Andy
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jan 6, 2008
- Messages
- 3,497
Nah, just in my home town on the western coast of AK, our fuel supplies work out like this. Crude oil is pumped on the north slope. Travels for 3days IIRC, down 800miles of pipeline, onto a super tanker, and down to the lower 48 to be refined. Then it is loaded back onto a smaller barge and leaves(usually from WA or OR) and transits the Gulf of Alaska, around the Alaskan Peninsula and up to the small communities. So the transportation costs, and being small and isolated, the economy of scale works against us.
Interesting. I think I'd be asking... demanding... that the Alaskan legislature approve a tax abatement for a company to build a refinery in Alaska, as well as tax and royalty free status for oil used in Alaska for sale locally. Just continue them on exported oil from Alaska. You could still fund APF, while dropping the cost of local fuel and gas, with no need to raid the APF for a cost offset.
Logically, I am surprised one of the many independent oil companies has not done this... unless... Two possibilities... One, the companies are not willing to deal with the national outcry from Eco-nuts, and the smothering amount of red type, or Two, the issue is all the oil wells in Alaska are owned by one company, and they have no competition to make a refinery up there worth while. Hmmm...
I think you are not quite understanding what the CBR is, and what it is designed to to. Which is basically a cash based credit card. In leaner times, it allows short term borrowing. But it hasnt been drawn on since FY2004.
http://fin.admin.state.ak.us/dof/financial_reports/resource/cbr_status_for_website.pdf
This is the most current status of the CBR.
This link is the supplemental budget, we also have the capital and operating budget. I am not sure where you are getting this 5billion in debt number.
Each of my quotes was linked to the respective sources. However, I do now see where the borrowing stopped in 2006, not 2004, according to the OMB. So for only the last 2 years, the budget has in fact been balanced.
This is good... but I wonder how much of this good result is due to wise frugal spending, verses increases in revenue from oil prices? If the latter is the case, it may be even more unwise to release the spending, given that they have not likely tightened their spending belts, and eventually oil income will likely drop.
Also, your link, the CBR, shows only how much money is currently in the fund... not how much is owed to the fund. I have not been able to find specific numbers here, other than the links I gave last post.
Nevertheless, I do not quite understand how the CBR is run, or who owns the debt. Or why interest would have to be paid to a fund supposedly made specifically for filling budget shortfalls. Nor why the debt would need repaid.
That said... if they are paying interest on the debt, and according to the Alaskan budget they are... they should repay the debt before they start more spending.
Yes it does work brilliantly, a model that should be undertaken by more governments. Your writings on the formula and how the dividend is determined, it mostly accurate, except that it is based on the 5 year average of the revenues after the inflation proofing, fund maintenance and management etc.
Agreed. Accept I don't want more governments having any money. It's a rare thing that your states population has successfully controlled your states legislature from blowing all the money. (psst: Social Security anyone?)
My main though, was that this new plan would remove the fiscal security blocks that enforced the controlled growth of the fund. The new plan will promise an ever increasing pay-out, regardless of fund performance. That could lead to a crash.
I dont disagree, and I will freely admit I am a bit skeptical of this whole thing. Its a novel idea, and offers solutions to a crisis. Which is something I appreciate in politicians.
I dont know how much legs this will have. But it is the focus of a special session here in a few weeks. It is expensive, unsustainable, and could be subject to some serious fraud. Those details still need to be worked out.
Well.. be honest... anytime any politician/lawyer has so much as a penny of public funds... it could lead to fraud and miss-use. In fact that should be expected. Also, I'm amused this is a crisis. Last I checked I could go to any filling station in town and there was plenty of gas there. Crisis is that Earthquake in China. Or Katrina, or the tornados that ripped through a few towns a weekend ago.
It's hard to think the price of gas is a 'crisis' when people are willing to pay what equates to $32/gal for a double mocha lattes as Starbucks. Or spend $60 bucks for a dumb video game that glorifies stealing cars and mistreating women, and just being a general scum bag criminal. GTA IV has made $500 Million. But ooooOOoo gas is up another $1... crisis! Crisis everyone! It reminds me a bit of the teenager in high school that had a crisis because "she didn't call me!" after the dance last Thursday. This is not a crisis... at least not yet.