Showing posts with label recreation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recreation. Show all posts

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Cruise Tax bill to Increase Tourism

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/36051424/ns/business/

Alaska governor plans to introduce cruise tax bill

By BECKY BOHRER
Associated Press Writer
updated 9:52 a.m. ET, Fri., March. 26, 2010

JUNEAU, Alaska - Alaska Gov. Sean Parnell introduced legislation Thursday aimed at reducing the state's head tax on cruise ship passengers and bringing more tourists to the state.

He first made the proposal last week after returning from a cruise ship trade show in Florida. He sees a rollback — from $46 a person to $34.50 — as a way to address industry claims that Alaska's cost of doing business is too high. He hopes it will lead to increased ship deployments and help settle a lawsuit with the Alaska Cruise Association, one the attorney general last year pledged to vigorously defend.

There are no guarantees.

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Leading lawmakers, while open to a tax reduction, earlier this week balked at combining it with a measure allowing tax credits for corporations contributing to statewide tourism marketing efforts. Parnell's proposal includes a tax credit provision for corporations making money off tourism in Alaska, capping contributions eligible for credits at $20 million this year.

It also allows for offsets of local head taxes that Chip Thoma, president of Responsible Cruising in Alaska, said will drop the state's tax share to $19 a passenger — potentially providing millions less for capital projects. His group called Parnell's plan an "industry-written measure" that amounts to "cap and skim."

The governor's office released a copy of the bill late Thursday.

Parnell spokeswoman Sharon Leighow confirmed the bill would further reduce the head tax to $19, including deductions of charges in Juneau and Ketchikan.

Voters approved the head tax in 2006, and it's been a thorny issue since. Supporters said the tax is meant to help cover the cost of infrastructure needed for large ships coming to port. Critics countered that it's onerous and unconstitutional.

Cruise Association President John Binkley has blamed Alaska's regulatory climate and tax costs for the expected loss of three ships, accounting for about 142,000 passengers, this season. But some, including those who helped lead the voter initiative, are skeptical the tax is keeping ships away and point instead to factors like the recession.

Parnell sees his proposal as a win for all involved — and not as a corporate giveaway.

"I made a very pointed case (to industry representatives) that they would need to demonstrate that, in a public process, that this would bring ships. That it would create Alaska jobs and not just be a transfer of dollars from the state to their bottom line," he told reporters.

Parnell said one company agreed to postpone deployment decisions until May, to see what legislators do. He said he's asked other cruise lines to do the same, and to testify publicly, to make their case for the changes.

Binkley said there are discussions under way with Attorney General Dan Sullivan on a possible "stipulation" to end the pending federal lawsuit. He declined further comment, saying in part that he wanted to see Parnell's proposal.

The Legislature is currently scheduled to adjourn April 18.

Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Monday, March 8, 2010

Takin' a look at coastal development

Abu Dhabi and Dubai are both investing heavily in marine/coastal development ventures in a renewed hope to attract [luxury] yachts and increased sailing.

READ MORE!

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Where mud and ice meet the water...

Frozen ground with no snow means much of the Anchorage Coastal Wildlife Refuge is accessible to walkers. Explore the shoreline southwest of the city in this Excursion.

SLIDE SHOW PRESENTATION

[really great slide show presentation on Anchorage's southwest coastline]

Sunday, February 14, 2010

ConocoPhillips Alaska president killed in avalanche

By Ashley Fantz
February 14, 2010 10:57 a.m. EST


(CNN) -- The president of ConocoPhillips Alaska was killed in an avalanche and another person in his snowmobiling party is missing, according to Alaska State Troopers.

The body of Jim Bowles was recovered near Spencer Glacier by rescue workers shortly after police received a 911 call at 12:30 p.m. Saturday, said troopers spokesperson Megan Peters.

"When we found him we attempted CPR but we could not revive him," she said.

Bowles, 57, was apparently out with friends snowmobiling in the Grandview wilderness area. Rescuers are trying to find Alan Gage, who is thought to have been buried in the avalanche, Peters said.

Bowles was the head of Alaska operations for the oil company, authorities said.

Alaska Gov. Sean Parnell issued a statement saying he and his wife Sandy "were deeply saddened today by news of the loss of Jim Bowles."

"Jim brought so much to our state: his love of the great outdoors, his leadership of ConocoPhillips Alaska, and his dedication to making Alaska a better place for all of us to call home," the statement read.

In a separate incident, miles from Spencer, another avalanche killed a skier Saturday afternoon. A woman who saw the accident called 911 while her husband was able to locate the skier's body. A dog accompanying the skier survived the avalanche, authorities said.

Between mid-February and mid-March warm temperatures cause layers of snow to become unstable.

Friday, February 12, 2010

Princess Cruises Investment in Alaskan Excursions

Not related directly to Anchorage... but still shows investment by the cruising industry in Alaska.

Saturday, February 6, 2010

Anchorageans(?) for a healthier community

Highway designer, urban planner, Lynn Peterson, talks the walk

http://www.adn.com/money/story/1123581.html


Her 2009 video presentation can be found here:

http://www.clackamas.us/bcc/peterson/alaska.htm

Monday, February 1, 2010

Press Release - Holland America

Here's the press release Holland America sent out on bringing a ship to Anchorage for the first time.

http://www.hollandamerica.com/news/NewsRelease.action?newsReleaseId=712

Thursday, January 21, 2010

moose dropping festival


"Head to the VFW for the Moose Drop Dropping – a raffle sponsored by the VFW. Don't be late! (If you are on "Talkeetna Time", all you will get to watch is the kids and dogs kicking moose droppings around.) Shellacked and numbered moose poop is hauled up in the air in a net and then dropped on a bullseye. Raffle numbers correspond to numbers on moose poop. Winners include the closest and farthest from the bullseye. Sounds like not-much-fun but it is a highlight of the day!"

definitely the most interesting recreational activity I have found so far

http://www.talkeetnachamber.org/event-moosedropping.html

http://www.iditarod.com/learn/trivia.html



Everyone who likes skiing, this is pretty intense.
http://www.alaskaheliski.com/

this is something we could try while we're there if we have time and mulah
http://www.anchorage.net/776.cfm

Only In Alaska

found this link while looking at stuff for recreation, I'll put some of it in my presentation. But thought it might be fun for everyone to glance through

http://www.alaskastock.com/only_in_alaska.asp

Friday, January 15, 2010

artif-ICE


two of my favorite subjects: inflatables + iceberg  = oh yea... check this out at Strange Harvest, a great archi-blog... 
"This inflatable Iceberg™ is another example. While the Artic ice shelf collapses perhaps by designing, marketing, and playing with these inflatable iceburgs is a way of dealing with loss - a sad desire to re-make the world as we found it rather than what it has become. On the other hand, this could be irony heavy, Futurist-esque celebration of the increasingly artificial landscape we inhabit - a fun way to be part of the problem."