Legislature(2021 - 2022)ADAMS 519

03/18/2022 01:30 PM House FINANCE

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* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+= HB 281 APPROP: OPERATING BUDGET/LOANS/FUNDS TELECONFERENCED
Scheduled but Not Heard
+= HB 282 APPROP: MENTAL HEALTH BUDGET TELECONFERENCED
Scheduled but Not Heard
+= HB 149 CHILD CARE PROVIDER COLLECTIVE BARGAINING TELECONFERENCED
Moved CSHB 149(FIN) Out of Committee
+ HB 289 AK MARIJUANA INDUSTRY TASK FORCE TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
+= SB 9 ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL; ALCOHOL REG TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
                                                                                                                              
                  HOUSE FINANCE COMMITTEE                                                                                       
                                                                                                                              
                       March 18, 2022                                                                                           
                         1:32 p.m.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                              
 1:32:06 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 CALL TO ORDER                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Merrick called the House Finance Committee meeting                                                                     
 to order at 1:32 p.m.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
 MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
 Representative Neal Foster, Co-Chair                                                                                           
 Representative Kelly Merrick, Co-Chair                                                                                         
 Representative Dan Ortiz, Vice-Chair                                                                                           
 Representative Bryce Edgmon                                                                                                    
 Representative DeLena Johnson                                                                                                  
 Representative Andy Josephson                                                                                                  
 Representative Bart LeBon (via teleconference)                                                                                 
 Representative Sara Rasmussen (via teleconference)                                                                             
 Representative Steve Thompson                                                                                                  
 Representative Adam Wool                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
 MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
 Representative Ben Carpenter                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 ALSO PRESENT                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
 Senator  Peter  Micciche,  Sponsor;  Tiffany Hall,  Executive                                                                  
 Director,   Recover  Alaska;   Representative   Zach  Fields,                                                                  
 Sponsor;   Representative   Grier   Hopkins,   Sponsor;   Joe                                                                  
 Hardenbrook, Staff, Representative Grier Hopkins.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
 PRESENT VIA TELECONFERENCE                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Anna  Brawley,   Title  4  Review   Coordinator,  Agnew  Beck                                                                  
 Consulting,  Anchorage;  Glen  Klinkhart,  Director,  Alcohol                                                                  
 and Marijuana  Control Office, Anchorage;  Lee Ellis, Brewers                                                                  
 Guild of  Alaska, Girdwood; Dana  Walukiewicz, Chair, Alcohol                                                                  
 Beverage  Control  Board, Department  of  Commerce, Community                                                                  
 and  Economic Development;  Sarah  Oates, President  and CEO,                                                                  
 Alaska    Cabaret,    Hotel,    Restaurant    and   Retailers                                                                  
 Association,  Anchorage; Lee Ellis,  Brewers Guild of Alaska,                                                                  
 Girdwood.                                                                                                                      
 SUMMARY                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
 HB 149    CHILD CARE PROVIDER COLLECTIVE BARGAINING                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
           CSHB  149(FIN) was  REPORTED out  of committee with                                                                  
           three  "do  pass"  recommendations   and  five  "no                                                                  
           recommendation"  recommendations  and with  one new                                                                  
           fiscal  impact  note from  the Department  of Labor                                                                  
           and Workforce Development.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
 HB 289    AK MARIJUANA INDUSTRY TASK FORCE                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
           HB 289 was HEARD and HELD in committee for                                                                           
           further consideration.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
 CSSB 9(FIN)                                                                                                                    
           ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL; ALCOHOL REG                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
           CSSB 9(FIN) was HEARD and HELD in committee for                                                                      
           further consideration.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
 Co-Chair Merrick reviewed the meeting agenda.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
 1:33:03 PM                                                                                                                   
 AT EASE                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
 1:33:17 PM                                                                                                                   
 RECONVENED                                                                                                                     
 Co-Chair Merrick                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
 CS FOR SENATE BILL NO. 9(FIN)                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
      "An  Act relating  to alcoholic  beverages;  relating to                                                                  
      the   regulation  of  manufacturers,   wholesalers,  and                                                                  
      retailers   of   alcoholic  beverages;   relating     to                                                                  
      licenses,    endorsements,    and    permits   involving                                                                  
      alcoholic   beverages;   relating   to   common  carrier                                                                  
      approval  to transport  or deliver  alcoholic beverages;                                                                  
      relating  to   the  Alcoholic  Beverage  Control  Board;                                                                  
      relating  to  offenses  involving  alcoholic  beverages;                                                                  
      amending  Rule  17(h),  Alaska  Rules  of Minor  Offense                                                                  
      Procedure; and providing for an effective date."                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
 1:33:32 PM                                                                                                                   
 Co-Chair Merrick  relayed that the  bill was previously heard                                                                  
 in  committee   on  March   10,  2022,   and  the  PowerPoint                                                                  
 presentation would begin where it left off.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
    ANNA BRAWLEY, TITLE 4 REVIEW COORDINATOR, AGNEW BECK                                                                        
 CONSULTING,  ANCHORAGE (via  teleconference),  continued with                                                                  
 slide  27 of  the presentation  titled "Alcohol  and Beverage                                                                  
 Control  (ABC) Board  Title  4 Review  Project,"  dated March                                                                  
 10,  2022  (copy  on file).  She  presented  Slide  27 titled                                                                  
 "Tracking  Alcohol  Orders  in  Local  Option Areas:  Current                                                                  
 Title  4." She reminded  the committee  that during  the last                                                                  
 hearing  she  discussed  the  regulation  of  internet  sales                                                                  
 [Slides  24 to  26]  and noted  that slide  27  portrayed the                                                                  
 current policy  that was not proposed  to change [Sections 10                                                                  
 to  12   and  16,  AS   04.06.095;  existing   limits  in  AS                                                                  
 04.11.010].  She explained  that currently  in "Local Option"                                                                  
 communities  there was  a  system in  place that  tracked the                                                                  
 limited  amount of  imported  alcohol  for personal  use. The                                                                  
 slide   depicted  the   monthly  importation   limit  set  in                                                                  
 statute.  She detailed that  an Alaska  customer submitted an                                                                  
 order  to the  package store  and  the licensee  verified the                                                                  
 customer's age  and if the monthly  order amount was met. The                                                                  
 licensee  then  records  the order  in  the  Alcohol Beverage                                                                  
 Control  Board  (ABC)  database,  called  the "Written  Order                                                                  
 Database."  The  database  access  was  limited   to the  ABC                                                                  
 board,  package stores, and  law enforcement.  She added that                                                                  
 the  current  system  was  separate  from  the  proposal  for                                                                  
 internet sales,  which was primarily  for areas that were not                                                                  
 local option areas.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
 1:36:37 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Ms. Brawley  advanced to  slide 28 titled  "Proposed: Publish                                                                  
 Community-Level  Data from Local Option  Order Database." She                                                                  
 elaborated  that in current  Title 4, [Sections  10 to 12, AS                                                                  
 04.06.095]  all data in  the local option  order database was                                                                  
 private  and deleted  after  one year.  She relayed  that the                                                                  
 state  needed to  stop bootlegging  therefore,  the following                                                                  
 changes were  proposed. The bill  would keep individual order                                                                  
 information  private but retain  aggregate data  for 10 years                                                                  
 and  allowed  the ABC  Board  to publish  annual  total sales                                                                  
 volume  by region or  community. The board  would protect the                                                                  
 individual   order  data   and   publish  an   annual  report                                                                  
 containing aggregate data by region.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
 1:38:23 PM                                                                                                                   
 Ms.  Brawley  remarked that  the  following  slides explained                                                                  
 the  remaining  policy  provisions  in SB  9.  She  turned to                                                                  
 slide  29  titled  "Proposed:  Revise  Penalties  for  Lessor                                                                  
 Offenses,"   [Defined   throughout:   most   prohibited  acts                                                                  
 defined  in  chapters  11  and  16.]  She  conveyed  that  in                                                                  
 current  law, almost all violations  of Title  4 were Class A                                                                  
 misdemeanors.  She  delineated  that  the  stakeholder  group                                                                  
 examined  every  penalty  section in  Title  4  and discussed                                                                  
 what the  appropriate penalty should  be. When penalties were                                                                  
 set  high across  the board  and perceived  to be  too strict                                                                  
 for most  offenses, law enforcement  was less likely to issue                                                                  
 citations  and  courts  were  less  likely  to  pursue  those                                                                  
 cases. The  proposal was to clearly  define the penalties for                                                                  
 each  section as  opposed  to setting  penalties  "across the                                                                  
 board."  The  slide  illustrated  the   penalties  for  minor                                                                  
 offenses  (violation),  Class  A  Misdemeanor,   and Class  C                                                                  
 Felony.  She  indicated  that  many  penalties  would  become                                                                  
 minor    offenses.    Serious    violations    would   remain                                                                  
 misdemeanors or felonies.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
 1:40:08 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Representative  Josephson  inquired  whether  serving alcohol                                                                  
 to  a  minor  would remain  a  Class  C  felony.  Ms. Brawley                                                                  
 answered   that   the   penalty   was   a  misdemeanor.   She                                                                  
 exemplified  an adult who  purchased a  drink in a  bar for  a                                                                 
 minor.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
 Representative  Wool relayed the situation  where minors used                                                                  
 fake identification  (ID) to  enter a bar.  He wondered if it                                                                  
 was still  a misdemeanor  if someone purchased  a drink for a                                                                  
 minor with a fake ID.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
 SENATOR PETER  MICCICHE, SPONSOR, replied  that the proof and                                                                  
 the standard  used to  charge someone was  not changing; what                                                                  
 was changing  was how  an offense was  classified: violation,                                                                  
 misdemeanor,  or felony. He  reiterated that if  a person was                                                                  
 able  to prove their  innocence due  to a fake  ID that would                                                                  
 not  change;  the  adjustment  was  to  the  level   of   the                                                                  
 offenses.   Representative   Wool   supported   lowering  the                                                                  
 aforementioned  situation  to a  misdemeanor. He  shared from                                                                  
 his  personal  experience   owning  a  bar  a  time  security                                                                  
 personnel  inadvertently missed  an underage  entrant and was                                                                  
 charged  with  a   misdemeanor  and  was  informed  the  next                                                                  
 violation  would be a felony.  The employee  quit the job. He                                                                  
 asked if the same penalties were proposed in the bill.                                                                         
 Senator  Micciche answered  that the question  was covered on                                                                  
 the  next  slide.  He  conveyed  that,  in  current  law,    a                                                                 
 licensee   or   employee  who   knowingly   overserves     an                                                                  
 intoxicated  adult  or  who serves  alcohol  to  a  minor was                                                                  
 guilty  of  a  Class  A  Misdemeanor.  The  bill changed  the                                                                  
 penalty  for both to  a minor offense,  with a  $500 fine.  He                                                                 
 indicated   that  the   offenses   were  rarely   charged  or                                                                  
 prosecuted  mostly  due  to  overbooked  courts.  He believed                                                                  
 that  the violation  would  be more  universally  applied. He                                                                  
 added  that when the  server knowingly provided  alcohol to  a                                                                 
 minor,   the   licensee   would   also   receive   a     $250                                                                  
 administrative fine from the ABC Board.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
 1:45:05 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Co-Chair Merrick acknowledged that Representative Johnson                                                                      
 had joined the meeting.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
 Representative  Thompson  asked  if the  courts  still  put  a                                                                 
 mark  on someone's  driver's license  if they  repeatedly had                                                                  
 drunk  driving offenses.  Senator Micciche  answered that the                                                                  
 bill  did  not  change  the system.  Representative  Thompson                                                                  
 wondered  what the  amount of  the fine  was for  someone who                                                                  
 served  alcohol  to  an  individual  with  a marked  license.                                                                  
 Senator  Micciche was  unsure, but  he thought  that the bill                                                                  
 did  not change  the offense.  He  reiterated that  the slide                                                                  
 was only  referring to the change  from a Class A misdemeanor                                                                  
 to a  minor offense  for overserving an  intoxicated adult or                                                                  
 a minor. He deferred the answer to Ms. Brawley.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
 Ms. Brawley confirmed the Senator's answer. She elaborated                                                                     
   that the stakeholders looked at all the penalties and                                                                        
 separated   the  serious   crimes  from  the   more  "routine                                                                  
 issues."                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
 Representative  Thompson  repeated  his  question  and  asked                                                                  
 what   the  penalty   was  for   serving  a  person   with  a                                                                  
 restriction on their driver's license.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
 Senator  Micciche deferred  the question  to the  director of                                                                  
 the Alcohol and Marijuana Control Office (AMCO).                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
 1:47:27 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
GLEN  KLINKHART,  DIRECTOR,  ALCOHOL  AND  MARIJUANA CONTROL                                                                    
OFFICE, ANCHORAGE (via teleconference), replied that he had                                                                     
 not  written the  ticket  in some  time  and would  follow up                                                                  
 with an answer.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
 Representative  Wool recalled  from personal  experience that                                                                  
 the onus  was on the person with  the restriction and not the                                                                  
 establishment  because  the  person  could  enter  a  bar for                                                                  
 entertainment  purposes,  however   they  could  not enter   a                                                                 
 liquor store.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
 Ms. Brawley moved to slide 30 titled "Proposed: Licensee                                                                       
 Penalties for Overserving an Adult or Serving a Minor:"                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
      In current Title 4, a licensee or employee who                                                                            
      knowingly overserves an intoxicated adult or  who                                                                         
      serves  alcohol  to  a  minor is  guilty  of  a  Class  A                                                                 
      Misdemeanor.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
      The bill would change the penalty for both statutes to                                                                    
      a Minor Offense, with a $500 fine.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
      In  addition to  the penalty  to the person  who commits                                                                  
      the  violation, the owner  of the  license would receive                                                                  
      an administrative  (non-criminal)  penalty of $250. This                                                                  
      alerts the owner  that a violation occurred, holds  them                                                                  
      immediately    accountable    and    encourages   future                                                                  
      compliance.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
    Section 92, AS 04.16.030; Section 104, AS 04.16.052;                                                                        
      Sections 127  129, AS 04.16.180.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
 Ms.  Brawley  elaborated  that  the goal  was  not  to reduce                                                                  
 penalties arbitrarily  but to find the  most effective way to                                                                  
 enforce the  statutes and separate threats  to life or safety                                                                  
 and  serious  crimes from  more  routine  business compliance                                                                  
 issues.  She expounded  that  the minor  offense  allowed the                                                                  
 ABC board to address the violations.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
 1:51:29 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Representative  Wool asked  about overserving  an intoxicated                                                                  
 adult.  He  asked whether  a  definition  for  an intoxicated                                                                  
 adult (while not driving) was included in SB 9.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
 Senator  Micciche answered  that the  bill did  not change or                                                                  
 deal  with the definition.  He restated  that the legislation                                                                  
 merely  decreased the offense  from a misdemeanor  to a "more                                                                  
 effectively managed minor offense."                                                                                            
 Ms.  Brawley turned  to  slide 31  titled  "Proposed: Require                                                                  
 Keg Registration:"                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
•   Reduces  adults' incentive  to  legally  purchase alcohol                                                                   
    and supply an underage drinking party.                                                                                      
 •   Kegs tagged with the  purchaser's contact information can                                                                  
    be t racked if confiscated at an underage party or other                                                                    
    situation where minors are given access to alcohol.                                                                         
•   A  person, not  a licensee,  possessing  an  untagged keg                                                                   
    containing alcohol could be fined.                                                                                          
 •   Modeled on existing Anchorage  and Juneau ordinances.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
 Section 134, AS 04.21.059                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
 Ms.  Brawley   emphasized  that  the   keg  registration  was                                                                  
 targeted at  reducing underage drinking  and was considered  a                                                                 
 best  practice  in   public  health.  She  offered  that  the                                                                  
 enforcement  was not at the point  of sale; the licensee sold                                                                  
 the keg  with a tag  containing the  purchaser's information,                                                                  
 if a keg  was confiscated at a  party with underage drinkers,                                                                  
 it would  allow for  tracing the  purchaser as a  way to hold                                                                  
 the  purchaser  accountable.  The system  would  result  in  a                                                                 
 ticket to the purchaser not the store.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
 1:54:47 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Representative Josephson cautioned about the "criminality                                                                      
 element."   He  understood   the  sponsor   and  stakeholders                                                                  
  "wanted something that worked" regarding violations. He                                                                       
   cited a statute in Title 4, "AS 04.16.059. Aggravated                                                                        
 penalties for certain violations involving a person under                                                                      
 21  years of  age and committed  by  a sex offender  or child                                                                  
 kidnapper."  He asked  if  the bill  renumbered  sections. He                                                                  
 considered  that  perhaps the  bill  did not  rewrite  all of                                                                  
 Title 4.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
 Senator  Micciche replied  that he  did not recall  where the                                                                  
 current  statute cited  by Representative  Josephson  was. He                                                                  
 indicated  that   most  of  the  current  sections  would  be                                                                  
 renumbered by SB 9. He deferred to Mr. Klinkhart.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
 Mr.  Klinkhart  answered that  he  did not  believe  that the                                                                  
 statute   was   covered   in  the   rewrite.   Representative                                                                  
 Josephson  asked  if  it  meant  the  section  remained    as                                                                  
 written. Mr. Klinkhart replied in the affirmative.                                                                             
 Representative   Josephson   relayed   that   a   constituent                                                                  
 expressed  concern  regarding limiting  homebrewing  kegs. He                                                                  
 wondered   if  the   registration  applied   to  homebrewing.                                                                  
 Senator  Micciche replied  that  the bill  did not  deal with                                                                  
 private homebrewing. Homebrewing rights were not changed.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
 Representative  Edgmon  cited  slide  30  and  wondered  what                                                                  
 standards  were used  to establish  an intoxicated  adults in                                                                  
 bars  and wondered  why  it was  not defined  in  statute. He                                                                  
 guessed an eye test was used.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
 1:57:33 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Senator  Micciche  clarified that  he  did not  state  that a                                                                  
 threshold  did not exist  in law  only that  the standard did                                                                  
 not  change. He  contended  that only  the  classification of                                                                  
 the  offense changed.  Representative  Edgmon  clarified that                                                                  
 he had  not stated Senator  Micciche had stated  it. He noted                                                                  
 that  SB   9  was  an  omnibus  bill   and  wondered  why  an                                                                  
 intoxicated  adult  was  not defined.  He  believed  that his                                                                  
 question  was "genuine."  He deduced  that it was  likely not                                                                  
 practical to administer a test in the situation.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
 Representative  Wool  shared  from  personal experience  that                                                                  
 what  was  monitored  in  a  bar  was people's  behavior.  He                                                                  
 believed that  the .08 percent blood  alcohol content was for                                                                  
 operating  a motor vehicle  and did  not apply in  a bar, nor                                                                  
 should  it. He  believed  outward signs  of  intoxication was                                                                  
 the  definition in  statute and  thought that  was the reason                                                                  
 servers  were  mandated  to  take  the  Training  for Alcohol                                                                  
 Professionals  (TAP) or  other  approved courses.  He pointed                                                                  
 out  that   his  prior  question  was   to  ensure  that  the                                                                  
 definition  was  not  being redefined  with  a  blood alcohol                                                                  
 level. He  wanted to avoid a situation  where law enforcement                                                                  
 entered a bar and administered breath tests.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Senator  Micciche stated that  a Driving  Under the Influence                                                                  
 (DUI)   was  a  different   standard.  He   shared  that  the                                                                  
 definition   under   discussion   was   AS.04.21.080   (b)(9)                                                                  
 regarding a "drunken person" read the following:                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
           (9) "drunken person" means a person whose                                                                            
      physical  or  mental conduct  is substantially  impaired                                                                  
      as  a  result  of  the  introduction   of  an  alcoholic                                                                  
      beverage  into the person's body  and who exhibits those                                                                  
      plain   and  easily   observed  or   discovered  outward                                                                  
      manifestations of behavior commonly known to be                                                                           
      produced    by   the   overconsumption    of   alcoholic                                                                  
      beverages;                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
 2:01:42 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Representative  Edgmon agreed  that a specific  threshold was                                                                  
 difficult   to  enforce.  He  commented   that  the  idea  of                                                                  
 establishing  a   standard  for  intoxication  "was  just  an                                                                  
observation" and thought that it was a reasonable question.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
 Ms.   Brawley   noted  that   slide   32   contained  contact                                                                  
 information and that the slide presentation was concluded.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
 Representative  Wool  referenced  changes  in  the  bill from                                                                  
 existing  law regarding  tasting  rooms. He  inquired whether                                                                  
 the  presentation included  increased  hours, changes  to the                                                                  
 population  caps,  and  the ability  to  have  live  music in                                                                  
 tasting rooms.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
 2:03:03 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Ms. Brawley  answered that she did  not believe they outlined                                                                  
 the  specifics  in the  presentation,  but  it  was generally                                                                  
 covered  in Slide 10.  The changes proposed  would extend the                                                                  
 hours  to  10  pm  with  a  hard  close. The  provision  also                                                                  
 allowed  limited amount  of live  entertainment via  a permit                                                                  
 system.  Representative Wool  believed  that it was  a "noted                                                                  
 omission"  that  the  specifics  were  not  included   in the                                                                  
 presentation.  He  remembered  that  there  was an  amendment                                                                  
 regarding  the  issue  in the  Senate  Finance  Committee. He                                                                  
 observed that  as a former beverage  dispensary license owner                                                                  
 the  issue  was  intensely  debated.  He  wondered  what  the                                                                  
 specifics  of  the  statutes  were regarding  limited  hours,                                                                  
 sales volume,  and population caps.  He wondered if any other                                                                  
 specifics  were on  a slide.  Ms. Brawley  did not  recall if                                                                  
 the  subject  was  specifically  discussed  and relayed  that                                                                  
 over the  years the number of slides  had been narrowed to be                                                                  
 respectful of the committee time.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
 Co-Chair Merrick asked if the answers could be provided in                                                                     
 writing.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
 Ms. Brawley agreed to provide the information.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
   Representative Wool stated that the subject had  been                                                                        
   brought before every legislature during his eight-year                                                                       
 tenure. The provisions did change from one legislature to                                                                      
 the next.  He believed that  it was important  to include the                                                                  
 changes   in  the   presentation.   He  mentioned   that  the                                                                  
 population  caps had changed dramatically,  and it was worthy                                                                  
 of discussion.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
 Senator  Micciche  interjected that  the  bill was  125 pages                                                                  
 long and  the original presentation  had been over 70 slides;                                                                  
 committees  had requested a condensed  presentation. He could                                                                  
 speak  in detail  to the  specific  tasting room  changes. He                                                                  
 asked  Co-Chair Merrick  if it was  presently a  good time to                                                                  
 discuss the changes.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
 Co-Chair Merrick wanted to wait until after the committee                                                                      
 heard from invited testifiers.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
 2:07:23 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Representative  Thompson   looked  at  slide  12  related  to                                                                  
 endorsements.  He asked if  a special endorsement  was needed                                                                  
 for  serving  alcohol  on  a  golf course.  Senator  Micciche                                                                  
 answered  that  a  golf  course  would  need  a  license.  He                                                                  
 explained  that an  endorsement was  an add  on to  a license                                                                  
 type.  He cited  AS 04.09.300  on  page 21  of the  bill that                                                                  
 addressed  the individual license  type necessary  for a golf                                                                  
 course.  Representative  Thompson inquired  if a  golf course                                                                  
 had  a  restaurant and  bar  in a  building  and  alcohol was                                                                  
 served outside  on the golf course  how the licensing worked.                                                                  
 Senator  Micciche  replied that  a golf  course  license only                                                                  
 allowed   alcohol   to  be   served  on   the   golf  course.                                                                  
 Representative  Thompson  reiterated  his  question.  Senator                                                                  
 Micciche  replied  if  the  owner  of  a  golf  course  was a                                                                  
 Beverage Dispensary  License (BDL) holder  they could serve  a                                                                 
 full  bar on the  whole course.  The golf  course license was                                                                  
 different,  it  only allowed  serving  beer and  wine  on the                                                                  
 course.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
 2:10:18 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Representative  LeBon  asked  about the  one  license  per 12                                                                  
 thousand  population limit  for breweries,  distilleries, and                                                                  
 wineries.  He  wondered  how  the  limit  compared  to  other                                                                  
 states.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
 Senator  Micciche   deferred  the   question  to  an  invited                                                                  
 testifier.                                                                                                                     
  LEE  ELLIS,  BREWERS  GUILD  OF  ALASKA,  GIRDWOOD  (via                                                                      
 teleconference),   asked  for  a  repeat   of  the  question.                                                                  
 Representative  LeBon complied. Mr.  Ellis responded that the                                                                  
 Brewers  Guild  had  spent  a  lot  of  time  examining   the                                                                  
 numbers.  He detailed  that by  comparison, Alaska  had a low                                                                  
 number of  brew pubs and only 4  other states had the tasting                                                                  
 room  model.  He  noted that  most  states  allowed  for full                                                                  
 retail  licenses for  breweries. The  actual number  of total                                                                  
 breweries   was  one  per   7  thousand   per  population  of                                                                  
 individuals  over 21 years  of age. He qualified  that if the                                                                  
 state  filled all  the licenses  available for  tasting rooms                                                                  
 only,  Alaska would  have  the densest  brewing  community in                                                                  
the world. Switzerland has the most breweries per person at                                                                     
 1 to  9 thousand  and Seattle allowed  a ratio of  one to 9.5                                                                  
 thousand population.  He stated that  Alaska could have "more                                                                  
 breweries than any place on Earth."                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
 2:13:43 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Representative  LeBon remarked that the  person count was not                                                                  
 only adults  and was based on total  population. He asked how                                                                  
 many  communities  were  limited  out  at  the  one  per   12                                                                  
 thousand  ratio  proposed  in the  bill.  Mr.  Ellis answered                                                                  
 that  for   the  retail  license  there   were  a  number  of                                                                  
 communities  that  already  were capped  out.  He  listed the                                                                  
 communities  that  would become  capped  out:  Sitka, Juneau,                                                                  
 and Wasilla.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Co-Chair  Merrick  asked how  many  communities  were already                                                                  
 capped  out. Mr.  Ellis  replied Homer,  Haines,  Palmer, and                                                                  
 Skagway                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
 2:15:16 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Representative  Wool remarked that the  state was broken into                                                                  
 municipalities,  and it was not the  same as taking the total                                                                  
 population  of the state and  dividing it by  12 thousand. He                                                                  
 commented  that many  states did not  have a  quota on liquor                                                                  
 licenses  and the comparison  was likely to  quota states. He                                                                  
 ascertained  that a state  with 25 million  people would have                                                                  
 a different  ratio than a state with  under 1 million people.                                                                  
 He  asked how  many breweries  Anchorage currently  had, were                                                                  
 allowed  under law, and   how many were  allowed with passage                                                                  
 of the bill. Mr. Ellis responded that Anchorage could have                                                                     
 28 retail  tasting rooms  for breweries,  28 for distilleries                                                                  
 and  28  for  wineries   if  SB  9  was  enacted.  Currently,                                                                  
 Anchorage  allowed  for  99  brewery  tasting  rooms,  99                                                                      
 distillery  retail licenses,  and 99 winery  retail licenses.                                                                  
 Representative  Wool  asked  how  many  breweries   Anchorage                                                                  
 currently  had. Mr. Ellis replied  that currently 3 breweries                                                                  
 were planning  on opening. He would  double check the number.                                                                  
 He  believed  currently  7  or  8  breweries  were  operating                                                                  
 retail licenses.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
 Senator Micciche  interjected that 25  would be allowed under                                                                  
 the bill  and 8 or 9  were currently operating  with a couple                                                                  
 planning on opening. He relayed that the bill allowed a                                                                        
 300  percent increase  in current  tasting room  licenses. He                                                                  
 added  that  breweries, wineries,  and  distilleries  were no                                                                  
 longer limited and only tasting rooms had proposed limits.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
 Co-Chair Merrick moved to invited testimony.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 2:18:12 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 TIFFANY HALL, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, RECOVER ALASKA, read from                                                                    
 a prepared  statement. She spoke in  support of the bill. She                                                                  
 shared  that her  organization  was a  statewide organization                                                                  
 comprised  of leaders  in the fields  of health,  safety, and                                                                  
 prevention   that   worked  to   reduce   alcohol   use.  The                                                                  
 organization  had  been  working  collaboratively  for   many                                                                  
 years with all the stakeholders and community leaders on SB
 9  and was  not an  abstinence  only organization.  She noted                                                                  
 that  the state struggled  with alcoholism  and that Alaska's                                                                  
 alcohol  related deaths  were twice  as high  as the  rest of                                                                  
 the nation. She emphasized that alcohol use cost the state                                                                     
 $2.4  billion   annually  and  that   the  leading  cause   of                                                                 
 emergency  room  visits  were  alcohol  related   for   those                                                                  
 between  the ages  of 18 to  64. She  declared that  SB 9 had                                                                  
 many  provisions that  could  improve Alaska's  statistics on                                                                  
 alcohol  use.  She delineated  that  the  bill  regulated the                                                                  
 number  and  types of  alcohol  outlets, which  was  the most                                                                  
 effective  strategy for  reducing the  harms of  alcohol. The                                                                  
 bill created  regulations for internet  sales of alcohol that                                                                  
 currently    was    unregulated.    The    legislation   also                                                                  
 restructured  enforcement and added  licensee and social host                                                                  
 liabilities,  both were  proven  to reduce  underage drinking                                                                  
 and  driving  fatalities.  The bill  closed  the  loophole  on                                                                 
 alcohol  server education  and increased license  fees, which                                                                  
 provided  more  funding  for AMCO  to  educate  licensees and                                                                  
 perform underage  compliance checks  that halted when federal                                                                  
 funding  was   exhausted  approximately   5  years  ago.  She                                                                  
 believed  that  the bill  kept  intact many  ways  to promote                                                                  
 business while maintaining health and safety regulations.                                                                      
 She reported  that a  considerable amount of  work took place                                                                  
 over  the  prior  11 years  among  over  120 stakeholders  to                                                                  
 craft  SB 9. She  thanked the  sponsor and  believed that the                                                                  
 bill was  a "huge win"  for the state. She  urged for passage                                                                  
 of the bill.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Representative  LeBon thanked Ms. Hall  for her testimony. He                                                                  
 asked  about  a  brewery  tasting  room.  He  asked   if   it                                                                  
 reflected  the  same  safety  concerns  equal  to  bars   and                                                                  
 package stores.  Ms. Hall responded  that one study suggested                                                                  
 that  taverns,  restaurants,  and  possibly  breweries   were                                                                  
 shown  to  have a  higher  connection  to  crime  and violent                                                                  
 crime  than a liquor  store. She  offered to  send the proper                                                                  
 citation  for  the  study.  Representative  LeBon  questioned                                                                  
 whether  a  brewery  tasting room  was  as  problematic  as  a                                                                 
 traditional  bar. Ms.  Hall  replied that  Alaska was  one of                                                                  
 the  few states  with  a  tasting room  model.  She suspected                                                                  
 there was  not peer reviewed  evidence specifically regarding                                                                  
 tasting  rooms. She  had reached  out to the  nations leading                                                                  
 expert  on  the  number  of  alcohol  outlets  relating    to                                                                  
 density,   Dr.  Pamela   Trangenstein,   [Scientist,  Alcohol                                                                  
 Research   Group;   Doctor   of   Philosophy   (PhD)  Alcohol                                                                  
 Epidemiology  and Policy; Master of  Public Health (MPH). She                                                                  
 relayed that  the doctor believed an  [alcohol] outlet was an                                                                  
 outlet  and alcohol  was  alcohol and  the  more of  them the                                                                  
 more  harm  was observed  in  the  community.  She delineated                                                                  
 that  the proliferation  of alcohol  outlets on  every corner                                                                  
 sent  a message to  youth about  the social  normalization of                                                                  
 alcohol.  She added  that  research supported  that  the more                                                                  
 access  to  alcohol  that  was  observed  by  youth  the more                                                                  
 likely they would drink at an earlier age.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
 Representative  LeBon asked if a  representative from the ABC                                                                  
 Board may want to answer the question.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
 2:24:41 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
  DANA WALUKIEWICZ, CHAIR, ALCOHOL BEVERAGE CONTROL BOARD,                                                                      
 DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, COMMUNITY AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT                                                                     
 (via   teleconference),  replied   that  he   would  like  to                                                                  
 research  whether  there  was  a correlation  of  enforcement                                                                  
 between   the   operation    of   tasting   rooms   and   BDL                                                                  
 establishments.  He did not have the  information on hand. He                                                                  
 would also check with local police departments.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
  Representative LeBon observed that the bill seemed to be                                                                      
 targeting brewery tasting rooms as a big concern by                                                                            
 limiting the number of licenses. He was wondering if                                                                           
 licenses  should be  limited to  all places  serving alcohol.                                                                  
 He thought there appeared to be a harsh focus on tasting                                                                       
 rooms.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
 Representative  Wool  believed  that  studying  whether there                                                                  
 were  more  police  interventions  at  bars  or taverns  than                                                                  
 tasting  rooms  would  produce  a  "predictable"  answer.   He                                                                 
 noted  that  bars  were open  until  1:00  A.M.  lacked drink                                                                  
 limits  and were  culturally  different.  He deduced  that it                                                                  
 was  easy  to  guess  that  bars  would  receive more  police                                                                  
 intervention.   He  added   that  all  alcohol   outlets  had                                                                  
 population  limits.  He summarized  Recover  Alaska's message                                                                  
 that  alcohol  had detrimental  effects  on  society  and the                                                                  
 more accessible  the more it harms  society. He recalled that                                                                  
 he had  a prior conversation in  2014 regarding tasting rooms                                                                  
 with  Ms.  Hall who  informed  Representative  Wool  that the                                                                  
 addition  of tasting  rooms was not  a Title  4 issue because                                                                  
 it  happened independently  in  statute.  He wondered  if Ms.                                                                  
 Hall had  changed her opinion based  on her current comments.                                                                  
 He inquired  if she  believed whether expanding  the hours of                                                                  
 tasting  rooms contributed  to  alcohol's harmful  effects on                                                                  
 society.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
 2:29:45 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Ms. Hall  explained that  in her prior  opinion regarding the                                                                  
 addition  of tasting  rooms, she  intended to  convey that it                                                                  
 already  existed  in  statute and  her  organization  was not                                                                  
 trying  to close  bars or by  their addition,  tasting rooms.                                                                  
 She  stood  by what  she  stated about  the  proliferation of                                                                  
 alcohol  in terms of  public health and  prevention outcomes.                                                                  
 She   referenced  the   expanded  hours  of   operation.  She                                                                  
 wondered if  only the hours were  expanding or if serving was                                                                  
 expanded.  She relayed research  regarding multiple different                                                                  
 closing  times  at alcohol  outlets  so that  not  all people                                                                  
 poured out  into the street at the  same time. She offered to                                                                  
 research the  effect of expanded hours  for tasting rooms and                                                                  
 wanted   to   determine  if   sales   were   also  expanding.                                                                  
 Representative  Wool  ascertained  that in  the  current bill                                                                  
 version,  tasting rooms  would  close at  10:00 P.M.  and the                                                                  
 hours  of service  was expanding.  He  qualified that  he was                                                                  
 not  "anti-tasting  room"  and  stated  that competition  and                                                                  
 leveling  the playing field  was his concern.  He argued that                                                                  
 he  did  not  oppose  alcohol  tasting  rooms.  He  posed the                                                                  
 question  of  whether  under-age  drinking  was  bad  for the                                                                  
 health of youth or because it was against the law. He                                                                          
 pointed  to the  fact  that most  other  places in  the world                                                                  
 allowed  drinking at  an  earlier age  of 18  or 19  years of                                                                  
 age. He noted that only 12 countries had the age limit of                                                                      
 21.  He  also asked  whether  the  age limit  was  related to                                                                  
 mental  and physiological health  or about  breaking the law.                                                                  
 Ms. Hall  replied that  the human brain  continued to develop                                                                  
 until  between the  ages of  22 to  25 and  it was  easier to                                                                  
 create  neural pathways  that  lead to  addiction  and misuse                                                                  
 under  that age range.  She reported that  an individual that                                                                  
 began drinking  at the age  of 15 was 5  times more likely to                                                                  
 develop   an   alcohol   use   disorder.   She   added   that                                                                  
 international   policy  organizations   were   attempting  to                                                                  
 increase  the  drinking  age  in  other  countries  to  21 or                                                                  
 older.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
 2:33:52 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Representative  Wool  asked if  countries  with  the drinking                                                                  
 limit under  21 years of  age had more  problems with alcohol                                                                  
 than  Alaska. He inquired  whether other  countries had worse                                                                  
 statistics  than the  United  States (US).  She did  not have                                                                  
 the  statistics,   but  informed   Representative  Wool  that                                                                  
 culture   was  a  factor;   how  alcohol   was  marketed  and                                                                  
 normalized.  Therefore, it  was not  strictly the  age factor                                                                  
 that contributed  to the  harm that was  evident with alcohol                                                                  
 use.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
 2:34:50 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 SARAH  OATES,  PRESIDENT  AND  CEO,  ALASKA  CABARET,  HOTEL,                                                                  
RESTAURANT  AND  RETAILERS'  ASSOCIATION  (CHARR), ANCHORAGE                                                                    
 (via teleconference),  thanked the  committee for hearing the                                                                  
 bill.  She shared that  the legislation  entered its eleventh                                                                  
 year  of  "robust  stakeholder  work  toward  meaningful  and                                                                  
 sensible  alcohol regulatory  reform." She  had been involved                                                                  
 since  the beginning and  believed that  the bill represented                                                                  
 "challenging,   yet  thoughtful   compromise"  and  consensus                                                                  
 reached  in  2019. She  implored  the committee  to  pass the                                                                  
 "vital legislation."  She maintained  that the bill contained                                                                  
 long-term   regulatory  certainty   and   desperately  needed                                                                  
 modernization."  She  added  that after  two  years  into the                                                                  
 pandemic,  "liquor license  holders had  suffered devastating                                                                  
 blows."  She  elaborated  that  the  industry contributed  $2                                                                  
 billion  of annual revenue  into Alaska and  employed over 32                                                                  
 thousand  workers. In 2020,  the industry  experienced losses                                                                  
 of  75   percent  and  employed  40   percent  of  its  prior                                                                  
  workforce. The industry was still in turmoil due to the                                                                       
 aftereffects  of  the pandemic  from supply  chain  issues to                                                                  
 delays  in the  distribution  of federal  relief.  She listed                                                                  
 the  ways SB  9 benefitted  the  industry. The  bill provided                                                                  
 funding and  legal authority for  online license applications                                                                  
 and  created  clear,   consistent,  and  fair  penalties  for                                                                  
 violations.  She  furthered  that  the  legislation  mandated                                                                  
 proactive  education on alcohol statutes  through AMCO rather                                                                  
 than  education  via enforcement.  She  elaborated  that many                                                                  
 licensees  did  not  understand  many  of  the provisions  in                                                                  
 Title  4;  it  was  confusing  and often  contradictory,  and                                                                  
 licensees  often  learned  through  receiving  violations. In                                                                  
 addition,  the  bill regulated  internet  sales  and required                                                                  
 out  of  state  sellers  to  pay  state  taxes  like  instate                                                                  
 sellers  did. She noted  that SB 9  allowed license stacking;                                                                  
 manufactures  were able to purchase  retail licenses and visa                                                                  
 versa. She  delineated that the  practice leveled the playing                                                                  
 field  and enabled  the expansion  of innovation  and brewery                                                                  
 business models  while preserving the  value of licenses held                                                                  
 by restaurants,  bars, and  package stores.  She offered that                                                                  
 by  limiting the  tasting room  model it helped  preserve the                                                                  
 secondary  market value of the 1.5  thousand retail licenses.                                                                  
 The   bill   created  endorsements,   which   allowed     for                                                                  
 flexibility  in  business  operations  without  creating  new                                                                  
 license  types,   which  added  a   layer  of  protection   to                                                                 
 businesses'  liquor  licenses.  She  referenced  the Beverage                                                                  
 Dispensary  Duplicate license  model that  was eliminated and                                                                  
 replaced  with a simplified  less expensive  process to serve                                                                  
 at  multiple  bars  and stations.  She  cited  a  business in                                                                  
                          th                                                                                                    
 Anchorage  called  the 49Street    Brewing  Company  on Third                                                                  
 Street,  that  held  over  6  licenses  to  cover  all  their                                                                  
 serving  stations and paid  multiple biannual  fees. The bill                                                                  
 reduced  that  to   one  license  with  an  endorsement.  The                                                                  
 legislation   expanded  opportunities   for   package  stores                                                                  
 allowing  them  to   showcase  products  through  a  sampling                                                                  
 endorsement  and  packing  store  tasting  event  permit. The                                                                  
 legislation   streamlined  the   petition  process   and  the                                                                  
 process  for  new  restaurants  to  obtain  beer   and   wine                                                                  
 licenses  and converted  the  public convenience  licenses to                                                                  
 regular transferrable licenses.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
 2:40:34 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Ms. Oates  continued to  speak to the  legislation. She noted                                                                  
 that  updated provisions enabled  golf courses  that hold BDL                                                                  
 licenses  to serve a full  bar across the  entire golf course                                                                  
 and  was no longer  limited to  beer and wine  sales. Another                                                                  
 provision allowed three package store licenses per decade                                                                      
 to  relocate  to  other  cities  or municipalities   within a                                                                  
 borough.  She exemplified  that  if Costco  wanted to  open a                                                                  
 package  store  in  Wasilla  it  could  purchase  the license                                                                  
 anywhere  in the  Matanuska-Susitna  borough and  transfer it                                                                  
 to  within the  Wasilla city  limits.  She believed  that the                                                                  
 bill offered  the industry  hope that it  could overcome some                                                                  
 of  the ongoing  challenges,  move forward  with  an improved                                                                  
 regulatory  system,  and thrive  as  Alaska's  second largest                                                                  
 industry. She asked for passage of the bill.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Representative  Wool asked  if there  was any  requirement  to                                                                 
 join  CHARR. He  inquired whether  a retail  or manufacturing                                                                  
 license was  necessary. Ms. Oates answered  that a member had                                                                  
 to  own a  restaurant, bar,  hotel,  or retail  business that                                                                  
 operated  in  the state.  A  member did  not  need to  hold  a                                                                 
 liquor  license. Representative  Wool asked  how many current                                                                  
 CHARR  members were  license holders.  Ms. Oates  believed  it                                                                 
 was over 90 percent, but she did not know the exact number.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
 2:43:12 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     LEE ELLIS, BREWERS GUILD OF ALASKA, GIRDWOOD (via                                                                          
 teleconference),  shared  that he  was president  of Midnight                                                                  
 Sun  Brewing Company.  He thanked  the committee  for hearing                                                                  
 the  bill.  He  supported   the  legislation.  He  read  from                                                                  
 prepared  remarks. He  provided context  for  why SB  9 was a                                                                  
 "significant   improvement   for  breweries,   wineries,  and                                                                  
 distilleries"  in  the  state.  He  explained  that  when the                                                                  
 craft beverage  industry began, it had  very little access to                                                                  
 retail markets  and very few options  to sell on premises. In                                                                  
 the  late  2000's,  statutes  were  passed  that  allowed the                                                                  
 industry  to  sell  restricted  quantity  of  product  on the                                                                  
 premises.  He qualified that although  a manufacturer tasting                                                                  
 room  was  a  popular  model  it  was  very  uncommon  retail                                                                  
 licensure  nationally.  Typically,  manufacturers  had access                                                                  
 to full  liquor licenses as well as  beer and wine license in                                                                  
 most   other  states.   Manufacturers  in   the  state  could                                                                  
 currently  operate  a brew  pub with  a  BDL or  a Restaurant                                                                  
 Eating  Place  License  (REPL)  license  but  hey  had strict                                                                  
 production,  wholesale,  and  retail  limitations.  The guild                                                                  
 commissioned   a  study   to  better  understand   the  craft                                                                  
 industry in  the state in 2019. The  study found that brewery                                                                  
 tasting  rooms  rarely  sold  over  500  barrels  (one barrel                                                                  
 equaled  31 gallons)  on premise,  while brewers  operating  a                                                                 
 brew  pub model  sold  2000 barrels  or  more on  premise. He                                                                  
 indicated that  while popular, tap rooms  only sold 3 percent                                                                  
of the beer produced in Alaska was sold through a tap room,                                                                     
 89  percent was  sold through  wholesalers and  retailers and                                                                  
 the   remainder  was   sold  on   premise  in   a  brew  pub.                                                                  
 Nationally,  brew pubs accounted for  40 percent of breweries                                                                  
 operating  in the  country,  while in  Alaska  they accounted                                                                  
 for  less than  20  percent. Currently,  breweries  had grown                                                                  
 despite  operating  in  a highly  restricted  market  but had                                                                  
 vastly  more  options  in  the  future  under  the  bill.  He                                                                  
 furthered  that although  the number  of tasting  rooms would                                                                  
 be  more  limited,  many  manufacturers  reported  that  they                                                                  
 would  eventually purchase both  an REPL and  BDL licenses to                                                                  
 fully  grow   their  businesses   without  restricting  their                                                                  
 production  and  distribution.  The bill  eliminated  caps on                                                                  
 manufacturing.  He  listed  the  following communities  where                                                                  
 manufacturing  was currently capped:  Palmer, Valdez, Haines,                                                                  
 Homer,   Cordova,  Soldotna,   Delta  Junction,   Craig,  and                                                                  
 Skagway.   He  noted   that   many  manufacturers   were  not                                                                  
 interested  in  retail  operations,  however  trade  barriers                                                                  
 limited  manufacturers  from  getting their  products  to the                                                                  
 retail  market.  The  legislation  removed  the unfair  trade                                                                  
 practices  to allow them  to become economically  viable. The                                                                  
 manufacturing  industry   historically,  strove  to  be  good                                                                  
 neighbors,  promoted responsible  consumption, and recognized                                                                  
 the  benefits  of   a  balanced  regulatory  environment  for                                                                  
 everyone.  The guild  supported  the compromises  recommended                                                                  
 by  the public health  sector in  an effort  to reduce harms.                                                                  
 The  guild recognized  the position  of the  alcohol industry                                                                  
 members who  created a limited entry  system that resulted in                                                                  
 significant secondary value for license holders.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
 2:46:25 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Mr.  Ellis  continued  to  read  from  prepared remarks.  The                                                                  
 guild  was  not particularly  supportive   of  the  system  as                                                                 
 free  market  believers  but  acknowledged  that  undoing   it                                                                 
 would   rob  Alaskans   of  their  investment.   The  brewing                                                                  
 industry  was built on  the manufacturers'  relationship with                                                                  
 their  communities.   The  brewers   were  prepared  to  make                                                                  
 sacrifices  to  ensure equity  for  all  and to  do  what was                                                                  
 right  for Alaska while  getting all  it can  for brewers. He                                                                  
 acknowledged  that experienced manufacturers  understood that                                                                  
 that  increasing population  caps would have  limited effects                                                                  
 on the  growth of their industry.  He indicated that with the                                                                  
 passage  of SB 9,  Alaska could  host the  highest per capita                                                                  
 density  of  breweries  and  distilleries  in  the  world. He                                                                  
 requested the committee pass the bill.                                                                                         
 Representative  Wool  asked  about  the  population  cap.  He                                                                  
asked why Mr. Ellis supported raising the population cap on                                                                     
 brew  pubs. Mr.  Ellis  asked Representative  Wool  to repeat                                                                  
the question. Representative Wool repeated the question. He                                                                     
asked why the Brewers Guild supported the increased cap for                                                                     
 tasting rooms.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
 2:49:30 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Mr.   Ellis  stated  his   understanding   of  the  question.                                                                  
 Representative   Wool   replied   affirmatively.   Mr.  Ellis                                                                  
 replied  that the  guild  was not  necessarily  supportive of                                                                  
 raising caps  so much as being in  support of the compromise.                                                                  
 He relayed  that what was originally  considered was a retail                                                                  
 license for  manufacturers with a lower  population cap and  a                                                                 
 brewery,  winery,  or  distillery would  apply  for  the same                                                                  
 license.  The  guild  did  not  support  the  system  out  of                                                                  
 concern  that breweries would  take up all  the licenses in  a                                                                 
 community.  They supported the bill  because it allowed every                                                                  
 community  to have  a  brewery, winery,  and  distillery. The                                                                  
 tasting room  model was created for  brewers to have a retail                                                                  
 outlet  but since  the bill provided  access to  other retail                                                                  
 license  types,  they  would  have  a  better  access  to the                                                                  
 retail  market  through the  newer  available  retail models.                                                                  
 Representative  Wool  asked if  many breweries  did  not have                                                                  
 tasting rooms  or serve beer. Mr.  Ellis responded there were                                                                  
 three  breweries operating  that  did not  do any  on premise                                                                  
 retail  activity.  Representative  Wool  asked  whether there                                                                  
 were  approximately  70  breweries  and  brew pubs  currently                                                                  
 operating.  Mr. Ellis  replied  there  were 41  breweries: 38                                                                  
 with  taprooms  and  12 more  operating  with  a  BDL license                                                                  
 totaling 53.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 2:53:40 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
  GLEN KLINKHART, DIRECTOR, ALCOHOL AND MARIJUANA CONTROL                                                                       
OFFICE,  DEPARTMENT  OF  COMMERCE,  COMMUNITY  AND ECONOMIC                                                                     
 DEVELOPMENT   (via  teleconference),   answered   an  earlier                                                                  
 question  by Representative  Thompson regarding  a restricted                                                                  
 license.  He explained that it  had to do with  how and why  a                                                                 
 person  had the restriction  on their  license. The penalties                                                                  
 ranged   from  loss   of  the   license,   suspension,  fine,                                                                  
 misdemeanor,   to   civil   liability.   He   spoke   to  the                                                                  
 legislation.  He pointed out  that he supported  both the ABC                                                                  
 board and  the Marijuana  Control Board (MCB).  He was  happy                                                                  
 to help  work with  the ABC board  and stated  that the board                                                                  
had been very supportive of SB 9. He was impressed that the                                                                     
 bill  gave  law enforcement  the  ability to  use  tools that                                                                  
 were more  appropriate for the situation.  He often gave more                                                                  
 warnings  than  tickets  because  a  warning  was  often more                                                                  
 appropriate  than a  fine to  bring someone  into compliance.                                                                  
 The   AMCO   office   favored   the   idea  of   "progressive                                                                  
 discipline",   and  he  felt   it  was   very  effective.  He                                                                  
 indicated  that when he  became director  the only compliance                                                                  
 tool was  a "hammer" and  the office worked  to create a more                                                                  
 community  based enforcement program.  He felt the provisions                                                                  
 in  the bill offered  law enforcement  the ability  to use an                                                                  
 appropriate  punishment along with the  tools to enforce more                                                                  
 serious crimes. He thanked the committee.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
 Representative  LeBon  repeated  his concern  that  SB  9 was                                                                  
 attempting  to limit  the  number of  breweries  with tasting                                                                  
 rooms.  He realized  that population  limits existed  for all                                                                  
 types  of alcohol  licenses but  felt that the  extreme limit                                                                  
 set  at  12 thousand  was  targeting  breweries  with tasting                                                                  
 rooms. He asked for comment.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 2:58:14 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Senator Micciche  appreciated the remarks.  He shared that he                                                                  
 was  a tasting  room  "guy." He  enjoyed  going to  the Kenai                                                                  
 River  Brewing  Company. He  did  not think  the  same people                                                                  
 that  went  to  tasting  rooms  went   to  bars.  He  thought                                                                  
 Representative  LeBon's concern  with the  one in  12,000 cap                                                                  
 was misdirected. He explained how the cap was increased to                                                                     
 12 thousand.  He recounted  that tasting rooms  as a business                                                                  
 model  had only existed  for approximately  20  years and the                                                                  
 concept  was "hard fought"  by other licensees  "because they                                                                  
 did not  want competition."  The strict limits  were set, and                                                                  
 a  few years  ago traditional  license holders  promoted more                                                                  
 restrictions  by  "trying  to define  not  having  fun"  in a                                                                  
 tasting  room. Eventually,  the  traditional  license holders                                                                  
 and  tasting  room  owners  engaged  in  discussions  until a                                                                  
 compromise  was struck. The tasting  room licensees agreed to                                                                  
 the population  limits in  lieu of easing  other restrictions                                                                  
 placed on tasting rooms.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
 3:01:03 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Senator   Micciche  acknowledged   that  the   caps  appeared                                                                  
 restrictive.   He   shared   his   interpretation    of   the                                                                  
 provisions.  He emphasized  that the population  limits would                                                                  
 go into  effect in two years, allowing  more tasting rooms to                                                                  
 open under the 3 thousand population cap. He stressed that                                                                     
 after  the caps  were  in effect  there  would be  many other                                                                  
 options  for manufacturers  with  significant room  to expand                                                                  
 by  opportunities like  BDL, REPL,  or Brew Pub  licenses. He                                                                  
 asserted  that the  tasting room  license was  a very limited                                                                  
 license  type, if  a  manufacturer chose  another  option, it                                                                  
 opened  the  opportunity  for  another  tasting  room  in the                                                                  
 community.  He proposed  that  Representative LeBon  view the                                                                  
 "big picture."  He stated that he had  heard a lot of "little                                                                  
 picture"  comments and had  shared the same  reaction when  he                                                                 
 was initially  aware of  the increased caps.  He reminded the                                                                  
 committee  that he withdrew  a prior Title  4 bill when there                                                                  
 was  an attempt  to further  restrict  the tasting  rooms. He                                                                  
 asked  the  stakeholder   group  to  find  a  way  to  expand                                                                  
 opportunities  for breweries,  distilleries, and  wineries so                                                                  
 they  would succeed  without  a brewery  on every  corner. He                                                                  
 maintained that  the provisions in SB  9 "was filled with all                                                                  
 kinds  of brilliant  solutions that  do not  exist" currently                                                                  
 and he  characterized it as "a  great compromise." His office                                                                  
 would  provide  information outlining  all  the  options that                                                                  
 were significant.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
 3:03:43 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Vice-Chair  Ortiz addressed  the  other options  that tasting                                                                  
 room  businesses had  to expand.  He  asked if  the financial                                                                  
 costs of the other options were a barrier to expansion.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
 3:04:31 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Senator  Micciche  answered  that the  bill  was  designed  to                                                                 
 create  a collaboration  between the different  license types                                                                  
 without  significantly   devaluing  other  expensive  license                                                                  
 types.  He  commented that  if  an  owner of  a  tasting room                                                                  
 wanted  to turn  it  into a  bar,  she could  purchase  a BDL                                                                  
 under SB  9. The amount  of alcohol served  for tasting rooms                                                                  
 remained  the same,  but the  bill  expanded the  hours until                                                                  
 10:00  p.m. and allowed  other activities to  occur. He noted                                                                  
 the expanded  options came through  compromise with the other                                                                  
 stakeholders,  but it also increased  the population limit  to                                                                 
 one   in   12,000.  He   furthered   that   some  communities                                                                  
 protesting  the cap were  at the limit under  the current one                                                                  
 to 3 thousand  cap, which created  a monopoly. Currently, the                                                                  
 law prohibited  a brewery  with a tasting  room to purchase  a                                                                 
 BDL  and reiterated  that would  be possible under  the bill.                                                                  
 He  noted  that  the  bill  removed  the  cap  on  breweries,                                                                  
 distilleries,  and wineries that did  not have a tasting room                                                                  
 therefore, expanding that business model.                                                                                      
 Representative  Wool appreciated Senator  Micciche' s answer.                                                                  
 He suggested  that most  new distilleries  or breweries would                                                                  
 open  a  tasting room  because  it  offered a  big  source of                                                                  
 revenue.  He  believed  that  without  the  retail  option it                                                                  
 would  be very  difficult  for the  brewery or  distillery to                                                                  
 operate.  He informed  the committee that  the cost  of a BDL                                                                  
 in  Juneau  and Anchorage  was  approximately  $300 thousand,                                                                  
 were  very limited  in number,  and not always  available. He                                                                  
 supported  the option  for  tasting rooms  to purchase  a BDL                                                                  
 but  did  not  support  expanding  other  options  to tasting                                                                  
 rooms  and   thought  it  was "mission  creep."  He disagreed                                                                  
 that people  either prefer tasting rooms  or bars, he thought                                                                  
 there  was  a  transition  between  one  and  the  other.   He                                                                 
 recounted  that a  BDL was very  expensive and  believed that                                                                  
 limiting  tasting rooms  favored  current tasting  rooms, but                                                                  
 it  would  become difficult  for  someone wanting  to  open  a                                                                 
 tasting room  in the future that could  not afford nor want  a                                                                 
 BDL.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
 3:08:36 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Senator Micciche  stated that "it was not possible to have it                                                                  
 both  ways."  He commented  that  there  was  already mission                                                                  
 creep  and tasting  rooms;  mission creep  happened  when the                                                                  
 legislature  allowed them. He ascertained  that licenses were                                                                  
 expensive  and  licensees worried  about  competition  from  a                                                                 
 business that did not have to buy an expensive license.                                                                        
 He had  a dream of "expanding  opportunities for Alaskans who                                                                  
 wanted   to   brew   really   good   beer."   He   noted  the                                                                  
 opportunities  for brewers  to  purchase a  Restaurant Eating                                                                  
 Place  License  (REPL).  He related  that  provisions  in the                                                                  
 bill allowed  municipalities to  apply for an  REPL.  He knew                                                                  
 of  some businesses  that had  significant  investments their                                                                  
 breweries and  would be willing to  purchase an expensive BDL                                                                  
 to  improve it. He  thought that  focusing negatively  on the                                                                  
 tasting  room limits in the  bill was a  mistake. He believed                                                                  
 that the  compromises and expanded options  in the bill would                                                                  
 all workout in the future                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
 CSSB 9(FIN) was HEARD and HELD in committee for further                                                                        
 consideration.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
 3:11:11 PM                                                                                                                   
 AT EASE                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
 3:16:24 PM                                                                                                                   
 RECONVENED                                                                                                                     
 HOUSE BILL NO. 149                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
      "An Act relating to allowing certain child day care                                                                       
      providers to organize for the purpose of collective                                                                       
      bargaining."                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
 3:16:28 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Co-Chair Merrick                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
 Representative  Rasmussen  MOVED  to ADOPT  Amendment  1, 32-                                                                  
 LS0474\A.7 (Klein, 3/16/22) (copy on file):                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
      Page 6, line 27:                                                                                                          
      Delete"."                                                                                                                 
      Insert";"                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
      Page 6, following line 27:                                                                                                
      Insert a new paragraph to read:                                                                                           
      "(6) requires an employee or child day care provider                                                                      
      to become a member of an organization that represents                                                                     
      childcare providers."                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
 Co-Chair Merrick OBJECTED for discussion.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
 Representative   Rasmussen   explained  the   amendment.  She                                                                  
 communicated  that the  amendment clarified  that an employee                                                                  
 or childcare  provider did not have  to become a member of an                                                                  
 organization   that  represents   childcare   providers.  The                                                                  
 amendment  offered   a  choice  and  she  asked  for  members                                                                  
 support.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
 Representative   Josephson    asked   whether   the   sponsor                                                                  
 supported the amendment.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
   REPRESENTATIVE ZACH FIELDS, SPONSOR, had worked on the                                                                       
 amendment  with Representative  Rasmussen  and  supported the                                                                  
 amendment.  He reminded the committee  that the bill proposed                                                                  
 a  sectorial  bargaining   model,  where  the  entire  sector                                                                  
 negotiated  with the  state.  He did  not believe  that union                                                                  
 membership  should be mandated under  the sectorial model and                                                                  
 should be  an opt-in model. He felt  that the sectorial model                                                                  
 did  not need any  degree of  coercion. The  language ensured                                                                  
 the  providers  that it  was  a choice  to  affiliate  with a                                                                  
 union should the sector decide to form one.                                                                                    
 3:18:35 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Representative  Josephson  believed  that  members  would pay                                                                  
 dues  and  if negotiated  benefits  were  passed  on  to non-                                                                  
 members  then non-union  employees  would enjoy  the benefits                                                                  
 without  any   costs.  He  asked   whether  he  was  correct.                                                                  
 Representative   Fields  responded,   "not  necessarily."  He                                                                  
 explained  that  if  sectorial  bargaining  was  adopted  the                                                                  
 sector  would seek out a  union it wanted  to affiliate with.                                                                  
 He  exemplified  the  sector  joining  the Service  Employees                                                                  
 International  Union (SEIU).  Some small providers  might opt                                                                  
 out of  being a part of  the union because  they did not need                                                                  
 the benefits  a union  provided. He restated  that there were                                                                  
 many  benefits of  sectoral  bargaining  because it  gave the                                                                  
 sector  a  voice  without  coercing  individual  providers  or                                                                 
 employees   to  join   the  sectoral   bargaining  structure.                                                                  
 Representative   Josephson   indicated   that  he   was  well                                                                  
 informed  about labor unions.  He thought that  joining was  a                                                                 
 "critical  issue" regarding unfair  labor practices (ULP) and                                                                  
 whether an employee would receive attorney privileges.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
 3:20:03 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Representative  Josephson  wanted  to make  sure  the sponsor                                                                  
 was  comfortable  with the  amendment.  Representative Fields                                                                  
 had  asked Representative  Rasmussen to offer  the amendment.                                                                  
 He  reminded the  committee  that most  parts of  the state's                                                                  
 economy  were  involved  in  "enterprise  based   bargaining"                                                                  
 which  constituted  an individual  company  and a  union that                                                                  
 engaged   in  negotiations.   He   shared  that   within  the                                                                  
 enterprise  based  bargaining model  he  did not  support the                                                                  
 right  to work  model because  it  enabled "free  riders." He                                                                  
 furthered  that in a  sectoral bargaining process  he did not                                                                  
 think   the  same  problems   associated   with  free  riders                                                                  
 existed.  He remarked that it  was a new  idea for the sector                                                                  
 and  the sector was  diverse and  he did not  believe that  it                                                                 
 was appropriate  to require  individuals to be  a member of  a                                                                 
 union.  He believed that  the employees would  choose to join                                                                  
 the union  when the benefits were  worth the costs for things                                                                  
 like healthcare, training, and legal fees.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
 Co-Chair   Merrick   asked   for   clarification   of   SEIU.                                                                  
 Representative  Fields  responded that  it stood  for Service                                                                  
 Employees   International   Union  that   included  childcare                                                                  
 providers  and used  the sectoral  bargaining model  in other                                                                  
 states.                                                                                                                        
 Representative  Wool inquired whether  the amendment would be                                                                  
 in the  union's laws  as well. Representative  Fields replied                                                                  
 that  because domestic  work was  excluded from  the National                                                                  
 Labor Relations  Act, it  was entirely up  to a state whether                                                                  
 to  require union  membership  within a  sectorial bargaining                                                                  
 framework.  He emphasized  the importance  of allowing people                                                                  
 to opt in with a new bargaining option in the state.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
 3:22:51 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
   Representative Rasmussen wrapped up the amendment. She                                                                       
 wanted  to ensure that  providers felt  comfortable that they                                                                  
 could  opt  out of  the  sectorial  bargaining  agreement and                                                                  
 could still receive state childcare assistance.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
 Co-Chair Merrick withdrew her objection.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
 There being NO OBJECTION, it was so ordered. Amendment 1                                                                       
 was adopted.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 3:23:34 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
  Representative Josephson MOVED to ADOPT Amendment 2, 32-                                                                      
 LS0474\A.6 (Klein, 3/16/22) (copy on file):                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
      Page 1, line 2, following "bargaining":                                                                                   
      Insert"; and establishing the child day care provider                                                                     
      fund"                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
      Page 8, following line 28:                                                                                                
      Insert a new bill section to read:                                                                                        
      "* Sec. 19. AS 37.14 is amended by adding a new                                                                           
      section to read:                                                                                                          
      Article 11. Child Day Care Provider Fund.                                                                                 
      Sec.   37.14.850.   Child   day   care   provider   fund                                                                  
      established.  (a) The  child day  care provider  fund is                                                                  
      established  as a  separate fund  in the  state treasury                                                                  
      for  the purpose of  implementing the  monetary terms of                                                                  
      an  agreement  applicable  to child  day  care providers                                                                  
      entered  into under AS  23.40.070 -  23.40.260. Money in                                                                  
      the fund does not lapse. The fund consists of                                                                             
           (I) money appropriated to the fund;                                                                                  
           (2) income earned on investment of fund assets;                                                                      
            and                                                                                                                 
           (3) donations to the fund.                                                                                           
      (b)  The  legislature  may  annually  appropriate  money                                                                  
      from  the fund  to implement  the  monetary terms  of an                                                                  
      agreement   applicable  to  child   day  care  providers                                                                  
      entered into under AS 23.40.070 - 23.40.260.                                                                              
      (c) Nothing in this section creates a dedicated fund."                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
      Renumber the following bill sections accordingly.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
 Co-Chair Merrick OBJECTED for discussion.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
 Representative   Josephson   explained  that   the  amendment                                                                  
 established   a  trust   fund  to  implement   the  sectorial                                                                  
 bargaining  agreement. He invited  the bill  sponsor to speak                                                                  
 to the amendment.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
 Representative   Fields   spoke   to  the   amendment.     He                                                                  
 articulated  that since the bill was  introduced in the prior                                                                  
 session,  the  state  had  experienced  a financial  windfall                                                                  
 that   could  allow  for   a  structure   that  could  inject                                                                  
 "meaningful  public  investment into  the  childcare sector."                                                                  
 He  relayed  hearing  testimony  that  the  childcare  sector                                                                  
 needed  more power  in negotiating  with  the state  and that                                                                  
 the  state was  never going  to  have an  adequately supplied                                                                  
 childcare  workforce  at  affordable  prices  without    more                                                                  
 public  investment.  The childcare  trust  fund was  based on                                                                  
 models   used   in   other   states,   that   after   initial                                                                  
 capitalization,  was  managed  under an  endowment  model. He                                                                  
 believed  that  when the  state  experiences  a "significant"                                                                  
 revenue  windfall, it  should  consider setting  some revenue                                                                  
 aside  to pay out long-term  benefits. He  explained that the                                                                  
 legislature  would appropriate a portion  of the savings from                                                                  
 the  childcare trust  fund  and if  paid out  at a  5 percent                                                                  
 rate  it could be  the largest  investment in  childcare that                                                                  
 the state  ever made.  He cited significant  public testimony                                                                  
 regarding   the  issue  in  the   House  Labor  and  Commerce                                                                  
 Committee.  He  offered  that the  United  States  Chamber  of                                                                 
 Commerce   Foundation    addressed   the   "dire   need   for                                                                  
 intervention   in  the  childcare   sector."  He  heard  from                                                                  
 multiple organizations  in support of  a childcare trust fund                                                                  
 and  from parents who  had to drop  out of  the workforce due                                                                  
 to the  unaffordability of childcare.  He emphasized that the                                                                  
 "crisis"  in childcare needed  to be addressed  and the trust                                                                  
 fund was beneficial to solving the problems.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 3:26:41 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Co-Chair Merrick withdrew her objection                                                                                        
 There being NO OBJECTION, it was so ordered. Amendment 2                                                                       
 was adopted.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 3:26:55 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Representative Rasmussen spoke in support of              the                                                                  
 legislation. She believed that the bill had a lot of merit                                                                     
 and could help with the childcare shortage in the state.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
 3:27:50 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Co-Chair Foster MOVED to REPORT CSHB 149(FIN) out of                                                                           
committee    with   individual   recommendations    and   the                                                                   
 accompanying fiscal note.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
 Representative Johnson objected and did not speak to her                                                                       
 objection.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
 A roll call vote was taken on the motion.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
 IN FAVOR: Edgmon, Ortiz, Josephson, Wool, Foster, Merrick                                                                      
 OPPOSED: Thompson, Johnson                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
 The MOTION PASSED (6/2).                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
 CSHB 149(FIN)  was REPORTED  out of committee  with three "do                                                                  
 pass"   recommendations    and   five   "no   recommendation"                                                                  
 recommendations  and  with one  new fiscal  impact  note from                                                                  
 the Department of Labor and Workforce Development.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
 3:29:12 PM                                                                                                                   
 AT EASE                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
 3:30:19 PM                                                                                                                   
 RECONVENED                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
 HOUSE BILL NO. 289                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
      "An Act establishing the Alaska marijuana industry                                                                        
     task force; and providing for an effective date."                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
 3:30:28 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE    GRIER HOPKINS,     SPONSOR,   provided    an                                                                  
                of the bill and read from a prepared                                                                            
      Good  afternoon members  of the committee  and Co-Chairs                                                                  
      Foster  and  Merrick,  for  the  record,  Representative                                                                  
      Grier  Hopkins representing Northwest  Fairbanks, Ester,                                                                  
      Goldstream,   Steese,  Farmers  Loop,   Birch  Hill  and                                                                  
      Downtown   Fox.  With  me  today   is  my  staffer,  Joe                                                                  
      Hardenbrook.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
      Thank  you for hearing  House Bill 289  today. This bill                                                                  
      would  establish  the  Alaska  Marijuana  Industry  Task                                                                  
      Force  to take  a holistic  look at our  state's growing                                                                  
      marijuana   industry,    analyze   its   strengths   and                                                                  
      weaknesses,  and  propose  a package  of  reforms. These                                                                  
      proposed  reforms  would be  submitted to  the Marijuana                                                                  
      Control  Board,  the Governor  and  the  Legislature for                                                                  
      consideration  and  possible  action     in  part  or in                                                                  
      whole.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
      Why is this legislation necessary?                                                                                        
      In   2014,    Alaska   voters   legalized   recreational                                                                  
      marijuana.    Since  that  time,  thousands  of Alaskans                                                                  
      have  sought to  participate in  this new  industry   as                                                                  
      business  owners,   workers,  investors,  consumers  and                                                                  
      more.  This industry is  a uniquely Alaskan  one   state                                                                  
      law requires  that license holders  be Alaska residents,                                                                  
      resulting  in  an  Alaska  marijuana  market  owned  and                                                                  
      operated  by  Alaskans selling  products  grown, tested,                                                                  
      processed and purchased here in the Last Frontier.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
      The industry  which has emerged  from the passage of the                                                                  
      voter  initiative  in  2014  is  supported  by  Alaskans                                                                  
      across  the state    but it  is facing  some challenges.                                                                  
      Many  business owners are struggling  to comply with the                                                                  
      letter  and  spirit  of  the  law,  and several  factors                                                                  
      including  taxation, licensing  and enforcement continue                                                                  
      to  challenge  the  industry.  Recent  reporting  by the                                                                  
      Anchorage  Daily News    articles which  are included in                                                                  
      the  bill  packet -  shows  ongoing frustration  amongst                                                                  
      the   Alaskan   entrepreneurs   who've   invested  time,                                                                  
      resources, and energy in this new market.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
      While  I'm  a  firm believer  in  free  markets  and the                                                                  
      inevitable   sorting   of  winners   and  losers   in  a                                                                  
      capitalist  system,  Alaska's  marijuana   industry   is                                                                  
      OURS,  and we elected  officials can and  should set the                                                                  
      rules  for the thousands of Alaskans  who've seen fit to                                                                  
      invest  their  hard-earned  dollars,  time,  and  energy                                                                  
      into this new market. We can and should ensure that                                                                       
      the  rules WE set  to govern  OUR industry  are fair and                                                                  
      reasonable  and  offer  those  Alaskans  who  pursue    a                                                                 
      career  or  business investment  in  Alaska  can achieve                                                                  
      success  while playing by  the rules. We  can and should                                                                  
      ensure  that local governments  continue to  play a role                                                                  
      in  authorizing,  monitoring,  and  generating   revenue                                                                  
      from this new industry.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
       Make no mistake, there are solutions to these                                                                            
      problems  -  but  they  involve  give  and take  amongst                                                                  
      members  of  the industry,  state  regulators  and local                                                                  
      governments.   In  order  to   pursue  a  strategy  that                                                                  
      strengthens   our  Alaska  businesses,   protects  local                                                                  
      control  and places  our industry  on a  firmer economic                                                                  
      footing,  HB 289  proposes that  this task  force review                                                                  
      the  issue, develop  ideas for industry  reform, utilize                                                                  
      state  resources  to  model  how  those  changes   would                                                                  
      affect   businesses,   local   governments   and   state                                                                  
      revenue.  Additionally, I  think it is  fitting that the                                                                  
      cost  of  these  efforts  will  be  borne  by    license                                                                  
      receipts   from  Alaska's  marijuana   industry.  That's                                                                  
      correct    the cost of this task  force will be paid for                                                                  
      by  the   thousands  of  Alaskans   who've  invested  in                                                                  
      Alaska's marijuana industry.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
      At this point, I'll turn to Mr. Hardenbrook to walk                                                                       
      the committee through the bill.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
 JOE HARDENBROOK, STAFF, REPRESENTATIVE GRIER HOPKINS, read                                                                     
 from a prepared statement. He explained how the task force                                                                     
 would operate.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
      The selection process for the thirteen members of the                                                                     
      task force has been crafted to ensure representation,                                                                     
      expertise, and geographic diversity.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
      The  task force  will  be chaired  by  the chair  of the                                                                  
      Marijuana  Control  Board. The  two state  agencies most                                                                  
      closely  involved   in  Alaska's  marijuana  industry                                                                     
      Commerce  and  Revenue -  will be  represented  by their                                                                  
      commissioners  or  their designees.  Because so  many of                                                                  
      these  questions are economic  in nature, we've reserved                                                                  
      a seat  for an economist from  the University of Alaska.                                                                  
      Because  the voter initiative  carved out specific roles                                                                  
      and rights  for local governments,  we've included three                                                                  
      municipal    government    representatives,     with    a                                                                 
      requirement that those officials come from different                                                                      
      judicial   districts  and   represent  the   breadth  of                                                                  
      Alaska's  local   governments     cities  and  boroughs.                                                                  
      Because  those most affected  by a  decision should have                                                                  
      a  role in  making that  decision, we've  reserved three                                                                  
      seats    a quarter of the task  force's membership   for                                                                  
      representatives  of  the  Alaska   marijuana   industry.                                                                  
      Like  the  local  government  seats,  these  task  force                                                                  
      members  must  hail  from  different judicial  districts                                                                  
      and  represent the  breadth  of industry    cultivators,                                                                  
      processors,  and retailers. The  governor will appoint  a                                                                 
      member  representing  public health  interests. Finally,                                                                  
      there  are two legislative seats,  in the hopes that the                                                                  
      input  and advice of legislators  can help craft a final                                                                  
      product with a greater chance of enactment.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
      As  Rep. Hopkins  mentioned,  this task  force is  not  a                                                                 
      permanent  creation.  Rather,  it must  meet  four times                                                                  
      over  the  interim,  conduct  their  work,  craft  their                                                                  
      proposals,  model their data,  and submit their findings                                                                  
      to   the   executive   and   legislative   branches  for                                                                  
      consideration  and  potential  action.  This legislation                                                                  
      does  not create  a new,  permanent position  but rather                                                                  
      relies  on  a  temporary  position  to  assist  the task                                                                  
      force  in crafting  its final  product. The  findings  of                                                                 
      this  task force  are, first  and  foremost non-binding,                                                                  
      and  are  not  limited  to suggestions  for  legislative                                                                  
      fixes    suggestions may include  statutory, regulatory,                                                                  
      and administrative changes.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
      A   top-down,  "one-size-fits-all"   solution   to  this                                                                  
      complex  issue  will most  likely  result  in additional                                                                  
      challenges  to  the industry  and  may  cause unforeseen                                                                  
      circumstances   which   compound  problems   instead  of                                                                  
      rectifying   them.  As   we've  repeatedly   heard  from                                                                  
      representatives  of  all  the  different  businesses and                                                                  
      resource   development  activities   in  Alaska,  fiscal                                                                  
      certainty  and  good data  are  essential  components of                                                                  
      any successful business enterprise.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
      And  to  reiterate  what Rep.  Hopkins  mentioned  - the                                                                  
      cost  of  these  efforts  will  be  borne  by    program                                                                  
      receipts  and  licensing  fees  from Alaska's  marijuana                                                                  
      industry.  That's  correct      the  cost  of  this task                                                                  
      force  will be paid for by  the Alaskans who've invested                                                                  
      in Alaska's marijuana industry.                                                                                           
      Chair  Merrick,  two  amendments  were  adopted  by  the                                                                  
      Labor  &  Commerce   Committee.  One  change  moves  the                                                                  
      proposed  task force from in-person  meetings to remote,                                                                  
      video  conferenced meetings, resulting  in a substantial                                                                  
      savings  in travel and lodging  costs. Another amendment                                                                  
      added a public health seat to the task force.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
      Chair  Merrick, I'd also like to  note for the committee                                                                  
      that  we  have  Glen  Klinkhart,  the  Director  of  the                                                                  
      Alcohol   and  Marijuana   Control  Office   online  for                                                                  
      questions  about the  fiscal note.  Thank you,  and I'll                                                                  
      conclude my presentation.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
 3:35:30 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Co-Chair Merrick asked the department to review the fiscal                                                                     
 note.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
  GLEN KLINKHART, DIRECTOR, ALCOHOL AND MARIJUANA CONTROL                                                                       
 OFFICE, DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, COMMUNITY AND ECONOMIC                                                                         
 DEVELOPMENT  (via teleconference),  spoke to  the fiscal note                                                                  
 [FN 2 (CED)].  He indicated that the  board was going to be  a                                                                 
 part  of  the  task  force  and  the  Alcohol  and  Marijuana                                                                  
 Control  Office (AMCO)  would act  as the conduit  to support                                                                  
 its  work.  The fiscal  note  envisioned $52  thousand  for  a                                                                 
 long-term  non-permanent  Project  Assistant  (Range  16)  to                                                                  
 assist  with meetings,  research, compiling  information, and                                                                  
 report   finalization   for   eight   months   (June  through                                                                  
 January).  In  addition,  travel  was  reduced  to  the  bare                                                                  
 minimum  due to the positive  use of Zoom  meetings. He noted                                                                  
 that  AMCO  was supported  by  program receipts  and  in some                                                                  
 years,  they returned  some revenue  to the general  fund. He                                                                  
 believed that  the fiscal note was  sufficient to support the                                                                  
 bill. He  furthered that  the idea of the  taskforce was that                                                                  
 the  Marijuana Control  Board was  a licensing  and enforcing                                                                  
 board.  The larger issues  were often not  dealt with because                                                                  
 they were  trying to deal with day  to day issue and ensuring                                                                  
 public safety.  The larger issues with  the industry were not                                                                  
 within  its purview,  but the board  indicated  it desired to                                                                  
 address the issue.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
 3:38:21 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Representative  Wool  applauded  the  efforts  of  the bill's                                                                  
 sponsor and  staff. He had several  constituents approach him                                                                  
 about  the  marijuana  tax  burden  due  to  the  flat    tax                                                                  
 structure of $800 per pound. He recalled that when the tax                                                                     
 structure was adopted the wholesale price had been about                                                                       
 $5,000  per pound  and now  it  was approximately  $2,000 per                                                                  
 pound.  He exemplified the  Title 4 re-write  and noted  that                                                                  
  it was difficult to find agreement among a large group;                                                                       
 the task  force had 13 members. He  expressed concern that at                                                                  
 first glance  it seemed excessive and  thought that the issue                                                                  
 was  confined to taxes.  He worried  that the  task force was                                                                  
 too large.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
 Mr.   Hardenbrook  answered   that   the  task   force  would                                                                  
 primarily  address the  economic issues  of the  industry.  He                                                                 
 noted    that   the    wholesale   tax    "incentivized   and                                                                  
 disincentivized  certain behaviors  within the  industry." He                                                                  
 elaborated  that the  task force  wanted to take  a 'holistic                                                                  
 look"  at the  industry and  try to  put it on  firm economic                                                                  
 footings.   He  characterized   the  industry   as  "uniquely                                                                  
 Alaskan."  He  respected  the  concern  about  the  number of                                                                  
 "cooks  in  the kitchen."  He  quoted the  book  of proverbs,                                                                  
 "without  advice plans go  wrong but with  many advisors they                                                                  
 can  succeed."  He  expressed  hope  that  a  group  of well-                                                                  
 informed people could find solutions to the problem.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
 Representative  Hopkins  interjected  that  the  task   force                                                                  
 would  not only  discuss  economic issues,  but  also examine                                                                  
 licensing,  regulation,  enforcement,  as  well  as  ways the                                                                  
 industry  could  maintain  its  Alaskan  owned  and  operated                                                                  
 structure.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
 3:42:28 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 Representative  Wool  remarked that  if  the federal  law was                                                                  
 changed the  industry could be nationalized.  He deduced that                                                                  
 the   task  force   may  not  have   so  much   control  over                                                                  
 nationalization.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
 Mr.   Hardenbrook   replied   that   the   task   force   was                                                                  
 specifically  charged with finding  ways to maintain Alaska's                                                                  
 marijuana  industry.  Currently, a  marijuana  license holder                                                                  
 had to  receive an Alaska  Permanent Fund  Dividend (PFD). He                                                                  
 agreed  that  national legalization  would  pose  a challenge                                                                  
 for  Alaska.  The  task force  would  address  how  the state                                                                  
 could  protect  the  industry  should  the national  paradigm                                                                  
 shift.  Representative  Wool thought  that the  market should                                                                  
 also have a voice.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
 HB 289 was HEARD and HELD in committee for further                                                                             
 consideration.                                                                                                                 
  Co-Chair Merrick reviewed the schedule for the following                                                                      
 meeting.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
 ADJOURNMENT                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
 The meeting was adjourned at 3:44 p.m.