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My turn: Stand up for Alaska, vote yes on 2

Posted: August 15, 2012 - 12:00am

During my eight years as Governor, we used the Alaska Coastal Management Program (ACMP) to facilitate and effectively promote numerous development projects. Through ACMP, Alaskans were at the table to help government agencies and industries determine how best we could develop Alaska’s resources. The program worked well and made sense then. It still makes sense today.

I’m pleased Alaskans have the opportunity to bring back smart coastal development by voting for Ballot Measure #2 in the Primary Election.

In my experience, coastal management was an important part of a successful process during one of Alaska’s most active periods of new exploration and increased development of oil and gas. We worked closely with industry and federal agencies in developing the Northstar, Alpine, and Badami fields. For the first time in a generation, we opened millions of acres of federal land in the NPR-A. All of these oil and gas projects and dozens of other projects on the North Slope and Cook Inlet moved forward with full utilization of the coastal management process.

Why? The program was more than local participation. It succeeded because it also coordinated agencies and the permitting process between state and federal government. It gave industry simplified access and accountability. The ACMP was good government and made good sense. It’s still a good idea.

Our coastal program didn’t help just oil and gas projects. It included the massive development of Dutch Harbor industrial seafood processing facilities, improvements to Southeast fishing facilities, and numerous new mining projects. There were many improvements to urban areas, such as the major renovation of the Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport, significant rebuilding of the Seward highway from Anchorage to Seward and Kenai. All of these important projects were planned and completed through the ACMP.

What did local communities want to negotiate at the table with industry and government agencies? They wanted to protect water quality, ensure adequate safety and cleanup procedures, protect land and ocean wildlife and fish habitat, and provide revenues to mitigate local impacts. They wanted a forum for important community economic and cultural concerns.

These are hardly radical or extreme concepts. Most Alaskans embrace these important development considerations. Alaskans want people at ground zero to have a strong voice. They want locals to help make the case for the best possible resource development in their communities.

The ACMP worked. Local residents and communities participated and their voices were heard. These projects had strong local support and all were developed.

But because of political gridlock in Juneau, the legislature let the ACMP die. We lost an important opportunity to bring communities to the table when industry proposes projects in coastal areas. Losing the ACMP eliminated Alaska’s most effective tool to influence federal land and water use decisions.

When Alaska became the only coastal state in America without a coastal management program, we no longer held what other coastal states had – a unique upper hand in dealing with the feds. This is the only national act that requires federal agencies to be consistent with a state program, and we gave it away.

During my administration, the overarching accomplishment of coastal management was to replace litigation and confrontation with communication and negotiation. At the end of the day, the ACMP created a sense of common purpose and empowered local people to be the guardians of promises made. At a time when people are fed up with partisan polarization and political stalemate, we can take an important and positive step away from that sort of divisiveness. We can reinstate a program with has a proven record of accomplishment and moving development forward.

ACMP opponents claim it stops or delays development and that we need fewer regulations and no interference from residents and communities. I know they’re wrong and so do several states with no reputation for burdensome regulations or roadblocks to development. Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Texas, and Louisiana haven’t found the Coastal Management Program an obstruction to development. Neither did Alaska for the 34 years we used the program. Add to this list the entire Eastern and Western seaboards, the Great Lakes states, and Hawaii and we have an overwhelming consensus that coastal management is an effective pro-development tool for state and local control. In the entire Nation, only Alaska has missed the boat.

We can correct that mistake. Look at the facts, not the sales pitches. Stand up for Alaska and positive resource development. Vote yes on Proposition 2.

• Knowles is a former governor of Alaska.

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MES
41
Points
MES 08/15/12 - 08:35 am
11
5

If the former ACMP was such a

If the former ACMP was such a good process, then why did the writers of this plan radically change it? And this is not a rhetorical question. Why was it changed so much?

Latitude58
14495
Points
Latitude58 08/15/12 - 07:22 am
6
8

The structure of the initiative

I keep seeing commenters here parroting the opponents of the program, citing phrases in the initiative that suggest an unaccountable body making rules on a whim.

How does the proposed structure of our new program compare to other states' who have successfully developed in their coastal areas?

mediawatchdog
271
Points
mediawatchdog 08/15/12 - 08:04 am
8
5

Said and unsaid...

Just as Tony says, we had a very workable program in place for years.

Also as Tony says, political gridlock was an issue, since the reconsistituted version of the previous ACMP was passed by the House 40 to 0 (a pretty good mix of Dems and Republicans), but not accepted by Senate in an attempt to leverage an oil tax deal.

Finally, what Tony doesn't say is the breadth of opposition to this initiative. Ignore the sales pitch? Two of Tony's biggest supporters when he was governor, Teamsters Local 959 and Operating Engineers Local 302, recommend voting "no" on the ballot measure. With many members that are third or fourth generation Alaskans, I doubt that two of Alaska's largest and most respected unions are buying a sales pitch of corporate interests; and I'm pretty sure they have a history of standing up for Alaska!

akjim
3003
Points
akjim 08/15/12 - 08:57 am
11
7

Sorry Tony

I was a strong supporter of Tony as mayor of Anchorage, and later as governor. But I just cannon agree with him here. This proposal puts far too much power into the hands of an unaccountable board. If the past management plan was such a great idea, let's go with that one, I'm all on board. But not this.

middleoftheroad
782
Points
middleoftheroad 08/15/12 - 09:02 am
10
3

@Media

Thanks for your info.
I am still on the fence on this one.
(However, the blogger NewLife is so offensive it makes me hesitate to ever put myself in his boat.) I appreciate the info you provide from a development point of view.

skirkz
6683
Points
skirkz 08/15/12 - 09:53 am
8
4

Zombie CMP

I agree with the benefits of the expired management process. But, contrary to Tony's claims, Prop. 2 does not give us "a chance to bring it back". Rather than resurrect the old fairly balanced plan, Prop. 2 creates a rabid, undead version that has the outward semblance of the ACMP, in theory. But, inside the details lurks a ravenous, insatiable monster that promises to plan and scrutinize responsible development to death, devouring Alaska's economy and killing thousands of jobs. Prop. 2 isn't a revised improvement on the old, but, a dark creation of mad scientist using spare parts controlled by an abnormal brain.
Put, the old plan on the ballot and I will vote for it.

billb
7846
Points
billb 08/15/12 - 10:45 am
5
15

Proposition 2

It ONLY because Parnell and his cronies are in the pockets of the big oil companies that the original management plan was NOT passed by the legislation to reinstate in the first place. If Parnell and his cronies had aloud it we would not even have this problem in the first place!

akjim
3003
Points
akjim 08/15/12 - 10:52 am
12
3

Nothing like a rant with poor

Nothing like a rant with poor grammar and misspellings.

mediawatchdog
271
Points
mediawatchdog 08/15/12 - 10:53 am
15
4

A little off there billb...

You're just a tad off there billb...it was the Senate Democrats that rejected the House approved (40-0) reinstatement of the ACMP.

Last time I checked, most Senate Dems don't fall into the "Parnell cronies" category. :-)

ken dunker II
3341
Points
ken dunker II 08/15/12 - 02:48 pm
8
3

The Senate has been applauded profusely for standing up

for Alaska regarding the administration's "tax giveaway" to the oil companies. Could someone explain, succinctly, why the Senate did not consider the previous ACMP in Alaska's best interest?

mistymtn
1140
Points
mistymtn 08/15/12 - 03:44 pm
4
2

not sure about that 40-0 vote, where did you get your info?

In the end during the special session vote for the ACMP, the vote went as described below. There were a couple of versions of the bill during the regular session if I remember correctly that may have had separate issues , but in the end, it wasn't the dems who let the program die...

"The vote went this way. It was supported by a bipartisan Senate. In the GOP-led House, every Democrat, and four Republicans supported keeping state sovereignty, and a pro-development, pro-local control law. That was three votes short of getting the bill passed."

from here:

http://juneauempire.com/opinion/2011-07-07/special-session-result-wasted...

and the voting records here:
http://votesmart.org/bill/votes/35994

mistymtn
1140
Points
mistymtn 08/15/12 - 03:47 pm
5
2

Ahhh..

I misunderstood which vote was being discussed. Looks like you were talking about a reinstating vote.. I was looking up information about the original vote to keep the program from phasing out in the first place..

my mistake.

glacierdogs
1332
Points
glacierdogs 08/16/12 - 10:17 am
2
2

Comments

This is written too well for Knowles to have written it. He is a name and a face, but not a brain.

When something is authored by an attorney but it is written with vague language as is this ballot measure then we should all be fearful. Also, when organized labor and Alaska industry agree that something will kill jobs then it probably will.

Finally, there seems to be no answer to the question of why the people drafting this measure tried to ask for so much more than what proponents, including Knowles in this piece, say worked so well for so long.

For all these reasons I see no reason to vote in favor of this ballot measure. And clearly it's still too easy to have a ballot measure put before voters.

ken dunker II
3341
Points
ken dunker II 08/16/12 - 11:00 am
2
0

I have to wonder how many other states paused before

implementing their own programs and looked towards Alaska for how to do it right.

jackie1234
38
Points
jackie1234 08/17/12 - 07:07 am
0
0

Name calling

I find it very interesting when commenters who are anonymous choose to resort to name calling and insults instead of facts, not doubt due to their lack of information. This is an example of not letting the lack of knowledge stop these folks from having strong opinions. There is nothing to be done about this except ignore these folks since they obviously just want to be negative rather than be informed. Ignorance is bliss!

Thanks to the informed commenters here who have thoughtful ideas to share.

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