FUND MANAGER GIVES AWAY CASH : RICH OR POOR, ALASKANS GET DIVIDENDS.Byline: David Germain Associated Press Associated Press: see news agency. Associated Press (AP) Cooperative news agency, the oldest and largest in the U.S. and long the largest in the world. Byron Mallott has an investment manager's dream job, running a King Midas of a fund that keeps piling up money and is revered by its half-million stake holders. Mallott heads one of the world's most unusual savings accounts, the Alaska Permanent Fund The Alaska Permanent Fund is a constitutionally established Fund, managed by a semi-independent corporation, established by Alaska in 1976. Shortly after the oil from Alaska’s North Slope began flowing to market through the Trans-Alaska Pipeline System, the Permanent Fund was Corp., set up by the state in 1976 as an income source once Alaska's oil money runs out. If the program had remained just that, a rainy-day account for government to pay its way, it would have had all the luster of, say, the average public pension fund. Two things happened in the past 15 years, though, to hold the public's interest in the fund. First, through ongoing contributions of excess oil revenues and heady investment markets, the Permanent Fund has grown beyond planners' expectations, approaching a book value of $20 billion. Second, fund caretakers started siphoning off some investment profits in 1983 to pay annual dividends to almost every Alaskan, culminating in the record payout of $1,130 a person this fall. It's pretty hard not to be a well-liked fund manager when you're passing out free money every year. People become eligible for the dividend after living in Alaska for a full calendar year. About 90 percent of the state's 600,000 residents are eligible this year. Mallott doesn't think of the money as a handout. He views it as sharing the state's wealth while building Alaskans' respect for their natural resources and a commitment to preserving them. ``The dividend is not an entitlement or a government payout,'' Mallott said. ``It's a form of participation by every Alaskan. It's classless class·less adj. 1. Lacking social or economic distinctions of class: a classless society. 2. Belonging to no particular social or economic class. . The most wealthy banker in Alaska takes the same pride of ownership in the resource as the welfare mother.'' Mallott became the fund's executive director in February 1995. Some critics said his appointment by the fund's board was a political payoff after Mallott campaigned for Gov. Tony Knowles
Tony Knowles and Anthony Knowles may refer to:
Yet few could challenge Mallott's qualifications. For 20 years, he was a board member and later chairman and president of Sealaska Corp., one of the most profitable native companies set up under the 1971 Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act The Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act, commonly abbreviated ANCSA, was signed into law by President Richard M. Nixon on December 18, 1971, the largest land claims settlement in United States history. . He also served eight years on the Permanent Fund board, including three terms as chairman. A former president of the Alaska Federation of Natives, Mallott was the state's first commissioner of community and regional affairs and has held board posts for banks, airlines and other businesses. Mallott, 53, was born in Yakutat, 200 miles northwest of Juneau, the ancestral home The Ancestral Home (Dom Ojczysty) is a political party in Poland, founded after the elections. It is a splinter of the League of Polish Families and led by Piotr Krutul. of his mother's Tlingit Indian clan. His father ran a general store and was Yakutat's mayor for 15 years. ``We ate everything that didn't sell at my father's store,'' Mallott said. ``We ate a lot of tripe tripe the scalded and cleaned rumen and reticulum. The omasum is discarded because of the difficulty in cleaning between the leaves. and pork hocks and on-the-edge vegetables.'' When his father died in 1965, the 22-year-old Mallott decided to leave college, return home and run for mayor in his father's place. ``Simply because Dad had died, I felt I ought to follow him - being mayor, that is, not in death,'' said Mallott, letting a trace of humor humor, according to ancient theory, any of four bodily fluids that determined man's health and temperament. Hippocrates postulated that an imbalance among the humors (blood, phlegm, black bile, and yellow bile) resulted in pain and disease, and that good health was show through his normally stolid stol·id adj. stol·id·er, stol·id·est Having or revealing little emotion or sensibility; impassive: "the incredibly massive and stolid bureaucracy of the Soviet system" manner. Mallott won but gave up the job six months later when then-Gov. Bill Egan hired him as an aide on local-government issues. Similarly, Mallott was elected mayor of Juneau in 1994 but quit soon after he was appointed to run the Permanent Fund. Mallott had wanted to stay mayor each time but resigned under criticism that he could not perform well while doing his other job. Through all his occupations, Mallott continues to work occasionally as a commercial fisherman, although his fishing time has been limited by the demands of the Permanent Fund. He said he sometimes comes to work at 4:30 a.m. with his investment staff, who must rise early because of the four-hour time difference between Alaska and the New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of markets. Alaska established the fund in hope it would grow large enough to become a perpetual money machine long after the oil is gone. Mallott and his wife applied their five children's Permanent Fund dividends to investments for college expenses, ``except for a token amount they could take and blow,'' Mallott said. The fund has paid about $10,000 to each Alaskan who has received dividends from the start. Those payments have given Alaskans a vested interest Vested Interest A financial or personal stake one entity has in an asset, security, or transaction. Notes: For example, if you have a mortgage, your bank has a vested interest on the sale of your house. See also: Right in making sure the fund is managed prudently. Although oil money still accounts for four-fifths of the state's revenues, production and income have been declining as Prudhoe Bay Prudhoe Bay, inlet of the Beaufort Sea and Arctic Ocean, N Alaska, in the Alaska North Slope region, east of the Colville River delta. In 1968 one of the largest oil reserves in North America was discovered in Prudhoe Bay. , Alaska's main petroleum field, peters out. The Permanent Fund has yet to be touched for state expenses, but Alaska leaders say the day will come when some of the fund's income will be spent for government. Luckily, the fund has ballooned faster than anyone expected. Since Mallott took over as executive director in February 1995, the fund has coasted to record profits in booming investment markets. For the first time this year, the fund's earnings of $1.8 billion exceeded the state's oil income. ``It's been managed quite prudently, and I think Byron has done a splendid job since taking over,'' said former Gov. Jay Hammond Jay Sterner Hammond (July 21 1922 – August 2 2005) was an American Republican politician who was Governor of Alaska from 1974 to 1982. He was born in Troy, New York in 1922. , who oversaw the fund's creation. Mallott politely declines to take credit. ``If the fund hadn't done well in this market, we all should have been taken out and shot,'' he said. Still, colleagues say his focused management style and eagerness to broaden investments boosted the fund's performance. Mallott also has brought welcome frugality after his predecessor, Bill Scott Bill Scott or Billy Scott may refer to:
``Byron brought us all to the point where we could further diversify our portfolio,'' said Grace Berg Schaible, who heads the fund's board of trustees board of trustees Politics The posse of thugs who oversee an institution's administration. See Board of directors. , ``and he's been responsible for reducing expenses, particularly our management fees.'' She said Mallott ``has provided stability at a time when we really needed stability.'' Running the fund is a job Mallott always coveted cov·et v. cov·et·ed, cov·et·ing, cov·ets v.tr. 1. To feel blameworthy desire for (that which is another's). See Synonyms at envy. 2. To wish for longingly. See Synonyms at desire. . He beat out 41 others who applied late in 1994. Though he doesn't consider himself a role model, Mallott takes pride in how far he's risen from his native roots. ``That this little old Tlingit boy from Yakutat could be sitting behind this desk, running this big fund and loving it, I just say, `Wow,' '' Mallott said. ``It's pretty cool.'' CAPTION(S): Photo Photo: Byron Mallott, a Tlingit Indian, is executive direct or of the Alaska Permanent Fund. Associated Press |
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