The filing deadline for this year’s Alaska Permanent Fund dividend is March 31, and if Rep. Nick Begich III has his way, this year’s dividend will be tax free. On March 3, Alaska’s lone member of the ...
The dividend was created to protect our shared resource wealth and hold government accountable — not to be negotiated away ...
Overspending from the Permanent Fund and years of lost oil revenue are pushing the state toward a preventable budget crisis.
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The offices of the Alaska Permanent Fund Corp. are seen Monday, June 6, 2022, in Juneau, Alaska. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska ...
Learn how Alaska residents receive annual dividends from the Alaska Permanent Fund, with payouts averaging $1,229, potentially enhancing your long-term financial growth.
The Alaska Permanent Fund, the No. 1 source of general-purpose revenue for state services and the Permanent Fund dividend, suffered a multibillion-dollar loss during last week’s stock market crash.
Fifty years ago, Alaskan voters amended the state constitution to set aside a portion of the state’s revenues from oil and minerals, establishing the Alaska Permanent Fund to benefit all generations ...
The Alaska Permanent Fund Dividend is one of the most unusual in America due to the unusual distribution mechanism of its oil wealth, as Alaska has a unique and special system of payment of an annual ...
The Michael J. Burns Building, which houses the Permanent Fund offices on 10th Street, on Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2024. (Clarise Larson/KTOO) The head of the agency that manages the Alaska Permanent Fund is ...
Some Alaska lawmakers differ with Gov. Mike Dunleavy about how to tackle the state's $5.5 billion deficit. Processing Content Three speakers — all Republicans, like the governor — parted ways with ...
Bart LeBon misuses, abuses, twists and distorts the word “safeguard” in his Aug. 11 Community Perspective proposing changes to the Alaska Constitution. Rather than safeguard, his proposal endangers. I ...