Yakutat power sale draws ample opposition

State regulators will decide the fate of Yakutat’s municipal power company, but a large group of local residents wants the final word to be theirs.

In a public comment submitted to the Regulatory Commission of Alaska, former mayor Larry Powell presented the names of 277 Yakutat residents affixed to a petition declaiming the sale of the local power company to the Alaska Village Electric Cooperative.

“It’s obviously in AVEC’s best interests, but it’s not in Yakutat’s best interests,” Powell said by phone.

He and other town residents would prefer the power grid stay in the hands of a municipal company. “We have people here, we have the capability, we’ve been doing it for 30 years, and it keeps us in control of our own rates,” he said.

The petition is a copy of one first submitted to the City and Borough of Yakutat Assembly this spring. It’s the work of a group of local activists who supported alternative energy and Yakutat’s existing power system.

“I just call it an alternative energy working group,” Powell said.

The group is concerned that AVEC will not back biomass energy or tidal energy to replace Yakutat’s diesel-fired power plant, built in 2014. Yakutat’s municipal power company has supported studies of tidally driven generators.

“We’re totally diesel-dependent right now; we need somebody who wants to be innovative,” said Jack Endicott, owner of the city’s famed surf shop.

Yakutat’s power sale has been in the works for years, but it will reach culmination in April 2017, the deadline for state regulators to rule on a license transfer from the city to AVEC, which runs the power systems of 51 rural Alaska communities.

Yakutat would be the first AVEC location in Southeast.

Those who signed the petition and oppose the sale say they’re frustrated that the issue didn’t come before voters in a referendum vote. Earlier this year, the Assembly voted to proceed with the sale without a referendum.

Jimmi Jensen, a member of the Assembly, said the belief among petitioners is that “every citizen here has an equal share in that powerhouse, and I don’t feel every citizen had an equal say in the sale.”

Jensen was elected on a write-in bid in October, months after the Assembly’s decision.

In hindsight, Powell said it was a mistake to not make the petition a formal one. As an informal document, the list of names had no binding power on the Assembly. Members could choose to ignore it, and they did, he said, even though the list is more than half of Yakutat’s 458 registered voters.

Endicott, who is among those on the petition, said, “It’s kind of frustrating to me. If the majority of people wanted it, they’d vote for it; if they didn’t want it, they’d vote against it. The public really didn’t get much of a say in the whole thing.”

More in News

The Norwegian Sun in port on Oct. 25, 2023. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire file photo)
Ships in port for t​​he week of May 4

Here’s what to expect this week.

A.J. Wilson, 17, DeAndre Pittman, 16, and Elora Johnson, 16, eat lunch March 31, 2022, in the Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé cafeteria. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire file photo)
Alaska lawmakers choose lower funding proposals for school lunches, reading reforms

Compromise budget rejects making reduced-price lunches free to students from low-income families.

(Michael Penn / Juneau Empire file photo)
Police calls for Wednesday, May 8, 2024

This report contains public information from law enforcement and public safety agencies.

Budding trees and bushes are seen in front of the Alaska State Capitol on Wednesday, May 1. (James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)
Brinksmanship and compromise emerge in Alaska’s Capitol as legislative session nears an end

Legislators combining varied pieces of legislation to get them across the finish line by Wednesday.

Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire
Rep. Jamie Allard, R-Eagle River, Rep. Justin Ruffridge, R-Soldotna, and Rep. David Eastman, R-Wasilla, discuss an amendment to a bill restricting transgender participation in school sports during a House floor session Thursday.
With time for key issues this session running out, House stalled by filibuster of transgender sports ban bill

Bill tabled until Saturday, making its chances bleak with Legislature scheduled to adjourn Wednesday

Sen. Löki Tobin, D-Anchorage, is seen during a news conference on Wednesday, March 13. (James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)
Alaska Senate OKs increased access to birth control

A large bipartisan majority of the Senate approved increased insurance coverage for… Continue reading

City Manager Katie Koester (center) explains options for a budget item to members of the Juneau Assembly’s Finance Committee during a meeting Wednesday night as Deputy City Manager Robert Barr and Finance Director Angie Flick listen. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
With city taking over school buildings, leaders balk at funding for newly built projects

Assembly members reject $4M for new nonprofit family center site, suggest using existing facilities.

Deputy Mayor Michelle Bonnet Hale (left) talks with Assembly members (from right to left) Alicia Hughes-Skandijs, Wáahlaal Gíidaak Barbara Blake and Ella Adkison following an Assembly Finance Committee meeting Wednesday night. Hale and Blake, whose terms expire this fall, say they are not seeking reelection. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Two Assembly members say they won’t seek reelection ahead of annual ‘run for office’ workshop

Michelle Bonnet Hale and Wáahlaal Gíidaak Barbara Blake cite family and time considerations.

Most Read