Anchorage – Alaska Politics and Elections https://www.apeonline.org Tue, 31 Mar 2020 22:07:28 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.4 https://i1.wp.com/www.apeonline.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/cropped-APE-small.jpg?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Anchorage – Alaska Politics and Elections https://www.apeonline.org 32 32 174736357 Anchorage community update from the Emergency Operations Center https://www.apeonline.org/2020/03/31/community-update-from-the-emergency-operations-center-3-31-2020/ https://www.apeonline.org/2020/03/31/community-update-from-the-emergency-operations-center-3-31-2020/#respond Tue, 31 Mar 2020 21:51:03 +0000 https://www.apeonline.org/?p=8431 The post Anchorage community update from the Emergency Operations Center appeared first on Alaska Politics and Elections.

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Community update from the Emergency Operations Center

Posted by Anchorage Office of Emergency Management on Tuesday, March 31, 2020

Anchorage Community update from the Emergency Operations Center

March 31, 2020

Visit  muni.org/COVID-19 for information, links, multilingual resources and more.

Interested in Donating? 

Anchorage continues to be a community with a big heart, and we have more items we need to help our fellow humans.  We are requesting donations to the donation center of the following personal care items:Single use/travel size shampoo and soap

  • Hair combs (not brushes)
  • Toothbrushes
  • Travel sized toothpaste, NO MOUTHWASH
  • Decks of playing cards
  • Board games

PLEASE ONLY DONATE UNOPENED ITEMS

Please take donations to:
CrossFit Alaska
9191 Old Seward Highway
Entrance faces Scooter Ave

Hours of donation: 9:00 AM- 5:00 PM 7 days a week.
For questions, contact 2-1-1, email covid-19@anchorageak.gov or call 907-343-4019

 


Saturday – Donation Ask

Despite generous community donations so far, Anchorage continues to face a shortage of personal protective equipment (PPE) and medical supplies. Recently identified needs include non-contact thermometers and universal transport media. Due to the global demand created by COVID-19, there is no definitive shipping date for these supplies.
The following Medical Supplies and PPE is needed immediately:
Non-contact medical grade thermometers, Please see picture attached
Universal Transport Media (for guidance see: http://dhss.alaska.gov/dph/Labs/Documents/LaboratoryTests.pdf#page=23)
Nitrile exam gloves (NO LATEX GLOVES)
N95 masks
Surgical masks
Medical gowns
Face shields which protect eyes
Open and expired PPE are acceptable for donation.  Used PPE is not being accepted.
Homemade cloth masks for use by Anchorage Fire Department that are made to the following specifications:

  • Recommended materials include a single layer of tightly-woven material, such as a dish/tea towel or bed sheets/antimicrobial pillowcases.
  • The materials used must be able to be washed/dried on high heat.
  • Please wash your hands and keep your area clean when making the masks.
  • When completed, please bundle masks in packs of 25 or less in a sealed zip lock bag and drop off at the donation center.
  • Do not make masks if you have any respiratory illness symptoms.
  • Masks will be laundered by AFD before use.

Open and expired PPE are acceptable for donation, however used PPE is not being accepted.
Please take donations to:
CrossFit Alaska
9191 Old Seward Highway
Entrance faces Scooter Ave

Hours of donation: 9:00 AM- 5:00 PM 7 days a week.
For questions, contact 2-1-1, email covid-19@anchorageak.gov or call 907-343-4019

Address/Location
Anchorage Office of Emergency Management
1305 E St
Anchorage, AK 99501

Contact
Emergency: 9-1-1
Non-emergencies: 907-343-1401

 

 

 

 

 

 

*Not seeing a video this is a Facebook embed, ad blockers might prevent video from playing correctly.

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Bloomie Buys Himself a Mayor https://www.apeonline.org/2020/02/26/bloomie-buys-himself-a-mayor/ Wed, 26 Feb 2020 16:31:15 +0000 https://staging.oprhosting.com/?p=8159 The Michael Bloomberg for President road show […]

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The Michael Bloomberg for President road show came to Anchorage a few weeks ago.  For a mere million-dollar donation to the Anchorage Museum, Bloomberg purchased sufficient good will to score an endorsement of his presidential campaign by Mayor Berkowitz.  

Bloomberg announced the City of Anchorage was a winner of the 2018 Bloomberg Philanthropies Public Art Challenge.  The money is to fund a public art project addressing climate change and economic development.  The Muni will partner with the Anchorage Museum to create what they call “seed lab.” 

Free money, right?  Truly a wonderful thing.  Right?  Or is it?

In response, Mayor Berkowitz endorsed Bloomberg for President.  Alaska Public Media quotes Berkowitz saying:

“Michael Bloomberg, of all the candidates in the race, Democrat or Republican, has the greatest ability to unite this country. And I think that the divide that is splitting America apart poses the greatest threat to our country that we’ve seen in generations.”

Quite the endorsement, that.  And it only cost Bloomberg a million dollars to get the endorsement of the highest-ranking elected democrat currently in office in the State.  For a guy expected to spend over $2 billion in his attempt to defeat President Trump in November, this is money well spent.

A week or so later, I ran across an article in the American Thinker entitled Bribery is at the heart of Bloomberg’s political career.  The article recounts Bloomberg’s practice of buying off opposition, usually in the form of charitable (tax deductible) or political contributions to people who would otherwise oppose him.  This practice is totally legal.  Unfortunately, it is also totally corrupt, as it buys off words and actions of people who would otherwise oppose him or at least be a bit skeptical of his intentions.

As NYC Mayor, Bloomberg spent extensively, giving massive sums to nonprofits and arts groups (sound familiar?).  He funded nonprofits that supported his political agenda.  When church groups or community organizations threatened to oppose him, he wrote checks and they quieted right down.  During his first nine years in office, the Carnegie Corporation funneled over $200 million of Bloomberg money to NY civic and arts groups.

In 2018, Bloomberg spent $24 million to boost 24 democrat candidates now in congress.  It turns out that a $2 million donation to a congressional campaign is indeed the start of a beautiful friendship.  His Bloomberg Philanthropies is busily, proudly and loudly doing the same thing with mayors.  And Ethan is simply one of at least 34.  Bloomberg also purchased a democrat majority in the Virginia legislature that is busily passing legislation turning Virginia into California.

Total spending in NYC during Bloomberg’s nine years in office aimed at shutting down opposition or currying favor is estimated at around $300 million.  That spending purchased him a third term as Mayor.  NYC has a population of 8 million.  Scale that up and it will take Bloomberg a mere $10 – 12 billion to buy the presidency and a congress that will support him and stay out of the way of his goals.

With this, I am reminded of the old (1937-ish) story about a famous man who asks a woman if she will sleep with him for a million dollars.  She says yes.  He asks how about $5?  Whereby she slaps him, asking what sort of woman he thinks she is.  He responds that we’ve already established that.  Now we’re just haggling over the price.

And it only took $1 million to purchase Ethan, his democrat and union backed Assembly, and the support of Alaska Public Media.  Imagine what another similar donation will buy. 

Alex Gimarc lives in Anchorage since retiring from the military in 1997. His interests include science and technology, environment, energy, economics, military affairs, fishing and disabilities policies. His weekly column “Interesting Items” is a summary of news stories with substantive Alaska-themed topics. He was a small business owner and Information Technology professional.

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700 Cops in Anchorage? https://www.apeonline.org/2020/02/19/700-cops-in-anchorage/ Wed, 19 Feb 2020 16:59:47 +0000 https://staging.oprhosting.com/?p=8155 Interesting what goes on when the wheels […]

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Interesting what goes on when the wheels of local government grind on and nobody pays attention.  In his October 2019 State of the City address, Mayor Berkowitz started laying the foundation of a police force of 600 – 700 officers.  It was originally reported by KTVA on Oct 21, 2019 and the Anchorage Press in Dec 2019.  Neither publication picked up on the story as a particularly Big Deal.

Mayor Berkowitz reprised this call in his speech to the AEDC luncheon on 1/29/20.  It was that speech that got my attention.

To put this in perspective, a review of recent budgets for APD is instructive.  Ethan was elected in 2015.  It took him about a year to get his first budget in place, 2016.  You can find his budgets hereIn 2016, his approved operating budget for APD was $100,753,451 for 543 total people.  By 2020, this rose to $121,138,346 for 611 people.  Do the math, and the Muni spends around $300,000 for each additional body over the period. 

While it is unclear if Ethan is talking total employment in APD, or beat cops for his 600 – 700 goal, we can make some estimates.  If the total is 600 employees, we are already there.  Bulk that up to 700, and we instantly add another $27 million to the Muni’s budget.  If Ethan is talking about 700 sworn officers, that increase is a whopping $91 million with a total force just over 1,000 people, as there are around 2.3 officers for every support staff position at APD.  Who pays for this?  Hint:  You and I do.   

The basic question is:   Why does a city the size of Anchorage need 700 cops, nearly twice what Mayor Sullivan employed, all proud union members, at a time when the crime rate is high and little to no credible effort has been made to address that crime rate or the homeless population perpetrating it?  Precisely what are these new guys being hired to do, as there seems to be little interest in controlling the drug use and crime other than pander to the perps?

Before we begin speculating, we need to at least point out a couple numbers.  In terms of equivalent numbers, Lincoln, NE currently has 353 officers, another 84 at LSO for a total of 437 all serving a total population of 317,000 people in the county, a community similar in size to Anchorage. 

The problem is not how many cops you have.  Rather, it is how they are used.  Conservatively governed locales like Lincoln typically need fewer police, progressive locales like Minneapolis – St Paul typically need many, many more.  And that is the problem.  Happily (for the left), police here in Anchorage are unionized, and typically support democrat candidates, as they’ve done for many, many years.  No wonder the Mayor and Assembly support more cops, regardless of the costs, as this is an easy way to grow their donor base while pretending to support basic law and order. 

The Mayor may be basing his goal on an analysis done by Steven Melo in 2018 that generally supports the notion that more cops equal less crime.  Unfortunately, his cost benefit analysis and conclusions are highly dependent on entry variables and where you draw the starting line (think long-time Blue cities like Detroit, Baltimore, Newark, or new ones like LA, SF, Portland and Seattle).  While the overall analysis supports more cops equaling less crime, it is not applicable to Anchorage.  Worse, neither the Mayor nor the Chief of Police have made a credible case that more cops equal less crime in this town.

Why is this?  I would think it is how the new cops hired over Mayor Berkowitz’ tenure in office have been used.  Are there fewer homeless camps?  No.  Fail Berkowitz.  Are there fewer vehicle thefts?  Marginally.  Fail Berkowitz, though the number of stolen vehicles was radically up for a few years and then decreased for the last 18 months as the ringleaders were apprehended.  Murder rate?  Fail Berkowitz.  Burglaries?  Fail Berkowitz.  How about drug use?  Unknown, as the Mayor views the homeless problem caused by drug use, mental illness, and alcoholism as a problem to be solved by building new low-cost housing, turning over public lands to the homeless for living space, and as an excuse for additional spending funded by a brand spanking new increase in the alcohol tax.

There is nothing to support the notion that more police equal less crime here in Anchorage.  Problem is that there is a LOT to suggest that more cops will be turned into predatory law enforcement aimed at the law-abiding citizenry with the intent on writing tickets to pay for their salaries and benefits as the years go by, much like what democrat City Fathers did in Ferguson, MO

When you double the number of active duty cops in Anchorage and don’t have enough money to pay for them, there will be an irresistible urge to use them as tax collectors via ticket writing, something we are already seeing with the scofflaw program.  And it will be that predatory, rapacious ticket writing effort that will undermine and quickly destroy respect for Law and Order here in Anchorage for decades to come.  It is that path that Mayor Berkowitz and his Assembly are now traveling. 

Alex Gimarc lives in Anchorage since retiring from the military in 1997. His interests include science and technology, environment, energy, economics, military affairs, fishing and disabilities policies. His weekly column “Interesting Items” is a summary of news stories with substantive Alaska-themed topics. He was a small business owner and Information Technology professional.

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