Legislature(2021 - 2022)GRUENBERG 120

03/02/2021 10:00 AM House FISHERIES

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* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+= HB 79 SALTWATER SPORTFISHING OPERATORS/GUIDES TELECONFERENCED
Moved CSHB 79(FSH) Out of Committee
+= HB 80 SPT FSH HATCHERY FACIL ACCT; SURCHARGE TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Public Testimony <Time Limit 2 Minutes> --
          HB 80-SPT FSH HATCHERY FACIL ACCT; SURCHARGE                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
11:08:39 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STUTES announced that the  final order of business would be                                                               
HOUSE  BILL  NO.  80,  "An Act  establishing  the  sport  fishing                                                               
hatchery  facilities  account;  establishing  the  sport  fishing                                                               
facility surcharge; and providing for an effective date."                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STUTES noted  the bill sponsor is the  House Rules Standing                                                               
Committee by request of the governor.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  STUTES invited  Commissioner  Vincent-Lang  to provide  an                                                               
opening statement on the bill.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
11:09:03 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
DOUG VINCENT-LANG,  Commissioner, Alaska  Department of  Fish and                                                               
Game  (ADF&G), on  behalf of  the governor,  provided an  opening                                                               
statement in  support of  HB 80.   He explained  that HB  80 goes                                                               
back  to the  unique package  used  to fund  construction of  the                                                               
Anchorage  and  Fairbanks hatcheries.    The  package attached  a                                                               
surcharge to sport  fishing licenses to pay back  bonds that were                                                               
taken  out;  no  general  funds   were  used  to  build  the  two                                                               
hatcheries.   The  surcharge  money was  used  to match  Dingell-                                                               
Johnson federal  funding and the  bonds were repaid  much quicker                                                               
than  expected.   When doing  the  bonding it  was realized  that                                                               
Southeast  Alaska anglers,  both nonresident  and resident,  were                                                               
paying  surcharge  fees  but  not   getting  benefit  from  these                                                               
hatcheries.    It  was  therefore decided  to  take  $500,000  of                                                               
surcharge fees  right off  the top  and support  various private-                                                               
non-profit (PNP)  hatcheries across  Southeast Alaska  to produce                                                               
Chinook and coho salmon.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER VINCENT-LANG explained that  the bonds are paid off,                                                               
but  that  there  is  a  hole for  deferred  maintenance  on  the                                                               
existing  hatcheries, along  with  a $500,000  hole in  Southeast                                                               
Alaska  for  production   of  Chinook  and  coho   salmon.    The                                                               
department recognizes  that it  made a commitment  to get  rid of                                                               
the  surcharge when  the bonds  were paid  off.   But, since  the                                                               
hatcheries must be  maintained and cannot just be  closed, it was                                                               
realized that without  a surcharge the money would  be taken from                                                               
the  fish and  game fund.   The  department looked  for a  way to                                                               
continue enhancement projects  in Southeast Alaska, and  HB 80 is                                                               
an attempt to reinstate a surcharge  at a lower level to maintain                                                               
hatchery  activities  throughout  sport fish  related  activities                                                               
across Alaska.  Commissioner  Vincent-Lang voiced ADF&G's support                                                               
of the bill, along with that of the governor's office.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
11:11:59 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STUTES opened public testimony on HB 80.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
11:12:11 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
DAVID  LANDIS,  General   Manager,  Southern  Southeast  Regional                                                               
Aquaculture Association  (SSRAA), testified in support  of HB 80.                                                               
He  noted that  SSRAA operates  seven hatcheries  in the  region.                                                               
One of those  facilities is Crystal Lake  Hatchery in Petersburg,                                                               
a designated  sport fish facility  owned by the State  of Alaska.                                                               
The state  owns three sport  fish hatcheries   one  in Anchorage,                                                               
one  in  Fairbanks, and  Crystal  Lake  in  Petersburg.   As  the                                                               
state's  contracted operator  of  the Crystal  Lake Hatchery,  he                                                               
said SSRAA supports the passage of HB 80.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR. LANDIS  stated HB  80 would allow  ADF&G to  continue funding                                                               
operation of  the Crystal Lake  facility, and to  fund critically                                                               
needed  repairs,  which the  department  has  characterized as  a                                                               
critical need.  Failure of the  raceways at the facility is truly                                                               
not "if" it is going to  happen but when, putting the millions of                                                               
Chinook  salmon reared  at the  facility in  jeopardy.   It is  a                                                               
shovel  ready project  fully designed,  engineered, and  ready to                                                               
go;  it just  needs funding.   If  additional funding  beyond the                                                               
surcharge  amount  currently  in   the  bill  becomes  available,                                                               
SSRAA's  view is  that  this  project and  others  like it  could                                                               
happen  more quickly.    Keeping Crystal  Lake  intact with  full                                                               
operational  and maintenance  funding  is compelling.   A  recent                                                               
department fact sheet shows Crystal  Lake providing an impressive                                                               
amount  of  Chinook  in Southeast  Alaska,  and  SSRAA's  figures                                                               
reflect that 40-50  percent of hatchery king  salmon harvested in                                                               
Southeast Alaska result  from the Crystal Lake  production.  This                                                               
would be  a user paid  system that  is fair and  appropriate, and                                                               
SSRAA supports the bill's passage.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
11:14:38 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
BEN   MOHR,   Executive   Director,  Kenai   River   Sportfishing                                                               
Association (KRSA),  testified in support  of HB 80.   He related                                                               
that the  sport fish  license surcharge  ended last  year because                                                               
the bonds that were issued  for sport fish hatcheries were repaid                                                               
early.    The hunting  and  fishing  communities have  acted  for                                                               
nearly 100  years to  support the  user pays  model for  fish and                                                               
game  conservation management,  and  this case  is no  different.                                                               
The  sport fishery,  whether  in fresh  or  salt water,  directly                                                               
benefits  from  Alaska's sport  fish  hatcheries.   This  is  the                                                               
central  reason  why KRSA  supports  the  governor's bill,  which                                                               
introduces a surcharge on sport  fishing licenses, the funds from                                                               
which  are specifically  dedicated  to  supporting sport  fishing                                                               
activities.   It is  KRSA's understanding  that these  funds will                                                               
specifically be used  for operation and maintenance  costs of the                                                               
sport fish  hatcheries across the  state.  To KRSA,  the critical                                                               
portion  of the  bill  is  that the  funds  generated from  sport                                                               
fishing licenses stay with the users.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR. MOHR pointed  out that the average Alaska  fishermen will see                                                               
a net $5 reduction in annual  licenses between last year and next                                                               
year while  maintaining the services  of ADF&G.   The association                                                               
recognizes  that it  may  be  a challenge  for  some  to see  the                                                               
decrease  of   license  fees  when   ADF&G  has   sustained  such                                                               
significant  losses   due  to  COVID.     However,  the  previous                                                               
surcharge wasn't used  for operations necessarily, it  was a bond                                                               
repayment.   The loss  in sport  fish license  sales in  2020 was                                                               
primarily  driven  by  a lack  of  participation  by  nonresident                                                               
anglers specifically due to their  inability to travel to Alaska.                                                               
Directing this  surcharge to operations and  maintenance of sport                                                               
fish  hatcheries provides  some relief  to ADF&G's  budget.   The                                                               
sport fishing community is happy  to contribute and KRSA supports                                                               
HB 80 as submitted.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
11:17:01 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE TARR  recalled that when  this bill was  seen last                                                               
year, the committee amended it to  just be a status quo situation                                                               
thinking there  was great need,  and that was prior  to COVID-19.                                                               
She asked whether it would change  KRSA's support for the bill if                                                               
the committee were to consider that again this year.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. MOHR  replied that it  would come down  to the details.   The                                                               
sport fishing community in general is  happy to see a decrease in                                                               
license  fees,  he  said,  and KRSA  is  supportive  of  whatever                                                               
measures can be  taken to reduce hurdles for  the average Alaskan                                                               
to access  the fishery.   The net  $5 decrease between  last year                                                               
and next year is something KRSA  fully supports, so going back to                                                               
the full surcharge would be dependent on the details.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  TARR remarked  that Alaskans  highly value  their                                                               
salmon,  and that  is  why she  is asking  if  Alaskans would  be                                                               
willing to support the status quo for something so important.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
11:18:29 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
KATIE HARMS,  Executive Director,  Douglas Island Pink  and Chum,                                                               
Inc. (DIPAC),  testified in  support of  HB 80.   She  noted that                                                               
DIPAC  is  a  private-non-profit  corporation  with  the  primary                                                               
mission to sustain  and enhance the valuable  salmon resources of                                                               
the state of  Alaska for economic, social,  and cultural benefits                                                               
of all citizens.  She expressed DIPAC's support of HB 80.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS.  HARMS stated  that DIPAC  operates a  Chinook sport  fishing                                                               
program through  funds from ADF&G's  Division of Sport  Fish that                                                               
is currently  almost 90 percent  supported by this  sport fishing                                                               
license fee  surcharge.   Prior to  1994, ADF&G  produced Chinook                                                               
salmon to enhance the Juneau  area recreational fisheries.  These                                                               
fish were raised at the  state's Snettisham hatchery and released                                                               
at selected  sites in the  Juneau area.   In 1994  Snettisham was                                                               
converted to a sockeye salmon  production facility and the Juneau                                                               
Chinook  program  was  transferred  to  DIPAC's  Macaulay  Salmon                                                               
Hatchery.  Since that time  DIPAC has received just over $340,000                                                               
each year  for this sport  fishing enhancement program.   Without                                                               
these outside funds  the Chinook program would  have never gotten                                                               
off the ground  at DIPAC, yet it has become  a stable program for                                                               
the Juneau area anglers.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MS.  HARMS  related that  during  the  past two  years  Southeast                                                               
Alaska  has seen  depressed salmon  returns.   Due  to poor  chum                                                               
returns  in  2019 and  2020  DIPAC  came  up  well short  of  its                                                               
operational  and capital  revenue  needs from  its cost  recovery                                                               
harvest programs.  With no  surcharge license fee revenues coming                                                               
from ADF&G to DIPAC this year  the Chinook program will likely be                                                               
greatly  reduced.    If  no  consistent  funding  source  can  be                                                               
identified  for the  program into  the  future, then  there is  a                                                               
potential  that the  DIPAC  board  may be  faced  with the  tough                                                               
decision to eliminate the program altogether.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
11:20:34 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
AL BARRETTE  testified in  opposition to  HB 80  as written.   He                                                               
stated he is  a sport fish user and a  subsistence fisherman.  He                                                               
supported the  [first] bill  passed several  years ago  that paid                                                               
off the two  hatcheries in Anchorage and  Fairbanks that directly                                                               
affect sport  fishermen.  He supports  continuing the maintenance                                                               
and  operation of  those  two hatcheries  that  are dedicated  to                                                               
sport  fishing.     However,  sport  fishermen   are  subsidizing                                                               
commercial  cost  recovery  programs   in  the  Southeast  Alaska                                                               
hatcheries and as  a sport fisherman he cannot support  that.  He                                                               
would amend  the two  state hatcheries  in Southeast  Alaska that                                                               
are primarily  set up  for cost recovery  and secondary  to sport                                                               
fishermen users.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
11:21:48 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
FORREST  BRADEN,  Executive  Director,  SouthEast  Alaska  Guides                                                               
Organization (SEAGO),  testified in support  of HB 80.   He noted                                                               
SEAGO is  a nonprofit association representing  fishing lodge and                                                               
charter  businesses  across  the  Alaska  panhandle,  with  these                                                               
businesses making up  roughly half of the  marine charter fishing                                                               
activity in  the state.   The bill  has SEAGO's full  support and                                                               
SEAGO   hopes   to   see  the   enhancement   surcharge   quickly                                                               
reestablished.     Hatchery  production  at   the  state-operated                                                               
facilities  in Fairbanks  and Anchorage,  as  well as  production                                                               
through  private   contracts  in   Southeast,  are   critical  in                                                               
maintaining key  sport fishing  opportunities across  Alaska, and                                                               
these programs need continued funding.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BRADEN spoke  to the  surcharge funds  that have  benefitted                                                               
Southeast Alaska  anglers.  He  said the Southeast  sport fishery                                                               
is heavily dependent  on fishing opportunity for  kings and cohos                                                               
and,  to date,  surcharge money  directed to  Southeast has  gone                                                               
largely toward  Chinook hatchery  production.   A quarter  of all                                                               
king salmon  harvested in  the Southeast  sport fishery  are fish                                                               
from  Southeast hatchery  origin,  and for  inside waters  around                                                               
Juneau,  Petersburg, and  Ketchikan  that number  goes  up to  50                                                               
percent.   Given  current wild  stock closures  on inside  waters                                                               
into late  season, terminal harvest  areas with  hatchery returns                                                               
are the  only access many anglers  have to king salmon  all year.                                                               
When  waters  are  open  to wild  stock  harvest,  hatchery  fish                                                               
available  for harvest  in common  property  fisheries help  take                                                               
pressure off those wild stocks while those stocks rebuild.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BRADEN pointed  out that  a  lot of  the Southeast  hatchery                                                               
production   benefitting  sport   anglers   in  common   property                                                               
fisheries  is  supported from  landing  taxes  in the  commercial                                                               
fishery.    So, he  continued,  sport  fishermen can  and  should                                                               
contribute to the  availability of target species  in waters that                                                               
they  share  with other  user  groups  by paying  an  enhancement                                                               
surcharge  to fishing  licenses.   Hatchery production  costs are                                                               
rising,  and repair  of infrastructure  continues  to be  needed.                                                               
Maintaining fishing  opportunities for  sport, personal  use, and                                                               
commercial  fisheries supported  by  current hatchery  production                                                               
and sport  surcharge funds are  key in  making that happen.   Mr.                                                               
Braden  added   that  SEAGO   can  support   placing  nonresident                                                               
surcharge  amounts back  to original  levels  with the  condition                                                               
that  any  additional funds  go  toward  increased production  of                                                               
fishery access,  and not  activities unrelated  to the  intent of                                                               
the bill.  He urged that HB 80 be moved forward.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
11:24:21 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  KREISS-TOMKINS thanked  SEAGO  for testifying  on                                                               
both HB 79 and HB 80.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
11:24:37 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
SUSAN  DOHERTY,  Executive  Director,  Southeast  Alaska  Seiners                                                               
Association (SEAS), testified in support  of HB 80 and its intent                                                               
to provide a source of  revenue to ensure critical infrastructure                                                               
and  enhancement   activities  can  be  maintained   and  have  a                                                               
continued funding source.  She  said SEAS would favor keeping the                                                               
nonresident  surcharge at  its previous  level to  guarantee that                                                               
the  many projects  in  ADF&G's fact  sheet  can be  sufficiently                                                               
funded.   Addressing previous testimony  that sport  fish dollars                                                               
support  the  cost of  recovery  activity,  she  said it  is  the                                                               
opposite.   Chum production and  the cost of  recovery activities                                                               
of those  fish allows the  association to continue to  raise coho                                                               
and  Chinook,  which are  not  as  valuable commercial  harvested                                                               
fish, except to the trollers.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MS. DOHERTY pointed  out that when looking at  projects and their                                                               
locations,  the  six  sites  in   Southeast  Alaska  only  depict                                                               
projects  where sport  fish dollars  are partnered  with private-                                                               
non-profit association dollars to  achieve these release numbers.                                                               
The  commercial fishermen  in Southeast,  through their  regional                                                               
associations,  pay for  and operate  the majority  of enhancement                                                               
activities in  this region, many  of which are coho  and Chinook.                                                               
Over the  35 years from  1985-2019, commercial  fishermen through                                                               
their  3 percent  enhancement tax  have provided  more than  $104                                                               
million  through assessment  alone.   This  is an  average of  $3                                                               
million every year for the last 36 years.  The private-non-                                                                     
profit  associations operate  many programs  that provide  sports                                                               
opportunity for  coho and Chinook  harvest throughout  the region                                                               
that are  solely paid  for by the  fishermen associations.   Some                                                               
assurance  that  the  share  of  the  surcharge  money  comes  to                                                               
Southeast is an important piece  of this legislation to consider.                                                               
She  said SEAS  supports passage  of HB  80, hopefully  with some                                                               
amendments to address ways to make it even better.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
11:27:16 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MICHAEL KRAMER,  Chair, Fisheries Subcommittee, Fairbanks  Fish &                                                               
Game Advisory  Committee, testified  that the  advisory committee                                                               
opposes HB  80, and he  personally opposes it  as well.   He said                                                               
the  surcharge   was  designed  for   the  specific   purpose  of                                                               
constructing  the  hatcheries  in Anchorage  and  Fairbanks  that                                                               
benefit sport users.   A small portion of that,  $517,000 a year,                                                               
was directed  to Crystal  Lake, which  annually produces  about 2                                                               
million king salmon smolt.   According to Crystal Lake's website,                                                               
about  20,000 of  those fish  were  harvested in  2020, of  which                                                               
17,525  were harvested  in the  commercial fishery,  leaving less                                                               
than 2,500 available  for cost recovery for the  hatchery and for                                                               
directed  sport fishing.   The  surcharge, even  if cut  in half,                                                               
would still raise  tens of millions of dollars  that the advisory                                                               
committee doesn't  think would  be well  spent by  a private-non-                                                               
profit  hatchery  run  by  the commercial  fish  industry.    The                                                               
commissioner has  said that  ADF&G will  support the  rearing and                                                               
release of  all the  hatchery kings produced  by Crystal  Lake in                                                               
2021 and 2022.   The advisory committee doesn't  know where those                                                               
funds  are  coming from  but  apparently  there are  funds  still                                                               
available.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. KRAMER  argued that most  of the  state funds going  into the                                                               
Crystal  Lake Hatchery  are  benefitting  the commercial  fishery                                                               
approximately 90-95  percent.   While of  some interest  to sport                                                               
opportunity in  the Southeast  area, that  is not  the hatchery's                                                               
mission as  it is  releasing at remote  sites that  are primarily                                                               
engaged  in by  commercial  fishing.   Recent regulatory  changes                                                               
would  expand cost  recovery efforts  in  those terminal  release                                                               
areas that  are remote and  not accessed often by  sport fishers.                                                               
The  specific purpose  of  the  surcharge was  to  build the  two                                                               
hatcheries in  Fairbanks and  Anchorage.   That purpose  has been                                                               
accomplished and it is time for  the surcharge to go away.  There                                                               
needs  to be  concern about  Alaska's  wild fish  stocks and  the                                                               
impacts that  hatchery over-releases  are having on  wild stocks.                                                               
Taxing sport  fish anglers who  primarily rely on wild  stocks to                                                               
support a commercial fish enhancement program is inappropriate.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
11:30:14 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  TARR  acknowledged  Mr. Kramer's  concerns  about                                                               
Crystal Lake, but  said the hatchery is just one  piece of a much                                                               
bigger effort here.   According to the  committee's research, she                                                               
continued,  the  bill would  benefit  both  commercial and  sport                                                               
anglers.   To  provide  Mr. Kramer  with a  better  sense of  how                                                               
Interior Alaska  sport anglers would  benefit from  this program,                                                               
she stated she  would email him an ADF&G document  that shows 270                                                               
release locations throughout Alaska.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
11:31:28 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
RAY DEBARDELABEN testified in support of  HB 80.  He stated he is                                                               
testifying  on  behalf  of  himself, but  that  he  is  currently                                                               
president  of  the  Kenai River  Professional  Guide  Association                                                               
(KRPGA).  He related that he  has spoken with several KRPGA board                                                               
members and general  members, and they are in full  support of HB
80.   He  pointed out  that  while the  hatcheries in  Anchorage,                                                               
Fairbanks, and  Southeast are mentioned, the  hatchery at Crooked                                                               
Creek is not and it could also  use some help.  He questioned why                                                               
this  hatchery isn't  mentioned in  the language  given the  king                                                               
salmon concern  on the Kenai River,  and that over the  past five                                                               
seasons it  has been  rare to  harvest any  Kenai kings  that are                                                               
greater  than  34  inches.    He  said  he  likes  Representative                                                               
McCabe's  suggestion  to  combine  HB   79  with  HB  80  because                                                               
increasing the license fee by  $4.00 for the hatchery program and                                                               
$2 for the logbook program would be a simple solution.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
11:33:04 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
RONI CARMON  noted that the  term "common  use" is used  often in                                                               
relation to HB 80,  a term that means everyone can  use it.  Even                                                               
though Southeast  hatcheries are  being talked about,  it relates                                                               
to all  hatcheries.  The  3 percent paid by  commercial fishermen                                                               
has  enhanced  the  sport  fishery.   The  Prince  William  Sound                                                               
hatcheries are  for commercial  fishermen and  their livelihoods,                                                               
and so should not  be mixed with common use.   The Kenai River is                                                               
common use, and  everything is common use, so  it means everybody                                                               
has  a right  to fish.    It is  the commercial  fishery that  is                                                               
paying that price,  so if it's common use then  the sport fishery                                                               
should  pay the  3  percent  enhancement off  of  their fees  and                                                               
licensing.   As  stated  by a  previous  witness, the  commercial                                                               
fishery is  paying for  this.   Nothing or  very little  is being                                                               
contributed by  the sports  fishery.  Common  use means  that the                                                               
commercial  fishermen  should get  their  cost  recovery and  the                                                               
expenses they've paid  for their hatcheries first;  common use is                                                               
a term that shouldn't be used for those hatcheries.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
11:35:30 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
LISA VON BARGEN,  Borough Manager, City and  Borough of Wrangell,                                                               
testified in  support of HB 80.   She stated that  on the surface                                                               
HB 80  appears to  be a  vehicle only  for sustaining  sport fish                                                               
enhancement,  but offered  her understanding  that the  committee                                                               
realizes that is not the case.   The funding generated under this                                                               
program will support hatcheries  like Crystal Lake in Petersburg,                                                               
considered to  be a sport  fish hatchery.  However,  Crystal Lake                                                               
also rears  king salmon used  to stock four  commercial fisheries                                                               
used by  seine, troll,  and drift  fishers in  southern Southeast                                                               
Alaska.    In  2020  the   estimated  ex-vessel  value  of  those                                                               
fisheries was  $1.284 million, and  over the past five  years the                                                               
ex-vessel value was  estimated at $7.341 million.   The Anita Bay                                                               
fishery is  vital to the  Wrangell fleet; its ex-vessel  value in                                                               
2020 was  about $640,000 and over  the past five years  more than                                                               
$4 million.   In August  [2020] Wrangell was the  first community                                                               
in Southeast Alaska  to declare an economic disaster,  one of the                                                               
reasons  being the  collapse of  the salmon  fisheries.   Without                                                               
this  enhancement  funding,  hatcheries like  Crystal  Lake  will                                                               
close and  those commercial fisheries  will disappear.   Wrangell                                                               
and the entire region cannot  sustain another economic blow.  She                                                               
requested that the committee approve HB 80.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
11:37:06 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STUTES, after  ascertaining no one else  wished to testify,                                                               
closed public testimony on HB 80.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
11:37:22 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE STORY observed from  the backup documentation that                                                               
the  objective  is  for  maintenance   and  operations  for  some                                                               
hatcheries, and in Southeast Alaska  it is projected for DIPAC to                                                               
receive about  "$300" and  Crystal Lake "$200."   She  asked what                                                               
assurance does the bill give in  the language on page 1, line 10,                                                               
Section 1,  that directly translates to  a fee paid by  an angler                                                               
in say, Region C, allocated for the hatchery stock release.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER VINCENT-LANG  replied that  he gives  his assurance.                                                               
Even  though it  wasn't written  in the  original bill,  he said,                                                               
[ADF&G]  is currently  giving $500,000  to  Southeast Alaska  and                                                               
plans  to  continue  that  in   recognition  of  the  importance.                                                               
Crystal Lake  is a state-owned  hatchery, rather  than PNP-owned,                                                               
and  ADF&G is  looking at  ways to  fund its  continued operation                                                               
through the $500,000, as well  as other potential funding sources                                                               
through the salmon  treaty, to do some of  the long-term deferred                                                               
maintenance at  that hatchery.   He allowed  there is  no written                                                               
assurance in  the bill,  but said  it is  his intent  to continue                                                               
that production in Southeast Alaska  given how important it is to                                                               
all the  users and knowing  also that any  hatchery-produced fish                                                               
are added on to Alaska's annual allocation of fish.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
11:39:07 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE STORY said  she is aware the  surcharge has lapsed                                                               
and offered  her understanding that  it has been  a long-standing                                                               
practice to distribute the funds in  this way.  She asked whether                                                               
that understanding  would continue under another  commissioner or                                                               
authority even though there is nothing clearly delineated.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER VINCENT-LANG  responded that he intends  to continue                                                               
the funding.   There have  been four or five  commissioners since                                                               
this began,  he said, and  those commissioners have  all followed                                                               
through  on that  commitment to  Southeast Alaska.   Even  though                                                               
that  surcharge would  go down,  he added,  it is  his intent  to                                                               
continue  the  $517,000  investment,  which  would  be  a  higher                                                               
percentage of the surcharge fee than ADF&G has paid in the past.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
11:40:12 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  MCCABE  asked  whether  he is  correct  that  the                                                               
Crystal  Lake   Hatchery  feeds  salt  water,   while  the  other                                                               
hatcheries for  stocking sport fish in  lakes, although Anchorage                                                               
might have a little salt water.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER   VINCENT-LANG  answered   that  the   William  Jack                                                               
Hernandez State  Fish Hatchery in  Anchorage does salt  water and                                                               
fresh water releases,  and most of the releases out  of the [Ruth                                                               
Burnett State Fish Hatchery] in Fairbanks are fresh water.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
11:42:44 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  MCCABE   asked  whether   there  are   any  other                                                               
contributions   to  the   Crystal  Lake   Hatchery  besides   the                                                               
surcharges, such as commercial fishers.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER VINCENT-LANG  answered that  all Alaska  anglers and                                                               
nonresidents  are charged  a  surcharge.   A  sport fisherman  in                                                               
Anchorage or Fairbanks gets the  benefit of lake stocking and the                                                               
benefit of  salt water  stocking along the  coast.   In Southeast                                                               
Alaska,  about one-fourth  of the  fees are  collected but  ADF&G                                                               
doesn't provide any  fish from the Anchorage  hatchery because it                                                               
is too costly to bring those  fish to Southeast.  So, ADF&G's way                                                               
of  supporting the  hatchery operations  in  Southeast Alaska  is                                                               
through its state-owned  facility at Crystal Lake that  is run by                                                               
a PNP, and  a couple other facilities.  This  is done through two                                                               
mechanisms:   1) giving  $517,000 in surcharge  money, and  2) in                                                               
recognition  of  the  importance  of  sport  fishing,  additional                                                               
monies  from the  fish and  game fund  are matched  with Dingell-                                                               
Johnson monies to support fish production.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE MCCABE asked who  else besides the sport fishermen                                                               
help fund those  hatcheries and the repairs  to those hatcheries;                                                               
for  example,  whether  commercial   fishermen  help  fund  them.                                                               
Because some of the fish from  the Crystal Lake Hatchery and from                                                               
the  Anchorage hatchery  are  going to  be  caught by  commercial                                                               
fishermen, he would  like to know if any money  is collected from                                                               
commercial  fishermen.   While  he  is a  fan  of hatcheries,  if                                                               
multiple  groups  are  going  to  benefit  from  the  fish,  then                                                               
multiple groups should be supporting both hatcheries.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER   VINCENT-LANG  replied   that   in  Anchorage   and                                                               
Fairbanks, sport  fishermen pay  the entirety of  the cost.   For                                                               
the Crystal  Lake and Southeast Alaska  hatcheries, contributions                                                               
come  from  the commercial  industry  as  well as  other  federal                                                               
sources associated with the salmon treaty.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  KREISS-TOMKINS  quipped that  Southeast  Alaskans                                                               
would welcome  100 percent  of the costs  of that  hatchery being                                                               
supported by the surcharge.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
11:44:07 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STUTES  said the committee  would continue  considering the                                                               
bill  along  with  any  proposed amendments  on  [3/4/21].    She                                                               
further noted  that consideration is  being given to  rolling the                                                               
changes into a committee substitute (CS).                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STUTES announced that HB 80 was held over.                                                                                

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
HB79 Support Doc - Paper Logbook 2.24.21.pdf HFSH 3/2/2021 10:00:00 AM
HB 79
HB79 Support Doc - eLogBook 2.24.21.pdf HFSH 3/2/2021 10:00:00 AM
HB 79
HB79 Support Doc - Salmon Treaty - Chinook Mitigation FAQ 2.24.21.pdf HFSH 3/2/2021 10:00:00 AM
HB 79
HB80 Support Doc - Stocking FAQ Revised 2.24.21.pdf HFSH 3/2/2021 10:00:00 AM
HFSH 3/9/2021 11:00:00 AM
HB 80
HB 79 Amednment #1 3.2.21.pdf HFSH 3/2/2021 10:00:00 AM
HB 79