Alaska court backs dividend-fund veto

JUNEAU, Alaska — The Alaska Supreme Court has ruled that Gov. Bill Walker acted within his authority last year in reducing the amount set aside for checks from Alaska’s oil-wealth fund to state residents.

The decision released Friday sided with the state, as a lower court had, in the dispute over Alaska Permanent Fund dividends.

The case was brought by Democratic state Sen. Bill Wielechowski and two former legislators, who argued that the Alaska Permanent Fund Corp. last year was required by law to make available nearly $1.4 billion from the fund’s earnings reserve for dividends, despite Walker’s veto.

Walker, a one-time Republican no longer affiliated with a party, had cut the amount available for dividend checks after lawmakers failed to agree on a plan to address a multibillion-dollar state budget deficit.

In its ruling, Alaska’s Supreme Court concluded that the state constitutional amendment establishing the permanent fund does not allow the dedication of permanent fund income.

“Absent another constitutional amendment, the Permanent Fund dividend program must compete for annual legislative funding just as other state programs,” the ruling states.

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