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Will ACES Be Discarded?





During her CPAC speech last Saturday, Governor Palin included some Alaskan constitutional populism (emphasis added):

If Mrs. Thatcher were with us here today, she would remind us that there is a big difference between being pro-business and being pro-free market. On this there can be no mistake where conservatives stand. It’s time for “We the People” to break up the cronyism and put a stake through the heart of “too big to fail” once and for all.

That includes these resource-rich states like Alaska, my home state. Read your constitution, Alaskans. Realize that the natural resources that God has created for man’s use – they’re not owned by the big multinational conglomerates and the monopolies. They’re owned by the people. They don’t own them, so don’t let them own you. You have a right to those resources to be developed for our use.

Governor Palin rightfully notes two important issues in particular–1) the Alaskan constitution’s charge that development of resources for the good of the people 2) the warning that the people (and politicians) of Alaska  not allow themselves to be owned by the oil companies.

The Alaskan constitution notes that the state’s natural resources belong to the people and are to developed for their maximum benefit :

 The legislature shall provide for the utilization, development, and conservation of all natural resources belonging to the State, including land and waters, for the maximum benefit of its people.

Governor Palin’s point is especially salient and timely when it comes to Alaska’s natural resources. On Wednesday night, the Alaska state senate passed a bill that if passed in the House and signed by Governor Parnell would overhaul the oil tax reform plan, ACES, that Governor Palin signed into law in 2007. Unlike Governor Palin’s ACES, however, this bill was not discussed in a transparent and comprehensive manner:

 The newest version of the oil tax bill was introduced Thursday. In the hours before it passed there no public testimony. There was no testimony from Alaska’s independent oil explorers. The only industry testimony came from Alaska’s Big Three oil producers, which had been invited to testify.

“It was sort of striking that the oil industry gets a chance for public comment and the rest of Alaskans don’t,” Wielechowski said.

Many of the smaller independent players in Alaska’s oil patch are the beneficiaries of tax incentives aimed at new production from new fields, rather than the strategy pushed by Parnell and championed by legislative leaders of pumping oil, faster, from known fields.

Testimony from the Big Three acknowledged that the oil-tax changes proposed under SB 21 would make Alaska a more competitive tax environment. But they would not promise new production.

One of the positives of ACES is that smaller, independent oil companies have been able to develop in Alaska. In fact, the number of oil tax returns filed with Alaska has increased 383% since ACES was passed. Annual capital expenditures have nearly doubled since FY2007, meaning that producers are engaging in increased infrastructure development (i.e. more rigs) and the like. These expenditures are helping to lead to increased profits for even the major oil companies. For example, in 2012, 13% of Conoco Phillips’s oil and gas development occurred in Alaska, but Alaska contributed to 34% of their income. Additionally, according to Alaska’s own labor statistics, oil and gas jobs increased more than 15% between 2007 and 2012.

So, why is there a push for reforming ACES? Because of the very thing that Governor Palin warned against in her CPAC speech–being owned by the oil companies. In theory, the Senate bill is better for the oil companies because it flattens ACES’s tax rate and provides incentives for new oil. This sounds pro-business, right? That’s what Governor Palin warned about in her CPAC speech as well. There’s a difference between the invisible hand of the free market and the hand-in-hand “pro business” relationship between business and government. This “hand-in-hand” relationship is the very type of relationship that was the impetus for ACES being passed in the first place, as the Murkowski administration prior to Palin’s administration was shrouded in corruption due to the pay-to-play deals between the oil companies and lawmakers. Governor Parnell has not had that kind of relationship in his dealings, but he has had a revolving door relationship between the oil industry and politics. As I wrote nearly two years ago:

In the early and mid 1990s, Parnell served in the Alaska House of Representatives and Senate. Following his time in the Senate, Parnell became director of government relations for ConoccoPhillips. He then went to work for Governor Murkowski as the director state division of oil and gas from 2003 to 2005. During part of this period time, Governor Palin had served as an oil and gas commissioner until she encountered unethical behavior from another commissioner and Alaska GOP chair,Randy Ruedrich, and she resigned and lodged a complaint against Ruedrich. Prior to running for Lt. Governor in 2006, Parnell worked at Patton Boggs, a law firm that represented ConocoPhillips and ExxonMobil in the Exxon Valdex oil spill case.

Although the bill was passed in the Senate, it was proposed at the request of Governor Parnell. He found 11 allies in the Senate, and the bill passed 11-9. One Senator, Peter Micciche, who is also employed as a ConocoPhillips natural gas plant supervisor,  paid lip service support to ACES, indicating he would reject Governor Parnell’s proposal. However, Micciche ended up voting for the modified Senate bill that Governor Parnell applauded.

The Senate bill removed the capital expenditure credits that ACES has, which particularly benefited the smaller companies who were not given the opportunity to testify before the Senate. The credits gave companies breaks on infrastructure development and expansion (e.g. new rigs) and the like, which because of economies of scale, helped smaller companies (with their smaller budgets) be able to grow.  This was another thing Governor Palin noted during her CPAC speech, “if you’re not at the table, you’re on the menu”.  Such may be the case for these smaller companies who were not given a voice in these Senate debates.

ACES has not only helped boost Alaskan jobs and investments by oil companies, it has strengthen Alaska’s fiscal health. ACES has helped create $16.5+ billion in state savings and has contributed to Alaska being upgraded to a AAA credit rating by both Fitch and Standard and Poor’s in the past 14 months. As a House committee begins to discuss this bill today, one would hope that, rather than appeasing the oil companies for increased production that may or may not occur, legislators would look at the economic and overall fiscal benefits that ACES has brought to the state.

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  • RefudiateGOPe

    It wouldn’t shock me to find out that some legislators would vote in favor of the change, not because it is a good change, but because it could possibly damage Governor Palin politically.

    • deTocqueville1

      I would certainly hope not but who knows!

    • section9

      This has nothing to do with Palin. Follow the money. If the smaller firms were able to pay more to keep ACES the way it was (with some reforms allowing AK to compete with the dreaded North Dakota Monster) and put that money in the back pocket of these politicians, ACES would be the way it was.
      Big Oil has the cash to burn.

  • deTocqueville1

    Terrific write up Whitney. Parnell sounds as if he would fit right into the DC environment, career politician, lawyer/lobbyist. I am surprised that Micciche would or could vote on the measure as he clearly has not just an apparent conflict of interest but a real one. Parnell has been pushing this change for several years now as you noted previousy and has been discussed by various journalists. It appears they are moving back to the comfortable, back room cronyism that Palin broke up. I hope there is a groundswell of opposition against it and that it dies in the lower house.

    • blueniner

      Sounds to me like a cave in on Parnells part.

      • http://www.twitter.com/whitneypitcher Whitney Pitcher

        He’s been chomping at the bit to overhaul ACES since he got into the governor’s office. This is just the first time that a bill has gotten this far. They’ve tried in previous years.

    • section9

      Parnell is a yes man for the Big Firms. What he did was to cut the knees off the small firms. They don’t want competition, and they want to go back to the Murkowski Days.

      Wait until the crooks in the Legislature and the State Senate get their hands on the Surplus?

      Put 16 billion dollars in front of a bunch of politicians and ask for restraint? That’s like asking Himmler to plant Trees for Israel.

      You Alaskans who might be reading this will live to rue the day that you didn’t lift a finger to help Palin stay in power.

  • Bean Counter

    Outstanding, as usual, Whit. As is the case with many of us, I became an ardent Palin supporter after the ’08 election, and began reading anything I could about her and her record as Governor. The first book I read was one called “Sarah Takes On Big Oil,” written by a couple oil and gas editors in Alaska. While I didn’t expect it to be light reading, what I also didn’t expect was to discover how policy wonky it was and that wading through it would give me at least two headaches. Bottom line, Governor Palin absolutely knows her stuff re: oil and gas, she ate the apple off the good ole boys’ heads and brokered solid deals to benefit the citizens of Alaska and their economy. The writers of the book told it straight and gave credit where it was due.

    I defy anyone who believes Palin is an intellectual lightweight to read this book and then maintain that opinion of her. Here’s the link to the book at Amazon:

    http://www.amazon.com/Sarah-takes-Big-Oil-compelling/dp/0982163207/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1363970794&sr=8-1&keywords=sarah+takes+on+big+oil

    • hrh40

      I concur wholeheartedly with this book recommendation.

    • http://www.twitter.com/whitneypitcher Whitney Pitcher

      I hate to admit it, but I still haven’t read that one. It’s on my list though!

  • John_Frank

    Very informative article Whitney. Thank you.

  • blueniner

    Interesting column, Sarah Palins CPAC speech was so rich with so many things in that speech, that to observe it all it needs to be listended to several times.

  • blackbird

    Thanks Whitney.

  • Lipstick

    How is the ADN reporting this event? They were so quick to print any crap about Palin they could make up, now that Parnell is in bed with big oil taking money from the common Alaskans pocket what do they think?

    Are they spinning it in a way that it is better? Blaming it on Palin? Or not saying anything?

    Let me guess…..

    • http://www.twitter.com/whitneypitcher Whitney Pitcher

      They are snarkily (if that’s a word) saying this was passed during Palin’s “populist phase”. The thing is, the ADN has allowed the former spokesperson for VECO to write anti-ACES editorials for a couple years.

      http://www.adn.com/paul-jenkins/

      VECO was the company implicated in the whole Murkowski corruption in 2006.

      I wrote about Jenkins here a two years ago:

      conservatives4palin.com/2011/04/the-lingering-influence-of-crony-capitalism-and-big-oil-in-alaskan-politics.html

      The ADN is lock-step for the overhaul of ACES.

      • section9

        This is a tell: some Democratic Politicians in the State Senate and House are taking Brown Bag Money from the oils again and want the Anchorage Daily Worker to cover for their scamming the public. Any attacks the Daily Worker makes on Palin are simply an attempt to blow smoke in the eyes of the voters of the state.
        Down here in Florida, we have Government in the Sunshine Laws. Parnell would have been run out of Tallahassee on a rail if he had tried to pull a stunt like this here.
        Of course, we have adults running our state. The notion of one party using a bunch of activists to, say, trying to run Charlie Crist or Lawton Chiles from office in the middle of his term would be unheard of here.
        As unpopular as he is, nobody would ever try and trump up ethics charges against Rick Scott. His Light Governor was only forced to resign when she became implicated in a real criminal scandal.
        Alaska has produced three politicians of any national consequence since statehood: Wally Hickel, Ted Stevens, and Sarah Palin. Now you know why.

  • hrh40

    tweeted

  • Firelight

    Excellent Whitney! So many people don’t understand why ACES was good in the first place and they only buy into the surface argument that what Parnell is doing is good for competition and jobs but in reality it is only good for big oil. It is going to hurt everyone else. Sadly, I think Alaska is going to have to learn the hard way.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Barbara-Haney/100000145161473 Barbara Haney

    When Aces was written, the big competitors of Alaska were Hugo Chavez, Vladamir Putin, Momar Kadafi, and a group of other dictators. Back then, as long as we kept our tax rate under 95%, we were the superior choice.

    Times change. The Balkans came on line, and most of Alaska has moved to North Dakota (where they just gave a person rights at the moment of conception). PA, WY, TX and a host of other places now effectively complete against Alaska in global markets. They have a tax rate significantly lower than 75%. Our pipeline is virtually empty, and our state revenues dwindling.

    The need to change ACES was due to changing times, not due to any flaws of Governor Palin. At the time ACES was written, it was clear that it would have to be changed “someday.” Who knew when that someday was? Who could have imagined the BP oil spill? Who could have imagined a radical EPA? Who could have imagined Arab Spring? Well, it happened… and these reforms were a last ditch effort to keep the state solvent.

    I am sorry you feel this change is a slam on Governor Palin. She was a marvelous Governor, and if she were still in office, things might be different. Sean Parnell is a great administrator, but he is not a builder like Palin was, nor is he a fighter like her.

    By either temperament or disposition, Gov. Parnell believes that cutting the corporate tax rate from 75% to something slightly under 50% was the wisest way to spur production. As an economist who supported ACES, and later the reforms proposed by Gov. Parnell, the application of sound, Reagan like supply side principles seemed to be a solution that would likely be effective. Remember, the oil companies work for us, and if we cut their pay for producing more (that is what progressivity is), they have a clear incentive not to produce. Back when Alaska was the “only game in town” and had a monopolistic position in the global market, ACES was great. Now, that position was eroded due to circumstances that could not be anticipated when ACES was written. Hopefully, the changes, along with the GRE and per barrel component will give producers an incentive to produce and generate more state revenue for Alaskans.

    Whitney, you seem to be influenced by the narrative of Sens. Wolechowski and Hollis French that Alaskans need to be like “hard nosed Norwegians” and run our economy like Norway. Alaskans are not Norwegians…. we are Alaskans.

    Also, the minority, in their press conference, said Click Bishop was the 11th vote, not Micciche. I find your inside information illuminating.

    The current change leaves the BULK of Aces in tact and makes rate modifications and modifications on payouts. To suggest ACES has been “scrapped” is a bit melodramatic. Even so, it is not at all an indictment of Sarah Palin’s character or other accomplishments as Governor. Gov. Palin was not ACES, it was only one part of her governorship.

    • section9

      However, if this is true:

      The Senate bill removed the capital expenditure credits that ACES has, which particularly benefited the smaller companies who were not given the opportunity to testify before the Senate. The credits gave companies breaks on infrastructure development and expansion (e.g. new rigs) and the like, which because of economies of scale, helped smaller companies (with their smaller budgets) be able to grow. This was another thing Governor Palin noted during her CPAC speech, “if you’re not at the table, you’re on the menu”. Such may be the case for these smaller companies who were not given a voice in these Senate debates.

      Then what we have here is a Governor and the Majority in the State Senate removing an incentive for the smaller oils to invest in capital intensive research and prospecting in Alaska.

      These smaller firms were direct competitors of the larger oil companies. You’ll pardon me if I’m suspicious of the forces behind this legislation: Exxon-Mobil, Conoco-Philips, and BP.

    • http://www.twitter.com/whitneypitcher Whitney Pitcher

      I appreciate your comment and providing greater context and background. My intention was not to come in as an Outsider and try to impose my opinion nor to be melodramatic or progressive in my arguments. I understand that modifications inevitably need to be made in a changing economic climate when other states are competing and to ensure that Alaskans get the most benefit for their oil production.

      I wasn’t trying to say Micciche was the 11th vote, just that he seemed to change his mind. My concern is with the process as a whole and how this may affect small producers who didn’t get to testify in the Senate. Parnell did allow a good deal of time for his plan to see light. I just wish the Senate would have done the same. I just hope that this does’t pave the way for the kind of corrupt Murkowski style dealings as well.

      It also seems that the Alaskan media (and the national media) would have a field day with any modifications, painting Palin as a failure. Perhaps this was a little bit of a knee jerk reaction to that potential.

      • section9

        I have found that it always pays to assume the worst when it politicians are put anywhere in the proximity of large piles of money.
        Sarah Palin was the exception, not the rule.
        Assuming your analysis is correct and I see no reason for it not to be, it looks as if the small producers got screwed.

  • section9

    By the way, you’ll notice that while Alaska’s birthright is being sold out from under them to a gang of economic war criminals, Alaskans are just waking up to this fact. The same thing happened when the Democrats were using front groups to try and bankrupt Palin. “Hunh, did someone say something about Palin wearing an Arctic Cat jacket? Press the snooze alarm and hand me that bag of moose jerky, honey!”

    Their shoddy excuse for a news media, led by the local fishwrapper, the Anchorage Volkescher Beobachter, er, excuse me, Daily News, has been flogging a change in Palin’s flagship piece of legislation so its patrons in the Alaska Democratic Party can start getting honest graft again.

    And of course, the first thing on Alaskan’s minds is “How’s this going to affect my Perm Fund Check?” not “I’m outraged that my kid’s future is being stolen from me by those graverobbers we thought we beat back when we elected Palin.

    Time for the Usual Suspects to ramp up the Quitter Meme again!

    Speaking of Honest Graft, has Jay Ramras gone to prison yet?

  • OldPat

    Long story short: PPC + CCC = Pork barrel politics.
    Pork barrel politics x LSM(ADN) = Nothin’ to see here. Move along.
    Hey, Alaska, you got it too. Don’t pretend you don’t.

  • John_Frank

    The following analysis by Barbara Haney may also be of assistance:

    Palin’s Geopolitical Prowess, Empowerment, and ACES Reform
    http://147degreeswest.blogspot.ca/2013/03/there-has-been-much-said-in-blogosphere.html

    Note the discussion under the post between Ms. Haney and Ms. Pitcher.

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