when it was                                                                    
stated  that people  wanted reductions  but they  also liked                                                                    
their services.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Teal  discussed things for the  legislature to consider.                                                                    
The  price of  oil had  been  discussed earlier  and how  it                                                                    
might affect  things. He speculated that  $200 million could                                                                    
be considered a large or a  small amount. It was a margin of                                                                    
error in  forecasting. The  price of oil  in the  future was                                                                    
unknown.  There were  some budget  shortfalls including  one                                                                    
for fire  suppression. He drew  attention to line 32  of the                                                                    
fiscal  summary which  showed a  supplemental for  Community                                                                    
Revenue  Sharing in  the  amount of  $34  million. It  would                                                                    
bring  the revenue  sharing  fund up  to  $150 million.  The                                                                    
governor wanted to distribute $50  million to communities in                                                                    
FY 17. The  governor's plan also indicated he  would like to                                                                    
reach a  $60 million  distribution level. If  a distribution                                                                    
were to  happen in FY 18  another $80 million would  need to                                                                    
be deposited in  FY 17. If an $80 million  was not deposited                                                                    
then Community Revenue Sharing would  fall to $33 million in                                                                    
FY   18.  If   the   governor  intended   to  increase   the                                                                    
distribution  to  $60 million  then  $80  million should  be                                                                    
placed in  the FY 17  budget - it  was not reflected  in the                                                                    
governor's  plan. He  also was  unclear if  additional money                                                                    
would  be  needed  for  the  Alaska  Liquefied  Natural  Gas                                                                    
(AKLNG)  Project.  If  the expenditures  he  mentioned  were                                                                    
considered, the  governor's deficit  would jump to  a little                                                                    
over  $600  million  from  the  $400  million  that  it  was                                                                    
currently.  It  would be  a  big  deficit  but it  was  much                                                                    
smaller than  the $3.9  billion deficit  the state  would be                                                                    
faced  with  if the  legislature  chose  to do  business  as                                                                    
usual.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Teal concluded that LFD  was currently stuck. It had the                                                                    
governor's  budget as  submitted on  December 15,  2016. The                                                                    
revenue bills were released as  LFD was putting the overview                                                                    
together. He  elaborated that the Permanent  Fund Protection                                                                    
Act had  been redrafted and  until the previous day  LFD had                                                                    
not  received a  copy  of the  revised  legislation. He  was                                                                    
unclear  whether LFD  was portraying  the governor's  budget                                                                    
accurately. He  thought the division  was doing the  best it                                                                    
could with  the information it  had. He was unsure  what the                                                                    
legislature would  do. If the legislature  chose to continue                                                                    
to   do  business   as  usual,   only  about   one-third  of                                                                    
expenditures  would be  covered with  revenues and  reserves                                                                    
would  rapidly   deplete  to  zero   within  3   years.  The                                                                    
legislature could  make additional  cuts to bring  the ratio                                                                    
up a  little bit. However,  it would not extend  the state's                                                                    
reserves by  more than  a year.  The legislature  could also                                                                    
adopt  the  governor's  plan  or   a  variation  of  it.  He                                                                    
clarified that  when he used  the term "governor's  plan" he                                                                    
meant any  of the  plans floating  around including  the GCI                                                                    
plan, a Rasmussen  Plan, the DOR model, and  the ISER model.                                                                    
They  were conceptually  all the  same. They  all looked  at                                                                    
expenditures, revenue, and the  PF earnings. There were some                                                                    
tweaks  with inflation  proofing the  PF, the  percentage of                                                                    
royalties, and other  items. However, he felt  they were all                                                                    
conceptually the  same because  they all had  to rely  on PF                                                                    
earnings to fill  the deficit. The governor's  plan took the                                                                    
state's current  fiscal circumstance and bumped  the revenue                                                                    
curve  up. There  were other  plans that  could do  the same                                                                    
thing but, the  governor's plan covered about  90 percent of                                                                    
expenditures. In  other words, it  used less than  4 percent                                                                    
of the  state's reserve  balance. Under the  governor's plan                                                                    
the state's reserves could last  25 years or more making the                                                                    
state essentially  sustainable at  about the  current level.                                                                    
He  added  that   at  least  there  was  some   hope  for  a                                                                    
sustainable future for Alaska  because the deficits would be                                                                    
small  enough that  a  little  more tax  or  a little  lower                                                                    
expenses would  result in  a balanced  budget. He  closed by                                                                    
offering  that he  and his  staff were  available to  assist                                                                    
legislators  in   any  way  possible.  He   understood  that                                                                    
legislators had a significant amount of work ahead of them.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:29:09 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman thanked Mr. Teal  and his staff for the work                                                                    
they do. He was aware of the time his people spent working.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Gara   made   a   humorous   remark   about                                                                    
Representative Guttenberg's  tie. He was aware  the governor                                                                    
had tried to craft his plan  in a way that would not require                                                                    
a constitutional  amendment. He commented that  the bill was                                                                    
written with money  remaining in the new oil  credit fund at                                                                    
the end  of the  year and money  remaining in  the sovereign                                                                    
wealth fund at the end  of the year after appropriations. He                                                                    
wondered  if the  money  would  be swept  into  the CBR  and                                                                    
require a three-quarter vote every  year to return the money                                                                    
back  into the  sovereign  wealth fund  and  oil tax  credit                                                                    
fund.  He asked  if it  was an  unintended consequence.  Mr.                                                                    
Teal responded  that under the governor's  plan (an attorney                                                                    
general opinion)  the ERA  would not be  swept into  the CBR                                                                    
and there would  be no more CBR in the  future. He disagreed                                                                    
strongly  with  the  idea.  He believed  that  the  ERA  was                                                                    
unsweep-able because  it was  part of  the PF.  The earnings                                                                    
went into  the GF defined  by the constitution. It  was only                                                                    
statute that  required the  sweep. He  thought the  plan was                                                                    
not  workable as  written because  it lacked  a sweep  and a                                                                    
super  majority  vote.  It would  be  something  that  would                                                                    
likely be examined in depth  in the following week. In order                                                                    
to review the plan in  detail he would need additional tools                                                                    
to  review the  complicated  process.  If the  legislature's                                                                    
main concern was the CBR  vote, the solution would simply be                                                                    
to repeal  the statute that stated  the ERA was not  part of                                                                    
the PF. The  legislature would be able to  easily follow the                                                                    
constitution  and indicate  that the  earnings were  part of                                                                    
the GF.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman  commented that the  meeting needed  to wrap                                                                    
up. There  had been several  conversations on the  issue. He                                                                    
reviewed the agenda for the following day.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
ADJOURNMENT                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
3:32:54 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
The meeting was adjourned at 3:32 p.m.