Capitol Report April 19, 2024
April 19, 2024
The Senate unveils their initial changes to the operating budget while the House begins review of the capital budget.
Budget
After a seamless budget swap last Friday, the House and Senate are reviewing the opposite
bodies鈥 budgets. The House Finance Committee is reviewing the Senate鈥檚 capital budget
while the Senate Finance Committee has already unveiled its own committee substitute
for the operating budget. Notably, the new version provides full UGF funding for the
university system鈥檚 fixed cost increases. These fixed costs include increases for
cyber security, property insurance premiums, and maintenance. Simultaneously, the
Senate Finance Committee removed $20 million in funding for reaching R1 research status
at UAF, $3 million for teacher preparation and healthcare pilot programs at UAA, and
$1.2 million for campus security improvements. The Senate will consider member amendments
to the operating budget early next week. Once the bill leaves the Finance Committee,
it will be considered by the entire Senate on the chamber floor. Senators may offer
additional amendments during that time. A six-person conference committee will ultimately
decide any differences between the final House and Senate operating budgets.
Priority Legislation
Extending Alaska鈥檚 Education Tax Credits Program - The Alaska Education Tax Credit
(ETC) program was established by the Legislature in 1987 to encourage private businesses
to make charitable contributions to support in-state educational institutions. In
return, these businesses receive credits to offset their taxes. The ETC program must
be renewed by the legislature every few years. Without a renewal or extension, the
program is currently set to sunset on January 1, 2025. Several bills are moving through
the Legislature to either extend or remove the sunset requirement entirely:
- a Senate Education Bill carried by Senator Jesse Bjorkman (R-Nikiski), extends the program to January 1, 2031. It also updates the contribution limits, expanding the cap from $1 million to $5 million. SB 120 is in the Senate Finance Committee. However, it has yet to show movement since mid-February.
- by Representative Justin Ruffridge (R-Soldotna) takes an alternative approach. Rather than extending the education tax credit program sunset, it removes the sunset date entirely, extending the program in perpetuity. Notably, in this legislation, the cap for the ETC program remains at $1 million. A hearing on HB 144 has been scheduled for Monday morning in the House Finance Committee.
- by Representative Julie Coulombe (R-Anchorage) also extends the ETC program in a roundabout way. The legislation introduces a new tax credit for businesses offering childcare benefits or programs. The new tax credit is added as a subsection to several Alaska Statutes that allow businesses to claim tax credits for education programs, including the ETC program. The legislation extends the current tax credits for three years. A hearing on the bill is scheduled on Tuesday morning in the Senate Finance Committee.
What We鈥檙e Watching
Monday, April 22
- 9:00 a.m. - House Finance: : Repeal Education Tax Credits Sunset
- 1:00 p.m. - House Judiciary - : FAFSA Raffle
- 1:30 p.m. - House Finance - : Appropriations: Capital; Reappropriations / Presentation: 鈥淔iscal Update鈥 by Legislative Finance Division
Tuesday, April 23
- 9:00 a.m. - Senate Finance: : Child Care: Tax Credit/Assistance/Grants
- 1:30 p.m. - House Finance - : Appropriations: Capital; Reappropriations / Presentation 鈥淗istorical Capital Budget Information鈥 by Legislative Finance Division
Wednesday, April 24
- 9:00 a.m. - Senate Finance: : 鈥淎ppropriations: Operating Budget; Capital; Supplemental; Amended鈥 / Presentation: 鈥淔iscal Update鈥 by Legislative Finance Division
- 3:30 p.m. - Senate Resources: : 鈥淐arbon Storage鈥 by Frank Paskvan, Affiliate Professor, 探花精选 Fairbanks
For more information, contact Director of State Relations for the 探花精选 System Chad Hutchison: cell: 907-378-3946, email: clhutchison@alaska.edu.