“We’re not going to be brow-beaten to continue violating the law,' said Anchorage Assembly Vice Chair Chris Constant, amid a dispute over payments for work on a homeless navigation center authorized by the Bronson administration without Assembly approval.
“We’re not going to be brow-beaten to continue violating the law,” Constant said. “We’re not going to do it. There is no power that the mayor legally has to spend money from the treasury without authorization of this body.”
Mayor Bronson said he’s agnostic about how to actually resolve the bill. He said he just wants the lawyers for the Assembly and his administration to figure it out. “I worry about the credibility of the city, of the municipality in the sense that when we are legally obligated to pay something, the message that it sends, especially to the contracting public, that ‘Oh, there’s always a risk when you do business with the municipality, you have to take them to court to get paid,’” Bronson said.
The Assembly specifically wants a meeting with the mayor and legal team to be briefed on the proposed settlement and legal analysis. The administration has said it has a deadline on Friday to pay the contractor, but was unsure what the basis of that deadline was.
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Anchorage Assembly threatens court action to block Bronson administration payment for unauthorized shelter constructionThe Anchorage Assembly late Wednesday took two steps to block any potential settlement payments from the Bronson administration to a contractor over work done on a contentious homelessness project without formal approval.
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Assembly threatens litigation against Bronson administration for contracting approval disputeAn invoice from Roger Hickel Contracting states that the municipality owes the business $2.45 million for “work completed for the Navigation Center.” It states that just over $2 million has already been paid.
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2 first-time candidates join perennial candidate in competition for West Anchorage Assembly seatRegistered nonpartisan Austin Quinn-Davidson is not seeking re-election after more than four years of elected service, leaving the seat open.
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Anchorage Assembly passes ‘clean slate’ proposal with amendmentsApril 30 is the day some shelters around the city — including the 360-bed Sullivan Arena — will start to close down, placing Bronson and the Anchorage Assembly under pressure to find a solution.
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2 pilots, business developer compete for South Anchorage Assembly seatZac Johnson, a former state pilot, Marine and former state trooper, Rachel Ries, a former medevac pilot and licensed paralegal and Zac Johnson, a business developer, are competing for District 6, Seat K on the Anchorage Assembly.
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2 educators compete for East Anchorage Assembly seatVoters will choose which one will fill the role Forrest Dunbar served in until he was elected to the Alaska Senate in November.
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