Legislature(2015 - 2016)SENATE FINANCE 532

04/07/2015 09:00 AM Senate FINANCE

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09:20:43 AM Start
09:21:35 AM Confirmation Hearing: Department of Revenue - Commissioner
10:00:45 AM Confirmation Hearing: Alaska Gasline Development Corporation Board of Directors
03:06:08 PM Continuation of Confirmation Hearing: Department of Revenue - Commissioner
03:46:10 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ Presentation: Overview FY17 Operating Budget TELECONFERENCED
Alaska Gasline Development Corporation Board of
Directors:
Richard Halford - Eagle River
Joe Paskvan - Fairbanks
Hugh Short - Girdwood
Department of Revenue - Commissioner
Randal Hoffbeck
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled: TELECONFERENCED
                 SENATE FINANCE COMMITTEE                                                                                       
                       April 7, 2015                                                                                            
                         9:20 a.m.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
9:20:43 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CALL TO ORDER                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon  called  the   Senate  Finance  Committee                                                                   
meeting to order at 9:20 a.m.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Senator Anna MacKinnon, Co-Chair                                                                                                
Senator Pete Kelly, Co-Chair                                                                                                    
Senator Peter Micciche, Vice-Chair                                                                                              
Senator Click Bishop                                                                                                            
Senator Mike Dunleavy                                                                                                           
Senator Lyman Hoffman                                                                                                           
Senator Donny Olson                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
None                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
ALSO PRESENT                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Randall   Hoffbeck,  Commissioner-Designee,   Department   of                                                                   
Revenue;  Rick Halford,  Former State  Senator, Eagle  River;                                                                   
Joe  Paskvan, Former  State Senator,  Fairbanks; Hugh  Short,                                                                   
Girdwood.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
SUMMARY                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
CONFIRMATION HEARINGS:                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     ALASKA GASLINE DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION BOARD OF                                                                            
     DIRECTORS                                                                                                                  
     DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE - COMMISSIONER                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
^CONFIRMATION HEARING: DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE - COMMISSIONER                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
9:21:35 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
RANDALL   HOFFBECK,  COMMISSIONER-DESIGNEE,   DEPARTMENT   OF                                                                   
REVENUE  (DOR),  discussed  his work  history.  He  recounted                                                                   
that he  arrived in  Alaska in  1980 with  plans to  become a                                                                   
park ranger  after graduating from  college with a  degree in                                                                   
resource  management.  He  related   that  due  to  a  hiring                                                                   
freeze, he was  unable to secure the work he  had planned. He                                                                   
instead  took a position  doing land  law adjudication  under                                                                   
the  Alaska Native  Claims  Settlement  Act (ANCSA)  and  the                                                                   
Alaska  National Interest  Lands  Conservation Act  (ANILCA),                                                                   
where  he  worked  for approximately  1.5  years  looking  at                                                                   
state  and  Native   land  rights  claims.  He   then  worked                                                                   
building houses,  selling real estate, and  doing appraisals;                                                                   
which  he worked  on for  about  two years  until the  market                                                                   
collapse  in  the mid-1980s.  He  relayed  that he  sold  his                                                                   
business  and  took  a  position  with  the  Municipality  of                                                                   
Anchorage  doing  real  estate  appraisals,  where  he  spent                                                                   
almost nine years as the supervisor.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck shared  that in  1992 he  was                                                                   
hired as  part of an  audit team by  the North Slope  Borough                                                                   
to  ensure  their properties  were  being  properly  assessed                                                                   
after  state cutbacks  in the  oil and gas  tax division.  He                                                                   
furthered  that this  team developed  the  audit program  for                                                                   
the oil  and gas property tax  audits in the state.  He noted                                                                   
that  the state  had been  doing the  audits previously,  but                                                                   
the  team reformulated  the  process.  He concluded  that  he                                                                   
worked at  the North Slope Borough  until 1998, and  had been                                                                   
the tax manager for the majority of the time.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck revealed that in  1998 he was                                                                   
named  as  Parks  and  Beautification  Manager  by  Anchorage                                                                   
Mayor Rick Mystrom,  and worked in that position  until 1999.                                                                   
He  added that  at the  latter part  of the  mayor's term  of                                                                   
office,  he  formed a  company  with  Dudley Platt  and  Dave                                                                   
Walters  (currently with  BP) which  bid on  the tax  support                                                                   
contract for  DOR. His company  was awarded the  contract and                                                                   
worked on it  for approximately two years, at  which time the                                                                   
state  assessor retired  and  Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck                                                                   
was  hired  as  the state  Petroleum  Property  Assessor.  He                                                                   
clarified that  he held the position  from 2001 to  2006, and                                                                   
during that time  was a primary author of the  rewrite of the                                                                   
administrative  regulations  under   AS  43.56.  Additionally                                                                   
during  that time,  he spent two  years on  the stranded  gas                                                                   
pipeline negotiations under the Murkowski Administration.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
9:25:46 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck   continued  to  recount  his                                                                   
work  history,  and described  how  he  had tried  to  reform                                                                   
several of  Alaska's property tax  laws while working  as the                                                                   
state petroleum  property assessor. He furthered  that during                                                                   
that time  DOR went to  a production-based upstream  property                                                                   
tax,  which  was  originally   tested  for  three  years  and                                                                   
extended to a  fourth year after being incorporated  into the                                                                   
language  under stranded  gas.  He commented  that after  the                                                                   
test  was over,  agreement  was not  reached  by all  parties                                                                   
involved and  the model  went back to  a more standard  cost-                                                                   
based  approach  for  valuing  properties.  He  related  that                                                                   
during  the  same  time there  was  a  Trans-Alaska  Pipeline                                                                   
System (TAPS)  settlement agreement  for three years  but the                                                                   
fourth year the state was unable to reach settlement.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck explained  that he  was hired                                                                   
by the  North Slope  Borough in 2006  as finance  director, a                                                                   
job  he  held until  2011.  The  scope  of the  job  included                                                                   
serving as  chief investment  officer, chief fiscal  officer,                                                                   
debt  manager, treasurer,  and budget  manager. He  commented                                                                   
that during  that time,  the borough  received three  ratings                                                                   
upgrades  from the  rating  agencies,  primarily  due to  the                                                                   
close working  relationship  the borough  had with the  state                                                                   
and the revenues  generated by the work that was  done by the                                                                   
state. He  added that  they were  able to increase  revenues,                                                                   
decrease  debt,  decrease  taxes, and  increase  savings.  He                                                                   
listed the scope  of other duties to include  being in charge                                                                   
of  accounting,   annual  audits,  grants,   benefits,  risk,                                                                   
insurance,   purchasing,    shipping,   receiving,    records                                                                   
management,  and tax audit  and assessing.  He remarked  that                                                                   
the scope of  the finance director position  was greater than                                                                   
that of the commissioner of DOR.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck   spoke  of  being  hired  as                                                                   
chief  of  staff  to  North  Slope  Borough  Mayor  Charlotte                                                                   
Brower in  2011. He related that  he had retired in  2012 and                                                                   
completed a seminary  degree, with the intention  of going in                                                                   
to  full-time ministry.  He  recounted  that Governor  Walker                                                                   
had  asked   him  if   he  was   interested  in  working   as                                                                   
commissioner  of DOR. After  some consideration,  he accepted                                                                   
and  was excited  about  bringing  the  gas line  project  to                                                                   
fruition.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
9:29:40 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon drew  the  committee's  attention to  the                                                                   
duties  and  responsibilities  of the  commissioner  for  the                                                                   
Department  of Revenue  under AS  43.05.010. She  highlighted                                                                   
three of the duties listed in the statute:                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     4.  keep  a  record  of  all  departmental  proceedings,                                                                   
     record  and  file  all  bonds,  and  assume  custody  of                                                                   
     returns,   reports,  papers,   and   documents  of   the                                                                   
     department;                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     6.   keep  a  record   of  each   order,  process,   and                                                                   
     certificate  issued by  the commissioner,  and keep  the                                                                   
     record  open  to  public inspection  at  all  reasonable                                                                   
     times;                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     7. hold  hearings and  investigations necessary  for the                                                                   
     administration of state tax and revenue laws;                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Kelly   asked  Commissioner-Designee   Hoffbeck  to                                                                   
comment  on  his strategies  for  maximizing  state  revenue.                                                                   
Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck commented that there  were no                                                                   
easy decisions or  simple solution. He referred  to the price                                                                   
and volume  of oil production  and stressed the need  to look                                                                   
at a  combination of  other revenue  sources. He opined  that                                                                   
there were some  difficult discussions needed  with regard to                                                                   
state expenditures  and determinations as to what  areas were                                                                   
considered  to  be part  of  the  state's core  function.  He                                                                   
emphasized  the  need  for  public   understanding  that  the                                                                   
legislature and  administration had  made the budget  as lean                                                                   
as possible while focusing on core functions.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck cited  continued spending  of                                                                   
state savings as  a finite funding option that  would not get                                                                   
the state  to a final  solution, and  reiterated the  need to                                                                   
look  at  other  revenue  sources.   He  mentioned  utilizing                                                                   
revenue  earnings,   and  specified  a  structured   form  of                                                                   
spending investment  earnings from  the permanent fund  as an                                                                   
option. He  reported that  DOR was  putting together  a model                                                                   
to examine several  scenarios of how the state  could use the                                                                   
various  investment   earnings,  including  the   Percent  of                                                                   
Market  Value (POMV)  proposal, capping  the permanent  fund,                                                                   
or various other  things. He detailed that the  model was not                                                                   
dissimilar  from a model  recently presented  by David  Teal,                                                                   
Director,  Legislative Finance  Division;  but would  contain                                                                   
more  robust forecasting  and  more options.  He named  other                                                                   
revenue  sources   including  income  tax,  sales   tax,  and                                                                   
statewide  property  tax  as possibilities  to  examine;  and                                                                   
characterized  them   as  "standard  government   tools."  He                                                                   
mentioned   a  bill  being   worked  on   in  the   House  of                                                                   
Representatives  that  would look  at reduction  of  indirect                                                                   
costs. He  suggested there  was a  package of solutions,  and                                                                   
surmised  it would  take three  of them  in order  to make  a                                                                   
balanced budget.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
9:33:52 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Kelly  asked if  Commissioner-Designee Hoffbeck  was                                                                   
satisfied  with  the  way  the   state  was  investing  state                                                                   
accounts  in the  short  and long-term,  and  whether he  had                                                                   
different strategies  to make  the state's cash  more liquid.                                                                   
Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck noted that  he had  asked his                                                                   
staff to  look at  the efficient  frontier for investing  the                                                                   
Constitutional Budget  Reserve (CBR), to see if  there was an                                                                   
opportunity  to use  some equities  within  it. He  explained                                                                   
that  the   CBR  was   set  up  to   function  as   an  asset                                                                   
preservation  account, and had  been primarily been  invested                                                                   
in  some form  of  fixed income  type  investments. He  added                                                                   
that the  sub-account was  the more  aggressive account  with                                                                   
equities  in  it.   He  relayed  that  there   was  statutory                                                                   
language  specifying  that  the commissioner  of  DOR,  while                                                                   
investing  in the sub-account,  must assume  the funds  would                                                                   
not be used  for five years.  He added that the  situation no                                                                   
longer  applied  and  the  funds were  moved  from  the  sub-                                                                   
account in  to the main account.  He reiterated that  DOR was                                                                   
examining whether  there was an  opportunity within  the main                                                                   
account  to  get more  return  than  just fixed  incomes.  He                                                                   
revealed  that DOR  had also  looked  at how  much the  state                                                                   
held in  cash on  a given  day for  paying bills and  whether                                                                   
there was opportunity  to reduce the amount in  order to keep                                                                   
more  invested.  He  qualified  that  any  short-term  liquid                                                                   
investments had  not paid much.  He referred to  proposals by                                                                   
DOR economics staff  that would entail using  current savings                                                                   
as collateral  to borrow against,  and then use  the borrowed                                                                   
funds to invest  as a revenue source. He referred  to current                                                                   
market volatility  and advised that  DOR was not ready  to go                                                                   
forward with the proposals at that time.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon asked  Commissioner-Designee Hoffbeck  to                                                                   
recount  his experience  with maximizing  revenue as  opposed                                                                   
to  asking  for  additional  revenue  sources.  Commissioner-                                                                   
Designee Hoffbeck  explained that in his position  as finance                                                                   
director for the  North Slope Borough, he  rewrote investment                                                                   
policies  to allow  for more  aggressive  investing than  was                                                                   
previously in  place. He added  that he would  rely primarily                                                                   
on  the  experts   on  staff  as  well  as   consultants.  He                                                                   
acknowledged  that he  was not  a  banker, but  that DOR  had                                                                   
people  who  were,  and  he would  primarily  rely  on  their                                                                   
expertise.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
9:37:31 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Senator  Dunleavy   referenced  the  aforementioned   revenue                                                                   
models and asked  if Commissioner-Designee Hoffbeck  would be                                                                   
seeking  tolerance  data  to   reflect  the  point  at  which                                                                   
residents of Alaska  would depart the state  after taxes were                                                                   
imposed, which  he called the "tipping  point." Commissioner-                                                                   
Designee  Hoffbeck  related  that  he  had  engaged  in  such                                                                   
discussion with  the economics group  and to the  extent that                                                                   
it  would be  possible, (the  issues would  be examined)  but                                                                   
not as part  of the base  revenue model. He pointed  out that                                                                   
such  data was  speculative and  it was  hard to  objectively                                                                   
point to  what the tipping point  was. He described  that DOR                                                                   
had  become  keenly  aware  of  what  constituted  new  money                                                                   
versus recirculated  money.  He clarified  that if the  state                                                                   
had a  sales or income  tax, it would  bring in a  little new                                                                   
money (i.e.  sales tax from tourism,  income tax from  out of                                                                   
state  employees) but  the majority  of that  money would  be                                                                   
recirculated   within  the   state  and   would  not   really                                                                   
stimulate the economy.  He qualified that the  two items that                                                                   
would  stimulate   the  economy   were  investment   earnings                                                                   
(currently  being saved  and not  part of  the economy),  and                                                                   
our  savings  account; both  of  which  were new  monies.  He                                                                   
discussed  the market  collapse  that  occurred  when he  was                                                                   
appraisal supervisor  in Anchorage in the 1980s,  when people                                                                   
lost 75 percent  of land value  and it took 10 years  for the                                                                   
economy to  recover. He recounted  that this  experience made                                                                   
him aware  that the state had  to be a part of  the solution,                                                                   
rather  than the  problem. He  continued that  if oil  prices                                                                   
remained low  in the  following year  or two, industry  would                                                                   
have  to pull  back. He  referenced  the promised  investment                                                                   
under  SB 21  [oil  tax legislation  from  2013], and  stated                                                                   
that industry had  kept that promise. He further  stated that                                                                   
at some point  the numbers would be such that  everyone would                                                                   
have to pull back.  He summarized that at that  point in time                                                                   
the state  would need to balance  the budget and look  at new                                                                   
monies  in order  not to  add to  the problem  of an  economy                                                                   
that was retracting.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Senator  Dunleavy expressed  interest  in the  aforementioned                                                                   
budget modelling  and wondered  how far  the budget  could be                                                                   
reduced, at what  point taxes would be imposed  on the people                                                                   
of  Alaska,  and in  what  form.  He asked  if  Commissioner-                                                                   
Designee  Hoffbeck thought  that  enough cuts  had been  made                                                                   
thus far. He  added that the governor had  discussed reducing                                                                   
the  budget  by  16  percent  and  others  had  discussed  25                                                                   
percent.  Commissioner-Designee Hoffbeck  commented that  the                                                                   
Governor  had a target  of a  25 percent,  which had  not yet                                                                   
been reached.  He stated  that although  there had  been some                                                                   
very  difficult   cuts  made,  specifically  in   the  Senate                                                                   
Finance Committee  the previous  week, he considered  most of                                                                   
the  cuts   to  be  "fine   tuning  within  government."   He                                                                   
furthered  that the next  step was  program cuts,  discussion                                                                   
was necessary, and there was still a ways to go.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Senator  Dunleavy  asked  if  Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck                                                                   
thought  that government  could  shrink  a little  bit  more.                                                                   
Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck   observed  that  there  were                                                                   
areas that were  not part of core government  that were still                                                                   
being  funded,  and   it  was  also  a  question   of  public                                                                   
tolerance.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
9:42:56 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Micciche noted  that  the total  earnings in  the                                                                   
state  were  just  over  $17  billion.  He  mentioned  a  "$4                                                                   
billion  issue" and  remarked  that there  was  a very  small                                                                   
number  of  working  Alaskans   relative  to  the  number  of                                                                   
workers  in  other  states.  He clarified  that  he  did  not                                                                   
advocate   an  income   tax,  and   hoped  that   significant                                                                   
reductions followed  by an oil price increase  would help the                                                                   
state's  budget shortfall.  He  estimated  that the  possible                                                                   
income tax  rate would be  23 percent  in order to  cover the                                                                   
$4  billion. He  stated that  a hypothetical  23 percent  tax                                                                   
rate  was  nearly  twice  the  highest  taxed  state  in  the                                                                   
country, and was  five times the average in the  lower 48. He                                                                   
wondered    if    Commissioner-Designee     Hoffbeck    would                                                                   
aggressively and  publicly support the legislature's  current                                                                   
and future budget reductions.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner-Designee    Hoffbeck    replied   that    budget                                                                   
reductions were  the initial step  in the process.  He stated                                                                   
that  he  would  probably  not  agree  with  all  legislative                                                                   
decisions, and understood  that some of the  reductions would                                                                   
have  significant personal  impact  for  Alaskans. He  shared                                                                   
that he  had committed  to meet  with each  of the  employees                                                                   
that would  be laid  off from  DOR. He  agreed that  he would                                                                   
indeed continue to  support the idea that budget  cuts needed                                                                   
to be made first.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair   Micciche   wondered   if   Commissioner-Designee                                                                   
Hoffbeck   would   be   pursuing  a   hedging   strategy   in                                                                   
investments,  and if so,  which division  of DOR would  begin                                                                   
the  process.  Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck  replied  that                                                                   
the Treasury Division  would begin the hedging  strategy, led                                                                   
by  Gary Bader,  Chief  Investment  Officer.  He shared  that                                                                   
there had  been general conversations  about hedging,  but it                                                                   
currently was dealt  with through savings, and  as such there                                                                   
would be no additional hedging costs.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Micciche  asked if there  was an intent  to engage                                                                   
with  Alaskans on  the current  fiscal  situation. He  shared                                                                   
that he  represented a  very conservative  district;  many of                                                                   
his  constituents  expressed   that  there  were  not  enough                                                                   
budget reductions,  yet others felt that the  reductions were                                                                   
too   extreme.  He   felt  that   the  constituent   feedback                                                                   
represented  a gap  in understanding  of  the current  fiscal                                                                   
situation.  He remarked  that  there  were some  savings  and                                                                   
reserves,  which were designed  for budget  crises. In  order                                                                   
to consider solutions,  he felt that Alaskans  should be well                                                                   
informed.  He  added  that  he  hoped  it  would  be  a  team                                                                   
approach  to   impart  the   information,  rather   than  the                                                                   
legislature  being  the  sole  source.  Commissioner-Designee                                                                   
Hoffbeck replied  that he hoped  that the administration  and                                                                   
the legislature  could  work together  during the interim  to                                                                   
present  the various  solution options  that were  available.                                                                   
He did  not believe  that attacking  and placing blame  would                                                                   
help the situation.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
9:48:35 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Senator Hoffman  announced that the governor had  halted some                                                                   
of the  mega-projects in  the state.  He wondered  when there                                                                   
would be  recommendations about what  would be done  with the                                                                   
projects;  such  as  the  Susitna  Dam,  Knik  Arm  Crossing,                                                                   
Juneau  Access Road,  and the  commercialization  of gas.  He                                                                   
queried  the  specific  timeframe within  the  following  3.5                                                                   
years as to  when there would be project  recommendations and                                                                   
a follow up  on the gas line.  He wondered if there  would be                                                                   
debt financing  to commercialize the  gas, and felt  that the                                                                   
gas line  was the  most important  project. He also  wondered                                                                   
how  to utilize  the  state's  cash flow  over  the next  two                                                                   
years, in  order to get the  project in the  right direction.                                                                   
Commissioner-Designee   Hoffbeck   replied   that   DOR   was                                                                   
formulating  a  fiscal  package,   rather  than  focusing  on                                                                   
individual components,  because it  was important to  see how                                                                   
the projects  related to  each other.  He furthered  that the                                                                   
capital  project  funding would  be  outlined  in the  fiscal                                                                   
package.  He  did  not  know   when  prioritizations  of  the                                                                   
projects  would  occur,  but those  considerations  would  be                                                                   
factored in to the fiscal package.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Senator  Hoffman  wondered if  there  would be  a  formulated                                                                   
picture  by  the  following  January.   Commissioner-Designee                                                                   
Hoffbeck replied in the affirmative.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Senator  Hoffman  wondered  if  the  debt  financing  of  the                                                                   
project  would also be  formulated into  the fiscal  package.                                                                   
Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck replied  that there  would be                                                                   
a financing  option  study done  by Lazard  Frères & Co.  LLC                                                                   
(Lazard) on how to finance the various projects.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Senator  Hoffman discussed  the permanent  fund and  wondered                                                                   
whether  the  state  could  continue   to  afford  inflation-                                                                   
proofing.   He  asked   Commissioner-Designee   Hoffbeck   to                                                                   
comment  on the administration's  perspective.  Commissioner-                                                                   
Designee  Hoffbeck   provided  that  the   inflation-proofing                                                                   
component  was  largely  driven by  the  original  investment                                                                   
structure of  the permanent fund,  which was  in fixed-return                                                                   
investments  including  treasuries  and  bonds,  and  was  an                                                                   
essential  part  of the  investment  strategy.  He  continued                                                                   
that because  the permanent  fund was  currently invested  in                                                                   
equities  and  alternative  investments,   inflation-proofing                                                                   
was almost  automatic, based on  the total value  rather than                                                                   
the  realized  earnings.  He  stressed  that  the  inflation-                                                                   
proofing would continue  to occur if the fund  was managed as                                                                   
a  POMV  fund  versus  realized   gains.  He  concluded  that                                                                   
inflation proofing  still put money back in to  the corpus of                                                                   
the fund, but was probably not critical going forward.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
9:54:08 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Senator  Bishop appreciated  the nominee's  efforts to  raise                                                                   
the  bond  rating  while  working on  the  North  Slope,  and                                                                   
recounted   that  those   efforts   helped   to  pass   prior                                                                   
legislation. He  asked if Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck had                                                                   
worked  under  the  Stranded   Gas  Development  Act  (SGDA).                                                                   
Commissioner-Designee Hoffbeck replied in the affirmative.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Senator Bishop  asked if  the nominee  was familiar  with the                                                                   
previous  session's   legislation,  SB   138  [oil   and  gas                                                                   
legislation passed  in 2014]. Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck                                                                   
replied in the affirmative.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Senator Bishop  wondered if  there were similarities  between                                                                   
SGDA  and SB  138,  and whether  he  preferred  one over  the                                                                   
other. Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck responded that  SB 138                                                                   
was  "healthier"  than  SGDA,   because  SB  138  was  better                                                                   
formulated. He  shared that he  had been in  negotiations for                                                                   
the SGDA pipeline,  when there was a specific  stated goal of                                                                   
getting the  pipeline "at all  cost" yet there was  no bottom                                                                   
line  or  "walk-out  strategy."  He  recounted  that  working                                                                   
under   tight  timelines   made  it   nearly  impossible   to                                                                   
negotiate a good  deal for SGDA, and the  legislature quickly                                                                   
rejected the  plan. He  opined that the  structure of  SB 138                                                                   
was  better, but  still relied  heavily on  the responses  of                                                                   
BP,  ConocoPhillips,  and ExxonMobil.  He  felt  that SB  138                                                                   
reflected many of the lessons learned from SGDA.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Senator  Bishop queried  the greatest  current challenges  of                                                                   
the Child  Support  Services Division.  Commissioner-Designee                                                                   
Hoffbeck  responded that  the greatest  challenge before  the                                                                   
legislature  [within   SB  51]  was  drafting   the  specific                                                                   
language   relating  to   child   support  from   individuals                                                                   
residing  in   foreign  countries,  so  the   division  could                                                                   
collect  funds  under a  treaty.  He  shared that  the  Child                                                                   
Support   Services   Division  was   his   lowest-maintenance                                                                   
division,  because it  had strong  leadership.  He felt  that                                                                   
the  biggest problem  of the  division  was staff  retention,                                                                   
because  it  was  a very  difficult  job.  The  turnover  was                                                                   
sometimes 30 percent a year.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair MacKinnon  asked if the  nominee could  return later                                                                   
in  the  day  for more  questions  from  the  committee.  She                                                                   
shared some  concerns about the  management of DOR,  and felt                                                                   
that  those   issues  should   be  addressed.   Commissioner-                                                                   
Designee Hoffbeck  replied that  he would be  available later                                                                   
in the day.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Senator Olson commented  that he was very impressed  with the                                                                   
accomplishment of  obtaining a seminary degree  while working                                                                   
as  financial  director  on  the   North  Slope.  He  made  a                                                                   
biblical analogy about the story of Jonah and the Whale.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon set  aside  the résumé  of  Commissioner-                                                                   
Designee Hoffbeck,  and would revisit the  conversation later                                                                   
in the day at 3:00 p.m.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
^CONFIRMATION    HEARING:    ALASKA    GASLINE    DEVELOPMENT                                                                 
CORPORATION BOARD OF DIRECTORS                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
10:00:45 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair MacKinnon  directed the committee's attention  to AS                                                                   
31.25.020:                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     (a)  The corporation  shall be  governed by  a board  of                                                                   
     directors consisting of                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
          (1) five public members; and                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
          (2)  two  individuals  designated by  the  governor                                                                   
          that  are each the head  of a principal  department                                                                   
          of  the  state,  except that  the  commissioner  of                                                                   
          natural resources  and the commissioner  of revenue                                                                   
          may  not  be  designated  to  serve  on  the  board                                                                   
          unless  the project for  which a license  is issued                                                                   
          under AS  43.90 has been abandoned or  is no longer                                                                   
          receiving  the inducements in  AS 43.90.110  (a) or                                                                   
          the  commissioner  of  natural  resources  and  the                                                                   
          commissioner  of revenue are no  longer signatories                                                                   
          on a valid contract under AS 43.90.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     (b) Public  members of the  board shall be  appointed by                                                                   
     the  governor and  are subject  to  confirmation by  the                                                                   
     legislature.  When  appointing a  public  member to  the                                                                   
     board,  the  governor  shall  consider  an  individual's                                                                   
     expertise  and   experience  in  natural   gas  pipeline                                                                   
     construction,  operation, and marketing;  finance; large                                                                   
     project management;  and other expertise  and experience                                                                   
     that is relevant  to the purpose, powers,  and duties of                                                                   
     the  corporation.  Public  members  of the  board  serve                                                                   
     staggered  five-year terms.  A public  member serves  at                                                                   
     the  pleasure  of  the  governor.  A  vacancy  shall  be                                                                   
     filled in the same manner as the original appointment.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
10:01:51 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
RICK HALFORD,  FORMER STATE  SENATOR, EAGLE RIVER,  commented                                                                   
that  it  was  possible  to gain  a  fantastic  education  on                                                                   
issues while  being a member of  the legislature, as  he once                                                                   
was.   He  mentioned   the  National   Conference  of   State                                                                   
Legislatures (NCSL)  and other institutions. He  related that                                                                   
he  started his  legislative career  in  the House  Resources                                                                   
Committee 35  years prior,  and the first  oil and  gas issue                                                                   
before him  was the  extension of the  interim tariff  on the                                                                   
Trans-Alaska Oil  Pipeline. He outlined the scope  of inquiry                                                                   
for a  legislator to  fully understand  an issue.  He relayed                                                                   
that he received  a degree from Alaska  Methodist University,                                                                   
with  a  Minor  in  Economics   and  Majors  in  History  and                                                                   
Political Science.  He related  the challenges in  working 24                                                                   
years  in the  legislature.  He recounted  serving  on a  gas                                                                   
line  committee  in  the  1990s,   and  chairmanship  of  the                                                                   
BP/Arco  Merger Committee.  He listed  his previous roles  in                                                                   
the legislature:  the House  Resources Committee,  the Senate                                                                   
Resources  Committee, and  the  role of  Majority Leader.  He                                                                   
highlighted continuous  work with  the oil and  gas industry.                                                                   
He discussed the  Alaska Liquid Natural Gas  project (AKLNG),                                                                   
and called  it a unique opportunity  which he hoped  would go                                                                   
forward.  He  referred  to  the  Alaska  Standalone  Pipeline                                                                   
(ASAP)  as  "strictly  a backup  project."  He  stressed  the                                                                   
importance of  the branches  of government working  together;                                                                   
and  commented on  the massive  scope, financial  commitment,                                                                   
and importance of the [AKLNG] project.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
10:06:14 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Senator Dunleavy  asked what  the impact  of HB 132  [current                                                                   
legislation relating  to policy  direction of AGDC]  would be                                                                   
if it  was not  vetoed. Mr.  Halford stated  that he  did not                                                                   
know,  but  opined  that the  greatest  positive  impact  was                                                                   
people  working   together  to   get  a  solution   from  the                                                                   
executive   and  legislative   branches  of  government.   He                                                                   
thought  the  issue  of  the   prioritization  of  the  AKLNG                                                                   
project  and   the  ASAP  project   would  be  a   source  of                                                                   
disagreement.  He again emphasized  the importance  of moving                                                                   
forward with compromise  and working towards a  common cause.                                                                   
He  highlighted  the  importance  of  the  attitudes  of  the                                                                   
executive  branch and legislative  leadership  to try  and be                                                                   
on  track  with   a  major  project  going   forward,  and  a                                                                   
reasonable backup  project. He  commented that an  investment                                                                   
in differences would be a lost investment.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon  asked  if   Mr.  Halford  had  signed  a                                                                   
confidentiality agreement.  He answered in the  negative, and                                                                   
clarified  that he  was not  necessarily  opposed to  signing                                                                   
such an agreement,  and thought it was necessary.  He related                                                                   
that he  had signed a confidentiality  agreement in  the past                                                                   
that had  allowed him to  view the business  plans of  BP and                                                                   
Arco in the merger debate.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon mused  that it  was difficult  to make  a                                                                   
decision  on whether  one route  was better  than another  if                                                                   
one  did not  know  what the  other  route  was. Mr.  Halford                                                                   
concurred.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
10:08:43 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Kelly asked  Mr. Halford  if he  could discuss  his                                                                   
view of  world markets,  and if the  world markets  on liquid                                                                   
natural gas  (LNG) were  "inviting" to a  $50 billion  or $60                                                                   
billion  project  or if  they  precluded  a project  of  that                                                                   
size.  He further  asked if  the  provisions in  SB 132  were                                                                   
appropriate  or were flawed.  Mr. Halford  opined that  there                                                                   
were  huge difficulties  in  getting a  project  the size  of                                                                   
AKLNG to  move forward.  He mentioned  the Point Thomson  Oil                                                                   
and  Gas Project,  and  expressed hope  for  its success.  He                                                                   
remarked that  the market  had been much  better at  times in                                                                   
the past.  He observed  that going to  LNG provided  the most                                                                   
flexibility.  He commented  on the  numerous issues  involved                                                                   
with putting  that much liquid  natural gas into  the market.                                                                   
He referred back  to the challenges of a  divided perspective                                                                   
on the project.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Kelly   asked  Mr.   Halford  to  comment   on  the                                                                   
structure  of  SB   138.  Mr.  Halford  asserted   that  "the                                                                   
structure  of the process  is the  structure of the  partners                                                                   
and the whole package."                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
10:12:17 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Senator Dunleavy  asked what role  AGDC would play  in moving                                                                   
into construction  of a  gas pipeline if  HB 132  was vetoed.                                                                   
Mr. Halford  expressed that he  did not know the  answer, but                                                                   
reaffirmed  that  the  relationship of  the  legislative  and                                                                   
executive  branches was  more important  than the  components                                                                   
and terminology  of an  individual bill.  He considered  that                                                                   
if  one could  maintain  a  stream  of information  that  was                                                                   
logical  on an  economically  viable alternative  at  minimal                                                                   
cost,  it  made  sense.  He  furthered   that  if  it  was  a                                                                   
competitive project  it would  create problems.  He discussed                                                                   
the issue of  pipe strength, and recalled that  it brought up                                                                   
questions regarding  such things  as gas conditioning  plants                                                                   
and  pump  stations;  which were  tremendously  expensive  to                                                                   
research  and answer.  He suggested  that there  was a  large                                                                   
sum of  money for  the purpose  of researching and  answering                                                                   
questions, the answers to which might never be utilized.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
10:14:14 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Senator Hoffman  asked what  the roles  of the Department  of                                                                   
Natural Resources  (DNR) and the Department of  Revenue (DOR)                                                                   
would  be  in  commercializing   Alaska's  natural  gas.  Mr.                                                                   
Halford  underlined  that  DNR   knew  more  of  the  project                                                                   
details and  confidential information  than any  other party.                                                                   
He  surmised  that  DNR  would  be a  major  player  and  the                                                                   
question  of marketing  would  be in  its hands  as well.  He                                                                   
reiterated  that  he had  not  yet signed  a  confidentiality                                                                   
agreement,   reasserted   that  he   would   sign  one,   and                                                                   
maintained that he  did not have the details of  what such an                                                                   
agreement would  include. He  spoke to the  need for  a level                                                                   
of trust  between the  administrative branch and  legislative                                                                   
branch.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Senator  Hoffman  restated his  question  about  the role  of                                                                   
DOR.  Mr.  Halford  asserted  that DOR  would  have  the  tax                                                                   
structure  and benefit  structure pieces  of the project.  He                                                                   
suggested that  trust had  different modalities.  He referred                                                                   
back  to difficult  economic  times while  he  served in  the                                                                   
legislature,  and hoped  that  the current  body  would do  a                                                                   
better job than was done previously.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Senator Dunleavy  referred to  competing philosophies  on the                                                                   
gas  pipeline,  and wondered  if  Mr.  Halford saw  the  main                                                                   
purpose  of   the  project  to   bring  inexpensive   gas  to                                                                   
Alaskans,  or  as  a  revenue   enhancement  for  export.  He                                                                   
commented  that the market  for inexpensive  gas to  Alaskans                                                                   
was something  the public  hoped for,  but observed  that the                                                                   
real benefit  of the gasline would  be revenue to  the state,                                                                   
which would in turn benefit Alaskans.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Senator  Dunleavy   asked  Mr.  Halford  to   comment  on  an                                                                   
alternative in the  case that the economics of  a gasline did                                                                   
not pan  out. Mr.  Halford stated  that there  was no  way to                                                                   
subsidize  a  project   of  its  magnitude  if   it  was  not                                                                   
economic.  He discussed  the economics  of  the project,  and                                                                   
suggested  that  the  state  had   little  control  over  the                                                                   
outcome, which  was largely determined  by price  changes. He                                                                   
described himself as an "economic determinist."                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
10:19:26 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Micciche  referred to  the three individuals  with                                                                   
a great  deal of  expertise who  were removed  from the  AGDC                                                                   
board,   and   asked   if  Mr.   Halford   felt   comfortable                                                                   
disagreeing with  the governor  publicly. Mr. Halford  shared                                                                   
his discomfort in  disagreeing with the governor,  yet avowed                                                                   
he  would   communicate  honestly   with  the  governor.   He                                                                   
asserted his  faith in the governor,  and stated he  also had                                                                   
faith in the process.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Micciche   referred  to  a  compass   piece  that                                                                   
"dropped a  bomb on  the AKLNG process."  He wondered  if the                                                                   
piece  was  a good  entrance  into  a relationship  with  the                                                                   
legislature  on the project.  Mr. Halford  qualified  that he                                                                   
did not  think the  governor had  anticipated the  outcome of                                                                   
the piece,  and mentioned the  steep learning curve  to which                                                                   
the  governor  was subjected  to  during  his  administrative                                                                   
transition.  He  commented  on   the  forthrightness  of  the                                                                   
governor and the resultant concerns with his candor.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
10:22:09 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Micciche  referred  to  the costs  of  the  AKLNG                                                                   
project, and  the level of  aggregate risk. He  mentioned the                                                                   
governor referring  to a greater  than 51 percent  proportion                                                                   
of ownership  which, he asserted,  left the people  of Alaska                                                                   
responsible   for  a   very  expensive   project  which   was                                                                   
dependent  upon the price  of energy  globally. He  asked Mr.                                                                   
Halford if he  thought Alaska could afford the  level of risk                                                                   
on such a large  project. Mr. Halford shared that  he was not                                                                   
comfortable  with   the  level  of  risk,  and   likened  the                                                                   
scenario  to  putting  too  many   eggs  in  one  basket.  He                                                                   
discussed   revenues  including   the   permanent  fund.   He                                                                   
discussed  the  confusing  notion  of  pondering  a  pipeline                                                                   
without  considering  a conditioning  plant  or  liquefaction                                                                   
plant. He  discussed project  costs and  scope. He  suggested                                                                   
that all the questions had not been answered.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Micciche  admitted that  the AKLNG project  was an                                                                   
ambitious project,  but the alternative ASAP  project carried                                                                   
with it  numerous inefficiencies. He  asked if AKLNG  was not                                                                   
viable, did  Mr. Halford  see any way  that the  ASAP project                                                                   
(or  other)  would  be  economically  feasible.  Mr.  Halford                                                                   
stated that the problems were magnified substantially.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon  thanked Mr.  Halford  for  his years  of                                                                   
public service.  She asked Mr.  Halford if he  had experience                                                                   
constructing  a natural  gas pipeline.  Mr. Halford  answered                                                                   
in the negative.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon asked  Mr. Halford  if he had  experience                                                                   
operating  a  gas  pipeline or  marketing  gas.  Mr.  Halford                                                                   
stated that he did not.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon referred  to  the pipeline  authorization                                                                   
bill and  noted that the  legislature had endeavored  to make                                                                   
sure people  had expertise and  the pipeline and  its benefit                                                                   
to Alaska would outweigh any political participation.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
10:26:53 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
JOE PASKVAN,  FORMER STATE  SENATOR, FAIRBANKS,  related that                                                                   
he had  been nominated for the  Board of Directors  for AGDC.                                                                   
He  shared  his   personal  history  as  a   lifelong  Alaska                                                                   
resident and emphasized  his strong connection  to the state.                                                                   
He  discussed his  family. He  related  that he  had been  an                                                                   
attorney  in private  practice  for over  30  years, and  had                                                                   
been  a  rotary   member  for  approximately   25  years.  He                                                                   
discussed  other affiliations  and  memberships. He  referred                                                                   
to his  experience  as a state  senator. He  related that  he                                                                   
had been  nominated as  a public  member under AS  31.25.020.                                                                   
He  mentioned  his experience  with  construction,  including                                                                   
large  state contracts  and disputes.  He added  that he  had                                                                   
retained  technical   consultants  to  assist   his  clients'                                                                   
interests.  He   expressed  understanding   for  construction                                                                   
schedules and  had retained engineers  to advise  on projects                                                                   
and timetables.  He related that  he had been  professionally                                                                   
involved  with  construction  contracts  for nearly  all  his                                                                   
professional  life.  He informed  that  he  was on  two  AGDC                                                                   
subcommittees,  the Technology Committee  (led by  Dave Kruz)                                                                   
and the Commercialization  Committee (led by John  Burns). He                                                                   
outlined   the   purpose   of   the   subcommittees   to   be                                                                   
information-gathering   rather   than   taking   action.   He                                                                   
discussed  the  overarching  task  of  AGDC  (as  defined  by                                                                   
statute)  and  paralleled  his   professional  experience  in                                                                   
securing   and  engaging  technical   advisors.  He   briefly                                                                   
described the AKLNG  project, a large diameter  gas line, and                                                                   
stated  it had  the probability  of the  biggest success  for                                                                   
Alaska. He  outlined the  ASAP project, a  36" gas  line, and                                                                   
described it as  the backup project that was  an economically                                                                   
viable alternative if AKLNG faltered.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
10:31:54 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Paskvan continued  his  presentation  to the  committee,                                                                   
noting  that  AGDC  did work  that  advanced  both  projects;                                                                   
giving examples  such as data  sharing and framework,  right-                                                                   
of-way  work,  mapping,  surveys,  and  environmental  impact                                                                   
statements.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Senator  Bishop  referred to  the  mention  of trust  by  the                                                                   
previous  testifier,  and  asked  Mr.  Paskvan  if  he  would                                                                   
advise the  governor to proceed  with the AKLNG  project (and                                                                   
shelve the  ASAP project) if it  was revealed to be  the most                                                                   
propitious.  Mr.  Paskvan  answered in  the  affirmative  and                                                                   
clarified  his stance  that  the state's  greatest  potential                                                                   
for economic return was with the AKLNG project.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
10:34:08 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Senator Dunleavy  asked what  the impact would  be if  HB 132                                                                   
was not  vetoed. Mr.  Paskvan ventured  that the  legislation                                                                   
would  restrict  the  ASAP  project   to  production  of  500                                                                   
million cubic  feet of  gas per  day. Senator Dunleavy  asked                                                                   
if Mr. Paskvan  agreed that TransCanada did have  a role, and                                                                   
furthered under the  AKLNG process it had an  ownership role.                                                                   
He elaborated  that ultimately  the determination  of whether                                                                   
the   AKLNG  project   would   proceed  to   the  Front   End                                                                   
Engineering  &  Design (FEED)  stage  would  be made  in  the                                                                   
summer of 2016.  He stressed the importance  of understanding                                                                   
that  the  AKLNG  project could  be  a  positive  net-present                                                                   
value project,  and it  could still be  determined not  to be                                                                   
built. Under  this scenario, it  would beg the question  of a                                                                   
backup project  to explore. He  emphasized the  importance of                                                                   
the state  doing due  diligence  to ensure  that AKLNG  was a                                                                   
positive net-present value project.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Senator  Dunleavy   asked  if  Mr.  Paskvan   philosophically                                                                   
agreed with  TransCanada's role  in the project.  Mr. Paskvan                                                                   
referred to  TransCanada's part  in the 25 percent  ownership                                                                   
of  the AKLNG  project, and  commented  that it  was the  law                                                                   
regardless of his  political feelings about it.  He disclosed                                                                   
that  one of the  reasons  he had wanted  to  be on the  AGDC                                                                   
board was because  he had considered it to  be non-political;                                                                   
rather,  he had  considered the  intent of  the committee  to                                                                   
pursue  due diligence  in looking  at what  projects were  in                                                                   
the  best  interest of  Alaska  getting  low gas  prices  and                                                                   
revenue in a non-political context.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Kelly asked  Mr. Paskvan to discuss SB  138, and the                                                                   
structure and  potential flaws of  the bill. Mr.  Paskvan was                                                                   
unsure  if it  was  his position  to  look  at strengths  and                                                                   
weaknesses of the  legislation. He recounted that  he and the                                                                   
other prospective  board members had  but one meeting  on the                                                                   
subject and  had not explored  all the details.  He suggested                                                                   
that  the   policy  decisions   needed   to  come  from   the                                                                   
legislative branch,  and relayed  that the board  members had                                                                   
operated within the policy when they previously met.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon  asked  if   Mr.  Paskvan  had  signed  a                                                                   
confidentiality  agreement so  that he  could understand  the                                                                   
project  direction from  the previous  administration  versus                                                                   
what was being  presented currently. Mr. Paskvan  stated that                                                                   
there had  previously been discussion  of such  an agreement,                                                                   
it was  his understanding  that  it was in  the draft  stage,                                                                   
and he  would sign it  when it was  completed. He  added that                                                                   
it  was  his  expectation  that  there  would  be  a  balance                                                                   
between  open  and  transparent  government  and  appropriate                                                                   
necessary confidentiality.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon   asked  if   Mr.  Paskvan   favored  the                                                                   
Southcentral terminus  option for the  gasline, or if  he was                                                                   
still considering  the Richardson Highway route.  Mr. Paskvan                                                                   
asserted  that he  was  not favoring  politics  of one  route                                                                   
over another,  and commented that  the ASAP line  had planned                                                                   
to  go   into  Southcentral  for   a  number  of   years.  He                                                                   
reiterated  that he wanted  to get  to a  project that  had a                                                                   
"positive net present value."                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
10:39:52 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Micciche asked  how  Mr. Paskvan  felt about  the                                                                   
concept of Payment  in Lieu of Taxes (PILT)  on the structure                                                                   
of  the gasline.  Mr. Paskvan  commented  that the  Fairbanks                                                                   
Northstar   Borough    had,   for   many    decades,   relied                                                                   
significantly   upon   the  property   taxes   on  the   TAPS                                                                   
facilities  that went  through  the borough.  He wondered  if                                                                   
PILT was an AGDC issue.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Micciche  clarified  that his  question  regarded                                                                   
the value  of the  pipeline over  time, and  wondered  if Mr.                                                                   
Paskvan  could  see   a  way  that  PILT  could   work  while                                                                   
satisfying  the  needs  of impacted  local  communities.  Mr.                                                                   
Paskvan  stated that  he considered  the  judicial system  to                                                                   
have  followed  an  appropriate  process  using  evidence  in                                                                   
determining the property value of TAPS property.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Senator  Hoffman asked  Mr. Paskvan  what role  he saw  AGDC,                                                                   
DNR, and  DOR playing  in commercializing  Alaska's  gas. Mr.                                                                   
Paskvan stated  that DNR was required  by law to  market gas.                                                                   
He added  that DOR  would be working  with AGDC  for purposes                                                                   
of assessing  the revenue streams  and making sure  the state                                                                   
had a  positive net present value  for any project  the state                                                                   
would  advance. He  furthered  that in  these economic  times                                                                   
the state could not subsidize AGDC's project.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon  asked  if  Mr.  Paskvan  had  individual                                                                   
experience  in   building  or  constructing  a   natural  gas                                                                   
pipeline. Mr. Paskvan answered in the negative.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon  asked  if  Mr.  Paskvan  had  individual                                                                   
experience  in operating  a gas  pipeline  or marketing  gas.                                                                   
Mr. Paskvan answered in the negative.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
10:44:18 AM                                                                                                                   
AT EASE                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
10:44:34 AM                                                                                                                   
RECONVENED                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
HUGH  SHORT, GIRDWOOD,  outlined  his priorities  as a  board                                                                   
member of  AGDC: competitively  priced and reliable  in-state                                                                   
gas; commercialization  of North Slope gas  resources through                                                                   
the sale  of LNG to  global markets  and access  for in-state                                                                   
demand;   creating   jobs  for   Alaskans   in   exploration,                                                                   
production, development,  and transportation of  natural gas;                                                                   
increasing   opportunities   for   Alaska-based   businesses;                                                                   
providing  additional revenues  to the  State of Alaska;  and                                                                   
building infrastructure  for the development of  on-shore and                                                                   
off-shore oil and gas exploration and production.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Short  outlined his background  and qualifications  for a                                                                   
position  on the  board  of AGDC.  He shared  that  he had  a                                                                   
career in  business and  finance, most  recently as  chairman                                                                   
and CEO  for the PT Capital  family of companies.  He related                                                                   
that  PT Capital  was  in the  midst  of building  a  private                                                                   
equity firm that  focused on investments and  small to medium                                                                   
market companies  in Alaska, Canada, Iceland,  and Greenland.                                                                   
He  commented  on  the  unique  nature  of  the  company,  as                                                                   
traditional  private equity  investment  had previously  been                                                                   
done from  outside  of the state.  He furthered  that  he had                                                                   
built the company  anchored by one of the  largest sovereigns                                                                   
in  the world,  with one  of the  most pristine  reputations,                                                                   
and  surrounded by  other well-regarded  investors. He  added                                                                   
that  additionally, one  of  the company's  subsidiaries  (PT                                                                   
Securities)   was  the  most   northern  Financial   Industry                                                                   
Regulatory  Authority (FINRA)  and  regulated Securities  and                                                                   
Exchange  Commission   registered  broker-dealer   investment                                                                   
banks in  North America. He  discussed the services  provided                                                                   
by  PT  Securities,  and mentioned  the  outcome  of  further                                                                   
development  of   a  strong  financial  services   sector  in                                                                   
Alaska.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Short  discussed his  over two-year  chairmanship  of the                                                                   
Alaska Industrial  Development and Export  Authority (AIDEA),                                                                   
and pointed  out the  appropriation of  over $530  million in                                                                   
capital and  associated contributions  by partners.  He added                                                                   
that the  board had approved  due diligence on  an additional                                                                   
$295   million  in   infrastructure   development   projects,                                                                   
including  the first  investments in  on-shore and  off-shore                                                                   
drilling rigs.  He mentioned his  chairmanship of  the Alaska                                                                   
Energy  Authority  (AEA),  and  his  responsibility  for  the                                                                   
implementation of  the Susitna-Watana Hydroelectric  project.                                                                   
He  reminded  the  committee  that it  was  a  $5.19  billion                                                                   
project,   and   as   chairman   he   was   responsible   for                                                                   
implementation  of the Federal  Energy Regulatory  Commission                                                                   
(FERC)  process as  well as  licensing  and construction.  He                                                                   
discussed  his achievements  as  chairman of  AEA and  AIDEA;                                                                   
which  included   the  institution  of   regular  performance                                                                   
evaluations,  and tying  key performance  metrics to  overall                                                                   
organizational goals.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Short  related  that  as president  and  CEO  of  Alaska                                                                   
Growth  Capital, he  was responsible  for  the deployment  of                                                                   
$240 million  of capital  and financing  for the  acquisition                                                                   
construction  of telecommunications  networks  for GCI  and a                                                                   
high-cost  arctic  rural  build-out.   In  addition,  he  was                                                                   
responsible for  the financing  of businesses that  worked in                                                                   
Alaska's  oil,   mining,  tourism,  retail,   logistics,  and                                                                   
transportation  industries. He linked  the activities  of the                                                                   
businesses  to  the core  natural  resource  exploration  and                                                                   
production that fueled the state.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
10:48:22 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Senator Hoffman  disclosed that Mr. Short was  his son-in-law                                                                   
and that they did not share any business ventures.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon  referenced  AS  31.25.020  and  surmised                                                                   
that  Mr.   Short  had   explained  his  relevant   financial                                                                   
experience and work in the markets.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Senator Dunleavy asked  why Mr. Short wanted to  be a part of                                                                   
the  AGDC board.  Mr. Short  thought it  was an  honor and  a                                                                   
rare   opportunity   to   build   an   important   piece   of                                                                   
infrastructure for  the state, and considered  his background                                                                   
appropriate for  creating the "next big  infrastructure" that                                                                   
would anchor the state's economy for the next century.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon asked  if Mr. Short  believed there  were                                                                   
alternate  routes  for  a  pipeline  terminus  still  on  the                                                                   
table.   Mr.  Short   relayed   that   currently  AKLNG   was                                                                   
contemplating a  southern crossing of Cook Inlet  to Nikiski,                                                                   
after  evaluation  of  Point   MacKenzie  as  an  appropriate                                                                   
crossing. He opined  that AGDC needed to keep  focused on the                                                                   
Cook Inlet  crossing. He  pointed out  that the ASAP  project                                                                   
currently tied into  the ENSTAR natural gas line,  in to Mat-                                                                   
Su; and he supported both of those routings.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair MacKinnon  asked Mr. Short to characterize  the risk                                                                   
to the state of  Alaska as it continued to  move forward with                                                                   
two competing projects  without yet knowing the  economics of                                                                   
AKLNG,  which   would  provide  the  lowest-cost   energy  to                                                                   
Alaskans.  Mr. Short  commented  that  he looked  forward  to                                                                   
discussions  with Lazard regarding  their initial  assessment                                                                   
of bonding  and appropriate risk  to the state.  He furthered                                                                   
that the  state did not own  any gas and must  therefore work                                                                   
with its partners  to access the gas and get  the royalty and                                                                   
production  share  to market.  He  considered  the best  path                                                                   
forward to focus  on AKLNG, and thought that AGDC  was on the                                                                   
right track with the project.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon   asked  if   Mr.  Short  had   signed  a                                                                   
confidentiality  agreement in  order to  understand what  the                                                                   
previous  administration  had  proposed. Mr.  Short  conveyed                                                                   
that he  had participated in  a governance committee  meeting                                                                   
at which the  attorney general had been  expeditiously tasked                                                                   
with  providing the  board with  a confidentiality  agreement                                                                   
to sign.  He clarified  that the agreement  had not  yet been                                                                   
provided.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon   asked  if  Mr.  Short   had  ever  been                                                                   
involved in  constructing a natural  gas pipeline.  Mr. Short                                                                   
responded in the negative.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon   asked  if  Mr.  Short   had  experience                                                                   
marketing  a  gas  pipeline.   Mr.  Short  responded  in  the                                                                   
negative.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon  ADVANCED  the  names  of  Rick  Halford,                                                                   
Joseph  Paskvan,  and  Hugh  Short   in  accordance  with  AS                                                                   
39.05.080 and  recommended the  appointments be  forwarded to                                                                   
a   joint  session   for   consideration.   There  being   NO                                                                   
OBJECTION, it was so ordered.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
10:52:58 AM                                                                                                                   
AT EASE                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
10:54:36 AM                                                                                                                   
RECONVENED                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon   commented  that  the   committee  would                                                                   
recess until 3:00  pm that day, and at that time  take up the                                                                   
confirmation of Commissioner-Designee Hoffbeck.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
10:54:57 AM                                                                                                                   
RECESSED                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
3:05:48 PM                                                                                                                    
RECONVENED                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
^CONTINUATION   OF   CONFIRMATION  HEARING:   DEPARTMENT   OF                                                                 
REVENUE - COMMISSIONER                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
3:06:08 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon   asked  Commissioner-Designee   Hoffbeck                                                                   
what  challenges he  foresaw in  implementing and  collecting                                                                   
the marijuana  excise tax.  She wondered if  he saw  any cash                                                                   
management  challenges, and  asked  at what  point the  state                                                                   
would  receive the  tax  revenue to  include  in the  revenue                                                                   
forecast book.  Commissioner-Designee Hoffbeck  surmised that                                                                   
compliance  would  be  the biggest  challenge.  He  discussed                                                                   
other states  who had previously legalized  medical marijuana                                                                   
and used  databases to work from;  and noted that  Alaska did                                                                   
not have  such a tool, which  would add to the  challenge. He                                                                   
spoke  to   the  federal  prohibition   on  the   banking  of                                                                   
marijuana  funds, and  wondered  how DOR  would receive  them                                                                   
from individuals.  He commented  that it would  be a  year or                                                                   
two  until  a positive  tax  would  register,  depending  the                                                                   
structure  of the law  as well  as how  much the state  would                                                                   
need  to modify  existing systems  to implement  the tax.  He                                                                   
remarked that  much of the  information was speculation  thus                                                                   
far, since it was not known what the tax would be.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon asked  who would  be reviewing the  issue                                                                   
of how  to collect the marijuana  excise taxes.  She wondered                                                                   
when the  committee would be able  to see a  report outlining                                                                   
her   previous  questions.   Commissioner-Designee   Hoffbeck                                                                   
replied that  the team  reviewing the excise  tax was  led by                                                                   
Ken Alper,  the DOR  tax division manager.  He was  unsure of                                                                   
when there would  be a plan ready for committee  perusal, but                                                                   
agreed to get back to the committee with the information.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon  continued  to discuss  marijuana  excise                                                                   
taxes. Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck thought it  would take                                                                   
a  year  of   implementation  before  seeing   revenues  from                                                                   
marijuana excise taxes.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair   MacKinnon  pondered   that  commercialization   of                                                                   
marijuana  would not  happen  for a  year,  as licensing  and                                                                   
registration had to happen first.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
3:08:56 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Micciche  asked if Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck                                                                   
had  contacted  other  states  to  consult  on  dealing  with                                                                   
difficult fiscal  situations, and whether or not  he was open                                                                   
to the idea.  Commissioner-Designee Hoffbeck related  that he                                                                   
had looked  at what  other states had  done; and  although he                                                                   
had  not   contacted  any   directly   to  solicit  help   or                                                                   
solutions, he  was open to doing  so. He commented  that most                                                                   
other states  had a more diverse  tax base, where  Alaska was                                                                   
heavily dependent  upon one industry. He described  Alaska as                                                                   
having  limited  its  options  by  pulling  away  from  other                                                                   
revenue  sources  when oil  was  so profitable.  He  asserted                                                                   
that  the state  would need  to re-create  the other  revenue                                                                   
options over the next year.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon asked  if Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck                                                                   
had  any   plans  for  moving   forward  aside   from  taxes.                                                                   
Commissioner-Designee   Hoffbeck  reiterated   his  statement                                                                   
that there  was no "magic bullet"  or single solution  to the                                                                   
problem  of declining  revenues; rather,  it needed  to be  a                                                                   
combination  of  various  things.   He  mentioned  investment                                                                   
earnings,  encouraging  additional  investment in  the  state                                                                   
(as was  done in SB 21),  the state's savings, working  for a                                                                   
gasline, and taxes as options for revenue.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
3:11:52 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Senator   Dunleavy   commented   on  the   relatively   small                                                                   
population  of   Alaska  and  its  large  area   with  little                                                                   
infrastructure.  He  mused  that laws  and  regulations  over                                                                   
time  were contributing  much of  the cost  of government  in                                                                   
Alaska.   He  wondered   if  Commissioner-Designee   Hoffbeck                                                                   
foresaw  himself   or  the  governor's   cabinet  considering                                                                   
reducing   budget    through   examining   such    laws   and                                                                   
regulations.  Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck  was not  aware                                                                   
that a  discussion  of laws had  come up  yet, however  there                                                                   
was a subcabinet  group that was examining  the relationships                                                                   
between  departments  and areas  where  consolidations  could                                                                   
occur and more  efficiencies could be gained.  He thought the                                                                   
concept of examining laws was a great idea.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Senator Dunleavy  shared that  he had  been working  with the                                                                   
educational establishment  to identify what items  they could                                                                   
remove to  relieve costs. He remarked  on the myriad  of laws                                                                   
and regulations  imposed by the  United States  Department of                                                                   
Education, the  federal government,  the state department  of                                                                   
education,  and the  state legislature  that incurred  costs.                                                                   
He strongly  urged Commissioner-Designee Hoffbeck  to examine                                                                   
laws  and  regulations that  may  have  driven costs  to  the                                                                   
state.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
3:15:00 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon  mentioned a  $4  billion  draw from  the                                                                   
CBR,   previously    referenced   by    Commissioner-Designee                                                                   
Hoffbeck in  a press  release. She  referenced the  2014 Fall                                                                   
Revenue Forecast,  which had indicated  the CBR would  not be                                                                   
exhausted  until  the  year  2025.  She  asked  Commissioner-                                                                   
Designee Hoffbeck if  he had a new target date  for the CBR's                                                                   
depletion,  and if  he  could discuss  the  $4 billion  draw.                                                                   
Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck stated  that the target  date                                                                   
would be  driven in  part by the  actions of the  legislature                                                                   
with  regard  to   reducing  the  size  of   the  budget.  He                                                                   
furthered that 2019  was the outside date for  how long state                                                                   
savings  would last.  He clarified  that  the projected  date                                                                   
did  not assume  use  of  investment earnings.  He  continued                                                                   
that  the  projection  was  the  genesis  of  moving  the  $4                                                                   
billion  in equities  out of  the  sub-account, selling  them                                                                   
and reinvesting  them in  fixed-incomes in  the main  CBR. He                                                                   
referenced  statutory language  that specified  that for  the                                                                   
Commissioner  of Revenue  to  invest within  the  subaccount,                                                                   
they must  assume  that the monies  would  not be needed  for                                                                   
five years. He  asserted that the assumption  could no longer                                                                   
be made,  and so  the equities  were sold  and reinvested  in                                                                   
the CBR as fixed-incomes.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon mentioned  that the  spring forecast  had                                                                   
just  been  released,  and  noted   that  DOR  had  projected                                                                   
increased  investment earnings.  She  asked if  Commissioner-                                                                   
Designee  Hoffbeck  could  speak   to  the  higher  projected                                                                   
earnings  in  light   of  the  $4  billion   that  was  sold.                                                                   
Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck stated that he  would need to                                                                   
review  the  executive  summary,   however  he  had  reviewed                                                                   
numbers that  indicated potentially  having $75  million less                                                                   
in investment  earnings; partially  due to the  transfer, and                                                                   
partially  due  to earnings  not  meeting  forecasted  levels                                                                   
prior to the transfer.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair MacKinnon  clarified for the committee  that she had                                                                   
asked  Commissioner-Designee Hoffbeck  to  quantify the  loss                                                                   
of income resulting  from moving the funds from  the CBR. Her                                                                   
question  related to  why the  state did not  move the  fixed                                                                   
assets  to  the CBR  so  they  would  be available  for  sale                                                                   
versus selling  the assets  outright.  She asserted that  she                                                                   
would re-check  the spring forecast  to verify  her assertion                                                                   
about increased earnings.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:18:27 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon asked  if Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck                                                                   
believed in  a social justice  philosophy in relation  to the                                                                   
state's investments,  and wondered  whether DOR looked  at it                                                                   
in that  way. Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck commented  that                                                                   
there  were components  within DOR  investment policies  that                                                                   
had  that  element,  and thought  the  state  had  completely                                                                   
divested any investments  that were associated  with Iran. He                                                                   
avowed  that  he   would  invest  based  on   the  investment                                                                   
policies  before  him  and leave  the  social  conscience  to                                                                   
others.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon asked  if Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck                                                                   
could  discuss  commercialization  of  North Slope  gas,  and                                                                   
wondered when  the committee would  see the proceeds  as part                                                                   
of the  spring or fall revenue  forecast. She  wondered when,                                                                   
based on the  current administration's proposal,  there would                                                                   
be   some   reflection   in  the   revenue   resource   book.                                                                   
Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck replied that until  there was                                                                   
certainty  of a  pipeline  being constructed,  revenues  from                                                                   
any  gas  commercialization  would  not show  up  in  revenue                                                                   
forecasts.  He suggested  that  during  the Final  Investment                                                                   
Decision (FID)  phase it  would be  possible to see  revenues                                                                   
from gas commercialization.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair MacKinnon  asked how Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck                                                                   
saw  his  role  in  participating  with  the  AGDC  board  in                                                                   
bringing Alaska's  gas to market, and wondered  what his team                                                                   
was  doing  to support  the  [AKLNG]  project.  Commissioner-                                                                   
Designee  Hoffbeck  related  that   there  were  several  DOR                                                                   
employees  that  had signed  confidentiality  agreements  and                                                                   
had actively  participated in fiscal negotiations.  He shared                                                                   
that he  recently travelled  to Houston,  Texas to  meet with                                                                   
producers  and their  teams for  various  components such  as                                                                   
pipeline  construction. He  stated that  he had  participated                                                                   
in  robust  conversations  and   gained  a  great  deal  more                                                                   
information.  He  specified  that  ultimately  it  rested  on                                                                   
himself and the  commissioner of DNR to  make recommendations                                                                   
to  the  governor  on  the  gasline.  He  furthered  that  he                                                                   
considered  that  they  were  a ways  away  from  having  the                                                                   
information  to make  the  recommendation.  He reported  that                                                                   
they had  asked the  attorney general  to give more  guidance                                                                   
on the confidentiality  agreements. He continued  that he and                                                                   
the  commissioner  of DNR  would  like  to be  more  actively                                                                   
involved; however  until the confidentiality  agreements were                                                                   
finalized,  there  was a  limited  amount of  information  to                                                                   
deal with.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
3:21:50 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Senator  Hoffman   discussed  the  Permanent   Fund  Earnings                                                                   
Reserve  Account   and  commented  that  it  had   been  been                                                                   
controversial as  to how the  revenues would be  utilized. He                                                                   
wondered  how Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck envisioned  the                                                                   
funds   being   spent   on  both   operations   and   capital                                                                   
expenditures.  Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck  thought  that                                                                   
the funds should  be an integral part of any  solution to the                                                                   
current revenue  picture. He asserted that they  funds should                                                                   
be  part  of a  larger  fiscal  package,  where there  was  a                                                                   
balance  of expenditures  and revenue  options. He  furthered                                                                   
that he did  not support immediately spending  the investment                                                                   
earnings as a solution;  rather, it should be only  a part of                                                                   
the solution.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Senator  Hoffman followed  up to  ask if  the permanent  fund                                                                   
earnings  should  be  spent on  daily  government  operations                                                                   
versus  building infrastructure  such  as  investment in  the                                                                   
gasline.  Commissioner-Designee   Hoffbeck  stated  that  the                                                                   
funds  could  certainly  be  used  for  either  purpose,  and                                                                   
thought there were  more options on the capital  budget side,                                                                   
where the  state could  bond for  some of the  infrastructure                                                                   
improvements. He  restated that  the spending should  be part                                                                   
of a greater  fiscal package,  rather than to just  "kick our                                                                   
liabilities down the  road." He surmised that if  there was a                                                                   
way to  capture an  opportunity early  on, using debt  rather                                                                   
than spending operational money, it should be examined.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Micciche  discussed   unpaid  tax  liability  and                                                                   
audits   for  taxpayers;   he   asked   Commissioner-Designee                                                                   
Hoffbeck  if he  was  aware  of any  substantial  outstanding                                                                   
overdue  taxes. Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck  stated  that                                                                   
there  was a  memo being  prepared for  the legislature  with                                                                   
regard to  five recently issued  oil and gas tax  audits that                                                                   
equaled a total of $258 million.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
3:24:45 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Micciche  referred to a tax lawsuit  involving the                                                                   
City of  Valdez and  the Fairbanks  Borough, and wondered  if                                                                   
there  had been  a final  ruling and  if it was  part of  the                                                                   
outstanding   tax  monies.   Commissioner-Designee   Hoffbeck                                                                   
clarified  that he  had  referred  to five  oil  and gas  tax                                                                   
audits.  He  furthered  that  the  case  Vice-Chair  Micciche                                                                   
referred to involved  Valdez and the North Slope  and while a                                                                   
settlement was still  being attempted, it had  been scheduled                                                                   
for  litigation in  the Superior  Court of  Alaska. He  added                                                                   
that  a part  of the  settlement  may be  tied  to trying  to                                                                   
settle the longstanding  TAPS litigation. He  elucidated that                                                                   
the cases  were related due to  the options that  Valdez, and                                                                   
to some  extent the  North Slope,  were tied  to whether  the                                                                   
monies flowed  to the municipalities  from the  litigation or                                                                   
not. He reiterated  that the state was attempting  to resolve                                                                   
both cases without further litigation.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Micciche asked  if  the Valdez  settlement  would                                                                   
make  it uncomfortable  for  DOR  to  recoup funds  from  the                                                                   
litigation.  Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck  commented  that                                                                   
if the  courts mandated a  refund from litigation,  DOR would                                                                   
enforce the ruling of the court.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon asked  if,  as a  trustee  of the  Alaska                                                                   
Permanent  Fund  Board,  Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck  had                                                                   
given instructions  to  the permanent  fund staff to  examine                                                                   
converting   more   of   the  earnings   reserve   to   cash,                                                                   
anticipating  a  need  to  draw  on  the  CBR.  Commissioner-                                                                   
Designee  Hoffbeck  responded  in the  negative,  and  stated                                                                   
that the reason  DOR drew from the subaccount in  the CBR was                                                                   
purely because it  was statutorily driven. He  clarified that                                                                   
there was no plan  to draw on the investment  earnings of the                                                                   
permanent fund,  adding that it  was part of  the discussion.                                                                   
He  described  the  CBR  as  "the  balancing  point"  of  the                                                                   
budget, and  DOR was  in "asset  preservation mode"  with the                                                                   
account so the monies would be there when needed.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
3:28:00 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon commented  that  her  staff had  reviewed                                                                   
the Department  of Revenue  Spring Forecast,  and as  she had                                                                   
earlier  pointed  out,  it indeed  showed  higher  investment                                                                   
earnings  over the  fall  forecast. She  asked  Commissioner-                                                                   
Designee Hoffbeck  to inform her in  the case that  it was an                                                                   
error. Commissioner-Designee Hoffbeck agreed to do so.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair   MacKinnon    asked   what    Commissioner-Designee                                                                   
Hoffbeck saw as  an advantage of moving towards  using a POMV                                                                   
strategy,  and   wondered  if  it  would   protect  Alaskan's                                                                   
dividends.  Commissioner-Designee   Hoffbeck  explained  that                                                                   
the  North  Slope Borough  also  had  a permanent  fund,  and                                                                   
although much  smaller, it  was not  dissimilar to  the State                                                                   
of Alaska Permanent  Fund. He continued that  the North Slope                                                                   
fund was  managed as  a POMV,  with a  percent of the  market                                                                   
value  available  for  operations  on  an  annual  basis.  He                                                                   
remarked that  it worked  well, and did  not have  the issues                                                                   
of realized  gains, which  required selling  assets in  order                                                                   
to  generate  a dividend.  He  described  that POMV  had  two                                                                   
components: how  to manage the  permeant fund, and  using the                                                                   
market value to  fund the dividend. He noted that  all of the                                                                   
investment  earnings   of  the  permanent  fund   (around  $6                                                                   
billion)  were  available  for  appropriation.  He  furthered                                                                   
that  if you  re-deposited the  earnings  into the  permanent                                                                   
fund,  and then  used  the POMV  for  the  allocation of  the                                                                   
earnings,  there   would  be  a  little  over   $2.5  billion                                                                   
available. He  supposed that POMV  could protect the  rate at                                                                   
which  the investment  earnings  could be  depleted, but  for                                                                   
the  long term  a systematic  withdrawal  from the  permanent                                                                   
fund would  slow its growth. He  went on to say that  if POMV                                                                   
was  used as  a measure  for the  dividend, it  may still  be                                                                   
higher  than what  was  yielded from  realized  gains in  any                                                                   
given year.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair MacKinnon  commented that she thought  the Permanent                                                                   
Fund Board had  a standing resolution to be on  a POMV basis,                                                                   
and thought it interesting to hear what Commissioner-                                                                           
Designee  Hoffbeck  believed to  be  advantages  in terms  of                                                                   
managing the  asset and protection  of a rate of  return over                                                                   
time.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
3:31:16 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon   commented  that   Commissioner-Designee                                                                   
Hoffbeck was  in a  position in which  people needed  to have                                                                   
confidence  in his  actions.  She  contemplated  that he  had                                                                   
moved  $4 billion  in anticipation  of a  state statute,  and                                                                   
wondered if  he had rebalanced  the funds,  or if it  was off                                                                   
the table  in cash. Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck clarified                                                                   
that the  funds were  invested in  treasuries and  bonds, and                                                                   
rather  than  being  in  anticipation   of  statute,  it  was                                                                   
directly dictated  by statutes.  He pondered the  question of                                                                   
moving  the $4  million  if it  were  not  for the  statutory                                                                   
language,  and concluded  that  he would  probably have  been                                                                   
more aggressive and  left some of the monies  in equities. He                                                                   
explained  that the  CBR had never  had equities  in it,  but                                                                   
DOR was  looking at putting  some equities  in the CBR  so as                                                                   
to have the  opportunity to capture some gains  if the market                                                                   
continued to rise.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair MacKinnon  observed that the current  administration                                                                   
was  handling things  differently  from the  past, to  varied                                                                   
effect, and  perhaps less aggressively  in terms of  a return                                                                   
on investment for  Alaska. She mused on observing  the future                                                                   
rate  of  returns   of  the  invested   funds.  Commissioner-                                                                   
Designee  Hoffbeck reflected  that the  market was  currently                                                                   
high and volatile,  and there was much concern  that it would                                                                   
return  to  a "bear  market."  Consequently  there  was  some                                                                   
logic  to the  sale, even  if  it weren't  for the  statutory                                                                   
language.  He remarked that  it had  been an opportune  time,                                                                   
in a  low market environment,  along with the  aforementioned                                                                   
statutory language regarding use of the funds.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon  stated  that  over  the  past  year  the                                                                   
legislature had  approved (in January  of 2014) a move  of $3                                                                   
billion;  with what  she believed  to be a  greater level  of                                                                   
caution  used at  investing and  making  the fund  transfers.                                                                   
She wondered  if Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck thought  the                                                                   
state's  income had  "taken  a  dip" after  he  had moved  $4                                                                   
billion from the  CBR, and asked how much  the treasury bonds                                                                   
were  yielding. Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck  stated  that                                                                   
he would have  to verify the amount of yield,  and reiterated                                                                   
that $75  million was  the potential  decrease in  investment                                                                   
earnings.  He  furthered  that  it  depended  upon  what  the                                                                   
market did  before the end  of the fiscal  year, it  had been                                                                   
relatively   flat   since   the    monies   were   originally                                                                   
transferred two  weeks previously.  He considered  that there                                                                   
was more  flexibility in making  three tranches  in investing                                                                   
into the  retirement accounts. He  felt that the  statute was                                                                   
clear in  that he  did not  have the  authority to  invest in                                                                   
the sub-account of the CBR.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:34:29 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon asked  if Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck                                                                   
could explain how  he viewed his fiduciary  responsibility to                                                                   
the  State   of  Alaska.  She   remarked  that  it   was  his                                                                   
responsibility  to  make  the   best  decisions  for  Alaska,                                                                   
regardless of what state statutes said. Commissioner-                                                                           
Designee   Hoffbeck   disagreed   with   the   assertion   of                                                                   
"regardless of state  statute," and reflected  that the state                                                                   
statutes  put  boundaries   around  what  he   could  do.  He                                                                   
contended  that his responsibility  was  to balance  risk and                                                                   
return in  order to get the  greatest possible return  at the                                                                   
lowest  possible  risk,  and   he  took  that  responsibility                                                                   
seriously.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair   MacKinnon   judged    that   Commissioner-Designee                                                                   
Hoffbeck  had moved $4  billion dollars  rather quickly,  and                                                                   
wondered  if he could  assure  the committee  of whom  he had                                                                   
discussed  the  move  with.  Commissioner-Designee   Hoffbeck                                                                   
qualified  that  the  move  was  contemplated  with  internal                                                                   
discussions, based  on looking at statutory language  as well                                                                   
as how  the state  was invested,  and the  group had  felt it                                                                   
was out of compliance with the statutes.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair MacKinnon  asked him if  he could relate  whom (from                                                                   
inside  the department)  he had  relied  on for  discussions.                                                                   
Commissioner-Designee   Hoffbeck  named  Gary   Bader,  Chief                                                                   
Investment Officer,  Treasury Division,  DOR, and  his staff.                                                                   
He   specified   that   they   had  met   with   the   deputy                                                                   
commissioner,  the  treasurer,  Mr.  Bader, and  two  of  his                                                                   
staff in  order to discuss  the options  and best way  to get                                                                   
back into compliance.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair MacKinnon  asked if there  was documentation  of the                                                                   
meeting. Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck reported  that there                                                                   
were  no  minutes  from  the meeting,  but  there  should  be                                                                   
documentation  of  the decision  and  it was  perhaps  posted                                                                   
online.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Micciche  asked  for   the  title  and  statutory                                                                   
reference   to   the  aforementioned   five-year   rule   for                                                                   
liquidation  in   the  CBR.  Commissioner-Designee   Hoffbeck                                                                   
replied AS 37.10.430.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Micciche  asked if Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck                                                                   
had the  statutory language  in front  of him.  Commissioner-                                                                   
Designee Hoffbeck stated that he did not.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon asked  him  if he  had  any conflicts  of                                                                   
interest in  his ability  to perform  as the commissioner  of                                                                   
DOR.  Commissioner-Designee Hoffbeck  didn't  believe he  had                                                                   
any conflict,  but qualified  that there  was some  lingering                                                                   
issues associated  with the  prior work he  had done  for the                                                                   
North Slope  Borough in Valdez.  He reported that  the issues                                                                   
had been  vetted by the  Attorney General's Office,  and that                                                                   
he  was  limiting his  participation  in  certain  litigation                                                                   
because  of  the   positions  he  had  taken   with  previous                                                                   
clients.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
3:37:54 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair MacKinnon  mentioned  legislation dealing  with PILT                                                                   
and  wondered  why the  bill  had  no reference  to  previous                                                                   
dialogue  from   meetings  of  the  Municipal   Advisory  Gas                                                                   
Project  Review Board.  She  suggested  that the  legislature                                                                   
had begun  to receive  feedback from  the municipal  advisory                                                                   
board  that   indicated  their  thoughts  or   comments  from                                                                   
previous  discussions  may not  have  been reflected  in  the                                                                   
legislation.  Commissioner-Designee   Hoffbeck  related  that                                                                   
DOR had  already had  a teleconference with  the oil  and gas                                                                   
producers,  and   it  planned  to  teleconference   with  the                                                                   
municipal  advisory  board  to  discuss  the  recommendations                                                                   
they  had made.  He  discussed  fiscal negotiations  and  the                                                                   
need  for  flexibility.  He  relayed  that  there  were  five                                                                   
components  within  the  PILT  bill, and  revealed  that  the                                                                   
municipal advisory  board had given their  recommendation for                                                                   
the input  on each of the  five components. He  remarked that                                                                   
finalizing  property  tax  particulars   was  premature,  and                                                                   
rather  than locking  in the  property tax  portion, DOR  had                                                                   
locked in  a structure  that would  limit discussions  to the                                                                   
five measurable components.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:40:11 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair   MacKinnon   opined    that   Commissioner-Designee                                                                   
Hoffbeck had value  to offer from a local  perspective on how                                                                   
the  local communities  felt  about the  asset  [oil and  gas                                                                   
project] crossing  or being placed on property  that could be                                                                   
taxed.  She suggested  that the  state  perspective might  be                                                                   
different, and that  the legislature was trying  to ascertain                                                                   
a specific price  to pay in order to have  terms to negotiate                                                                   
to  benefit  all of  Alaska.  Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck                                                                   
pointed out  that the largest  recipient of the  property tax                                                                   
of the pipeline  [AKLNG project] was the State  of Alaska. He                                                                   
asserted that DOR  was protecting the state  interest as well                                                                   
as the  municipalities' interest.  He stated that  there were                                                                   
three  parts to  the discussion:  what  was the  idea of  the                                                                   
"take" during  operations, construction impact  payments, and                                                                   
how  much  of the  money  flows  through  the  municipalities                                                                   
versus how much  flowed through the state. He  added that DOR                                                                   
had one of the three discussions accomplished.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair   Micciche   clarified  his   previous   question,                                                                   
regarding payment  over the tax  cap. He asked  Commissioner-                                                                   
Designee   Hoffbeck   if   the  fact   that   he   previously                                                                   
represented  the North  Slope Borough  made it  uncomfortable                                                                   
in the  case that  he had to  execute an over-payment  order.                                                                   
Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck   confirmed  that  litigation                                                                   
was one  of the areas  in which he  had stepped back,  and he                                                                   
would  execute   whatever  the   courts  or  the   negotiated                                                                   
settlement  dictated.  He  added  that  he  had  some  strong                                                                   
opinions  on  the  record,  and   that  was  his  reason  for                                                                   
stepping back.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Micciche  wondered  how  the  commissioner  would                                                                   
deal   with  potential   conflicts  or   the  perception   of                                                                   
conflicts  or  awkwardness.  Commissioner-Designee   Hoffbeck                                                                   
relayed that  the best way,  much like legislators  had done,                                                                   
would be  to be  open and transparent  about his  involvement                                                                   
in  the  past.  Additionally,  if there  were  any  questions                                                                   
about the  decision-making  process, he  would be open  about                                                                   
what the  decision-making process  was. He concluded  that he                                                                   
had,  to the  extent  that  was  possible, backed  away  from                                                                   
those areas where the conflict would be most egregious.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
3:43:14 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon  asked  if the  Power  Cost  Equalization                                                                   
(PCE) Fund  was managed differently  than the  overall assets                                                                   
the  state  had.  Commissioner-Designee   Hoffbeck  clarified                                                                   
that the biggest  difference in the way the  fund was managed                                                                   
was  that the  PCE had  a directed  rate of  return at  seven                                                                   
percent.  He stated  that  the biggest  problem  in with  the                                                                   
directed rate  was in a  low market,  one might have  to take                                                                   
excessive risks to achieve 7 percent.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon  thanked  Commissioner-Designee  Hoffbeck                                                                   
for   sharing    his   perspectives.    Commissioner-Designee                                                                   
Hoffbeck expressed  his appreciation for  Senator MacKinnon's                                                                   
input.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon ADVANCED  the name  of Randall  Hoffbeck,                                                                   
in  accordance   with  AS  39.05.080,  and   recommended  the                                                                   
appointment   be   forwarded   to   a   joint   session   for                                                                   
consideration. There being NO OBJECTION, it was so ordered.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
ADJOURNMENT                                                                                                                   
3:46:10 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
The meeting was adjourned at 3:46 p.m.                                                                                          

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
040715 DOR Confirmation Resume.pdf SFIN 4/7/2015 9:00:00 AM
Confirmations 2015
040715 AGDC Confirmation Resumes.pdf SFIN 4/7/2015 9:00:00 AM
Confirmations 2015