Showing posts with label Assembly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Assembly. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 05, 2017

While Dutch Men Protest Gay Couple Attack Hand-in-Hand, Anchorage Protests By Electing Two Gay Men To Assembly

Last summer,  already campaigning at PrideFest, Christopher Constant told me (off camera, but his poster didn't hide things) that if he won his seat on the Anchorage Assembly (city council), he'd be the first openly gay member.

He won yesterday, but he wasn't exactly right.  Because another openly gay candidate, Felix Rivera, in mid-town, won a seat as well.  Here's the video I took of Chris last summer. You can see he's not coming onto the Assembly without experience and knowledge about the neighborhoods he will represent.






I took some liberty with the headline.   I doubt any Anchorage voters even knew about the Dutch hand-holding protest when they voted.  I'm guessing that most people who voted for Christopher Constant or Felix Rivera didn't even knew they were gay.  It didn't really come up in the election until the very end when one of Rivera's opponents sent out a last minute attack ad, and even that used coded language rather than say he was gay.  And Rivera got 46% of the vote in a four way race. The next highest opponent got 29%.

No, Anchorage elected two gay men, not because they were gay (though perhaps some voted against them for that reason) but because they were the strongest candidates in their races.


As understated as gender was in the race, it is a big deal in Anchorage.  After years and years of fierce opposition from an evangelical pastor, Anchorage finally added LGBTQ to its anti-discrimination ordinance in 2015.  There was an attempt to put an initiative on yesterday's ballot to block parts of the 2015 change, but it didn't meet the legal requirements for an initiative.    Mayor Ethan Berkowitz won his mayoral race in 2015 by a landslide supporting gay rights against a rabidly anti-gay opponent.

Felix Rivera at candidate forum March 2017
So this is a milestone after a lot of bitter history over this issue.

And here's Felix Rivera at the AFACT candidate forum a couple of weeks ago.





Dutch Hand Holding Protest

While there was no direct connection between the Anchorage election, and the Dutch protest, there are a lot of indirect connections.  The article says that after the attack on the married couple who were walking home holding hands, the prime minister condemned the attack.  But two lawmakers took it a step further.
"Alexander Pechtold, who is the leader of the Democrats 66 (D66) party, arrived hand in hand with his party’s financial specialist, Wouter Koolmees, in support of Vernes-Sewratan and Sewratan-Vernes. “We think it is quite normal in the Netherlands to express who you are,” Pechtold said, according to People."
Then lots of Dutch men posted pictures of themselves holding hands in support of the couple.  One picture in the article shows a group of men who work at the Dutch embassy in London walking along the street holding hands.


Jay Brause, Gene Dugan, and Out North

Which gives me a bridge to mention Jay (Jacob) Brause and Gene (Eugene) Dugan, a gay Anchorage couple who sued the state of Alaska when they weren't allowed to get married here way back in 1994.  They won their case!  But then the state (led by that pastor) amended the constitution to define marriage to involve a man and a woman only.

Jay and Gene ran Out North, a small theater/art space that regularly brought acts that challenged conventional thinking.  They played a huge role in giving Anchorage a space in which to stretch its mind and continue to reexamine long held assumptions.  I'm sure Out North played a role in preparing Anchorage for this day, when two openly gay men have been elected to the Assembly in a race where their sexual preference was almost completely a non-issue.  For those of you who think I've gone off in a totally different tangent, Jay and Gene now live in London where those Dutch Embassy colleagues held hands.  Jay and Gene they got fed up living in a state that vigorously denied their right to get married and moved to UK.  But they did come back to Anchorage to get married here after that became possible.


Holding Hands In Thailand 

I'd like to make one more connection to the idea of men holding hands.  When I was a Peace Corps volunteer in Thailand, one of the American values that was deeply embedded in me was that men do NOT hold hands.

But in Thailand they do.  It's no big deal.  It happens all the time.  Dealing with my own visceral response when men wanted to hold hands with me in Thailand, helped me understand the idea of biases that our cultures teach us without us even knowing that they are biases.  Instead we think that they are 'truths' about nature.  In this case, that it is unnatural for men to hold hands.  But in Thai culture it isn't and a gradually became comfortable when someone took my hand as we walked somewhere.  



The Other Winning Assembly Candidates

Here are some pictures of the other winners last night.





Suzanne LaFrance at the AFACT candidate forum March 12.  She's won the south Anchorage seat 6 that tends to be conservative.  But not always.  Janice Shamberg held this seat.   Suzanne LaFrance was supported by Berkowitz.  In fact all the winners were except Dyson.









Pete Petersen was reelected to his east Anchorage seat 5. Not only are there now two gay men on the Assembly, Petersen is one of two returned Peace Corps volunteers on the Assembly.




Fred Dyson Introducing Joe Miller 2010
Fred Dyson won in Eagle River's seat 2.  He wasn't at the forum, but I had this picture from 2010 when he introduced US senate candidate Jim Miller.  That was the meeting where Miller famously said, If the East Germans could build a wall, we could.  And it was the same meeting where journalist Tony Hopfinger was handcuffed by Miller's 'security.'






Tim Steele also missed the March 12 forum and I don't seem to have a picture of him in my files.


I realize this post seems to wander all over the place, but society is complicated.  Lots of things are interrelated and if we look at everything as an isolated event suitable for a Tweet, then we don't get all that interconnectedness.

Tuesday, April 04, 2017

Taxi Change and Transit Go Down, Assembly Picks Up One More Liberal, [UPDATED]

[Updated at midnight with 23:23 election results.  99% of the voter for School Board and the Propositions is in.  Assembly seats all are missing 1 precinct.  I'm guessing that may be absentee ballots and questioned ballots.]

In the Muni wide vote (School Board and Propositions) there are 2 precincts out still.  Here are the results as of 10:45pm.  On this round, I'm only doing the numbers for the close races.



Assembly winners so far look like
Christopher Constant in District 1
Fred Dyson in District 2
Tim Steele in District 3
Felix Rivera in District 4
Pete Petersen in District 5
Suzanne LaFrance is leading in District 6 (South Anchorage).  It's been close, but this last tally with only one precinct out looks like it seals it for LaFrance.

School Board
Don Donley in Seat C
Seat D is too close to call - Holleman is ahead of  Schuster by 80 votes, with two precincts out.

Propositions Passing
1.  ASD
3. Parks
4. Roads/Sewers
5. Fire
6.  APD expansion  is the closest that is likely to win
7.  Park District Expansion

Failing
2.  Public Safety and Transit
8.  Taxi ordinance repeal




**Latest (23:23) data

3737
DistrictVotes    Percentage
Assembly District 1  
SWANK, Albert

COX, Chris

CONSTANT, Christopher**131652%
MARTINSON, Mark Alan

DUNSMORE, David

WEST, Warren

Assembly District 2   
BRASSELL, John L

DONNELLY, Patrick

DYSON, Fred**279748.84%
WEHMHOFF, Gretchen

Assembly District 3


STEELE, Tim**462261.33%
NEES, David**283037.55%






Assembly District 4


ALLEVA, Ron

SANDERS, Marcus D

SMITH, Don

RIVERA, Felix**306346.74%






Assembly District 5

JONES, Don**282142.63%
PETERSEN, Pete**375556.74%






Assembly District 6


FOGLE, Albert**465446.87%
LAFRANCE, Suzanne**521252.49%











Seat VotesPercent
School Board C 

SMALLWOOD, James   

HILDE, Alisha

HOTCH, Tasha

DONLEY, Dave**1507542.96%
JAMISON, Christopher




School Board C
  

SCHUSTER, Kay**1588944.68%
HOLLEMAN, Andy**1594744.85%
BERKE, Albert**33109.31%









PropYesNo
Prop 1 ASD23481   56.62%*17993
Prop 2 Pub Safety
Transit
  19170 22228   53.68%*
Prop 3 Parks22217  53.55% *19270
Prop 4 Roads
Sewers
 23653   57.57%*17431
Prop 5 Fire 22626  54.73% *18716
Prop 6 APD20815    50.39%*20496
Prop 7 Parks
Service Area
 21579   52%  *19539
Prop 8  Taxis1645624052  *   59%

*  winners  99% of the vote is in

Anchorage Election Results 6

Trends have continued for last several sets of results.
South Anchorage Assembly still close as is School Board seat C.


I'm starting this one with the numbers from the last post, so you can see the changes from one report to the next.  Slash separates the reported numbers 1111/2222/3333

Putting in percentage points for the leader, or two leaders if it's still close.
Assembly and ASD are 22:13 numbers/  Propositions are 22:45 numbers

DistrictVotes    Percentage
Assembly District 1    9/14precincts
SWANK, Albert63/66/83
COX, Chris240/247/318
CONSTANT, Christopher811/???/106350.72%/50.48%/49.84%
MARTINSON, Mark Alan37/40/53
DUNSMORE, David377/395/517
WEST, Warren54/55/73/
Assembly District 2
     precincts

BRASSELL, John L253/334/516
DONNELLY, Patrick127179/261
DYSON, Fred956/1377/211749.18%/48.64%/48.93%
WEHMHOFF, Gretchen593/921/1407
Assembly District 3
18/26  precincts  24/26

STEELE, Tim2838/3075/433260.99/61.11%/60,87
NEES, David1755/1892/2702
Assembly District 4
16/25 precincts
20/25

ALLEVA, Ron367/414/482
SANDERS, Marcus D458/543/631
SMITH, Don1027/1234/1427
RIVERA, Felix1844/2159/241149.5%/49.19%/48.28
Assembly District 5
18/25 precincts
21/25
JONES, Don2096/2350/2419
PETERSEN, Pete2696/3058/315355.95%/56.25/56.25%






Assembly District 6
8/26 precincts
new #s 10/26 precincts 16/26
FOGLE, Albert1405/1988/286647.89%/46.99/47.72%
LAFRANCE, Suzanne1517/2224/310251.70%/52.56%/51.65%











Seat VotesPercent
School Board C 
72/124 precincts 102/124
SMALLWOOD, James   4072/4838/6041
HILDE, Alisha3037/3612/4628
HOTCH, Tasha2225/2666/3294
DONLEY, Dave7400/8873/1154941.43%/41.49%/42.32%
JAMISON, Christopher937/1120/1415



School Board C
    72/124 precincts 102/124

SCHUSTER, Kay7822/9395/1228343.39%/43.57%/44.50%
HOLLEMAN, Andy8169/9788/1239045.31%/45.40%
BERKE, Albert1818/2116/2608







Adding 22.14 changes to this chart, adding 22:45

PropYesNo
Prop 1 ASD14419 /18223/23275    * 10635/13881/17849
Prop 2 Pub Safety
Transit
12027/14998/19021  12996/17070 /22037 *
Prop 3 Parks13709/17317 /22034*11361/14831/19100
Prop 4 Roads
Sewers
14557/18388/23445    *10240/13432/17293
Prop 5 Fire13953/17598/22441    *11014/14416/18550
Prop 6 APD12932/16253/20645   *12015/15743/20314
Prop 7 Parks
Service Area
13189/16727/21406   *11625/15107/19363
Prop 8  Taxis10150/12925/1639414397/18557/23862   *



* leading

Anchorage Election Results 5 [Updated]


These are 9:47 results for Assembly and School Board and 9:57 for Propositions.
Still a few close races.  Donley seems to have his school board seat though.

[UPDATE - I'm adding the 9:57 numbers to the 9:47 numbers for Assembly and ASD.




DistrictVotes    Percentage
Assembly District 1    9/14precincts
SWANK, Albert63/66
COX, Chris240/247
CONSTANT, Christopher811/383(error)50.72%/50.48%
MARTINSON, Mark Alan37/40
DUNSMORE, David377/395
WEST, Warren54/55






Assembly District 2 
     precincts

BRASSELL, John L253/334
DONNELLY, Patrick127179
DYSON, Fred956/137749.18%/48.64%
WEHMHOFF, Gretchen593/921






Assembly District 3
18/26  precincts

STEELE, Tim2838/307560.99/61.11%
NEES, David1755/1892






Assembly District 4 
16/25 precincts

ALLEVA, Ron367/414
SANDERS, Marcus D458/543
SMITH, Don1027/1234
RIVERA, Felix1844/215949.5%/49.19%






Assembly District 5 
18/25 precincts

JONES, Don2096/2350
PETERSEN, Pete2696/305855.95%/56.25






Assembly District 6 
8/26 precincts
new #s 10/26 precincts
FOGLE, Albert1405/198847.89%/46.99
LAFRANCE, Suzanne1517/222451.70%/52.56%











Seat VotesPercent
School Board C 
72/124 precincts
SMALLWOOD, James   4072/4838
HILDE, Alisha3037/3612
HOTCH, Tasha2225/2666
DONLEY, Dave7400/887341.43%/41.49%
JAMISON, Christopher937/1120



School Board C
    72/124 precincts

SCHUSTER, Kay7822/939543.39%/43.57%
HOLLEMAN, Andy8169/978845.31%/45.40%
BERKE, Albert1818/2116







Adding 22.14 changes to this chart

PropYesNo
Prop 1 ASD14419 /18223    * 10635/13881
Prop 2 Pub Safety
Transit
12027/14998   12996/17070*
Prop 3 Parks13709/17317    *11361/14831
Prop 4 Roads
Sewers
14557/18388    *10240/13432
Prop 5 Fire13953/17598    *11014/14416
Prop 6 APD12932/16253   *12015/15743
Prop 7 Parks
Service Area
13189/16727   *11625/15107
Prop 8  Taxis10150/1292514397/18557   *

* leading






Anchorage Election Results 4 9:34 postings







DistrictVotes    Percentage
Assembly District 1   7/14 precincts
SWANK, Albert63
COX, Chris222
CONSTANT, Christopher75952.27%
MARTINSON, Mark Alan28
DUNSMORE, David325
WEST, Warren42
Assembly District 2   
    9/19 precincts

BRASSELL, John L253
DONNELLY, Patrick127
DYSON, Fred95649.18%
WEHMHOFF, Gretchen593
Assembly District 3 
13/26 precincts

STEELE, Tim214762.23%
NEES, David1259






Assembly District 4 
12/25 precincts

ALLEVA, Ron281
SANDERS, Marcus D333
SMITH, Don770
RIVERA, Felix139949.86%






Assembly District 5 
15/25 precincts

JONES, Don1910
PETERSEN, Pete234654.84%






Assembly District 6 
7/26 precincts

FOGLE, Albert1203
LAFRANCE, Suzanne128251.36%











Seat VotesPercent
School Board C 58/124 precincts

SMALLWOOD, James   3398
HILDE, Alisha2558
HOTCH, Tasha1829
DONLEY, Dave613241.16%
JAMISON, Christopher799



School Board C
  58/124  precincts

SCHUSTER, Kay6528
HOLLEMAN, Andy683545.55%
BERKE, Albert1473









PropYesNo
Prop 1 ASD10,021    * 7376
Prop 2 Pub Safety
Transit
8494   8887   *
Prop 3 Parks9595   *7823
Prop 4 Roads
Sewers
10,220    *7003
Prop 5 Fire9804    *7544
Prop 6 APD9074   *8249
Prop 7 Parks
Service Area
9240   *7994
Prop 8  Taxis701710,019   *

* leading


Municipal Election Results 3


9:14 pm numbers



DistrictVotes    Percentage
Assembly District 1 5/14 precincts
SWANK, Albert484
COX, Chris17516%
CONSTANT, Christopher54850%
MARTINSON, Mark Alan202%
DUNSMORE, David26623%
WEST, Warren282.5%






Assembly District 2  6/19 precincts
BRASSELL, John L189      13%
DONNELLY, Patrick79          5%
DYSON, Fred732       52%
WEHMHOFF, Gretchen402       28.5%






Assembly District 3 9/26 precincts
STEELE, Tim1488
NEES, David809






Assembly District 4  8/25 precincts
ALLEVA, Ron162
SANDERS, Marcus D191
SMITH, Don457
RIVERA, Felix857






Assembly District 5 10/25
JONES, Don1334
PETERSEN, Pete1687






Assembly District 6 5/26
FOGLE, Albert943
LAFRANCE, Suzanne968











Seat VotesPercent
School Board C 38/124 precincts
SMALLWOOD, James   237123%
HILDE, Alisha182417%
HOTCH, Tasha126512
DONLEY, Dave431941%
JAMISON, Christopher5305%



School Board C38/124 precincts
SCHUSTER, Kay459243%
HOLLEMAN, Andy474345%
BERKE, Albert1041









PropYesNo
Prop 1 ASD6919 5208
Prop 2 Pub Safety
Transit
60016117
Prop 3 Parks66645467
Prop 4 Roads
Sewers
71174877
Prop 5 Fire69005180
Prop 6 APD63621129
Prop 7 Parks
Service Area
64555543
Prop 8  Taxis48536980



Municipal Election Results 2 - 9pm update


These are 9:00 results



DistrictVotes    Percentage
Assembly District 1  3/14 precincts
SWANK, Albert28
COX, Chris98
CONSTANT, Christopher304
MARTINSON, Mark Alan9
DUNSMORE, David162
WEST, Warren6






Assembly District 2  4/19 precincts reporting
BRASSELL, John L123
DONNELLY, Patrick44
DYSON, Fred416
WEHMHOFF, Gretchen243






Assembly District 36/26 precincts
STEELE, Tim1062
NEES, David533






Assembly District 48 precincts/28
ALLEVA, Ron162
SANDERS, Marcus D191
SMITH, Don457
RIVERA, Felix857






Assembly District 55 precincts/25
JONES, Don767
PETERSEN, Pete929






Assembly District 63 precincts/26
FOGLE, Albert547
LAFRANCE, Suzanne536












Seat VotesPercent
School Board C 24 precints/124
SMALLWOOD, James   1644
HILDE, Alisha1223
HOTCH, Tasha839
DONLEY, Dave2784
JAMISON, Christopher339



School Board D24 /124 precincts
SCHUSTER, Kay3012
HOLLEMAN, Andy3189
BERKE, Albert684








PropYesNo
Prop 1 ASD1559      3343
Prop 2 Pub Safety
Transit
41103833
Prop 3 Parks44963449
Prop 4 Roads
Sewers
47743085
Prop 5 Fire47033209
Prop 6 APD43273582
Prop 7 Parks
Service Area
43393522
Prop 8  Taxis31754580




Anchorage Election Results 1 - 8:30 Assembly School Board [UPDATED With Propositions]


These are 8:30pm results.  Probably early voting results.  Mostly less than 1% of the precincts.
For the propositions there are two sets of numbers.  I took the one from the group that listed the most precincts.

You can check directly for Assembly and School Board here.

And for the Propositions here.





District Votes     Percentage
Assembly District 1

SWANK, Albert 16 6%
COX, Chris 29 11%
CONSTANT, Christopher 146 54%
MARTINSON, Mark Alan 3 1%
DUNSMORE, David 62 23%
WEST, Warren 10 1%






Assembly District 2

BRASSELL, John L 59
DONNELLY, Patrick 16
DYSON, Fred 120
WEHMHOFF, Gretchen 56






Assembly District 3

STEELE, Tim 373
NEES, David 196






Assembly District 4

ALLEVA, Ron 54
SANDERS, Marcus D 58
SMITH, Don 120
RIVERA, Felix 225






Assembly District 5

JONES, Don 191
PETERSEN, Pete 255






Assembly District 6

FOGLE, Albert 364
LAFRANCE, Suzanne 304







SMALLWOOD, James HILDE, Alisha HOTCH, Tasha DONLEY, Dave
JAMISON, Christopher Write-in





Seat  Votes Percent
School Board C 

SMALLWOOD, James    530
HILDE, Alisha 501
HOTCH, Tasha 282
DONLEY, Dave 1065
JAMISON, Christopher 105



School Board C

SCHUSTER, Kay 1134 Cell
HOLLEMAN, Andy 1134 Cell
BERKE, Albert 241 Cell






PropYesNo
Prop 1 ASD1559      1254
Prop 2 Pub Safety
Transit
16181197
Prop 3 Parks16181193
Prop 4 Roads
Sewers
17061072
Prop 5 Fire1412823
Prop 6 APD16661129
Prop 7 Parks
Service Area
15761201
Prop 8  Taxis11301597

Municipal Election Results Soon

I voted today at my local precinct.  I was voter number 76 at about 2pm.  That doesn't sound like a lot and it isn't.  There are about 1200 voters registered in my precinct.

HOWEVER,

  • more and more people are voting early
  • the state is notoriously slow about purging people who have died or moved away

Midnight Sun blog posted the other day that the Municipality is hosting election central at the Denai'na Center starting at 6:30pm (polls don't close until 8pm) with parking available in the Muni parking lot.

The Alaska Women For Political Action are having their election party starting at 7pm at the Lakefront Anchorage on Spenard.

I'm not sure if I'm going to go out and mingle or stay home and post election results.

But you can find out the election results as they are posted on the Muni election page.  I'm guessing they will be available on this page title 'election results'.  If you go there before 8pm, it probably will only show 2016 and earlier results.  Last year they preloaded a bunch of early votes and posted them at about 8pm.

You can check back here around 8pm to see if I'm posting results or pictures of people gathering.

Sunday, March 19, 2017

Notes On Assembly Candidate Debate And Some Voter Election Prep

The AFACT (Anchorage Faith & Action Congregations Together) Assembly Candidates' forum Sunday March 12, 2017 was very well organized and gave the audience a sense of the candidates running for the Assembly in the April 4, 2017 election.

click to enlarge and focus a bit
They made it easier for everyone by providing a chart with all the RSVP'd candidates' names and the three topics of the questions - Budget, Public Safety, Bike & Pedestrian Safety.

You can see from my lack of notes (since I can hardly read them, I decided not to try to blur them out) that some candidates weren't there.  Also, there's a back side for the rest of the districts.


For everyone who is alarmed by encourage by the November election result, voting April 4 and getting others out too, is an important step for two reasons.  You can make sure our Assembly stands up for your values and you can send a message that Americans are paying more attention to all elections.

Anchorage Municipal elections tend to be attract fewer than 20% of registered voters.  Races can be won or lost by a handful of voters.  So your vote has much more weight in these elections.

Surely, each election is a public demonstration of values.

I did notice some things as I listened to how the candidates responded to the questions.  Below are my observations.  These notes are not intended to give details of each candidate's remarks, or  guide your vote, but to start you thinking about the issues as you prepare to do your election homework.


Preparation and Organization
It's hard to focus on the key points in the one minute candidates were given to respond to each question.  But some candidates had done their homework and were able to speak to the questions with specifics while also showing their understanding of how many things were interrelated.  David Dunsmore (District 1), for instance,  linked safety issues to schools, jobs, and general community prosperity.  Chris Constant (District 1) talked about how Fairview property values are being kept low by the uncertainty of DOT's plans to connect the Seward and Glenn highways through the Fairview neighborhood.  This has also led to Fairview having none of the trail infrastructure that other parts of the city has, even though it has the highest density of pedestrians.   Suzanne LaFrance  (District 6) had prepared notes that allowed her to get a lot of content into the minute she had to answer.

Gretchen Wehmoff (District 2), when asked about public safety, pointed out that the Department of Corrections was the largest provider of mental health care.  She suggested getting people the care they need early would cut down the prison population and those heavy costs.

Other candidates seemed to talk off the top of their heads, filling in with anecdotes, or repeating the same theme with each questions.  David Nees (District 3) for instance enlightened us on the bike question by saying that no biker had been killed by a car while riding on the bike trail.


Cut the Budget
A few candidates - particularly Don Smith (District 4) and Chris Cox (District 1) - made cutting the budget their basic theme.  Smith told the group he was Mr. Tax Cap and complained about the luxurious apartments being given out to 'street drunks.'  Cox's wrap up message was that people in favor of men using women's restrooms and who like taxing and spending need to vote for someone else.  

Be A Community That Cares For Its Members
I think most acknowledged that keeping track of finances was important, but added that we needed to be a community that cares about the others in our city, which seemed to get approval from this church sponsored event audience.  They pointed out that cutting in one place, often raised costs somewhere else.

Underlying Narratives
Two competing narratives seemed to underlie many candidates' remarks.
Narrative 1:  Individuals need to be responsible for themselves, not the public.
Narrative 2:  As a community we have make sure we have physical and social infrastructures - public transportation, schools, health services - so that individuals can take responsibility for themselves.

Having grown up in a family where personal responsibility was always stressed, I agree that individuals need to learn how to be responsible.  But I recognize that  kids whose parents are substance abusers, absent, unemployed, or otherwise struggling, aren't going to learn that value without a good school system and other support systems that can help the families.  So I tend to lean toward the second narrative.

Your Homework
It doesn't require too much time to get yourself up to speed on the candidates in your district.  After the forum, I put up posts for each Assembly district with a district map, a list of each district's candidates, and links to their websites.

District 1 (Downtown) has the most candidates for Assembly anyone needs to check on -  six.
District 2 (Chugiak/Eagle River) and District 4 (Midtown) each have four candidates.
All the others,
District 3 (West Anchorage)
District 5 (East Anchorage)
District 6 (South Anchorage)  have just two candidates you need to check.

The links will get you to maps of the district, names of the candidates, and links to their websites.

You have a little more work to do - School Board seats and Propositions - and I'll get you more information on that over the next week or so.

Note:  I've added a tab on top that is indexing all these posts on the Anchorage Municipal election.

Thursday, March 16, 2017

Anchorage Assembly Race, District 6 (South Anchorage) Candidates

Sunday's (March 12, 2017) AFACT Assembly Candidates Forum was well run, well attended and gave me a good introduction to most of the assembly candidates.  As I started a post on this, it quickly became clear I ought to break this up into several different posts - starting with an intro page for each assembly district.  This is the last of the districts.  I'll try to get another post up about the forum next.

So, here's the District 6 (South Anchorage) map with a photo of the candidate who was there. (In this district, one of two.)

click on image to enlarge and focus
 

Albert Fogle (generic image) 
The other candidate, , was not at the forum so I have used this generic candidate photo.


Here are links for the two candidate websites:



Here's my posts for:
District 1 (downtown) candidates.
District 2 (Chugiak-Eagle River)
District 3 (West Anchorage)
District 4 (Midtown)
District 5 (East Anchorage)
District 6 (South Anchorage)

[Update 3/21/17:  Here's the sample ballot for District 6 voters.  Well, actually, some District 6 voters have two voters.  
If you live in Rainbow, Indian, Bird Creek, a section north of Girdwood outside the GVSA, and Portage, you also vote on adding Anchorage police service. Here's that ballot.
If you live in Girdwood, you have another ballot to annex some nearby parcels that are not in the GVSA.]

When I finish the posts for the other districts, then I'll do a post about the Sunday AFACT forum.

Wednesday, March 15, 2017

Anchorage Assembly Race, District 5 (East Anchorage) Candidates

Sunday's (March 12, 2017) AFACT Assembly Candidates Forum was well run, well attended and gave me a good introduction to most of the assembly candidates.  As I started a post on this, it quickly became clear I ought to break this up into several different posts - starting with an intro page for each assembly district.

So, here's the District 5 (East Anchorage) map with a photo of the candidate who was there. (In this district, one of two.)

click on image to enlarge and focus
    

Don Jones 
The other candidate, Don Jones, was not at the forum so I have used this generic candidate photo.


Here are links for the two candidate websites:


Here's my posts for:
District 1 (downtown) candidates.
District 2 (Chugiak-Eagle River)
District 3 (West Anchorage)
District 4 (Midtown)
District 5 (East Anchorage)
District 6 (South Anchorage)

[Update 3/21/17:  Here's the sample ballot for District 5 voters.]

When I finish the posts for the other districts, then I'll do a post about the Sunday AFACT forum.

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Assembly Repeals New Labor Law. Mayor Vetoes Their Vote

Anchorage Assembly Meeting - click to enlarge
The Assembly voted 7-4 to repeal Assembly Ordinance 37 which squeaked by last year after Assembly Chair Ernie Hall cut off public participation.  The ordinance pretty much gutted collective bargaining in Anchorage and Ernie Hall nearly got voted out of office by a write in candidate who came within several hundred votes after joining the campaign two weeks before the election.   Some have argued this was similar to the anti-union ordinances that have been pushed by the Koch brothers in places like Wisconsin.  It was a hugely divisive ordinance. 

Tonight, after a lot of testimony, the Assembly voted 7-4 to repeal the old ordinance.  This was possible because Tim Steele was elected over appointed Assembly person Cheryl Frasca and because Adam Trombley and Bill Starr, who both voted for the original legislation, tonight said there were flaws in the bill and they were willing to work with others to make a better ordinance.   Trombley and Starr voted with Dick Traini, Elvi Gray-Jackson, Paul Honeman (who was there by teleconference), Patrick Flynn, and Tim Steele. 

You can see all the Assembly profiles here
Mayor Sullivan (r)


However, as soon as the bill passed, the Mayor immediately vetoed it and had his veto already written, printed, and ready to hand out. 

The no votes sounded pretty adamant about their votes and to override the Mayor's veto requires eight votes.



Here's the veto.  I saved it as very big file so you can read it easily if you click on it.



































For me the big question is why did Starr and Trombley change their votes?  Both were strongly supported by the mayor and have voted with him on most if not all critical votes.    Both said they were willing to meet with those who so strongly opposed 37 and work out a better ordinance.

Yet I can't help think that after watching how Ernie Hall almost got beaten in the last election - by a write-in candidate no less - that they are looking out for the next election in April 2014 when their terms expire.  They can say to the unions that they voted to repeal the ordinance.  And if they did their homework and counted the votes, they knew that the ordinance would stay in place with the mayor's veto.  Starr comes from Eagle River which tends to vote pretty conservatively, so perhaps that isn't his motive.  On the other hand, I don't know how many union voters live in Eagle River and Municipal elections don't have that much of a turnout usually.  Trombley represents East Anchorage which is a lot more volatile and former state legislator Pete Petersen has already said he was going to run against Trombley.

I generally stay away from Assembly meetings.  The ones I've gone to have sucked a lot of blogger time out of me.  If I went regularly I'd have no time for anything else.  We went to the discussion on democracy and the role of government upstairs, and after we stuck our heads in to see how things were going.   So I'm not completely clear on the timeline of this.  But a petition to repeal Ordinance 37 got enough signatures.   In a video interview I did with Assembly member Dick Traini during a break in the meeting [see below], he said the Assembly plans to put the repeal measure on the April municipal ballot.  He also says the mayor plans to veto that, but he's sure the Assembly will win in court.  The elections are handled by the Municipal Clerk who works for the Assembly, not the Mayor.




But if the ballot included repeal of 37, then a lot of union folks are sure to vote.  Municipal elections - especially when there is no mayoral race - have turnouts under 20%.

So Assembly members Trombley and Starr had some incentive to repeal the measure already.  That would keep it off the ballot and not as many union members would vote.  And this way they can say they already voted to repeal it.

Interesting dynamics.

[UPDATE Jan 18, 2014:  Judge sided with the Mayor on his ability to veto the vote.]