Alaska editorial: Senate survey shows residents want a full-fledged solution to fiscal gap

  • Thursday, February 2, 2017 9:33am
  • Opinion

This editorial first appeared in the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner:

Lawmakers are wise to listen to their constituents, and at the beginning of this year’s legislative session, the Alaska Senate majority caucus made a meaningful overture to reach out to residents for their opinions on matters related to the state budget. An online survey set up by the caucus asked several questions about different approaches to help balance the budget and gathered about 7,000 responses from Alaskans over a period from Jan. 22-25. The results may not have been quite in line with the majority’s own positions, but legislators would do well to heed the responses when crafting a solution to the state budget crisis.

It should be stated up front that the survey wasn’t scientific in its approach. It was up to residents who heard about the survey to go to the website themselves and answer its questions, so the people who responded may well not be a completely representative cross-section of the state’s residents. That said, the manner of the survey’s distribution and the self-selecting nature of participants make its methods closely akin to other avenues for public comment on actions by the Legislature. What’s more, 7,000 Alaskans is a huge sample size as polls go — far bigger than most telephone surveys done by research firms. That so many Alaskans were motivated to respond to the survey in a relatively short period of time is a demonstration of how strongly residents feel that the budget deficit must be addressed now, with a sustainable solution and not a temporary fix.

The responses to the survey were enlightening. About 50 percent of Alaskans who responded think the level of state spending is too low (21.9 percent) or about right (28 percent), with 43.5 percent believing the level of spending is too high and 6.5 percent unsure. This jibes with the growing outcry from Alaskans as cuts to state services begin to reach aspects of government — the state troopers, road maintenance and education, to name a few — that affect residents on a day-to-day basis. There was roughly an even split on whether there should be a constitutional limit on state spending.

What might have been more surprising to the members of the Senate majority who designed the survey were the responses to questions about new revenue sources. More than half of respondents were in favor of a state sales tax, income tax and some sort of permanent fund earnings restructuring that would cap the dividend. They were also in support of increasing taxes on motor fuels and strongly in favor — 64.7 percent — of reducing oil tax credits to producers.

One of the most popular items on the survey was K-12 education, with 62.8 percent saying the allocation to elementary and secondary education is too low (46 percent) or about right (16.8 percent). Only 18 percent supported cuts in school funding.

Not every spending item was popular. About 54 percent of respondents were wary of the state going it alone on a liquefied natural gas pipeline from the North Slope, which likely owed partially to the state’s budget straits and a paucity of savings to invest in megaprojects.

It’s wise not to treat the survey’s results as gospel; Alaska is a notoriously difficult place to conduct an accurate poll of how the state’s residents feel. But there are some trends the survey highlights that deserve strong consideration. Residents’ appetite for a cuts-only approach appears to be waning, and there is increasing recognition that more revenue sources will be necessary to provide state services and lessen dependence on oil tax receipts.

Most importantly, residents appear to be accepting of the fact that they will shoulder some of the burden of paying for services — that some combination of taxes and restructuring of permanent fund earnings will both be necessary to put the state back in the black. Legislators should take heed.

More in Opinion

Web
Have something to say?

Here’s how to add your voice to the conversation.

The Alaska Psychiatric Institute in Anchorage. (Alaska Department of Family and Community Services photo)
My Turn: Small wins make big impacts at Alaska Psychiatric Institute

The Alaska Psychiatric Institute (API), an 80-bed psychiatric hospital located in Anchorage… Continue reading

The settlement of Sermiligaaq in Greenland (Ray Swi-hymn / CC BY-SA 2.0)
My Turn: Making the Arctic great again

It was just over five years ago, in the summer of 2019,… Continue reading

Rosa Parks, whose civil rights legacy has recent been subject to revision in class curriculums. (Public domain photo from the National Archives and Records Administration Records)
My Turn: Proud to be ‘woke’

Wokeness: the quality of being alert to and concerned about social injustice… Continue reading

President Donald Trump and Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy pose for a photo aboard Air Force One during a stopover at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage in 2019. (Sheila Craighead / White House photo)
Opinion: Dunleavy has the prerequisite incompetence to work for Trump

On Tuesday it appeared that Gov. Mike Dunleavy was going to be… Continue reading

After Hurricane Katrina in 2005, many Louisiana homes were rebuilt with the living space on the second story, with garage space below, to try to protect the home from future flooding. (Infrogmation of New Orleans via Wikimedia, CC BY-SA)
Misperceptions stand in way of disaster survivors wanting to rebuild safer, more sustainable homes

As Florida and the Southeast begin recovering from 2024’s destructive hurricanes, many… Continue reading

The F/V Liberty, captained by Trenton Clark, fishes the Pacific near Metlakatla on Aug. 20, 2024. (Ash Adams/The New York Times)
My Turn: Charting a course toward seafood independence for Alaska’s vulnerable food systems

As a commercial fisherman based in Sitka and the executive director of… Continue reading

People watch a broadcast of Former President Donald Trump, the Republican presidential nominee, delivering a speech at Times Square in New York, on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024. (Graham Dickie/The New York Times)
Opinion: The Democratic Party’s failure of imagination

Aside from not being a lifelong Republican like Peter Wehner, the sentiment… Continue reading

A steady procession of vehicles and students arrives at Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé before the start of the new school year on Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire file photo)
Opinion: Let’s consider tightening cell phones restrictions in Juneau schools

A recent uptick in student fights on and off campus has Juneau… Continue reading

(Juneau Empire file photo)
Letter: Alaskans are smart, can see the advantages of RCV and open primaries

The League of Women Voters is a nonpartisan organization that neither endorses… Continue reading

(Laurie Craig / Juneau Empire file photo)
10 reasons to put country above party labels in election

Like many of you I grew up during an era when people… Continue reading

(Juneau Empire file photo)
Letters: Vote no on ballot measure 2 for the future of Alaska

The idea that ranked choice voting (RCV) is confusing is a red… Continue reading