Tuesday, March 02, 2010

Public Testimony on Operating Budget as Legislators Leave Town

Today at 1pm public testimony begins on the operating budget and it closes tomorrow.  This schedule is probably up somewhere, I got mine from a legislative staffer.  The best thing to do is check with the Legislative Information Office. 


Public testimony for the House Finance CS of the Operating Budget is scheduled as follows:
Today
1:30 – 2:30 Juneau
2:45 – 3:45 Bethel, Kotzebue, Barrow, Nome, Delta Junction, Offnets
4:00 – 5:15 Anchorage
Wednesday, March 3
1:30 – 2:45 Fairbanks
3:00 – 4:00 Sitka, Wrangell, Petersburg, Dillingham, Cordova
4:15 – 5:00 Homer, Kenai, Valdez, Ketchikan, Kodiak, Seward, Mat-Su, Glenallen, Tok
Two days.  Four hours and 45 minutes today, and three and a half hours tomorrow.  Not much time to comment on a multi-billion dollar budget.

Some legislators I talked to were upset that the notice only came yesterday and people didn't have much time to prepare.

Some other legislators say that this is on the Finance Committee's calendar in addition to the email notice that came out yesterday.  They also said generally people who are following specific bills keep track of these things and are prepared to testify.  Basically, that means, I would guess, the people who specific funding at stake in the budget and their lobbyists. 

I tend to think that even with a month's notice, the average person wouldn't be prepared to testify.  First of all, they only closed out the budgets last week.  Though the governor's proposed budget has been out a while.   The legislature's  "LAYMAN’S GUIDE TO THE BUDGET PROCESS" says: 
Even for people who have fully understand [sic] the legislative process, the budget often remains the mystery of mysteries. The appropriation process is difficult to track. Appropriations bills are lengthy and complex composed of hundreds of “line items” which must be negotiated one by one. House and Senate Finance subcommittees work out many of the details. (Ask for the list of Members of the Finance Subcommittees -- lobbying these key people can be important.) Although the subcommittees do hold public hearings, they are usually only for testimony from departmental experts. Late in the session, the subcommittee recommendations are submitted to the full House and Senate Finance Committee and the public. There is often one round of public testimony by teleconference. Generally a Joint House-Senate Conference Committee finalizes the budget late in the session. [emphasis added]


Moving on.  I have some videos to edit and post - one on the Seeds for Change program and another of Rep. Crawford on his bill to have the state buy steel today while the price is low and have it ready for the gas pipeline which will need to use a lot of steel.

I also got interviewed by one of the legislative interns who has a paper due soon on the role of the media.  She's very sharp and it should be an excellent paper.


So this is just an interim post while I get my stuff together.  

And after three days of steady drizzle to light rain, it's merely cloudy and the sun has made shadows if not completely emerged from the clouds. 

Oh yes, leaving town.  The Energy Council meeting is this week.   Here's what the AK Republican Website said about this in 2002:

Several members of the House Republican Majority will travel to Washington, D.C. this weekend to represent the state's interests as a major oil and gas producer at the annual spring meeting of the Energy Council, and to help support oil exploration in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.
"The Energy Council has always been an important forum for Alaska to represent our interests as one of the nation's top energy producing states," said Rep. Joe Green (R-Anchorage) head of the state's delegation, and a member of the Energy Council's executive committee. "With Congress debating a national energy policy that directly impacts the future of our oil and natural gas industries, it is critical for the Legislature to have a place at the table at this conference."
The Energy Council is a legislative organization of ten energy-producing states ranging from the Gulf of Mexico to the Arctic Ocean. The member states produce more than 80 per cent of United States oil and gas and include leading coal, uranium and renewable energy-producing states. Associate members include Venezuela and the Canadian provinces of Alberta and Newfoundland/Labrador.
Other members of the House Majority attending the Energy Council meeting include: Rep. Scott Ogan (R-Palmer), chair of the House Special Committee on Oil and Gas and a member of the Energy Council executive committee; Rep. John Harris (R-Valdez), member of the House Finance Committee; and Rep. Hugh Fate (R-Fairbanks) vice-chair of the House Resources Committee. Other legislators, including Rep Eldon Mulder (R-Anchorage), co-chair of the House Finance Committee, will accompany the Energy Council delegation with plans to visit members of the U.S. Senate to encourage them to support pending legislation to authorize oil exploration in ANWR.
"There is so much happening regarding energy right now that it's really in the best interest of the state to make our case clearly to any U.S. senators who still haven't seen the light on the importance of Alaska's energy to the nation's future," Green said.
The Energy Council's 2002 "Federal Energy and Environmental Matters Conference" starts Saturday and will continue through Tuesday. Among the items on the agenda are: increasing investment in the U.S. energy infrastructure; a status report on national energy legislation; forums on the impact of the national energy bill to the states; a roundtable on how the congressional committee process affects energy and environmental policy; and reviews of federal energy regulations and legislation.
State legislative sessions ordinarily scheduled for Friday and Monday will not be held, so some legislators may attend events in Washington, D.C., and other legislators may travel home to meet with constituents.

While this just talks about House Republicans, there are more than several legislators going because things are pretty much shutting down for the rest of the week.  Lisa Demer at the Anchorage Daily News writes:

JUNEAU -- Twenty-one Alaska lawmakers, including half the state Senate, are heading to Washington, D.C., this week for an energy conference that some go to year after year.
Nearly all are traveling at state expense.
The Legislature is essentially shutting down midday Wednesday. By the time lawmakers return on Monday, March 8, the 90-day legislative session that many complain is too short will have reached its 49th day . . .
Let's see, things are shutting down midday Wednesday and the second half of the public testimony on the  budget starts Wednesday at 1:30pm.  Well, according to the ADN article, about half the legislators will still be in town.  Probably members of the minority who don't have much say on the budget anyway.

J's Due Back Today, But I Wasn't Alone

Monday, March 01, 2010

Rossbacher Background and Other UA Presidential Search Notes

We only got the names late Sunday afternoon and I don't have time to do this justice, but since Dr. Rossbacher is the 'Outsider' whom
Alaskans know the least about, here's a little I've found to get  a sense about her. 

[Photo from Southern Polytechnic - President's Page.]

There's an audio interview from last August with Dr. Rossbacher at tagtvonline.

According to this audio, Dr. Rossbacher is the first woman geologist to be a college president in the United States.
Enrollment this fall is a record high of over 5,000 students. 


She's the President at Southern Polytechnic State University in Marietta, Georgia.  Their website shows a school with a heavy emphasis on engineering and technology - befitting a Polytechnic.  The five schools include:

What I notice about the University website is its transparency regarding how the university works.  There's one page that has all the (presumably) key committee minutes avaiable for the last few years, as well as a blog-like report called the Weekly Blab.  This is appears to be the page of the Vice President for Academic Affairs.  You can check out all the key committee meeting minutes and the Weekly Blab. 


The Faculty page includes a lot of links - including back to the Vice President of Academic Affairs page.  Here are some other things on that page:

Here are some things that may be of interest to new faculty:

Here are some things that may be of interest to advisors:



Text of Speeches [from the President's Page]



I did quickly glance at the resumes available from the UA President Search pages.  Here's the vital information for Dr. Rossbacher.




And for Chancellor Pugh:

Here's the same information for General Gamble: 

GambleCV/Resume (pdf)
200 dpi image
Profile (pdf)

As I said, I've focused on Rossbacher because my time is limited, but I did look at the other resumes and found this delicious typo on General Gamble's page. 

Leadership may well be his strongest suit(e), but attention to detail appears not to be.  That said,  I had a typo on an important job resume once and got the job anyway, so I don't think this is crucial.   I'm more concerned at how much of this reeks of professional public relations jargon. 

"Reputation and personal leadership philosophy synonymous 
with outstanding character and performance."

This sounds like it comes from a book of phrases with which to pad your resume.  It's not the kind of language one expects from someone "known for face-to-face, consensus building style."  But is more consistent with "unpleasant decision-making such as tough recession-proofing cost saving measures."  This is the language George Clooney used when he fired people in "Up in the Air".



I don't know the General.  He could be fantastic.  I know General Tom Case surprised us at the School of Business and Public Affairs with his decency and willingness to adjust to the University culture instead of imposing a military culture.  But he was also severely handicapped coming from a setting where he had a thousand staffers who jumped at his command and stayed up all night if necessary to complete what he asked for.  Faced with faculty who saw themselves as their own bosses and no real staff to actually get work done , my sense is that he was tremendously frustrated as Dean. 

UA Presidential Search - Speed Dating

[UPDATE March 19: All the posts on the UA President search and the APU president search can be found here.]

Last week I heard people say that Sen. Gary Stevens was on the short list for the UA President Search.  Then over the weekend I learned that Gregg Erickson's [Rebecca Braun's] Alaska Budget Report had listed six finalists.  (Let me remind readers that I'm a retired professor at UAA and have been through the process of president and chancellor searches a number of times.)  Progressive Alaska has posted a 'commentary' from two UAF faculty members assigned to Kotzebue that says that the University has been slow to share with the university community the list of finalists, even though a list was leaked [published in] through the Alaska Budget Review. (This is a subscription newsletter, so I can't link to it.)

Let's put this all in context.  The University is supposed to be an academic institution.  Traditionally university system presidents and campus chancellors are recognized scholars AND administrators.  They usually have PhD's.  And lots of experience in universities.  At the moment, none of the top positions in the University of Alaska is held by someone with a PhD.

President Hamilton is a retired Army General with a Masters Degree in English.  UAF Chancellor Rogers has a Masters Degree in Public Administration from Harvard (my field), UAA Chancellor Fran Ulmer, has a J.D. cum laude from the University of Wisconsin Law School.  UAS Chancellor John Pugh has an MSW  (Masters of Social Work) from the University of Texas, Austin.

All three Chancellors have extensive careers in the state of Alaska.  Rogers graduated from UAF and is married to a UAF graduate.  He's worked in administrative positions at the University and been a state legislator.  Ulmer was mayor of Juneau, in the state legislature, and Lt. Governor of Alaska.  Pugh has been Director of the Division of Family and Youth Services, State of Alaska, then Deputy Commissioner and Commissioner of the Alaska Department of Health and Social Services.

My academic field is public administration, so I'm strongly supportive of people who have had good administrative experience.  It is critical for the top administrator of a University.  But so is academic experience.  The Chancellor and President are the heads of organizations made of teacher/scholars.  Going through the career path of an academic so that you understand the rigors of academic research and the joys and frustrations of teaching is critical too.  I'm not one of the purists who insist on PhD's for all the heads of the campus or the system if they have unique qualifications.

However, to have all four of the top positions held by people who have not been faculty skews the balance way off.

It is also true that before President Hamilton, the university had gone a long time without budget increases.  Hamilton turned that around pretty quickly with a powerful presentation that he'd tried out around the state before taking it down to Juneau.  By the time he got before the legislators he'd heard all the questions people might ask and had convincing data rich responses to any question the legislators could throw at him.  As an ex-military man of Republican leanings, he was a match for the Republican legislature and began bringing budget increases back home from Juneau.  Budgets are important.

And in my personal experiences with him (I was a union grievance representative) I was always impressed with his willingness to listen and to respond reasonably.  I didn't do it often, but when I sent him a detailed email, I would get an equally detailed and thoughtful email in return, promptly.

He received an Academic Freedom award in 2002 from the conservative National Academy of Scholars.  More recently there has been dispute about faculty member Dr. Richard Steiner's being taken off NOAA projects because of alleged improper advocating. 

UAA faculty have chafed under characterizations attributed to Hamilton that UAF should be the doctoral degree granting campus and UAA was more of a community college, though UAA  had more students get graduate degrees than UAF.

That's some of the backdrop to the current presidential search.  I cannot recall exactly how the last presidential search was conducted, though I know that traditionally, Chancellor searchers have included search committees made up a wide spectrum of faculty, community members, and even students.

This search appears to have been conducted in a much more closed nature.  The University website has a link to a calendar for the search, but the calendar only has campus wide meetings for faculty, students, and staff to give input - last September.

Two hours and 45 minutes on September 16 in Fairbanks.
Two hours on September 18 in Anchorage.
Two hours on September 29 in Juneau (with video conference links to Ketchikan and Sitka)

That doesn't seem like a lot of time to get feedback on such an important decision. 


There's nothing after that.  I don't know if it's just that the website wasn't updated or that was it for public input.  In any case, if more input was wanted, it would have been helpful to keep the website updated.

So, the names listed on the Alaska Budget Report last week were, according to a guest post at Progressive Alaska by Kotzebue based University of Alaska faculty Susan B. Andrews and John Creed:
  • Gary Stevens, 68, State Senate President and retired UA history professor

  • Sally Johnstone, 60, VP for Academic Affairs, Winona State University in Minnesota

  • Patrick Gamble, 65, Alaska Railroad Corp. President/CEO
  • Jim Johnsen, 52, a Senior VP for Doyon, Ltd. and former aide to Mark Hamilton 

  • John Pugh, 64, UAS Chancellor since 1999
The Andrews/Creed post questioned why the University wasn't releasing the list of names since it had already been leaked [publicized] by Gregg Erickson on Thursday.

Well, Sunday afternoon, university faculty got emails with the list of finalists and the schedules for meeting the President candidates.


From: 
Date: Sun, Feb 28, 2010 at 4:20 PM
Subject: [UANews-L] CORREX UA Board of Regents announces finalists for
UA president
To: UAnews-L@lists.uaf.edu


CORRECTED VERSION--please disregard previous one

For Immediate Release
Sunday, Feb. 28, 2010

UA Board of Regents announces finalists for UA president Campus visits begin Monday

The University of Alaska Board of Regents announces the following finalists for the UA president position:

•       Lisa A. Rossbacher, president of Southern Polytechnic State University in Marietta, Georgia, part of the University System of Georgia, since 1998; and a professor of geology;

•       Patrick K. Gamble, president and chief executive officer of the Alaska Railroad Corp. since 2001; and a retired four-star Air Force general;

•       and John R. Pugh, chancellor of the University of Alaska Southeast since 1999, former UAS dean of faculty, education, liberal arts and sciences; and former state Health and Social Services commissioner.

Photos and complete resumes of each finalist are posted on the board’s presidential search website, at www.alaska.edu/bor/pres-search/.

Board Chair Cynthia Henry said the selection process is challenging. “We received many solid applications from well-qualified individuals, both within the state and from the Lower 48,” Henry said. “It’s been a difficult and lengthy process, narrowing the field down to these few. Now we look forward to hearing from our various stakeholders as we move to the next stage of our search---selecting a president to lead the University of Alaska System.”

The finalists will begin a tour of the UA system’s three largest campuses Monday morning, providing the candidates with numerous opportunities to meet students, faculty, staff, community members, business owners, alumni, local officials and elected local and state leaders.

The board encourages members of the public to attend the evening public presentations in each community as well, though public members are welcome at campus sessions if evening presentations are not convenient.

Feedback forms will be available at all venues for university stakeholders and the public to provide opinions on the three finalists.

The finalists will visit the University of Alaska Fairbanks tomorrow, Monday, March 1; the University of Alaska Anchorage Tuesday, March 2; and the University of Alaska Southeast Wednesday, March 3. See the above website for detailed itineraries of each campus visit.

“We want to hear from our university stakeholders as well as the public about who they think could best lead this complex institution,” said the board’s vice chair, Tim Brady. “UA offers everything from workforce training certificates to four-year degrees, master’s degrees, doctoral degrees and post-doctoral research opportunities. The UA system provides a $1 billion influx annually into Alaska’s economy and is responsible for educating and training some 30,000 students each year—most of whom are Alaskans. We want a well-qualified president to follow the fine leadership and enthusiasm we’ve seen under Mark Hamilton the last 12 years.”

Hamilton announced last June his intention to retire in 2010. He and his wife Patty plan to remain in Alaska, but hope to spend more time with their children and grandchildren, as well as enjoy more opportunities to hunt, fish and enjoy the outdoors.

The board will consult with its statewide advisory committee on Thursday (for membership of that panel, check the board’s presidential search website). The regents will then meet again March 15 to discuss and possibly choose a final candidate. A public announcement would follow sometime after that.

For information on the search, visit the Board of Regents’ website at www.alaska.edu/bor/pres-search/.


Let's look at this closer:


The finalists will begin a tour of the UA system’s three largest campuses Monday morning, providing the candidates with numerous opportunities to meet students, faculty, staff, community members, business owners, alumni, local officials and elected local and state leaders.
But the schedules on the links seem to contradict this characterization of "numerous opportunities."

In past Chancellor searches, candidates had two or three days on campus, and candidates were almost never on campus the same time.  Faculty and students and community members and staff had multiple opportunities for in-depth interaction with candidates during the visits - there were even opportunities for one-on-one visits in some cases.  Meetings in the past allowed each constituency to meet separately with the candidates so they could go into depth about issues of special concern to them.  There were also more generalized meetings where the audiences were more mixed.

APU, the private university down the street from UAA, also had a President Search this school year.  They had each candidate up for several days of intense interaction with faculty, students, and alumni and donors. 

But in UA's search, all three candidates will be on campus at the same time and constituents won't have a lot of time to get to know them. 

Each group will have 45 minutes to meet and get a sense of the candidates in Fairbanks Monday. 

And there will be another 40 minutes in the evening for the community members.  There will be an extra 40 minutes to talk with Patrick K. Gamble who is the only one to have a slot with no one else meeting at the same time.

The announcement went out Sunday afternoon, so it might make it into the newspapers Monday morning.  And the meetings are already starting Monday afternoon in Fairbanks. 

Tuesday is UAA Day.  Five constituent groups have been identified to have 45 minutes with the candidates:
  • Governance Groups
  • Students 
  • Faculty and staff
  • Alumni
  • USUAA (student government)
Presumably if someone didn't have any classes to go to, they could see two of the candidates twice.

There's a two hour community reception at the Convention Center from 6-8pm too. 

In Juneau, there is a lot more time on the ground.  Here, the candidates will meet with specific academic units.  The Schedule is too big for me to get you a legible screen shot, but you can get the pdf yourself here.  So each of these groups is scheduled for 30 minutes with each candidate:
  • School of Arts  &  Sciences
  • School of  Education
  • Student  Government
  • School of Career Education
  • Faculty Senate
  • School of Management
  • Juneau Campus Advisory Council
  • Staff Council
Plus each candidate has 45 minutes at an Open Forum.  So presumably, people in Juneau, after spending their allotted 90 minutes could get another 120 minutes by visiting other sessions.  Plus another hour at an open session.  That's a little more time to assess a candidate.  Plus there are two and a half hours more in the evening at Centennial Hall for "the Juneau Community and Legislature."

So Juneau, where people presumably know one of the candidates pretty well - UAS Chancellor John Pugh - gets the most time to see the candidates and in smaller groups.  But they also get the candidates at the end of a three day whirlwind tour.  They'll be pretty tired by the time they get to Juneau.  Assuming the airport isn't fogged in Wednesday.

Compared to past searches, at least for Chancellors (as I said, I just don't remember what happened when Hamilton was hired), the Board of Regents is holding this decision pretty close to the vest.  While Pugh is a known commodity - at least in Juneau - and Gamble (head of the Alaska Railroad and former Air Force General) has been in Alaska long enough for people to be able to check up on him, Dr. Rossbacher is pretty much an unkown entity.

[UPDATE March 8:  An Anchorage Daily News article says that in January 1998 the Board of Regents held an emergency meeting after Pres. Komisar announced his resignation, and said they would do the search themselves.  There were two finalists who each spent their own day on campus.  The article said this was a break from previous searches where a committee made up of some regents and university employee and public members conducted the search.  The article is archived and may require a password.]

There are other questions that come to mind:

Did Erikson get the list wrong last Thursday? (One of the finalists was NOT on his list)
Or did the Regents shuffle it to make it look like he was wrong?

My guess is that Gamble is the designated candidate.  They really like Generals.  The approach to academia in recent years, has been to apply a market model to universities and to see students as "customers."    I'm a very strong advocate for faculty who make their students a high priority and who get to know them well enough to move them from where they are to where they need to be understand and master the concepts and skills.  But I don't buy the logical next step of "the customer is always right." It simply does not work in an academic setting.

The closed process with just a short window of access to only the final three candidates has several potential negative consequences:
1.  There isn't much time for faculty, staff, students, the media, and community members to do any independent background checking on the candidates.  As the George Sullivan example (see 3rd paragraph from the bottom) from the early 80s proves, this can be costly.
2.  The new president is going to have to work a lot harder to win the confidence of the faculty, students, and staff, simply because the process has been so exclusionary, with this brief show and tell at the end.
3.  It suggests to faculty (and probably the others) that they aren't taken seriously enough to give them a real chance to be involved in this process.  

On the other hand, sometimes the best procedure comes up with nothing good, and bad procedure comes up with winners.  Though I don't think the odds favor this.  UA searches have been known to drag on forever.  In this process the email suggests the decision could come in by March 15.  (Don't these people read Shakespeare?  I just saw Julius Ceasar knifed last week at Juneau's Theater in the Rough.)

Even APU, which had an expedited search process, didn't skimp when it came to introducing the candidates to their community.  Which all leads me to believe that this is just for show and they pretty much know who they want.

Birds!! I Used to Post Birds. Surf Scoters Today.

I kept waiting for the the steady drizzle to be less visible before going out to run Sunday.  I could see it coming down, but I couldn't capture the rain on my camera.  But eventually I took off and this time in a new direction as I started out to Thane Road, which heads south of downtown.  My legs felt like I had weights on them.  I got down to the cruise ship docks and saw a flock of black birds in the water. 







For the birders, the video has them swimming in various formations, diving, and surfacing.  There's also some interaction with some gulls that I don't quite understand.  Are they all in the same place because there was food below the surface?  Did the gulls come because they saw the scoters?  Did their presence affect each other's behavior?  Did the dive because the gulls flew in?  Why did the last one stay on the surface?  Was he a lookout?  So many questions.  But I thoroughly enjoyed the time I spent out there watching the birds. 



I don't have gulls in the heading.  Once I learned that they change colors almost every year until they are adults, I gave up on trying to identify anything but mature gulls.  And I'm making the (probably incorrect) assumption that if they are grey/brown like this, they are still immature. 

Sunday, February 28, 2010

Alaska Medicaid Trends - Report By Janet Clark to House Finance


How to present all this information?  Back to the Fire Hose analogy.  I've got my notes while I was there.  I could also try to go through and pick out key points, plus there was the Powerpoint presentation and the Report and Janet Clarke emailed me copies of those today.
So, the easiest way is to give you the Executive Summary.  And then I'll give you my written notes of the mostly questions and answers from the committee members.  The previous post gave a short summary of what people in this meeting said about ways to control costs of Medicaid.

You can also listen to the audio of the meeting from Gavel to Gavel.




EXECUTIVE SUMMARY (from the Report by Clarke)

PURPOSE
In January 2010 the House Finance committee requested consulting assistance to review Medicaid expenditures and projections (which are expected to spike by 17% in FY2010) to better understand the cause of the increase and impacts on budgets. 

 

Three questions were asked
  1. What caused the large increase in Expenditures from FY2009 to FY2010 and why did it happen?
  2. What is an appropriate level to budget for Medicaid spending in FY2010?
  3. What is an appropriate level to budget for Medicaid spending in FY2011?

METHODOLOGY

Several different sources of data including Medicaid spending, enrollment, recipients, Food Stamp caseloads, Alaska Population trends, and the Consumer Price indices were used in the analysis.  Interviews with State officials supplemented the data.

ANALYSIS 

Medicaid spending is based on three main components:  
  • PRICE
  • RECIPIENTS
  • UTILIZATION
       
Each of these components has been analyzed for their impact on Medicaid spending. 
Expenditure trends were developed and spending over time was analyzed.  Reviews were completed of the current budget supplemental budget request and FY2010 and FY2011 forecasts by the Department of Health and Social Services were analyzed.

CONCLUSIONS
Over 11,000 more Children are now enrolled in the Medicaid program than they were one year ago, causing the substantial spike in the budget.
Recipients (those who use services) grew at a slower pace than enrollees.
The cause of the increase is primarily tied to Economic conditions (Unemployment rate at 8.8%) and Alaska’s population increase.
Other factors such as price and utilization also contributed to the increase.
The most recent monthly trends in Medicaid spending show a slowing of expenditures.
RECOMMENDED LEVELS OF SPENDING
Recommended FY2010 Supplemental:     
  • $36.8 Million GF (General Fund)(Alaska Pays)
  • $37.7 Million Fed (US pays)
  • $74.1 Million TOTAL
[NOTE:  This is a recomendation for a SUPPLEMENTAL Increase.  The Total is below:]

Recommended
FY2011 Medicaid Budget:   [FY 2011 = Fiscal Year 2011, which goes from June 2010-June 2011]
  • $    441.6 Million GF
  • $ 1,318.2 Million TOTAL

My notes convey the back and forth between the committee members and the people presenting.   And the questions you surely have from the above are discussed.   I've tried to clean up the typos.


KEY PLAYERS Janet Clarke  was hired by the Finance Committee to review the department budget proposals on Medicaid.  She used to work in the Department and if I got things right, she left about two years ago.  She clearly knew what she was doing.  And the Finance Committee clearly respected her knowledge.

Finance Committee Members: 

CO-CHAIR: Representative Hawker CO-CHAIR:Rep Stoltze  Absent
VICE-CHAIR: Representative Thomas
MEMBER:Representative Austerman
MEMBER:Representative Fairclough
MEMBER:Representative Joule  Absent
MEMBER:Representative Kelly Absent
MEMBER:Representative Doogan
MEMBER:Representative N.Foster
MEMBER:Representative Gara
MEMBER:Representative Salmon 
So, Janet Clarke came up to present her report.  The rest is my running notes, which I've gone through to highlight and clean up spelling a bit.  But recognize these are a ROUGH RECORD not a true record.  You get here Clarke's presentation (without the charts) and the questions and answers.

Clarke:  Page 1 of Report: Page 3 - Medicaid declined 2007 and 2008, without cut in service, in part due to good economy, but also cost cutting.

But itʻs back up now. Terms like FMAP  - Federal Medicaid Authorized Percentage - is the federal matching rate.  Alaskaʻs FMPA would have fallen to 50% but the Economic Stimulus Bill (ARRA) increased the rate to 61.12%.Asst When the stimulus FMAP goes away in 2011, the state will be faced with another $100 million.

Thomas:  You mentioned tribal.  Without them, how big would this be? Clarke:  Itʻs about $150 million. Salmon:  We had a report from non-profits out of Anchorage and mentioned the state was funding their program - about $1 million.  Do you know what area of the state that is coming from?

Clarke:  I do not.

Doogan:  So I can understand this, if this were a 50/50 match, it would be about $900 million each, but because itʻs 60/40 it would be lower, but the stateʻs share would still be higher than now.  Is that because some of the programs are 100% Fed?

Clarke:  Youʻre absolutiley right, some are 100%, some 90% and other formulas.

Doogan:  If we go back to 50/50 - how much is it going to jump up?

Clarke:  It will depend on the National formula.  Iʻve seen numbers from $100-120 million.

Clarke:  Factors that determine the spending.  Itʻs an entitlement program.  If people are eligible, they can get the services. Slide: 

Three components of growth:  Price, Population (Enrollment and Recipients) and Utilization.

Part I:  Price: 
1.  Change in CPI. [Consumer Price Index] Now 3% is general cost increase. 2.  Physician rate increases are within normal CPI, but this cost was beyond the CPI.  There were changes in the Medicaid formula that increased Dental rates by 5% and the second which increased medical rates by 15%.  The medical rate increase wasn't anticipated and was linked to a change in the formula the feds use to calculate rates.

Part II:  Population:
1.  Enrollment in Medicaid     
children  , adults, seniors
- main growth is children     Medicaid children monthly enrollment (6100 increase July 09-Dec 09)     
- red Denali Kid Care (2300)(150-175%)     
-grey Regular poverty level (about 9000) [I'm not sure what these numbers mean, perhaps I got them wrong - I think she was dividing the kids into those who got Denali Kid Care and those who qualified through poverty.  But the numbers don't add up.]

Hawker:  Timing on chart is that the low point was last January and so the increase began after we funded last year.

Clarke:  Part III - Recipients - those covered who actually use it. (Medicaid Recipients Chart) Children, Disabled Adults, Adults, Elderly, Disabled children Medicaid Children Monthly Recipients: Last January trend was declining, then it hit.

So, itʻs the children that are increasing.  How to measure?
1.  Look at numbers of enrollees and look at how many use services?  2009 97% used services.
2.  Look at costs/medicaid enrollee. 2006-2009  fairly stable.  About $8200 per enrollee. 2010 - Three models.
a)  high forecast - >$9000 for FY2000
b) low forecast (really moderate, I wouldnʻt call it low)
c) check write and thatʻs $8243(?)

Austerman - thru 2008 actual?  Yes.  2010 been what so far?

Clarke:  Between checkwrite and low projection.

Austerman - pretty much following the trend

Clarke:  Couple things. 
1)  in spring spending accelerates 
2) Also some programs that department pays lump sum payments - some tribal payments and others, special one to API, and thatʻs not taken into account.

Austerman:  so that number will continue to go up?

Clarke:  Yes

What are the factors that led to increase?
Price:  about 3% Population:  11,000 more kids enrolled, about 5% Utilization:  a little bit

Whatʻs causing this?  Alaska Public Assistance Caseload Trends.
Economy is having an impact. Food stamps and medicaid growth almost exactly the same.  FS is a leading indicator, shows where medicaid enrollment will go

Gara:  Food stamps qualifier?  150%

Salmon:  Simple, yellow line on the bottom is what?

Clarke:  ATAP & Tribal TANF  - itʻs very stable and has been great success, Welfare reform set 5 year limit. Alaska Temporary Assistance Program - Remarkable decline in that program.

Clarke:  Dept. of Labor website - Alaska population grew at highest rate in years, birthrate highest since 1992.  Previous studies.  Medicaid pays for 40-50% of births in Alaska.  So population has contributed to cost increase. Delayed impact from SB 27, 2007, Denali Kid Care Program, had been at a 200% Poverty level and was change in 2003 to 175%.  But changed to fixed rate, whatever the number in 2003 = 175%  but in 2007 it actually was 150% of poverty level.  So in 2007, they put it into the law that it was 175%.  They thought kids would return by 2008.  There was a delayed impact.

Last thing:  Two issues that have garnered a lot of media attenion
1. H1N1
2.  Health Care reform These seem to increase utilization

Salmon:  Why is the Adult Public Assistance a straight line?

Clarke:  Itʻs for elderly

Foster:  Would be interesting to see correlation between cost of energy and utilization.  Also, looking at this geographically - urban or rural?

Clarke:  One good thing about Medicaid program:  They have data.  You can get any info you like, just depends how deep you want to drill. 

Hawker:  Medicaid democraphics follow Alaska Demographics.  In urban areas, youʻll see - itʻs not that the services are different between rural and urban - if they are in rural Alaska and they have access to native health care, theyʻll get 100% from the feds.  This allows the state to afford more for the rest of the state.  And transportation costs are high.  And feds keep asking about transportation costs because they are so high.

Chart:  Medicaid Projections Three different monthly forecasts.  Which is most accurate? April 2008 high forecast 1.13Billion for FY 2008, low $984.   Come together in June when we get the actual spending Jan 2010:  suggests 1.26 billion 1.2 and 1.16 Billion. Chart:  Monthly Medicaid Spending Goes back to October 2008.  Weekly trends, but shown as monthly.

Fairclough:  p. 17 after birthrate in Alaska, State lost three cases that were restricted by 2006 intent v. court ruling on controlling costs.

Clarke:  Dept of Law Iʻm sure will talk to you.  When the intent went into place, it dropped and has slowly come back up.  Urge Leg. to consider.
1.  Because of special stimulus FMAP.  If we accept the money, we canʻt cut eligible for services.
2.  I think in the future if Legislature needs to contain costs, will have to put it in legislation.  Legislative intent is just legislative intent.  Having lived through cost containments, there will be challenges by people being cut.

Fairclough:  Want to know what was reinstated and how that related to intent?

Clarke:  Austermanʻs earlier question.  $682 million since Jan. 2010.  Thatʻs $1.2 billion for the year if it continues. 

Gara:  People w/o health insurance going to emergency room.  Those people arenʻt even covered by medicaid.

Clarke:  If they do go in and then qualify for medicaid theyʻre signed up, but ask the department.

Austerman:  Please repeat numbers Clarke:  getting close to $1.2 billion figure. Next charts boring.  Just numbers.  Medicaid Supplemental Alternatives $88.4 million.  that would be $1.264 billion.  I think it is trending to $1.2 billion, about $64 million less, but Iʻm sensitive to the unexpected.  I recommend give them this extra cushion.  That would save $7 million in general funds.

Hawker:  Making judgment calls around the margins.

Gara:  This isnʻt going to impact their costs, just whether there is a supplemental.

Clarke:  This is the supplemental.

Gara:  Through June.  Youʻre hoping theyʻll need $70 million less.  But whether you are right or they are right, it wonʻt affect the actual costs.

Clarke:  I was asked to give my best guess.  But youʻre right Medicaid spending is what it is.

Gara:  If we overestimate, they wouldnʻt overspend it, right?

Clarke:  Typically, there are controls.  This isnʻt to say there arenʻt transfers.  But this department has been historically upfront and returning any extra.

Foster:  Dept. basically is guessing $88 million and youʻre recommending we come in at $74 million.  This is the low forecast plus 2%. Austerman:  Does this increase their starting base next yearʻs budget.

Clarke:  No, it does not affect the base.

Hawker:  it doesnʻt affect the base.

Foster:  You said in response to Gara that Medicaid is what it is.  But one area we do have control.  If there were more facilities around the state IHS, then the state would be paying less of that 50% correct?

Clarke:  I think youʻre correct on an individual basis. FY 2011:  Last Page:  FY 2011 Medicaid Budget: DHSS & Consultant Comparison Both come to the same place.  We get there through different paths.  I think weʻll spend less this year.  I think Medicaid will grow 12% this year and about 7% next year.  (not 100% sure of the numbers.)  Yes, these are large numbers and they are reasonable.

Austerman:
1.  I want to go back and look at containment issues and how they were handled back to 07 and 08.
2.  Behoove us to look at FMAP and changes needed at end of that, possibility of legislation...?

Gara:  Follow up on Rep. Fosterʻs question.  Lack of education.  The IHS funding, if you qualify it is 100% payment.  If it happens in IHS facility that helps us a lot.  Iʻm not clear if someone who qualifies goes to Providence, can you qualify automatically if you go to a non IHS facility?

Clarke:  No.  Has to be in qualified IHS facility.

Gara:  Is there a saving if there are more IHS facilities.

Clarke:  Looking at long term care and nursing homes, there are few in rural Alaska, thatʻs the one area you have.

Hawker:  Let Ms. Clarke off the stand.

Doogan:  I still donʻt get the big spike in medicaid costs that begins in 2009.  3% CPI increase, but not for long.  Some charge changes but not tht big.  Population graph - medicaid recipients total - those trend lines are flat or going down.  Then utilization, I donʻt actually see a particular chart here, but if the other two arenʻt doing it, it has to be more people using the service.

Clarke:  If you go to page 10.  I didnʻt put all charts in powerpoint presentation.  In the Report


Switch to the Commissioner and two Deputy Commissioners:
Bill Hogan Commissioner 
Alison Elgee Assistant Commissioner Finance Management Services
Bill Streur Deputy Commissioner for Medicaid & Health Care Policy

Commissioner Hogan:  If anyone knows this, itʻs Janet and I think itʻs an excellent report. Respond to Rep. Doogan.  Page 13. This is serious stuff.  We take this very seriously.  Iʻve spoken with the Gov.  who committed to the Leg. Leadership to look at this for FY 12. Economic Stimulus.  We have the enhanced FMAP rate through Jan. 2011.  Various things that extend that through June 2011. 

So beginning FY 2012, weʻll need about $125 million more.  (was that billion?) You can see there were circumstances occurring - change in unemployment rate.  26% increase inf food stamps and 9% unemployment. Best way to address this is economic development and more jobs.  As jobs are developed, but we also provide many safety net programs.  Medicaid is one of them.

Hawker:  to your last comments.  Would like to give your clairvoyant, Mr. Streuer, I would like to eat some crow.  Last year you did warn us there was a change on the horizon.  We were looking at the trends to the data points up to the point when we sat here.  Mr. Streuer, I donʻt know how you did it, but you predicted the state economy better than anyone else.
Disclosure:  Heʻs also one of my constituents.

Fairclough:  If we cross tab unemployment and  industries that they are coming from - construction academy, health industry, retail outlet?

Hogan:  Itʻs possible, we have data on people leaving public assistance rolls and where they might go.

Austerman:  What kind of analysis can we get if we have 9% unemployment and itʻs higher Outside, are people moving here to get work? 

My fingers are getting tired.

Salmon: Today I got call from DOT and two days ago from DOL, theyʻre coming back with answers.

Hogan: Cost containment measures several years ago. ONly those eligible were actually getting the program and were only getting the right amount of service. We scrutinized that carefully.

Hawker: We were getting documentation of serious abuses.

Hogan: Absolutely correct. We began to reduce hours people eligible for. Some legal entities felt we didnʻt have legal criteria, objective criteria for determining that. One of the lawsuits. The technical term is ʻmaterial improvementʻ. Since then weʻve adopted a more defendable tool. If you have further qustions, Stacy Crayley? at Department of Law can help.

Hawker: Weʻre trying to encapsualte 8 years of budget reviews into a two hour abstract.

Hogan: REspond to Gara about emergency rooms. Our providers, get the person to sign up if they are eligible, and that eligibility is retroactive. But there are many individuals who do not qualify for medicaid and who do not have insurance. Hospitals are not compensated.

Gara: Iʻm not going to pretend there is some easy solution there. Is that a significant expense and if it is, is there a way to redirect them to less costly service.

Mr. Streuer: Frequent flyers - people who use emergency in lieu of personal physician which could be dealt with much lower costs. We can identify these people and try to put them in touch with primary care provider. To avoid this. Constant problem. New system will give greater lattitude to identify. A couple areas weʻre looking at: Medical home. Assigning someone to work with a particular provider and get all their care through that provider. IHS facility and ocmmunity health centers willing to step forward.

Gara: Anything in the works in cost savings relating to Rep. Fosters comment about getting more federal funding through use of IHS programs.

Streuer: Ongoing program. Itʻs money in the bank.

Gara: Using Neighborhood Health Center. Hard to make an appointment, first come first served, so people go to emergency room.

Doogan: Look at anual medical spending, looks like in 2000 Medicaid was an inoffensive $600 million and in ten years has gone up 100% and in next two years it will have tripled in those 12 years. At some point Iʻll need that answer before the budget leaves the committee.

Hawker: 2003 legislature, remember chart we saw where it was marching upward. I asked. Then they said Iʻm not sure why, it just keeps growing. We intuitively knew it was those three components. We attempted to fund, but took a while, an appropriation for agency to engage consultant to analyze system to look at causal factors. To see how we might contain costs. I think a year or two before - you were working as a staffer - people were looking at 20 years having a $3billion medicaid program. I take pride that we have leveled and stabilized the program. I donʻt think itʻs that mysterious. Med costs are going up like crazy, population going up like crazy.

Allison Elgee, Asst for HHS: Department did develop a model. Annually you get a report with a ten year look assuming no changes. Weʻre looking at a program in 20 years it will be $3.5 billion. We arenʻt talking about reducing meicaid, were talking about bending the curve.

Another point to clarify, need to replace $120 costs in funds that disappear, thatʻs before projection for growth. so it will be higher.

Foster:
1.  how many IHS qualified patients are seen under medicaid program?
2. In trying to save money. Hospital near native population incurring costs fo $10 million and all qualify and FMAP is 50%, can state pay for IHS facilities? And shift the costs to the feds.

Hogan:
1. Yes, very specific info about IHS beneficiaries who are eligible for medicaid etc. and we can give you that.
2. Longterm facilities in Anchorage, Bethel and ?? With help of legislature weʻve given these facilities capital monies.

Austerman: Iʻm not out to take anything away from anyone at this time. But if I understand Janetʻs presentation. Partly set on how we set the eligibility. At one time we fixed it at 175% of poverty level and then it drove back down, but then it generated more kids coming into the system. It behooves us in the long term to look at price of oil and dribble coming out of oil pipeline, somewhere weʻre going to have to figure how these two points cross. Not going to do it in this budget cycle.

Hawker: this conversation is a recurring theme. Iʻm musing philosophically on the record, always dangerous, within the stte budget, we the leg were having the biggest difficulty with University for a number of reason. Way to address that was to restructure the subcommittee and have those sessions directly without being filtered. Iʻd be telling this committe to comtemplate doing the same and looking at this as a committee as a whole since it has great economic challenges.

Hogan. With you, it helps that you understand our budget. We have confidence we can do something about this, not helpless. We can bend the curve. We arenʻt helpless. We can insure people get quality services, but bring this under control. There will be painful decisions and we need to work together. The Gov. is absolutely committed.

Hawker: No bearing at all on Rep. Jouleʻs handling of that subcommittee.

Fairclough: Bending the curve. Invest truly in what is harming Alaskans in many ways. Some are duplicated. They access as many services as possible to find help, and not in a very cost effective way. Trying to find relieve. Housing and everything else. Suggest to Austermann. Instead of bending the curve, maybe we throw everything out of the box onto the floor to produce a totally different curve. Bending the curve doesnʻt work for me. Waiting on prevention only costs us more dollars exponentially.

Hogan: Echo Rep. Faircloughʻs comments on prevention. A challenge. Medicaid doesnʻt pay for prevention. Have to think of other ways to affect number of people eligible for medicaid.

[NOTE:  THESE ARE VERY ROUGH NOTES.  LISTEN TO THE AUDIO (ABOVE) FOR A WORD FOR WORD ACCOUNT.]

Controlling Medicaid Costs (Short Summary from House Finance Report)

Intro:
I'm going to do two or three posts on Friday's Finance Committee Hearing on Medicaid Costs.  This is "single greatest line item of state spending."  So,
  • it is very complicated (but not impossible)
  • it is important for Alaskans to understand
  • the information provided at the hearing made things fairly easy to understand
This post is introductory, brief, and an looks at ways to control costs.   This is stuff most people hide from because it seems too difficult to grasp.  I challenge you to read this post carefully.  It's short.  It should give you some handles for starting to understand this issue.  The next post will offer my rough notes of the actual presentation so you can see the kinds of questions that legislators asked and the answers they got.  This post is extracted from that. 

What Happened Friday and Why?
The House Finance Committee commissioned, Janet Cooke, a former Health and Social Services employee, to evaluate the HHS' supplementary budget request for $88 million for Medicaid. (Supplementary budget means coming back mid year after seeing actual costs and adding to the original budget.)  They wanted to know:

  1. What caused the increase from FY 2009 to FY 2010?  (Fiscal Year 2009.  Alaska State fiscal years begin July 1 the year before - for FY 2009 that would be July 1, 2008)
  2. How much should the legislature add to the existing FY 2010 budget? (This year has already been budgeted so how much will the Department need to cover the costs? *
  3. How much should the legislature spend for the next FY (2011)?
Two Terms

*Medicaid is an entitlement program.  This means if people meet the criteria for the program, they are eligible for services.  Thus the cost is not predictable.  If more people qualify (lose their jobs) or if those qualified get sick more, or if prices rise, the State is still obligated to pay and the costs will rise.

Also, the state shares these costs with the federal government.  FMAP stands for Federal Medicaid Authorized Percentage - the federal matching rate.  Alaskaʻs FMAP would have fallen to 50% (this year, I think) but the Economic Stimulus Bill (ARRA) [American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009] increased the rate to 61.12%, meaning the federal government will pay 61.12% and the state 38.88%.  (Actually there are different formulas for different populations and programs.  So, for instance, Alaska Natives treated in an IHS facility get 100% federal reimbursement.)



Control of Costs:

Medicaid is an entitlement program.  If people are eligible, they are entitled.  So if the pool of eligible people increases, the costs go up.  That leaves limited options.  Here are some of the options I heard discussed at the hearing:

1.  Alaska Natives treated at IHS (Indian Health Service) facilities are covered 100% by Medicaid.  Therefore, the more Alaska Natives get care at IHS facilities, the less the state has to pay.  Thus there are several places where the state has some leverage:
  • Helping set up IHS facilities in places where large numbers of Alaska Natives live but can't get to IHS care.  The issue of longterm care came up as one with the most potential, because now there are few or no such facilities in rural Alaska.
  • Encourage Alaska Natives to use IHS facilities
As one legislator said, because of the IHS Alaska Natives get 100% paid by the federal government, and that leaves more money for non-Native Alaskan care.

2.  Prevent small problems from escalating into large problems
  • Make more preventive care available.  (I believe it was Clarke who pointed out that Medicaid won't pay for this)
  • Make primary care facilities (including quick access) available in communities so that people go to primary care doctors instead of emergency rooms. 
  • Develop the economy, create jobs so that people move out of poverty and get health insurance
These ways that the State can affect Medicaid costs are just one issue that arose in the Friday hearing on Medicaid costs of the House Finance Committee.  I'll put up at least one other posts on this.  It is complicated, but Janet Clarke's report helps a great deal.

Getting a sense of Medicaid costs - a huge part of the Alaska State budget ($1.2 Billion) - is not that hard.  There will be repetition in the next posts, but I'm finding that the repetition is critical in my own understanding of this.

Saturday, February 27, 2010

If Thoreau Had a Blog - "will not any endeavor to cure the brain-rot"

A Juneau friend has lent me a book of poetry edited by Robert Bly.  I've never been particularly attracted to Bly, but there are a lot of poems by different poets in this book.  The Rag and Bone Shop of the Heart is subtitled "Poems for Men."  Except this piece by Thoreau is prose.

And I can't find, in the book, where this piece is from.  There's a copyright section at the end, but I guess this is old enough that the rights were public.  Fortunately, today, unlike 1992 when the book was published, I can easily find the source through Google.  It's little, but cumulative, issues like this, that I think have soured me on Bly.   In any case, Google tells me this is from the conclusion of Walden Pond.  So you can read what I left out, plus the rest of Waldon Pond at the link if you choose.

I fear chiefly lest my expression may not be extravagant enough, may not wander far enough beyond the narrow limits of my daily experience, so as to be adequate to the truth of which I have been convinced. Extra vagance! it depends on how you are yarded. . .
I desire to speak somewhere without bounds; like a man in a waking moment, to men in their waking moments; for I am convinced that I cannot exaggerate enough even to lay the foundation of a true expression. Who that has heard a strain of music feared then lest he should speak extravagantly any more forever?
Why level downward to our dullest perception always, and praise that as common sense? The commonest sense is the sense of men asleep, which they express by snoring. Sometimes we are inclined to class those who are once-and-a-half-witted with the half-witted, because we appreciate only a third part of their wit. Some would find fault with the morning red, if they ever got up early enough. "They pretend," as I hear, "that the verses of Kabir have four different senses; illusion, spirit, intellect, and the exoteric doctrine of the Vedas"; but in this part of the world it is considered a ground for complaint if a man's writings admit of more than one interpretation. While England endeavors to cure the potato-rot, will not any endeavor to cure the brain-rot, which prevails so much more widely and fatally?

Would this Thoreau's blog have any readers today?  How would he have written this today?  Would he think, perhaps that today we have taken his call for extravagance a bit too far?  Or not far enough?   I'm sure he would still be railing against the limits of common sense and brain-rot. 

From Boloji:  

Six hundred years ago Kabir was born in India in 1398 AD. He lived for 120 years and is said to have relinquished his body in 1518. This period is also said to be the beginning of Bhakti Movement in India.

A weaver by profession, Kabir ranks among the world's greatest poets. Back home in India, he is perhaps the most quoted author. The Holy Guru Granth Sahib contains over 500 verses by Kabir. The Sikh community in particular and others who follow the Holy Granth, hold Kabir in the same reverence as the other ten Gurus.

Kabir openly criticized all sects and gave a new direction to the Indian philosophy. This is due to his straight forward approach that has a universal appeal. It is for this reason that Kabir is held in high esteem all over the world. To call Kabir a universal Guru is not an over exaggeration. To me personally, the very name Kabir means Guru's Grace. 

And from Sacred-Texts:

The Vedas

There are four Vedas, the Rig Veda, Sama Veda, Yajur Veda and Atharva Veda. The Vedas are the primary texts of Hinduism. They also had a vast influence on Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism. Traditionally the text of the Vedas was coeval with the universe. Scholars have determined that the Rig Veda, the oldest of the four Vedas, was composed about 1500 B.C., and codified about 600 B.C. It is unknown when it was finally committed to writing, but this probably was at some point after 300 B.C.
The Vedas contain hymns, incantations, and rituals from ancient India. Along with the Book of the Dead, the Enuma Elish, the I Ching, and the Avesta, they are among the most ancient religious texts still in existence. Besides their spiritual value, they also give a unique view of everyday life in India four thousand years ago. The Vedas are also the most ancient extensive texts in an Indo-European language, and as such are invaluable in the study of comparative linguistics.

Friday, February 26, 2010

Did I Mention How Beautiful Juneau Is?

I got to sleep in and didnʻt get up til 9am. Then I worked on some posts and since the sun was shining again, went for a run.

It turned out that in the Channel it was foggy again.

 
Since I met that geologist while I was taking a picture 
like this, there will be no stopping me.



On the way back the creek was generating its own fog.




And when I got home, the crocus had opened.  I guess this is included in the rent.  The stigmaʻs bright orange reminded me that crocus stigmas are the source of saffron.  But it turns out not just any crocus.  From Local Harvest:
The expensive saffron spice that you buy in the store is the dried female portion (stigma) of the Saffron Crocus. Why not grow your own? Saffron is the world's most expensive spice. Fortunately the home gardener only needs a couple dozen Saffron Crocus to produce enough saffron for some occasional dishes throughout the year. The corms will multiply each year, and to prevent overcrowding, corms are divided every 4 to 5 years. Saffron is grown mostly as a culinary and medicinal herb, having been cultivated for at least 4,000 years. Historically saffron has also been used as a natural dye for hair and natural fabrics, and for use in perfumes. Medicinal: Traditional use for its spasmolytic and sedative effects. Ornamental: Saffron blooms in mid-fall, producing exquisite brightly colored, lilac-purple blooms, each with three vibrant red stigmas. Even if you never harvest Saffron Crocus for food use, it deserves its own special place in the flower garden.
 Unfortunately,  the site also says it grows in zones 6-9.  That would work in Juneau I suspect, but not in Anchorage.  

So then I went down to the capitol and sat in on the full Finance Committee hearing on the medicaid budget which was interesting, but they didnʻt talk about the mental health budget or Bring the Kids Home.  But Iʻd gotten a call from Rep. Jouleʻs staff to pick up the spread she they were working off of at the subcommittee meeting so Iʻll try to make the corrections this weekend. 

And when I was back home, K and P knocked on the window and invited me to walk back up Perseverance Trail.  P picked up a friend's dog - Apollo - and off we went.  Except an almost full moon was coming up as the sun was setting and I kept pulling out my camera.
From the street outside our gate.

Looking back as we walk up Basin Road past the houses.

Looking up ahead.  

 
Walking back.