House Finance Committee hears subcommittee closeout reports for six agencies, schedules continued sessions
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The Alaska House Finance Committee received subcommittee closeout reports on March 6 covering the departments of Law, Health, Family and Community Services, Administration, Corrections and Transportation, heard staff explanations of budget documents, and scheduled continued closeouts for March 9.
The Alaska House Finance Committee met in Juneau on March 6 to receive subcommittee closeout reports for multiple state agencies and to review the documents committee members will use to vet final budget language and intent.
Co-Chair Josephson opened the meeting at 1:33 p.m., named members and staff in attendance and asked staff to explain the packet of materials (BA reports, wordage reports and subcommittee narratives) that underpin the subcommittee recommendations. "The documents which communicate these recommendations are the agency budget or BA reports, also referred to as BA sheets," Alexander Schroeder, staff to Co-Chair Josephson, told the committee as he described how to read fund-source tables, position counts and version comparisons.
Subcommittee staff presented closeouts for the departments of Law, Health, Family and Community Services, Administration, Corrections and Transportation. Highlights included a subcommittee-recommended net increase of about $460 million (12.1%) for the Department of Health driven largely by Medicaid receipt authority; a roughly $3.2 million net UGF increase for DFCS with a $1.5 million increment restored to children's advocacy centers; and DOT&PF's move of the Alaska Marine Highway System into the bill language and multi-year funding rather than the numbers section.
Committee members used the hearing to seek clarifying details about line-item math, the alignment of Medicaid increases with federal approvals, where proposed savings and increments will be recorded in the FY27 budget and how the marine highway transfer affects apparent year-to-year comparisons. Director Painter of the Department of Revenue answered a question about how a change in general funds would translate into Permanent Fund Dividend dollars, estimating roughly $157 per person for each $100 million, based on 636,000 recipients.
Co-Chair Josephson thanked staff and adjourned the committee at 2:13 p.m., noting the panel will resume closeouts at the next meeting scheduled for Monday, March 9 at 9 a.m.
