Legislature(2015 - 2016)BARNES 124

02/13/2016 10:00 AM House LABOR & COMMERCE

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* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
-- Time Change From 3:15 p.m. --
+= HB 159 HEALTH CARE RETAINER; INSURANCE EXEMPT TELECONFERENCED
<Bill Hearing Canceled>
-- Public Testimony <Time Limit May Be Set> --
+= HB 194 AK SECURITIES ACT; PENALTIES; CRT. RULES TELECONFERENCED
<Bill Hearing Canceled>
-- Public Testimony <Time Limit May Be Set> --
+= HB 248 ELECTRONIC TAX RETURNS & ALCOHOL TAX TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Public Testimony <Time Limit May Be Set> --
+= HB 252 ELCTRNC TAX RETURNS; VESSEL PASSENGER TAX TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Public Testimony <Time Limit May Be Set> --
          HB 248-ELECTRONIC TAX RETURNS & ALCOHOL TAX                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
10:02:53 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR OLSON announced  that the first order of  business would be                                                               
HOUSE BILL NO.  248, "An Act requiring  the electronic submission                                                               
of  a  tax return  or  report  with  the Department  of  Revenue;                                                               
relating to the excise tax  on alcoholic beverages; and providing                                                               
for an effective date."                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR OLSON opened public testimony on HB 248.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
10:03:20 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
SASSAN MOSSANEN, founder of the  Denali Brewing Company, informed                                                               
the  committee that  his  brewery is  located  in the  Matanuska-                                                               
Susitna Borough,  and began production  in 2009.  In  seven years                                                               
the  brewery has  undergone five  expansions to  a 35,000  square                                                               
foot  building and  to twenty-five  year-around  employees.   The                                                               
brewery's growth  was supported  by its employees,  partners, and                                                               
the willingness of  the local lending institution.   Mr. Mossanen                                                               
explained that  the price  of beer is  set by  outside influences                                                               
and  by the  high  cost  of producing  beer  in  Alaska.   Denali                                                               
Brewing's  growth has  been  good for  employment  and for  local                                                               
business, but the  business is in a fragile position.   He said a                                                               
small  increase in  price could  lead his  customers to  purchase                                                               
beverages  produced  outside  of  Alaska,  or  to  lower  quality                                                               
products.   In that case, the  ability of the business  to create                                                               
jobs and  invest in  the community would  be diminished,  and its                                                               
ability to  make beer threatened.   The current $0.35  excise tax                                                               
is  among  the  highest  in  the nation  and  an  increase  would                                                               
directly affect his ability to stay in business.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
10:06:05 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
BILL FRY said  he and his wife own and  operate Bear Creek Winery                                                               
in Homer.   The  winery opened  12 years ago  and last  year sold                                                               
over 92,000 bottles.  Mr. Fry  employs between 8 and 15 employees                                                               
and now has a new  bottling plant, warehouse, event pavilion, and                                                               
large  freezer.   The  winery  purchased  over 37,000  pounds  of                                                               
Alaska  fruit and  berries grown  in Cantwell  to Southeast,  and                                                               
buys from villagers and Native  corporations, spending $55,000 on                                                               
Alaska  fruit.   He  pointed out  that  unlike Alaska  breweries,                                                               
wineries  use more  than  just local  water,  but purchase  local                                                               
ingredients.   He said he  wants to pay  a fair share  to balance                                                               
the budget, and  agrees with the governor's plan; in  fact, he is                                                               
not opposed  to the bill  if it  is amended to  provide wineries,                                                               
distilleries, and distributors the  same exemption as is afforded                                                               
to breweries.   Currently,  the bill directs  wineries to  pay $5                                                               
per  gallon and  the breweries  pay $0.70  per gallon.   Wineries                                                               
cannot raise their prices to  cover this increase, as making wine                                                               
from  Alaska ingredients  is expensive;  his  business also  uses                                                               
American-made   bottles,  corks,   and  labels.     Without   the                                                               
exemption, his  options would be  to buy berries from  Canada and                                                               
Oregon, cut  back on employees, expansion,  and capital projects,                                                               
or  buy Chinese  bottles.    Mr.  Fry added  that over  2 million                                                               
gallons  of  wine  was  imported into  Alaska  last  year,  which                                                               
contributed $5 million in excise  tax, and 18,000 gallons of wine                                                               
from his winery contributed $45,000  in excise taxes, mostly paid                                                               
by  his  distributor.    Distributors should  also  be  given  an                                                               
exemption  for  Alaska-made products.    Mr.  Fry urged  for  the                                                               
committee to extend the exemption or remove it.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
10:09:29 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
STEPHEN GERTEISEN  said he  is the founder  of Arkose  Brewery in                                                               
Palmer.  Arkose  Brewery has been in business for  five years and                                                               
manufactures beer  in Palmer.   The brewery  is set to  expand in                                                               
the spring and  add full-time employees.  Although  in support of                                                               
balancing  the  budget,  and doing  its  fair  share,  successful                                                               
manufacturing  businesses  in  Alaska are  rare,  and  breweries,                                                               
wineries, and  distilleries are already contributing  by creating                                                               
jobs and products.   Furthermore, in the summer  tourists come to                                                               
visit the  brewery.  In  order to continue to  expand production,                                                               
he  said he  is opposed  to the  bill because  the increase  is a                                                               
burden.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
10:12:05 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
JEANNE KITAYANA,  co-owner, Haines  Brewing Company, said  she is                                                               
greatly concerned  with HB 248's  impact to small businesses.   A                                                               
successful  manufacturing business  in  a  small rural  community                                                               
already  is  economically  burdened  with  availability  and  the                                                               
shipping costs  of shipping  in raw  materials, and  shipping out                                                               
final products.   A  small population will  only support  a small                                                               
profit  margin,  and  the proposed  additional  taxes  will  work                                                               
against economic development in  Alaska communities.  Small craft                                                               
breweries are  based on community  support and  hometown loyalty.                                                               
Recently, Haines Brewing Company moved  to a new building on Main                                                               
Street,  which is  a sign  that  Haines is  progressing with  its                                                               
downtown   revitalization  movement.     Community   support  has                                                               
encouraged  further  business  development,  and  she  asked  the                                                               
committee to refrain from hindering small business in Alaska.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
10:14:11 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
GARY SUPERMAN,  board member,  Alaska Cabaret,  Hotel, Restaurant                                                               
and Retailers  Association (CHARR), and  owner of the  Hunger Hut                                                               
bar, motel,  and liquor  store, said  he did  not agree  with the                                                               
governor that the  proposed increase is reasonable.   In 2002 and                                                               
2003, the  industry fought a  previous tax increase  that doubled                                                               
the tax.   Mr.  Superman directed attention  to a  spreadsheet in                                                               
the  committee packet  illustrating  taxation  levels across  the                                                               
nation.   After thirteen  years, Alaska  taxes are  already above                                                               
those of  other states.   Although many states have  raised their                                                               
taxes,  they are  not nearly  as high  as Alaska's  level.    The                                                               
enactment  of  this bill  will  have  a  stifling effect  on  his                                                               
businesses; he  has nine  employees and  built a  new store.   He                                                               
tries to  be competitive, which  is difficult  in his area.   Mr.                                                               
Superman  opined the  industry  cannot absorb  this increase  and                                                               
remain  viable; his  bar is  losing profits  and patronage  for a                                                               
variety of  reasons, and some of  the local pubs will  close.  In                                                               
addition, he  will not  continue to stock  local wine  because it                                                               
will  no longer  be  competitive.   There  is  a negative  impact                                                               
"across  the  board,"   and  he  expressed  his   hope  that  the                                                               
legislature will not support the bill.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
10:17:51 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
BILL HOWELL said he was representing  the consumer of Alaska.  He                                                               
has been a resident of Sterling  for twelve years and is retired,                                                               
and  teaches  as  adjunct faculty  at  Kenai  Peninsula  College.                                                               
Proposed HB  248 would  double the existing  excise tax  rates on                                                               
alcoholic  beverages in  Alaska, which  are already  some of  the                                                               
highest in  the U.S.   Currently, the  state collects  almost $40                                                               
million per  year from taxes paid  by the citizens of  the state;                                                               
producers,  distributors,  and  retailers   of  beer,  wine,  and                                                               
spirits will  pass the  cost of the  tax along  to end-consumers.                                                               
He said the  governor is directly targeting the  tax at Alaskans,                                                               
who are already  paying their fair share.   Mr. Howell questioned                                                               
why  the  liquor industry  and  consumers  are singled  out,  and                                                               
suggested that all  taxes should be doubled.  He  agreed that new                                                               
sources of  revenue need to  be found, after cutting  out another                                                               
$1 billion  from the  state budget,  including cuts  to education                                                               
and  health care.   Mr.  Howell said  the source  of new  revenue                                                               
should be a  statewide sales tax, and restated  his opposition to                                                               
the bill.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
10:21:21 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CHRYSTAL  SCHOENROCK  said she  is  a  member  of CHARR  and  the                                                               
secretary  of  the  Kenai  Peninsula CHARR;  she  also  owns  the                                                               
Forelands Bar  and Liquor Store in  Nikiski.  She said  Alaska is                                                               
about  the "second  largest taxed  state," and  she has  laid off                                                               
employees  and  cut  employees'  hours  due  to  layoffs  in  the                                                               
industry on the North Slope.    Ms. Schoenrock said she felt that                                                               
if workers  on the North  Slope can take a  cut in pay  so should                                                               
the governor.  She said she could  not afford the tax as she does                                                               
not have  many customers,  and urged  that the  legislature "find                                                               
another way."                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
10:23:12 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CARMEN LUNDE,  Director, Kodiak CHARR,  said the  liquor industry                                                               
has previously had  its taxes raised by 300 percent  and the last                                                               
tax  increase put  Alaska by  far as  the highest-taxed  state on                                                               
alcohol.    The  industry  already  contributes  heavily  to  the                                                               
state's tax base  - approximately $40 million per year  - and the                                                               
hospitality industry  should not pay  more.  The tax  proposal is                                                               
for $0.10  per drink, which  would bring the  tax on a  gallon of                                                               
spirits to $25.60, on a gallon of  wine to $5, and on a gallon of                                                               
beer  to $2.40.   Ms.  Lunde  characterized the  tax proposal  as                                                               
outrageous.  She  is aware of the $3.5 billion  deficit and urged                                                               
that  other  avenues   should  be  explored,  such   as  cuts  to                                                               
government and  spending, and  revisiting tax  cuts for  oil. She                                                               
said  she  is  in  favor  of a  state  lottery,  and  opposed  to                                                               
"touching the permanent fund."                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
10:25:21 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CLAY MURPHY said  he a 35-year Alaska resident and  has lived and                                                               
worked all  over the state.   He said he is  adamantly opposed to                                                               
the alcohol tax because all  businesses and restaurants will pass                                                               
the cost of  the tax along to consumers; in  fact, Alaskans would                                                               
be  "double-taxed"   by  the  actions   of  their   governor  and                                                               
legislators.  The bill will hurt  small business and he urged for                                                               
a focus  on the budget  during this crisis.   Mr. Murphy  said he                                                               
was pleased with  the focus on the budget by  the Alaska House of                                                               
Representatives.   He  said the  tax  has been  introduced as  an                                                               
afterthought without previous notice to the public.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR OLSON advised  that legislation is posted  on the committee                                                               
web site.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR. MURPHY asked what the money will  be used for and how much is                                                               
expected to  be generated  for each purpose.   He  cautioned that                                                               
increased  taxes  will  become   a  steamroller  and  urged  that                                                               
legislators consider the harm to  individuals and businesses.  In                                                               
addition,  he urged  for further  cuts to  agencies which  can be                                                               
done without harm  to the residents of Alaska because  of the way                                                               
money is  spent by state agencies.   His experience is  that when                                                               
business revenues  have decreased, cuts  have to be made,  and it                                                               
is  not  right  to  hurt   businesses  without  further  cuts  to                                                               
agencies.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
10:29:19 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
TIFFANY HALL, executive director of  Recover Alaska, said she was                                                               
calling from Seattle,  but lives in Anchorage.   She informed the                                                               
committee  that Recover  Alaska  is a  multi-sector action  group                                                               
working  to   reduce  the  harm   caused  by   excessive  alcohol                                                               
consumption  throughout  the  state.    Increasing  the  existing                                                               
alcohol  excise tax  will generate  much needed  revenue for  the                                                               
public services which rely on state  general funds (GF).  In this                                                               
way,  the tax  functions as  a revenue  diversification strategy,                                                               
and  also   supports  long-standing  public  health   and  safety                                                               
objectives.   Additionally, an  increase in  the alcohol  tax has                                                               
been shown  to reduce alcohol  consumption, which will  also save                                                               
money as  the cost of  alcohol abuse in  Alaska causes a  loss of                                                               
productivity,  health  care   costs,  traffic  crashes,  criminal                                                               
justice costs, and protective services  costs, totaling over $1.2                                                               
billion.   An increase in the  tax will also save  lives, improve                                                               
the health of babies, and reduce  underage drinking.  In 1983 and                                                               
2002,  statewide  alcohol  tax  increases  were  followed  by  29                                                               
percent  and  11 percent  decreases  in  the number  of  alcohol-                                                               
related  deaths.   There were  also reductions  in the  amount of                                                               
binge   drinking  during   pregnancy,   and   in  youth   alcohol                                                               
consumption.   Increases to  state excise  taxes on  alcohol have                                                               
been  recommended  by  the  Surgeon  General  of  the  U.S.,  the                                                               
Institute of Medicine, the American  Medical Association, and the                                                               
Community Prevention  Services Task  Force due to  research which                                                               
indicates that  increased alcohol excise taxes  lead to decreases                                                               
in alcohol-related deaths, traffic  crashes, violence, crime, and                                                               
child abuse.   Negative impacts  of alcohol abuse cost  the state                                                               
over  $1 billion  per  year,  and increasing  the  tax will  help                                                               
bridge the fiscal  gap by reducing costs  and generating revenue;                                                               
an increase in  the tax will decrease consumption  and save lives                                                               
in Alaska.  She  urged the committee to pass the  bill.  Ms. Hall                                                               
offered to provide written comments  that will include sources to                                                               
verify her spoken testimony.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
10:32:54 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
The committee took an at ease from 10:32 a.m. to 10:33 a.m.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
10:33:07 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MICHAEL JEFFERY  said he  was speaking  on his own  behalf.    He                                                               
provided  a brief  background, noting  that he  was the  superior                                                               
court judge  in Barrow  for 32  years and prior  to that  a legal                                                               
services attorney.   He is  now retired,  and is not  speaking on                                                               
behalf of  the court  system.  Mr.  Jeffery expressed  his strong                                                               
support for  HB 248, and his  agreement with the comments  of Ms.                                                               
Hall.  He pointed  out the cost of alcohol abuse  in 2010 of $1.2                                                               
billion  was due  to  loss of  productivity,  health care  costs,                                                               
crashes,   criminal   justice,    protective   services,   public                                                               
assistance,  and   social  services.     Evidence-based  research                                                               
supports increases in  state excise taxes on alcohol  in order to                                                               
raise  revenue, and  reduce heartache  all  over the  state.   He                                                               
recalled that  Barrow went  dry for  a period  of time,  and when                                                               
residents were allowed  to bring alcohol back in,  the crime rate                                                               
doubled, which is an example of  the harm that alcohol can cause.                                                               
He acknowledged the  concern of business owners  in the industry,                                                               
but alcohol-related crimes and suicides  are beyond price.  There                                                               
should  be  support  for  a  program that  can  raise  money  for                                                               
services  including domestic  violence shelters,  early childhood                                                               
education, and  treatment for substance abuse  and mental health,                                                               
while also  allowing people to  use alcohol.   The cost  over the                                                               
lifetime  of  one  child  severely   affected  by  fetal  alcohol                                                               
spectrum  disorder  can  be  $1  million  to  $2  million;  binge                                                               
drinking  by moms  is identified  as a  cause of  this condition.                                                               
Mr. Jeffery expressed his support for HB 248.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
10:37:38 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
LARRY  HACKENMILLER,   Secretary,  Interior  CHARR,   stated  his                                                               
opposition  to HB  248, which  doubles  the alcohol  tax for  the                                                               
purpose of  closing the  budget gap.   He  said according  to the                                                               
Department  of Revenue,  the  last major  tax  [increase] was  in                                                               
2002, and  also created the  [Alcohol and Other Drug  Treatment &                                                               
Prevention Fund  Authority], in which  50 percent of  the alcohol                                                               
taxes  were to  be deposited  and used  for mental  health budget                                                               
code 1180.   He said  $20 million went  to the alcohol  and other                                                               
drug treatment fund,  and questioned how much  money was directed                                                               
to alcohol treatment  and prevention, and how much  to other drug                                                               
abuse treatment and  prevention.   The bill would  double the tax                                                               
on alcohol  consumers, so  half of the  money goes  to prevention                                                               
programs for drugs other than  alcohol.  Mr. Hackenmiller said if                                                               
money  is dedicated  to the  treatment of  other drug  abuse, the                                                               
additional tax  is punitive against  an alcohol consumer,  and is                                                               
discriminatory.    He  directed  attention  to  page  11  of  the                                                               
document  entitled,  "New   Sustainable  Alaska  Plan,  Alcoholic                                                               
Beverage Tax  HB248," and  said he  did not  see any  new revenue                                                               
estimated  from  marijuana, and  expressed  his  belief that  the                                                               
state was  going to make  money in  taxes from marijuana  and, if                                                               
so, he suggested that marijuana  users should pay the $20 million                                                               
to  the mental  health budget  code 1180.   This  would lift  the                                                               
burden  from  alcohol  consumers.    Mr.  Hackenmiller  said  the                                                               
additional $40 million  in the new revenue  component coming from                                                               
the  new alcohol  tax is  incorrect because  the increase  to the                                                               
general fund  is only $20  million, as  the other $20  million is                                                               
dedicated  to  expenditures;  depositing  $20  million  into  the                                                               
mental health budget code 1180  will increase government spending                                                               
for office  space, computers, copy  machines, employees,  and new                                                               
programs.    He  advised  that  the  state  budget  needs  to  be                                                               
decreased first,  and there  are more  spending reductions  to be                                                               
found, and more  dedicated funds.  The alcohol tax  is a punitive                                                               
tax  and should  not be  considered in  the budget  gap proposal;                                                               
unless  the budget  is  decreased to  a  sustainable budget,  the                                                               
state will revisit taxes again in the near future.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
10:41:00 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
ROBERT MCCORMICK  said he works  at Glacier Brew House  and Orso,                                                               
serves on the board of Alaska  CHARR, and is the treasurer of the                                                               
Brewers Guild of Alaska.   Mr. McCormick acknowledged the need to                                                               
find new  sources of income for  the state, but the  sources need                                                               
to  be  broad-based,  so  everyone  pays,  and  on  services  and                                                               
products  that are  taxed less  in Alaska  than in  other states.                                                               
In  Alaska, the  taxes  on spirits  are  the second-highest,  the                                                               
highest on  wine, and the  second-highest on beer in  the nation.                                                               
Mr. McCormick  said he is  also concerned that Alaskans  will buy                                                               
alcohol  from other  states online,  and the  tax will  make that                                                               
option  more  attractive.     In  addition,  illegally  importing                                                               
alcohol will be  more lucrative and tempting.  Brewing  is one of                                                               
the few manufacturing  industries that is growing  in Alaska; the                                                               
number of brewers has grown from less  than a dozen to over 20 in                                                               
20 years.   He pointed out that the state  would not double taxes                                                               
on the oil industry.  Brewers  do not receive incentives from the                                                               
state,  and  do  not  receive  tax  credits.    He  restated  his                                                               
opposition to HB 248.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
10:43:35 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
KIRSTEN  MYLES, executive  director, Cook  Inlet CHARR,  said she                                                               
represents the food and beverage  retailers in Anchorage, who are                                                               
opposed to  HB 248.  She  stressed that the proposed  alcohol tax                                                               
would  put Alaska's  taxes at  five to  eight times  the national                                                               
average; although all industries are  needed to bring in revenue,                                                               
an increase of this size targeted at one industry is ridiculous.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
10:44:54 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
DARWIN  BIWER  said he  owns  Darwin's  Theory,  a small  bar  in                                                               
downtown Anchorage, and  is the chair of the  board for statewide                                                               
CHARR.    He  referred  to  the  last  tax  in  1971-1972,  which                                                               
established a treatment program,  and questioned what happened to                                                               
the money  and why it  didn't solve  all of the  health problems.                                                               
Also, he said  he could not raise his prices  by $0.10 per drink,                                                               
but  would have  to  raise the  price  by $0.25  at  a time;  the                                                               
proposed tax is  an increase at the retail level  and an increase                                                               
to the  consumer.   Mr. Biwer  said when  prices go  up consumers                                                               
will  drink a  cheaper beer  and not  Alaska products,  which are                                                               
more  expensive, thus  Alaska brewers,  wineries, and  distillers                                                               
will be hurt by the tax.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
10:47:09 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
DON GRASSE  said he is the  president of K and  L Distributors in                                                               
Anchorage,  which  employs over  200  Alaskans  and has  been  in                                                               
business in  the state since  1940.  He expressed  his company's,                                                               
and  the  industry's,  disappointment   with  the  governor,  his                                                               
administration,  and  the proposed  alcohol  tax.   Many  in  the                                                               
industry  contacted  the governor  and  his  staff prior  to  the                                                               
release of  the bill and pointed  out how high the  alcohol taxes                                                               
are in Alaska, and how little  revenue would be raised.  When the                                                               
proposal is  compared to doubling the  gas tax, which is  50th in                                                               
the nation, the gas tax would  be $0.24, and the national average                                                               
is $0.30.   The fishing tax is proposed to  increase by 1 percent                                                               
and  the  mining tax  is  proposed  to  increase 2  percent,  and                                                               
cigarette taxes would be 8th in  the nation.  Mr. Grasse said the                                                               
alcohol taxes are out of step  with all of the other proposals by                                                               
the governor.  The actual cost  to consumers will be much greater                                                               
than $0.10  per drink and in  many cases the costs  of goods will                                                               
increase by more than 20 percent  to a consumer.  Mr. Grasse said                                                               
the hospitality industry  has the potential to grow,  but will be                                                               
stifled by  the proposed taxes.   He expressed his hope  that the                                                               
legislature will  see that  the alcohol tax  is not  the solution                                                               
for the state's problems.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
10:50:04 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MATT TOMTER said he owns the  Eagle River Alehouse and the Palmer                                                               
City Alehouse,  two restaurants  that employ  between 90  and 120                                                               
people per  year.   He informed the  committee that  the industry                                                               
has faced  the following challenges  in the  past 12 months:   an                                                               
increase in the  minimum wage of $2 per hour  which increases his                                                               
cost  by $100,000  per year;  Affordable Care  Act of  2010 (ACA)                                                               
requirements, the cost of which  are unclear, except it will cost                                                               
$90,000 to $160,000  per year to provide  insurance to everybody;                                                               
and an increase  in alcohol taxes.  He said  he sells about 3,800                                                               
kegs of  beer per  year, and  the increase in  cost that  will be                                                               
passed  along to  consumers is  significant.   Taking  in all  of                                                               
these factors,  in 2016  and 2017 his  operational costs  will be                                                               
raised by  over $250,000  per year.   Mr. Tomter  said, "  ... at                                                               
some point  there's a breaking  point on  how much we  can charge                                                               
for  a burger."   He  warned that  when people  can't afford  the                                                               
prices they will stop supporting  the food and beverage industry,                                                               
which is  a primary  employer on  the road system.   He  wants to                                                               
stay  in business  and  said he  is opposed  to  the increase  in                                                               
alcohol tax.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
10:52:39 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
JOEL KADARAUCH  said he represents  the Odom Corporation  and the                                                               
Alaska Wine and Spirits Wholesale  Association.  Odom Corporation                                                               
has been  in business locally  for eighty years and  employs over                                                               
four hundred  Alaskans, 98 percent  of which hold  full-time jobs                                                               
with benefits.   He  said if  selective tax  increases are  to be                                                               
part  of the  solution to  the state's  deficit, the  current tax                                                               
burden should be recognized:   Alaska's alcohol excise taxes were                                                               
tripled  in  2002, and  became  the  highest-taxed state  in  the                                                               
nation in  wine, beer,  and spirits, and  remains the  highest in                                                               
two categories.   He directed attention to  three graphs provided                                                               
in  the committee  packet which  represent this  tax burden,  and                                                               
depict where  Alaska would rank  should HB 248 become  law: seven                                                               
times  the national  average  for beer,  six  times the  national                                                               
average  for   wine,  and   five-and-a-half  times   for  spirits                                                               
[documents not provided].  While  the total per-capita tax burden                                                               
is  the lowest  in  the nation,  there is  no  other industry  in                                                               
Alaska  that carries  a disproportionately  high tax  burden.   A                                                               
broad-based approach  is onerous and inequitable.   Secondly, the                                                               
contribution of HB 248 to state  revenues would be $20 million to                                                               
unrestricted   general  funds,   which  is   a  minimal   deficit                                                               
reduction.    Mr.  Kadarauch  summarized that  he  and  those  he                                                               
represents are strongly opposed to the bill.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
10:55:24 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MIKE COONS  stated his opposition  to HB 248.   He said he  was a                                                               
retired paramedic  and has seen  abuse and addiction.   Mr. Coons                                                               
said he opposes  all sin taxes and the  consequences thereof, and                                                               
that  he  has  provided  further details  in  written  testimony.                                                               
Section 3 of  HB 248 shows a  100 percent increase in  sin tax on                                                               
all alcohol products, except for  homebrew.  He cautioned that if                                                               
the bill is  enacted, bootlegging in dry  villages will increase.                                                               
The socialist-liberalist's  stated goal is  to make a  product so                                                               
expensive that users will stop  buying a product; however, in his                                                               
experience, those  with an alcohol  addiction will  buy homebrew,                                                               
and "beg on  the street corner ...."  Mr.  Coons advised that the                                                               
result  of sin  taxes is  that  state and  local governments  get                                                               
money  for  the   general  fund,  and  some  money   may  go  for                                                               
rehabilitation  efforts,  but most  of  the  taxes are  used  for                                                               
bloated local and state government.   He opined that sin taxes on                                                               
alcohol, cigarettes,  and gasoline are  really a means  to attack                                                               
users  of  a product,  and  fund  the  progressive goals  of  big                                                               
government.   Mr.  Coon said  the tax  will be  paid for  "by the                                                               
responsible users  in the neighborhood  of 90 to 95  percent, and                                                               
to  the  addicts,  maybe  5  percent,  maybe  10  percent."    He                                                               
concluded that  the tax will  not help  alcoholism, homelessness,                                                               
or  reduce   driving  under   the  influence   (DUI)  violations.                                                               
Referring to  earlier testimony, he  said he was  totally against                                                               
lotteries.   The bill  punishes responsible  adults but  does not                                                               
contribute to a sustainable budget.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
10:59:50 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MICHELE SHAPIRO,  Director, Mat-Su  CHARR, said she  was speaking                                                               
on  behalf  of  restaurants,  bars, and  package  stores  in  the                                                               
Matanuska-Susitna Borough.    Hospitality  members in  the Mat-Su                                                               
Borough  are  strongly opposed  to  HB  248, and  she  reiterated                                                               
previous testimony that  Alaskans pay the highest  alcohol tax in                                                               
the nation already,  which is a heavy burden for  one industry to                                                               
bear.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
11:00:56 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
KATE BURKHART said she is  the Executive Director of the Advisory                                                               
Board  on Alcoholism  and Drug  Abuse, and  of the  Alaska Mental                                                               
Health  Board,   which  are  the  state   planning  councils  for                                                               
behavioral health, and her comments  are on behalf of the boards.                                                               
Ms. Burkhart said  she has also provided written  comments to the                                                               
committee in  support of HB 248.    She encouraged  the committee                                                               
to consider the  bill as part of the larger  attempt to solve the                                                               
state's budget problems, along with  reduced spending, reforms to                                                               
contain costs,  and efforts  to generate  revenue.   Ms. Burkhart                                                               
referred to  criminal justice  reform that  will succeed  only if                                                               
the  state has  a  robust community  health  and social  services                                                               
sector.   This  is a  multi-dimensional problem  that requires  a                                                               
multi-dimensional solution; it is important  to consider the bill                                                               
in the context  of similar legislation.  She  urged the committee                                                               
to refer  to her written  comments for further details  on issues                                                               
related to HB 248.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE JOSEPHSON expressed his  understanding that HB 248                                                               
would  double the  amount that  goes into  the Alcohol  and Other                                                               
Drug Treatment & Prevention Authority fund.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS.  BURKHART said  the  governor's intention  is  to follow  the                                                               
current practice of  putting one-half of the excise  tax into the                                                               
Alcohol  and Other  Drug Treatment  & Prevention  Authority fund,                                                               
and one-half into GF.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE JOSEPHSON asked:                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     Do you  know whether or  not, that the $20  million, if                                                                    
     it  passed, that  would  go into  this  fund, would  be                                                                    
     omitted from  some other  behavioral health  account or                                                                    
     mental health trust  account?  In other words,  is it a                                                                    
     net gain of $20 million to  treat, or is it going to be                                                                    
     status quo?                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MS.  BURKHART  answered  that  the   legislature  must  make  the                                                               
appropriation,  thus the  legislature  decides how  much goes  to                                                               
what program.   Currently,  there are GF  mental health  funds as                                                               
well  as revenue  from the  Alcohol and  Other Drug  Prevention &                                                               
Treatment Authority  fund going  to behavioral  health prevention                                                               
and treatment; in  fact, more than $20  million goes specifically                                                               
to substance use disorder treatment  services such as residential                                                               
treatment and  detoxification services.   Every year, all  of the                                                               
money is before the legislature  for appropriation, thus if there                                                               
were supplanting, the legislature would do so.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
11:04:48 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
BRANDON  HOWARD said  he was  starting Amalga  Distillery, a  new                                                               
distillery in Juneau.   This is a new business  in the community,                                                               
and he acknowledged  that the industry is  associated with social                                                               
issues.   He said the spirit  excise taxes will double  his taxes                                                               
to  about  $8   per  bottle,  which  will   impact  his  margins.                                                               
Businesses in  Alaska must pay  a premium for materials,  and for                                                               
shipping products out of the state,  and another tax will make it                                                               
harder  to  start a  distillery  and  it  may  be a  less  viable                                                               
business.   Mr. Howard  suggested another way  to double  the tax                                                               
revenue would  be to double  the number of distilleries  and grow                                                               
the industry  in the state.   In addition to  capital, challenges                                                               
to opening  a new  business are permitting  and processing.   The                                                               
tax burden will be passed to  the customer, and the price for his                                                               
product will be  much greater than that of his  competitors.  His                                                               
initial distribution will  be within the state, and  the tax will                                                               
burden Alaskans.  Mr. Howard stated his opposition to HB 248.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  OLSON recalled  previous  legislation  that allowed  micro                                                               
distilleries to have tasting rooms, which would be helpful.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR.  HOWARD agreed  that is  a  big help.     He  added that  his                                                               
distillery, and others in Alaska,  are promoting premium products                                                               
for  distribution out-of-state.    In further  response to  Chair                                                               
Olson, he  said Amalga Distillery will  manufacture Juneauper Gin                                                               
and a single malt whiskey, using Alaska barley, wheat, and rye.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
11:09:52 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
JACK MANNING  stated he  owns a convenience  and liquor  store in                                                               
Juneau,  is president  of  the  local CHARR,  and  serves on  the                                                               
statewide CHARR board.   He said he applauds  the legislature and                                                               
the  governor  for  dealing  with   the  state's  fiscal  issues.                                                               
However, this  is a tax on  consumers, and is it  unfair to place                                                               
the  burden on  one segment  of Alaskans,  the alcohol  consumer.                                                               
This  is  a radical  tax  rate;  a  similar  change in  taxes  in                                                               
Washington  almost  destroyed a  new  distillery  industry.   The                                                               
liquor  stores  in  Oregon  along  the  Washington  state  border                                                               
increased sales by 35 percent,  benefitting from the tax increase                                                               
in  Washington.   Alaska  does  not  have bordering  states,  but                                                               
liquor is  available from  the Internet for  free freight,  as is                                                               
advertised by Alaska  Airlines.  He said he  agreed with previous                                                               
testimony in opposition to HB 248.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
11:12:09 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR OLSON announced that public testimony would remain open.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
[HB 248 was held over.]                                                                                                         

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
HB248 Supporting Documents-Email Perry Ahsogeak 02-12-16.pdf HL&C 2/13/2016 10:00:00 AM
HB 248
HB248 Opposing Documents-Written Testimony- Bill Howell 02-13-16.pdf HL&C 2/13/2016 10:00:00 AM
HB 248
HB248 Opposing Documents-Written Testimony-Larry Hackenmiller 02-13-16.pdf HL&C 2/13/2016 10:00:00 AM
HB 248