Alaska is at “a fork in the road,” says 40-year resident Pat Dougherty.
For nearly all the years Dougherty has lived in Alaska, the state has been reaping a vast income from the oil in their land – and sending a portion of it back to residents in the form of a yearly dividend check from a trust fund called the Alaska Permanent Fund. The payout surpassed $2,000 last year for each man, woman, and child living in the state. The fund has become “a part of life” in Alaska, says Dougherty, and for some residents in rural areas of the state, the dividend makes up a significant portion of their household income.
Alaskans have long viewed the Permanent Fund as dependable and even untouchable. But circumstances are changing and Alaska is at a financial breaking point. Plunging oil prices have hit the fund and the state’s other savings. The state government now has a budget deficit of $4.1 billion and if no changes are made, the Permanent Fund is predicted to collapse in less than four years.









