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Web posted December 6, 2006

Palin to review appointments

By ANNE SUTTON
the associated press

Gov. Sarah Palin will revisit 35 appointments made by her predecessor in the hour before he left office this week, especially that of Murkowski's former chief of staff, Jim Clark, to the volunteer seven-member board of the Alaska Natural Gas Development Authority.

At least one board member said Clark - Murkowski's right hand man in the failed negotiations with oil companies on a $25 billion natural gas pipeline - has bucked the board's decisions since its inception.

Board member Scott Heyworth questioned Murkowski's motives as well as Clark's support for the authority.

"To do this at the 11th hour and then appoint his chief of staff who's been at odds with ANGDA since day one, it's amazing," said Heyworth.

Palin's spokesman Curtis Smith said he told Palin of the appointment minutes before she took the stage for her swearing-in at the Carlson Center in Fairbanks.


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The natural gas authority was approved by voters through a citizens initiative in 2002. The organization was formed to plan for a state-owned and operated natural gas pipeline from the North Slope to Valdez, where the gas would be converted to liquids and shipped south.

Murkowski, however, pursued a different pipeline project and asked the authority to focus instead on a proposed natural gas pipeline to the Lower 48 through Canada. In particular, the group has been studying spur lines that would divert some of the gas to Alaska towns in the interior and southcentral regions.

At the time, some board members fretted about backing away from what they saw as a voter mandate although the group moved forward with planning under the governor's proposal.

Clark said he believes his experience and understanding of the project would be valuable to the authority.

"We feel ANGDA made a very very strong contribution there, and I'm looking forward to getting caught up with things they are doing and see if I can make a contribution," he said.

Clark said he resigned from his position as chief of staff at 10 a.m. Monday so that Murkowski could appoint him an hour later to a seat reserved for a member of the general public.

Heyworth also called Murkowski's failure to reappoint board chairman Andrew Warwick an act of "political retribution."

Warwick said he may have run afoul of Murkowski in the last election.

"I've supported Frank Murkowski for some 25 years, but I supported John Binkley in the primary and that probably had something to do with it," said Warwick, of Fairbanks.

Murkowski is traveling this week and could not be reached for comment. However, Clark said he is confident politics were not at play.

"I don't see where this administration has had retribution against anybody for anything, probably to a fault," Clark said. "Andy is owed a big debt of gratitude for his service."