
Peter Micciche
11:55 - 12:27
"I'm here to fight for enough. Not for a lot, but for enough. I placed my hand on the Bible for 62,000 souls that call the Kenai home and to ensure that we receive enough so that senior citizens and families from Nikiski are not covering the cost or subsidizing a giant global project."
“I'm here to fight for enough. Not for a lot, but for enough. I placed my hand on the Bible for 62,000 souls that call the Kenai home and to ensure that we receive enough so that senior citizens and families from Nikiski are not covering the cost or subsidizing a giant global project.”
You've heard about what they pay in Texas or wherever, but few discussions I've heard are apples-to-apples comparisons to the total take. I'm not here to talk about that. I'm here to fight for enough. Not for a lot, but for enough. I placed my hand on the Bible for 62,000 souls that call the Kenai home and to ensure that we receive enough so that senior citizens and families from Nikiski are not covering the cost or subsidizing a giant global project.
Kenai Peninsula Borough Mayor Peter Micciche told the Alaska Senate Finance Committee Wednesday that the House version of the Alaska LNG tax bill provides a workable 70% property tax reduction, while the original 90% cut would have left local taxpayers subsidizing the project.

Legislative Finance Division analysis shows the alternative volumetric tax structure in Senate Bill 2001 would generate approximately $124 million annually when the full Alaska LNG project is operational, with Kenai Peninsula Borough receiving $55 million and North Slope Borough receiving $40 million based on capital expenditure weights.
