Alaska Legislature shutters offices on Friday afternoons

The Anchorage Legislative Information Office, March 4, 2016. (Photo by Megan Ahleman)
The Anchorage Legislative Information Office, March 4, 2016. (Photo by Megan Ahleman)

As a cost-saving measure, 22 legislative information offices around the state are shuttered starting this Friday afternoon.

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The offices will be closed every Friday afternoon while the legislature is not in session. The legislature’s in-house administrative council voted the action through 9-1 on Thursday.

The Legislative Council’s vote, which also included a reduction in payroll for support staff that work irregularly, is expected to cover a $298,000 cut in the legislature’s operating budget for the current budget year.

Some legislators on the council expressed an appetite to cut further and close the offices for the entire day on Fridays.

Sen. Gary Stevens, a Kodiak Republican, chairs the council and said that could still happen down the road.

“I can accept a half-day closure on Fridays to see how it works. It saves us enough money. And in the future if we find that’s still not enough, when there are additional cuts, then maybe we should be going to a full day on Friday. But I think this is a step towards solving our problem,” he said.

The information offices are staffed by nonpartisan employees of the Legislative Affairs Agency.

Those employees facilitate teleconferencing for Alaskans to remotely attend legislative meetings. They also serve as a public point of contact and as interpreters of what’s often an arcane lawmaking process.

Sue Cotter, who manages the legislature’s information and teleconferencing, told the council that in some of the remote offices, her staff also help process Permanent Fund dividend documents.

Jeremy Hsieh is the deputy managing editor of the KTOO newsroom in Juneau. He’s a podcast fiend who’s worked in journalism since high school as a reporter, editor and television producer. He ran Gavel Alaska for 360 North from 2011 to 2016, and is big on experimenting with novel tools and mediums (including the occasional animated gif) to tell stories and demystify the news. Jeremy’s an East Coast transplant who moved to Juneau in 2008.

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