Colberg vetoes again

BY ANDREW WELLNER
Frontiersman
Published on Thursday, October 22, 2009 6:52 PM AKDT

PALMER — A grant for an energy conservation campaign to target Southcentral has the Mat-Su Borough Assembly debating what the borough’s proper role is in promoting awareness of energy consumption.

The resolution in question passed the assembly Sept. 15, but Borough Mayor Talis Colberg vetoed it Tuesday. That would be Colberg’s second veto in four months on the job.

The resolution handed $100,000 to the Renewable Energy Alaska Project, which plans, with its partner groups, to put up an Alaska-specific website where residents can enter facts about their energy consumption. The site would then offer tips on how to conserve. REAP hopes to get utilities onboard so — with users’ permission — the site can also track how those conservation efforts pan out.

Chris Rose, REAP’s executive director, said at the meeting when the resolution passed that the hope is to eventually set up competitions among communities in Southcentral. Wasilla, for example, would be pitted against Palmer to see which could conserve more.

“This is really going to be the beginning of what we think is going to be a statewide program,” Rose said.

The resolution was on the assembly’s consent agenda — a segment of the agenda of each assembly meeting wherein a block of ordinances and resolutions is passed, usually with one vote.

According to the resolution, community outreach and education on energy efficiency is required as a part of the borough’s overall energy efficiency and conservation strategy, which is a requirement to receive an energy efficiency and conservation grants from the U.S. Department of Energy.

Borough planner Emerson Kruger said at the September meeting that the borough put in for such a grant — $250,000 to complete three projects making the main borough building in Palmer more energy efficient — and has to put up matching funds. Spending those matching funds on the REAP project, he said, could fulfill the community outreach portion of the plan.

Rose said REAP is putting up $25,000 and could conduct the campaign with that money and the borough’s $100,000. He said REAP is seeking other funding sources but, as yet, hadn’t found any.

Colberg wrote in a memo accompanying the veto that he had a number of reasons for vetoing the resolution. One, he wrote, is that the borough has more pressing concerns.

“The voters just turned down a bond to make repairs on existing schools. School maintenance is still an obligation that will need to be addressed in some manner in the future. In contrast, a south central Alaska media campaign to raise consumer awareness is not an essential borough function,” he wrote.

He also pointed to borough libraries, which have budgets of $120,000 to $280,000; funding levels he said is a struggle to maintain.

“It is not the job of the government to tell people how to think. We can and should provide support to libraries so people can have access to ideas and make their own decisions,” Colberg wrote.

He also objected to the process used to pass the resolution, saying that a consent agenda, which doesn’t require a public hearing, isn’t the place for “allocating $100,000 to one special interest group.”

At least two assembly members agreed with Colberg. At the September meeting, Cindy Bettine and Mark Ewing both voted against the grant to REAP.

“I’d like to see you gain some money from them and then come back to us,” Ewing said to Rose. “For the borough to be the primary funding source at this time, I don’t know if that’s correct.”

In an e-mail sent after Colberg’s veto, Bettine said she agreed with a lot of the mayor’s reasoning. Both she and Ewing said the program is a great idea and that they’d love to see the borough sign on eventually, though maybe not for this amount of money or at this time.

“I just don’t think that’s what the borough is, that’s not one of the basic functions that we should be doing here,” she said at the September meeting.

Assemblyman Pete Houston, one of the proponents of the resolution, said in an interview Thursday that he thought the borough should definitely be involved.

“I think it’s important for the borough to take the lead, partly because nobody else seems to be and partly because that’s part of our commitment, our plan. We set that as a goal,” Houston said. At the September meeting, Rose responded to the idea the borough doesn’t need to take the lead.

“Somebody wants somebody else to go first. And what we’re wanting to do is use the borough’s leadership to leverage more funding and move forward,” he said.

Houston said it was his understanding that the $100,000 comes out of a portion of the borough budget set aside for grant matches.

“It wasn’t specified at budget time what particular grant it would need to be, we just reserved money so we would be able to match grants as they came out,” Houston said. “If it wasn’t this grant, it would be some other.”

He said he felt the borough had fulfilled its public hearing requirement at budget time when the money was set aside as grant matching funds, but said he’d welcome another chance for the public to weigh in.

The vetoed resolution will be back before the assembly on Nov. 3. The last time Colberg wielded his veto pen — to strike down the ordinance putting a sales tax proposal on the most recent ballot — his veto was quickly overturned. The sales tax eventually failed at the polls.

    

Contact Andrew Wellner at andrew.wellner@frontiersman.com or 352-2270.

Comments

25 comment(s)

    Dennis O. wrote on Oct 26, 2009 2:01 PM:

    " Renewable energy is the future. The longer we keep our heads in the sand about it, the more we increase our chances of shivering in the dark. "

    had enough wrote on Oct 23, 2009 8:15 AM:

    " Chris Rose led the charge against coal bed methane, and got us in this mess. His FOMS buddies that have had a strangle hold on MSB have systematically killed any meaningful private development project. Now Rose wants your tax dollars to "conserve." When your lights go off during the first roving brown out,, remember, the Friends of Mat Su ARE the enemies of Alaskan's, Way to go Talis! "

    Lisnup wrote on Oct 23, 2009 7:00 AM:

    " The savings going to pay off the sports center? When's Palin's reign gonna be paid for? Think coal! "

    Rusty wrote on Oct 23, 2009 6:29 AM:

    " No more squandering our tax dollars on phony baloney un-needed, unreliable, inefficient renewable nonsense. This money was for a freaking website, not to build something constructive, just padding Chris Rose's pocket book.

    Thank you Mayor Colberg for this veto. We look forward to many, many more. "

    LiveFree wrote on Oct 23, 2009 3:31 AM:

    " Thank you Mayor Colberg for the veto. I see REAP as just a group of left wingnuts wanting to tell me how to manage my life. Do something really useful REAP, like providing me with an alternate source of "green" energy that is competitive with existing sources and then I will decide for myself which source to use. In the meantime, get a real job. "

    Valley Girl wrote on Oct 22, 2009 10:46 PM:

    " Thank you, Colberg! "

    Straight Talk wrote on Oct 22, 2009 10:01 PM:

    " Thank you Mayor Colberg for the veto. The voters have spoken loud and clear that it is time to cut unnecessary spending and reduce the size of government, This veto is a good first step. "

    For Supporting the Future Today wrote on Oct 22, 2009 5:30 PM:

    " As an elected official you should not hide behind a screen name with your remarks...unless of course you think that you won't get elected again if you tell the world who you are! Shame of you! Lets see if anyone can figure out who you are..... "

    New Assembly Memebers wrote on Oct 22, 2009 11:32 AM:

    " Have the newly elected borough assembly members been seated yet? I'd sure like to see a breakdown of the assembly voted. "

    re Thats Why wrote on Oct 22, 2009 11:18 AM:

    " If "[$]100,000 is nothing for a project of this scale..." feel free to write the check to the Renewable Energy Alaska Project yourself.

    Oh... what's that? You only meant $100,000 of OTHER PEOPLE'S MONEY is nothing? Thought so. "

    jbarton wrote on Oct 22, 2009 10:57 AM:

    " Hooray Talis! Now we can freeze together in the dark and not save money through reduced energy costs related to wise and prudent use of "free fuel" and intelligent energy conservation. Maybe you could Veto the upcoming natural gas shortages facing south central Alaska next. "

    About time wrote on Oct 22, 2009 9:48 AM:

    " Thanks,it is about time to quite wasting money that is not the boroughs to waste, spend within our means and thank you Talis. "

    Todd wrote on Oct 22, 2009 9:11 AM:

    " And that's why I voted for him. We do NOT need to spend $100K to tell people to conserve energy with Libraries and School repair being underfunded. It doesn't mean that he doesn't support energy conservation; it means he doesn't see the need to spend tax dollars... my tax dollars and your tax dollars... on some cheesy commercials and ineffective newspaper ads. "

    Priorities wrote on Oct 22, 2009 9:07 AM:

    " Awesome Job Mr. Colberg!!!! Keep it up. "

    Supporting the Future Today wrote on Oct 22, 2009 8:57 AM:

    " Mayor Colberg, as an elected public official, I encourage you to provide leadership that considers both todays needs and the needs of the future. Energy efficiency and conservation are major concerns of a large percentage of those you represent. When you use the results of a recent election as a reason to veto the assembly's resolution, you youself are catering to special interests, but not to those that are shown to be the will of the people. "

    Renewable Energy wrote on Oct 22, 2009 8:30 AM:

    " We in the Valley can support renewable energy without blowing money on commercials and tv ads. THAT is a waste of money. Why not put money into the actual renewable resource instead? Well, we can't because between the borough and obamanation everything has been shut down. Thanks tree hugging liberals. I wonder how closely you will hold those trees when you have no gas to heat your home......Just a thought. "

    A breath of fresh air wrote on Oct 22, 2009 8:27 AM:

    " Thanks Talis, for being so conscientious and careful with my money! Any assembly members are you starting to get the idea? "

    thats why wrote on Oct 22, 2009 8:12 AM:

    " we are 20 years behind the lower 48. 100,000 is nothing for a project of this scale - what do you think they pay for the printing of the Borough Annual report? Just the printing done outside not even in Alaska. Or the voter pamphlets? So under informed...... "

    Hes not a YES MAN wrote on Oct 22, 2009 7:13 AM:

    " If the MSB needs to send a message to its residents then use the MSB webpage- not only is it a free marketing avenue but its where residents would look for borough news. Also, the MSB can use the borough page that runs in the Frontiersman and by designating a little space in that ad, the MSB can direct readers to the webpage for these kind of messages.

    Colberg, watch out for Duffy and his kronies, they have old habbits that are not always in the best interest for the entire Valley. "

    Windy in the Vally wrote on Oct 21, 2009 10:52 PM:

    " Mayor Colberg, please support Renewable Energy projects in the Valley. It's time to move into the future.. "

    Thanks Mayor Colberg wrote on Oct 21, 2009 9:28 PM:

    " Appreciate Colberg very much. Not afraid to say NO Thanks! The Assembly needs to listen to what the voters are saying and asking for, and not promoting their own agenda's. Schools yes, Libraries yes, P.R. campaign's Nope. "

    Wasilla Granny wrote on Oct 21, 2009 7:40 PM:

    " Good job Talis, Thank you. "

    Oops wrote on Oct 21, 2009 5:58 PM:

    " The Valley needs to be very afraid......and the right wingnuts think Talis is what? We are in trouble. "

    jp wrote on Oct 21, 2009 4:39 PM:

    " good job Mr. Colberg!

    keep up the good work! "

    Good Job Mayor Colberg wrote on Oct 21, 2009 4:18 PM:

    " Way to go Mayor Colberg! It is about time the assembly got their hands slapped while dippng into the "cookie jar". A PR campaign isn't too high up on most of our lists. And spending $100,000 for it? That is way over the top! "

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