Blogs by Rep Bob Lynn

Blog site of Representative Bob Lynn, Alaska House of Representatives,District 31 Anchorage, Alaska. Blogs consist of public comments during legislative sessions, speeches, political commentary, as well as personal observations, and some journal type entries. Comments are invited.

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Location: Anchorage, Alaska, United States

Member of the Alaska State House of Represeentatives since 2003. US Air Force, Retired; military bandsman; F94C interceptor pilot; Vietnam service as radar controller (Monkey Mountain), radar site commander(Pleiku); Government Contract Management; Public school Teacher, Retired. Married 55 years to Marlene Wagner Lynn, 6 children, 20 grandchildren, 1 great-grandchild. Member St. Elizabeth Ann Seaton Church. Former Tucson Arizona policeman, Ambulance Driver and Mortician's Assistant, Realtor (currently on referral status).

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

GOING HOME AT DAYBREAK

A marathon session in the House of Representatives today. I didn’t leave the capitol building until 4:30AM. Fortunately I’m a “night person,” plus have experience working multitudinous graveyard shifts while serving in the military.

At long last, the highly controversial SB305 to establish the “PPT” (Petroleum Production Tax) came to the House floor for debate. Thirty – yes 30 - amendments were offered to the bill. The governor had offered a tax of 20% in the bill. The debate ranged between merits and demerits of a 20 to 25% tax. The problem: to find a rate upon which at least 21 House members could coalesce into agreement. Many of us also wanted to establish a tax rate that would be acceptable to the Senate (which had passed a 22.5% tax) – so that the Senate would concur with the House, and we could expedite moving into the critical gas pipeline process debate.

When we started the tax rate debate, House members were pretty much “all over the map” on what the rate should be. This pretty much reflects mail, phone calls, and email from my constituents. It seems half my constituents want to have little or no tax, and half want to tax the oil producers out of existence. Obviously, compromise had to rule the day. As a matter of information, only a minority of the constituents who contacted me wanted the governor’s 20% rate.

I voted NO a 25% rate, voted YES for a 22.5% rate. 21% never made it to a vote. Finally, we passed the bill a 21.5% tax (I voted YES). The vote was House 28 to 11, with 1 member excused. 27 Republicans and 1 Democrat voted YES. 11 Democrats voted NO. This was a reasonable compromise. It was also a momentous vote, because the stakes are so high.

I’ve been in session in the House previously until after 2 in the morning, but 4:30AM, and going home at daybreak, is my personal record. As we used to say in the military, “We knew the risk when we joined up.”

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