
Speaker C
61:12 - 61:39
"the intent is that we bring this forward probably at the July 21st meeting, so we have some time. And of course, this does not need to reflect every single person's individual priorities. We want to find what, you know, at least a majority of us can agree on at this point."
“the intent is that we bring this forward probably at the July 21st meeting, so we have some time. And of course, this does not need to reflect every single person's individual priorities. We want to find what, you know, at least a majority of us can agree on at this point.”
So I'll stop talking there, but I think just if folks have thoughts, questions, or things that you would like to see in this resolution, the intent is that we bring this forward probably at the July 21st meeting, so we have some time. And of course, this does not need to reflect every single person's individual priorities. We want to find what, you know, at least a majority of us can agree on at this point. Thank you. So, so I'll stop talking there and just see if there's initial reactions, thoughts, questions, even if it's just a request for more information.
The Anchorage Assembly's Budget and Finance Committee-of-the-Whole heard Thursday that five municipal funds carry combined deficits approaching $45 million, with the workers' compensation and IT funds accounting for the largest shortfalls and the 2027 budget cycle set to determine how much can be resolved.

The Anchorage Assembly's Budget and Finance Committee discussed a draft budget priorities resolution Thursday asking the administration to model school-funding versus general-government tradeoffs for fiscal year 2027, with a July 21 target for advancing the measure.
