
Representative · Alaska State House · District 5
12 articles · 20 transcripts
“the fundamental difference between the T21 federal law and this bill is the state, if you pass this, is now actively going to punish people who are 20 and 19 years old. Mr. Speaker, those kids are going to go to war someday, okay? That's why they joined the Army.”
“Better benefits cost more money, Mr. President. And this bill is probably a better benefit than the current 401 for a lot of employees, but just know the reason it is is because it's going to cost more money.”
“if you go on Fort Wainwright or JBear or Eielson or Elmendorf, you will find hundreds of people that are not age 21 that are actively using tobacco products.”
“My only reservation— I have two reservations here. Number one, I don't want to do anything that effectively kills the underlying bill.”
“when I talked to the Glenfarm folks, they were here and testified Committee, obviously they have a rub at this 15 cents. They prefer 6 cents. I basically wanted the material difference between 6 and 15.”
“if you go to 75% or 60%, I know we flipped the numbers backwards in the conceptual amendment. You are just going to have this program, if you do allocate money, it is just going to soak it all up to those ones.”
“if we do this and we enact this in law and we know that we're going to burn through all these funds, and jack that employer contribution rate to the UI fund and all this back up, but we're going to run out of benefit anyways. What do we tell people that maybe they had one kid in 2029 and then— or 2030— and then in 2040 they're going to have another kid and we say, oh, by the way, we don't have that program anymore.”
“I was under the impression with the adoption of Amendment 3, we basically took care of that issue with the RU486, mifepristone, misoprostol kind of banning from prescribing prescriptions to assign them”
“It basically defines administrative expense is strictly narrow to administrative employee salaries, administrative employee benefits, professional and technical services, supplies, communication, travels, dues and fees, and school board stipends.”
“I can tell you that it is incredibly clear that the fathers of Alaska's constitution repeatedly rejected constitutional earmarks.”
“This deletes a sizable chunk of that over and beyond what's necessary in the STIP. It's $94 million. And also, like, the West Zoo Access Project is one of the few things that we have in Alaska that is going toward positive steps for resource development.”
“the framers of the Constitution were very pro-education advocates. And the real question is, why did they decide not to include a dedicated fund for education when they drafted the state's constitution when we had one basically in territorial times.”