Alaska Legislature convenes for special session

Mike Chenault, Speaker of the House, Alaska Legislature, R- Nikiski wields the gavel during the second regular session of the 29th Alaska Legislature, January 19, 2016. (Photo by Skip Gray/360 North.)
House Speaker Mike Chenault, R- Nikiski wields the gavel during the second regular session of the 29th Alaska Legislature, Jan. 19. (Photo by Skip Gray/360 North)

Alaska lawmakers are back at work Monday after failing to pass a budget by the constitutional deadline last week.

It’s the first day of a special session called by Gov. Bill Walker.

Lawmakers now have 30 days to try to do what they couldn’t in the past four months: Agree on a budget and make progress on closing the state’s $4 billion deficit.

There are several deadlines looming.

If there’s no budget in place by June 1, the administration will have to send out layoff notices to state workers.

If there’s still no budget in place by July 1, the state could face a government shutdown.

In addition to the budget, Walker has asked lawmakers to consider several bills that have so far proved immune to compromise.

Those include an overhaul of the state’s oil and gas taxes and a proposal to restructure the Permanent Fund — as well as a range of new taxes, including an income tax.

The House plans to convene at 11 a.m. Monday, followed by the Senate at noon.

Sign up for The Signal

Top Alaska stories delivered to your inbox every week

Site notifications
Update notification options
Subscribe to notifications