Legislature(1995 - 1996)
04/04/1996 09:25 AM Senate FIN
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* first hearing in first committee of referral
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CS FOR HOUSE BILL NO. 212(FIN)
An Act relating to the management and sale of
state timber and relating to the administration of
forest land and classification of state land.
Co-chairman Halford directed that CSHB 212 (Fin) be brought
on for discussion and referenced SCS CSHB 212 (Res).
BARBARA COTTING, aide to Representative James, came before
committee. She directed attention to a sponsor statement
and bill analysis (copies on file in the original Senate
Finance Committee file for HB 212). She explained that the
bill was introduced at the request of constituents in the
timber industry in Fairbanks. It has subsequently received
wide state support. Interested constituents are operators
of small timber businesses in local communities. Operations
have been impacted by overly complicated procedures that
must be endured to secure timber from the state. It is not
a lack of timber but inability of the Dept. of Natural
Resources to allow harvesting that has caused the problem.
Current Title 38 statutes, requiring five-year planning and
three-year updates, make continuation of an ongoing industry
very difficult. Well-managed timber harvesting not only
creates and supports jobs and a healthy economy, it creates
and supports healthy forests. Communities are prohibited
from developing basic timber industries necessary for
maintaining strong forest ecology and a strong economic
environment.
HB 212 provides flexibility to the division of forestry to
meet the needs of small timber operators in a timely manner.
It also makes small adjustments to Title 28 and 41 intended
to secure a sustainable forest products industry. A truly
cooperative effect stemming from introduction last year and
work during the interim resulted in the bill in its current
form.
In response to a question from Senator Randy Phillips
regarding the planning process, Ms. Cotting advised that
sales of ten acres or less would be exempt from all
requirements of the forest land use plan. An additional key
provision is that small sales are defined as 160 acres or
less. The division of forestry will closely monitor sales.
TOM BOUTIN, State Forester, Division of Forestry, Dept. of
Natural Resources, came before committee. In response to an
inquiry from Senator Zharoff regarding operation of the ten-
acre exemption, Mr. Boutin explained that sales now "have to
go through two, separate, unrelated processes." They have
to be in the five-year schedule for at least the two prior
years. Each sale also has to have a forest land-use plan.
The latter is used to substantiate the best-interest finding
needed for disposal of any state land-use resource. Section
1 of the bill remove the requirement for sales of ten acres
or less. It would also mean that the department would not
have to prepare a plan when it sells timber and is not
involved in the harvest. He cited, as an example, a raft of
timber stolen from state land which was ultimately made
available for fire wood because sale by the state would have
required the expensive public process involved in developing
a land use plan. Section 1 would have alleviated that
situation. Mr. Boutin cited the situation at the Ft. Knox
project as a further example.
Co-chairman Halford asked if the department supports the
bill. Mr. Boutin replied that all concerns raised when the
bill was introduced have now been answered. He acknowledged
concern by the environmental community regarding exemption
of sales of 160 acres or less. Aside from emergency
situations, the division is committed to "having every sale
in the five-year schedule." The division will work on a
department order that will define that. Information from
operators indicates that the market window can open and
close in a two-year period.
Co-chairman Frank MOVED for passage of SCS CSHB 212 (Res)
with individual recommendations and accompanying fiscal
notes. No objection having been raised, SCS CSHB 212 (Res)
was REPORTED OUT of committee with a ($3.0) fiscal note from
the Dept. of Natural Resources, $19.6 note from the Dept. of
Fish and Game, and a zero note from the Dept. of
Environmental Conservation. Co-chairmen Halford and Frank
and Senator Rieger signed the committee report with a "do
pass" recommendation. Senators Donley, Phillips, and
Zharoff signed "no recommendation."
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