Connecting Alaska to the World And the World to Alaska
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Longtime Interior Lawmaker David Guttenberg Won’t Seek Re-election to Ninth House Term

Skip Gray/360 North

Longtime Fairbanks Democratic lawmaker David Guttenberg has decided against running for re-election to a ninth term in the Alaska House of Representatives. Guttenberg says he’s leaving his decades of service to his district and the state party so he can enjoy life in his home in the Goldstream Valley.

Correction: See note, below.

Guttenberg says in his usual straightforward manner he wants to dispense with the usual speculation that ensues whenever a politician announces he or she has decided to leave elected office.

“Lemme get a couple of things outta the way, right? My health is fine – has nothing to do with my decision,” he said. “I have no legal matters hanging over my head, right? You’re not going to hear about something come down later on.”

The 66-year-old Guttenberg was hospitalized earlier this year for chest pains. But he says his reasons have nothing to do with that, nor with anything political. Instead, he says they have everything to do with going back to his home in the Goldstream Valley and enjoying life.

“It’s time for me to step out, for me to just catch up on my personal life,” he said. “The house is continually being remodeled and not finished, because of all the endless special sessions. My gardens have been neglected ...”

Guttenberg is still in Juneau for yet another of those extended legislative sessions, made longer by ongoing disagreement over putting together a state budget that’ll pay for the services Alaskans demand, but that also will satisfy Republicans’ demands for more spending cuts.

“People want to talk about cutting the budget, but at the same time they want services,” he said, “and they want the full PFD. And to get people all of those things is very difficult now.”

Credit Alaska House Majority Coalition
Guttenberg and fellow Fairbanks Rep. Scott Kawasaki on the floor of the House. Both will leave the House after the term ends – Guttenberg will leave elected office; Kawasaki is challenging Sen. Pete Kelly, of Fairbanks.

Despite the rancor of the annual budget ordeal, Guttenberg says he’s feels good about playing a role in helping pass many important pieces of legislation during his 16 years representing the 4th District, which sprawls north and west of the city. Before redistricting, he represented the 8th District.

He’s especially proud of his years-long effort to get a veterans cemetery for Fairbanks, he said, adding: “This summer, they’re actually going to do the groundbreaking for that.”

Another major accomplishment, he says, was helping get both the House and Senate to unanimously pass so-called PDM or prescription-drug manager legislation. He said it was “a significant piece of healthcare legislation that will drive down prescription-drug prices and keep our local pharmacies in place.”

He says his disappointments include not being able to persuade his fellow lawmakers to do more about the lack of broadband internet connectivity in many places around the state.

Guttenberg 'has been a great advocate for labor and working people and education for the last 16 years.'
- Mindy O'Neill
Interior Democrats

Guttenberg has been involved in Alaska politics since 1986, when he became treasurer of the Interior Democrats. He was elected chair the next year, and went to serve as chair of the state Democratic party and national committeeman.

He was scheduled to officially announce his decision to leave office during a during a meeting of the Laborers Union Local 9-4-2. That’s an appropriate setting, says Mindy O’Neall, the present chair of the Interior Democrats.

“David Guttenberg has been a great advocate for the Interior,” she said. “He’s been a great advocate for labor and working people and education for the last 16 years. And we sure have been lucky to have had his representation for that long.”

O’Neall says because of his service, no other Democrat has challenged Guttenberg over the years. But she anticipates there will be a fair amount of interest in the 4th District seat now that the longtime occupant is leaving it – for a long-delayed home-renovation project.

Correction: This story has been revised to clarify that Guttenberg won’t be running for re-election to a ninth term. Guttenberg is presently serving his eighth term.   

Tim has worked in the news business for over three decades, mainly as a newspaper reporter and editor in southern Arizona. Tim first came to Alaska with his family in 1967, and grew up in Delta Junction before emigrating to the Lower 48 in 1977 to get a college education and see the world.