Legislature(2021 - 2022)BARNES 124

04/27/2022 01:00 PM House RESOURCES

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* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ HB 349 HEARING ESTABLISH DRILLING UNITS/SPACING TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Invited & Public Testimony --
+= HB 171 PFAS USE & REMEDIATION; FIRE/WATER SAFETY TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Testimony <Invitation Only> --
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
        HB 171-PFAS USE & REMEDIATION; FIRE/WATER SAFETY                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
1:39:55 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PATKOTAK announced  that the final order  of business would                                                               
be HOUSE BILL  NO. 171, "An Act relating  to pollutants; relating                                                               
to  perfluoroalkyl and  polyfluoroalkyl  substances; relating  to                                                               
the  duties  of  the Department  of  Environmental  Conservation;                                                               
relating   to  firefighting   substances;  relating   to  thermal                                                               
remediation  of  perfluoroalkyl   and  polyfluoroalkyl  substance                                                               
contamination; and providing for an effective date."                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PATKOTAK stated  that today's goal is to bring  the bill up                                                               
to  date  based on  the  changes  made  in the  Senate  Resources                                                               
Standing Committee,  and to take  testimony from the  sponsor and                                                               
affected  agencies.   He  said  the sponsor  has  asked that  the                                                               
committee  adopt  a committee  substitute  (CS)  to HB  171  that                                                               
matches the version currently in the works in the other body.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
1:40:23 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  HOPKINS moved  to adopt  the proposed  CS for  HB
171,  Version  32-LS0788\I,  Radford,   4/23/22  as  the  working                                                               
document.   There being  no objection, Version  I was  before the                                                               
committee.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:40:59 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  HANNAN, as  prime  sponsor of  HB 171,  explained                                                               
that the bill  would set in statute health  protective levels for                                                               
drinking  water  that  limit perfluoroalkyl  and  polyfluoroalkyl                                                               
substances  (PFAS) and  perfluorooctanoic acid  (PFOA) compounds.                                                               
The major change in the CS,  she related, is removal of the blood                                                               
test collection and  monitoring.  She said the  bill continues to                                                               
affirm  that the  polluter pays  and that  the liability  for the                                                               
pollution  remains with  the  polluter; exempt  the  oil and  gas                                                               
industry; and exempt  the use until there is  an alternative that                                                               
is  acceptable  by the  state  fire  marshal.   She  stated  that                                                               
PFAS/PFOA  aqueous   film  forming   foam  (AFFF)  is   the  best                                                               
[firefighting response] for  oil and gas fires  because they burn                                                               
hot and  long.   Representative Hannan pointed  out that  most of                                                               
the  PFAS/PFOA  pollution  in  Alaska is  not  from  actual  fire                                                               
response but from  required testing at airports.  She  said it is                                                               
a compound  that does not dissipate  and does not dilute,  but it                                                               
does  migrate in  the  water  column, and  it  has migrated  into                                                               
drinking  water systems  from  the sites  that  were required  to                                                               
deploy it.   This chemical compound is very toxic  to humans, she                                                               
continued, and contributes to low  birth weight, thyroid disease,                                                               
and a list of cancers.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
1:43:37 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
TIMOTHY CLARK,  Staff, Representative  Sara Hannan,  Alaska State                                                               
Legislature, on  behalf of  Representative Hannan,  prime sponsor                                                               
of  HB 171,  explained the  changes  in Version  I, the  proposed                                                               
committee substitute  for the  bill.  He  stated that  other than                                                               
the removal  of the  blood testing  requirements, the  only other                                                               
change is  an updating  of the  effective date  of the  bill from                                                               
1/1/2022 to 1/1/2023.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
1:44:07 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  HOPKINS referred  to  the  [North Pole  Refinery]                                                               
where sulfolane  pollution occurred under the  refinery's builder                                                               
and  original owner,  but the  pollution wasn't  discovered until                                                               
after purchase of  the refinery by another company  and now there                                                               
have been many court cases over  who is liable.  He asked whether                                                               
the  original   polluter  or  the  current   landowner  would  be                                                               
responsible for the cleanup and remediation.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  HANNAN replied  that  in that  specific case  the                                                               
lawyers will have to fight it out because she doesn't know.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  HOPKINS posed  a scenario  in which  a government                                                               
entity, such as the U.S.  Department of Defense, is the polluter.                                                               
He asked whether  the government entity would  be the responsible                                                               
polluter.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HANNAN responded yes.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
1:45:55 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE RAUSCHER asked whether  provisions in HB 171 would                                                               
dictate the answer to Representative Hopkins' question.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR. CLARK answered that the  foundational premise for liabilities                                                               
in HB 171  is the concept that  the polluter pays.   So, he said,                                                               
the  liability  would  rest  with  the  entity  that  caused  the                                                               
discharge of the pollutant into the environment.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE RAUSCHER  asked who the  polluter would be  if the                                                               
federal government gave the okay for use at, say, an airport.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. CLARK  replied that until  the present, the  Federal Aviation                                                               
Administration  (FAA)  required  airports  to  train  with  PFAS-                                                               
bearing foams on  a regular basis.  He said  it seems conceivable                                                               
to him that the FAA would be the liable entity.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
1:47:49 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  GILLHAM asked  how the  origin of  PFAS pollution                                                               
can be determined.   For example, he said, Juneau's  dump is only                                                               
a mile  or two from  the airport.   He further noted  that sludge                                                               
washes  into [Gastineau]  Channel and  asked where  the liability                                                               
would be there.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HANNAN  responded that the bill  addresses PFAS in                                                               
foam.   She said the  bill does not  address PFAS in  things like                                                               
Gore-Tex   jackets  or   containers  for   fast  food,   although                                                               
legislation in some  states does address that.   She related that                                                               
Juneau residents have  been assured the landfill has  a liner [to                                                               
prevent] leaching into the water  table.  She said Alaska's water                                                               
column issues are  related to the dispersing of the  foam and are                                                               
primarily associated with use at  airports from mandated testing.                                                               
Regarding liability,  she stated, what  is being talked  about is                                                               
the cleanup  and providing clean drinking  water.  Representative                                                               
Hannan  pointed out  that the  Juneau airport  is in  a saltwater                                                               
area, and  it is not where  Juneau gets its drinking  water.  The                                                               
community  of Gustavus,  she continued,  has  no community  water                                                               
system  and PFAS  from the  airport have  leached into  the water                                                               
table, polluting  wells, including the  school's well.   For five                                                               
years now,  she specified, the  Department of  Transportation and                                                               
Public Facilities (DOT&PF) has provided  an alternative source of                                                               
drinking water to  the citizens whose wells were  polluted by the                                                               
PFAS plume  from the  Gustavus airport.   Cleanup  and mitigation                                                               
are  ongoing,  and DOT&PF  and  the  Department of  Environmental                                                               
Conservation (DEC)  and DOT&PF have taken  the responsibility for                                                               
it, she added.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
1:51:57 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  RAUSCHER  referred  to  page 2,  lines  18-27  of                                                               
Version I, which read:                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
          Sec. 46.03.345.  Liability for drinking  water and                                                                  
     drinking water testing. (a) A  person who causes a fire                                                                  
     that results  in a release of  a firefighting substance                                                                    
     containing     a     perfluoroalkyl    substance     or                                                                    
     polyfluoroalkyl substance  is liable  for the  costs of                                                                    
     providing  drinking water  and  drinking water  testing                                                                    
     under AS  46.03.340. This subsection does  not apply to                                                                    
     a release  of a firefighting substance  to extinguish a                                                                    
     fire in a residential building or motor vehicle.                                                                           
          (b) A person who  extinguishes a fire by releasing                                                                    
     a    firefighting    substance    that    contains    a                                                                    
     perfluoroalkyl  substance of  polyfluoroalkyl substance                                                                    
     is  not  liable for  the  costs  of providing  drinking                                                                    
     water and drinking water testing  under AS 46.03.340 or                                                                    
     site cleanup  under this chapter,  AS 46.08,  AS 46.09,                                                                    
     or another state law  unless the firefighting substance                                                                    
     was released for training or testing purposes.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  RAUSCHER  noted  that under  subsection  (a)  the                                                               
person  causing  the  fire  is  not  the  one  who  released  the                                                               
substances,  but   that  person   is  liable  for   what  happens                                                               
afterward.    He further  noted  that  under subsection  (b)  the                                                               
person who extinguishes the fire  by using such substances is not                                                               
liable for the  cost of providing drinking water.   He maintained                                                               
that those two provisions contradict each other somewhat.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR. CLARK  answered that when  reference is  made to a  person in                                                               
that paragraph,  most likely that  would be a company  because in                                                               
U.S. law companies  are persons.  He said the  entity that caused                                                               
a fire where PFAS was used to  put out that fire would be liable.                                                               
The next  paragraph, he continued,  is differentiating  that fire                                                               
departments that are forced to use  these substances to put out a                                                               
fire  will not  be held  liable because  of the  circumstances in                                                               
which they found themselves.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
1:54:15 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE MCKAY posed an example  of airplane engine failure                                                               
forcing [the pilot]  to crash land on a  Gustavus airport runway,                                                               
causing  the  plane to  erupt  in  fire and  firefighting  trucks                                                               
responding by  hitting the  fire with PFAS  because that  is what                                                               
they  have.   That  [the  pilot] would  be  held  liable seems  a                                                               
stretch,  he stated,  because it  wasn't intentional,  it was  an                                                               
accident.  Liability per line  18, he argued, cannot be connected                                                               
to unintentional accidental acts.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
1:56:24 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CATHY  SCHLINGHEYDE, Staff,  Senator  Jesse  Kiehl, Alaska  State                                                               
Legislature, responded on behalf  of Senator Kiehl, prime sponsor                                                               
of the companion bill, SB 121.   She explained that the liability                                                               
provisions in these bills are  designed to match the existing DEC                                                               
rules about liability, which means  that with all these hazardous                                                               
substances  the polluter  pays,  or the  spiller  pays, and  that                                                               
includes accidental releases.   So, she said,  someone who spills                                                               
a  carcinogen into  the environment,  even if  it's an  accident,                                                               
would still  be liable  for the cleanup.   The  responsible party                                                               
wouldn't  have  criminal  liability  because there  is  not  that                                                               
intent,   she  continued,   but  the   party  would   have  civil                                                               
liabilities.   Ms.  Schlingheyde noted  that the  bill adds  some                                                               
protections  not  existing in  current  law.   For  example,  she                                                               
specified,  under  current law  a  volunteer  fire department  is                                                               
responsible  when  it uses  foam  that  contains PFAS  or  sprays                                                               
anything  else while  fighting a  fire.   This will  give them  a                                                               
liability shield that they wouldn't  otherwise have because there                                                               
is concern about  the ability for volunteer  fire departments and                                                               
others to  be able to pay  for this, she advised,  but it doesn't                                                               
create a new type of liability.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
1:57:54 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  MCKAY offered  his understanding  that there  are                                                               
PFAS at airports in Alaska right now.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS. SCHLINGHEYDE answered yes.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE MCKAY  offered his understanding that  the airport                                                               
fire department  people are shielded  from liability to use  on a                                                               
fire the PFAS currently at the airports.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MS. SCHLINGHEYDE  replied that this  would give them  a liability                                                               
shield if  this were  a fire  but not  for a  training or  for an                                                               
accidental release.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE MCKAY stated it is  unfair in a situation like his                                                               
aircraft example.   The  saving of human  life is  more important                                                               
than  the groundwater,  he maintained,  and he  doesn't have  any                                                               
choice  in this  accidental situation  that the  firefighters are                                                               
using PFAS.  He  pointed out that as the pilot  he can't say that                                                               
if he  were to  crash, the  firefighters should  let him  burn to                                                               
death rather  than using PFAS.   It isn't right and  doesn't make                                                               
sense, he added.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  HANNAN responded  by  noting that  Gustavus is  a                                                               
second-class city  that provides  two examples.   One  example is                                                               
DOT&PF being  held liable for  the practice discharge of  PFAS at                                                               
the airport.   Now  DOT&PF is having  to provide  drinking water.                                                               
The  other  example is  the  Gustavus  Volunteer Fire  Department                                                               
being held  liable by DEC for  using PFAS [to extinguish]  a real                                                               
fire because currently volunteer  fire departments are liable for                                                               
discharging  PFAS.   For four  years DEC  has pursued  collecting                                                               
from the  Gustavus volunteer  fire department  because it  used a                                                               
fire truck donated by the state that was full of PFAS foam.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:00:33 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PATKOTAK  announced that the  committee would  hear invited                                                               
testimony.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:01:07 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHRIS HLADICK  provided invited testimony  in support of  HB 171.                                                               
He qualified  that he is speaking  on behalf of himself  but that                                                               
he   formerly   was  the   Region   10   administrator  for   the                                                               
Environmental  Protection Agency  (EPA), the  former commissioner                                                               
of   the  Department   of  Commerce,   Community,  and   Economic                                                               
Development, and  a city manager in  the state for 27  years.  He                                                               
said he is  testifying in support of HB 171  because he thinks it                                                               
is a good first step.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR.  HLADICK advised  that  today's discussion  has  been a  good                                                               
discussion  about  some of  the  complicating  issues with  PFAS,                                                               
called "forever chemicals"  by the EPA.  He related  that the EPA                                                               
is in  the process  of developing  a [maximum]  contaminant level                                                               
(MCL) for  drinking water that is  supposed to be done  by summer                                                               
2023.  However, he pointed out,  there is nothing to say that the                                                               
state can't set  levels of its own and then  adjust in the future                                                               
or keep  at levels less than  what the EPA develops.   He offered                                                               
his belief  that the  EPA is  working on  22 chemicals  and noted                                                               
that  the   PFAS/PFOA  family  includes  over   4,500  chemicals.                                                               
Liability is  an issue,  he affirmed, and  working out  the legal                                                               
interpretation on the liability issue  is an important first step                                                               
in the process going forward.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:03:54 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
TIFFANY  LARSON,  Director,  Division  of  Spill  Prevention  and                                                               
Response (SPAR), Department  of Environmental Conservation (DEC),                                                               
provided  invited testimony  expressing  DEC's  concerns with  HB
171.   She  noted  that  her written  testimony  provided in  the                                                               
committee packet,  titled "HB 171  Prepared Statements  for House                                                               
Resources Committee  April 27,  2022," contemplates  the original                                                               
version of  the bill,  so she  will skip the  points that  are no                                                               
longer valid.   She explained that PFAS is a  family of chemicals                                                               
with  5,000-10,000   man-made  compounds  of  carbon   bonded  to                                                               
fluorine, one  of the strongest  bonds to  exist.  She  said PFAS                                                               
chemicals are  water, heat, and  oil resistant, as well  as water                                                               
soluble   and   persistent   in   the   environment,   and   they                                                               
bioaccumulate.  She stated that  while DEC has concerns about the                                                               
content  of HB  171,  the  department appreciates  Representative                                                               
Hannan bringing attention to this important subject.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MS.  LARSON addressed  the question,  "What has  DEC done  in the                                                               
absence of legislation to protect  Alaskans and the environment?"                                                               
She  said  Alaska   pro-actively  listed  perfluorooctanoic  acid                                                               
(PFOA)   and  perfluorooctane   sulfonate  (PFOS)   as  hazardous                                                               
substances.   In 2016, she related,  Alaska was one of  the first                                                               
states to promulgate soil and  groundwater cleanup levels for two                                                               
PFAS compounds.  In 2019,  she stated, [DEC] incorporated through                                                               
its technical  memorandum ("memo")  the lifetime  health advisory                                                               
(LHA)  of  70  parts  per  trillion  (ppt)  for  PFOA  and  PFOS,                                                               
individual  or combined.    This number,  she  explained, is  the                                                               
threshold  for  when a  responsible  party  (RP) is  required  to                                                               
provide alternative  drinking water.  Since  2018, she continued,                                                               
DEC  and  DOT&PF have  been  voluntarily  testing drinking  water                                                               
wells at  the airports that have  been required to use  AFFF.  As                                                               
part  of that  effort,  DEC implemented  expedited procedures  to                                                               
sample  wells  that it  suspected  of  contamination, Ms.  Larson                                                               
specified,  and   where  drinking   water  impacts   were  found,                                                               
alternative drinking  water has  been provided.   She  noted that                                                               
DEC also  issued two state  permits for thermal  remediation that                                                               
are  protective of  human health  and the  environment consistent                                                               
with developed testing requirements for limits and emissions.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:06:46 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. LARSON related that the EPA  is actively working on the issue                                                               
of  5,000-10,000  compounds of  PFAS  by  developing a  strategic                                                               
roadmap, which EPA published in  October 2021.  Existing research                                                               
was reviewed  through EPA's Science  Advisory Board for  PFOS and                                                               
PFOA, she  said.  The result  of that review will  be released in                                                               
May [2022], she  continued, and DEC anticipates  the review board                                                               
will set  a lower  LHA and  DEC expects  it to  be reduced  by an                                                               
order of magnitude -  from 70 ppt down to 7 ppt or  lower.  It is                                                               
further expected, she  advised, that in fall 2022  EPA will issue                                                               
a  proposed rulemaking  for National  Primary Drinking  Water Act                                                               
regulations,  with a  final rule  promulgated in  fall 2023.   In                                                               
winter 2022,  Ms. Larson  added, the EPA  is expected  to publish                                                               
ambient water quality criteria.   Plus, she specified, the EPA is                                                               
looking  at identifying  categories  of PFAS  to  regulate on  an                                                               
individual compound basis.   She said DEC expects  that by summer                                                               
2023 the EPA  will have published a final  rule for Comprehensive                                                               
Environmental   Response,   Compensation,   and   Liability   Act                                                               
(CERCLA)("Superfund")  designation  for  PFOA   and  PFOS.    She                                                               
deferred to  Ms. Jennifer Currie  to provide testimony  on behalf                                                               
of the Department of Law.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:08:46 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
JENNIFER  CURRIE, Senior  Assistant  Attorney General,  Statewide                                                               
Section  Supervisor,  Environmental  Section, Department  of  Law                                                               
(DOL), provided invited testimony  expressing DOL's concerns with                                                               
HB  171.   She said  there  are two  distinct ways  that DEC  can                                                               
identify  a  substance as  hazardous:    first,  DEC can  make  a                                                               
determination  based on  the  definition  of hazardous  substance                                                               
contained  in  statute;  second,   DEC  can  list  the  hazardous                                                               
substance in its  promulgated regulations.  She  stated that when                                                               
DEC  has  decided  that  a substance     especially  an  emerging                                                               
contaminant - is  hazardous according to the  definition only and                                                               
not  by regulation,  responsible properties  have tried  to evade                                                               
liability  by improperly  arguing that  the determination  is not                                                               
valid because it is not regulation.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MS. CURRIE  advised that if HB  171 is enacted, there  is concern                                                               
that liable parties  will try to evade liability  by arguing that                                                               
other emerging  contaminants are non-hazardous substance  if they                                                               
are not  named in statute.   She said the  language of HB  171 is                                                               
unclear as to  whether the bill is  defining hazardous substances                                                               
under state law to include PFAS  because it's referred to only as                                                               
a substance, and DEC liability  statutes impose joint and several                                                               
liability only  on releases  of hazardous  substances.   She drew                                                               
attention to Sec. 46.03.350(c) of  Version I that requires DEC to                                                               
accept certain  amounts of PFAS each  year, all of which  must be                                                               
disposed of by  DEC.  She counseled  that if at any  point in the                                                               
future  the  PFAS disposal  site  has  a  release or  receives  a                                                               
determination that it  is not appropriate for  PFAS disposal, the                                                               
site will be  deemed a contaminated site directly  under state or                                                               
federal law.  She specified that  because DEC is the entity which                                                               
disposed of PFAS at the site,  the state will be held jointly and                                                               
severally liable for addressing the contamination at that site.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MS.  CURRIE  pointed   out  that  another  issue   is  that  Sec.                                                               
46.03.345(b)  names  the  federal  government  as  liable  if  it                                                               
requires  the  use of  PFAS  substance.    She advised  that  any                                                               
provision that makes the federal  government liable under a state                                                               
statute would  be subject  to challenge unless  there is  a valid                                                               
waiver of sovereign  immunity.  The United States,  she said, has                                                               
sovereign immunity  for lawsuits just as  the state does.   For a                                                               
waiver  of  sovereign  immunity   to  be  valid,  she  continued,                                                               
Congress must  specify what it  intends to waive, or  courts will                                                               
hold  the  waiver as  not  occurred.    To enforce  .345(b),  she                                                               
counseled,  the  state   will  likely  have  to   enter  cost  of                                                               
litigation without  a likelihood  of success  to attempt  to hold                                                               
the federal  government liable.   She deferred  to Ms.  Larson to                                                               
continue with DEC's testimony.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
2:12:15 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. LARSON  resumed her testimony.   She addressed  the question,                                                               
"What  challenges exist  for DEC  with implementing  the bill  as                                                               
written?"  She  said there is not currently  an existing database                                                               
of  where aqueous  film  forming  foam (AFFF)  has  been used  in                                                               
Alaska, so  DEC would have  to do the research  to find it.   She                                                               
noted that  there is significant  liability to the state  and for                                                               
ultimate  disposal.   She related  that  there is  not a  current                                                               
mechanism  by which  DEC can  accept, handle,  or dispose  of any                                                               
amount of  PFAS containing firefighting substances.   She pointed                                                               
out that  the federal permitting for  thermal remediation doesn't                                                               
change  the  monitoring  requirements  and  only  adds  time  and                                                               
expense  for  those permit  applicants.    She advised  that  the                                                               
minimal  release   language  for  thermal   remediation  requires                                                               
contract development  of a numerical pollutant  limit and special                                                               
procedures  more   stringent  than  federal  requirements   on  a                                                               
timeline ahead of EPA and the science.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MS. LARSON  concluded her testimony  by stating that DEC  has the                                                               
necessary  authority, and  has used  it,  to require  responsible                                                               
parties  to  respond  to  PFAS   contamination  and  to  regulate                                                               
hazardous  substances.   To statutorily  declare  a substance  as                                                               
hazardous could  jump ahead  of the  science, she  submitted, and                                                               
takes that  decision making out  of the hands of  DEC's technical                                                               
staff.  She  said DEC understands the  public's concern regarding                                                               
PFAS, and  the desire  for clear  lines of what  is safe  and not                                                               
safe.   However, she  stated, the  scientific community  is still                                                               
working  to determine  the critical  levels of  PFAS in  drinking                                                               
water and in  human blood and bodies, and this  bill doesn't make                                                               
that process happen any faster.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:15:07 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  MCKAY  referred to  the  list  of substances  and                                                               
their cutoff concentrations  on page 2, lines 8-16  of Version I.                                                               
He submitted that the measurement  in parts per trillion (ppt) is                                                               
so small and exact  that it is like passing a  speed limit law of                                                               
64.3876 miles per  hour, no more, no less.   He argued that these                                                               
limits  could  change as  the  EPA  and  other agencies  do  more                                                               
testing and therefore suggested that  DEC could set these numbers                                                               
independently of the legislature.   He reiterated his belief that                                                               
assigning liability in  the plane crash example  he posed earlier                                                               
seems like a stretch.  He  posed another example where a forklift                                                               
driver accidentally  puts a fork  through a drum of  aviation gas                                                               
causing it to ignite and  said holding the forklift driver liable                                                               
for the groundwater contamination seems like a stretch.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:18:28 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
RANDY  BATES,   Director,  Division   of  Water,   Department  of                                                               
Environmental Conservation  (DEC), responded that these  are very                                                               
specific  drinking water  provisions,  which  are different  from                                                               
clean water provisions.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:19:05 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. LARSON,  regarding the numbers  being very specific  and akin                                                               
to  writing a  speed  limit  sign of  [64.3876]  miles per  hour,                                                               
explained that  the State of  Alaska didn't originate  the limits                                                               
in the bill and that the  sponsor probably has a better awareness                                                               
of the  origin of the  limits.   Regarding whether it  is somehow                                                               
different from  the way drinking water  standards are established                                                               
in  the orders  of magnitude  in  the numbers,  she advised  that                                                               
those standards  usually are prescriptive.   She deferred  to Ms.                                                               
Currie to address accidental liability.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:20:12 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. CURRIE  specified that  environmental statutes  for liability                                                               
don't  take into  account accidents;  they are  "no fault."   She                                                               
said  there is  some  confusion with  the  bill because  Alaska's                                                               
liability  statute  for  contamination  is  AS  46.03.822,  which                                                               
establishes four  different categories  of people  liable jointly                                                               
and  separately, so  each one  is responsible  for the  fault all                                                               
themselves.   For  example,  she continued,  if  two people  were                                                               
liable and  one went  bankrupt, the  one that  was left  would be                                                               
responsible for all of it    that is joint and several liability.                                                               
She said the  legislation establishes sort of  two new categories                                                               
of  liability  but doesn't  note  whether  they are  jointly  and                                                               
severally liable in conjunction with  .822.  Also, she noted, the                                                               
bill doesn't establish that PFAS  are hazardous substances, which                                                               
is required  for .822.   She  further noted  that in  an accident                                                               
like  those  posed  by   Representative  McKay,  the  traditional                                                               
liability  for  contamination  does  not take  into  account  the                                                               
person's mental state.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:22:03 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE RAUSCHER asked  what data was used  for the limits                                                               
in HB 171 given the [EPA] report won't be out until May [2022].                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  HANNAN  replied that  the  limits  came from  the                                                               
"Michigan PFAS Science Advisory Working  Group."  Michigan is one                                                               
of the leading  states [in addressing] PFAS  pollution, she said,                                                               
and this research  was shared when the bill was  introduced.  She                                                               
offered to provide the studies again.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE RAUSCHER asked  how long the study was  and why it                                                               
was chosen.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HANNAN responded that  Michigan is a leading state                                                               
establishing standards.   She  said the report  is based  in 2019                                                               
and she first introduced the bill in 2020.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  RAUSCHER, regarding  the  [limit]  of 25  gallons                                                               
annually from  every entity, noted  that the substances  could be                                                               
coming from  an oil company or  a firefighting outfit.   He asked                                                               
whether there is  any idea about the volume that  the state could                                                               
expect to be warehousing every year.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HANNAN answered,  "We don't, ... it  is limited to                                                               
25  per  year."    She  related that  DOT&PF  has  identified  34                                                               
airports at  which there is PFAS  aqueous foam.  She  offered her                                                               
belief that it would be better  to move it from diverse locations                                                               
where  a forklift  driver might  puncture a  container to  a more                                                               
centralized collection location for disposal or monitoring.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:24:42 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE RAUSCHER, regarding  the 10,000 compounds, offered                                                               
his belief that  these compounds are contained  in many plastics.                                                               
He asked  how contamination  is going  to be  differentiated when                                                               
looking at the chemical makeup of thousands of compounds.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HANNAN  replied that this legislation  is focusing                                                               
on the  PFAS and  PFOA compounds used  in AFFF,  the firefighting                                                               
foam.   The  bill is  not looking  at plastics  or Gore-Tex,  she                                                               
explained,  because there  are no  manufacturing sites  in Alaska                                                               
for those.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE RAUSCHER inquired whether  the sponsor thinks that                                                               
the data  in the  forthcoming [EPA] report  will be  different or                                                               
the same.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HANNAN responded  that she does not  think the EPA                                                               
will  have  research  that  correlates  to  what  Alaska's  clean                                                               
drinking water standards are.  She  stated that the EPA must work                                                               
on a  national level to  address the hundreds of  PFAS compounds.                                                               
The impetus  for the bill,  she continued, is because  of waiting                                                               
on the EPA to address clean  drinking water standards and the EPA                                                               
is  not doing  it in  a fast  enough way  to address  the safety,                                                               
security,  and health  protection of  Alaskans.   In response  to                                                               
Chair Patkotak,  she said drinking  water standards are  a viable                                                               
element to ensuring Alaskans are protected.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  RAUSCHER offered  his  belief that  the bill  has                                                               
some retroactive provisions.  This  worries him, he said, because                                                               
the federal government has maintained  levels at the airports, so                                                               
other entities  have looked at that  and have thought it  okay to                                                               
utilize them.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:27:26 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SCHRAGE  asked whether  he is correct  in thinking                                                               
that the  dumping into water  of raw materials comprised  of PFAS                                                               
chemicals,  such  as  petroleum   products,  will  cause  instant                                                               
pollution  whereas the  dumping of  plastics made  of these  same                                                               
PFAS chemicals will not instantly pollute the water.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MS. LARSON responded  that the answer isn't simple  as to whether                                                               
a small amount of petroleum being  dumped into a well will result                                                               
in contamination.   She explained that pollution  is talked about                                                               
in terms  of the product  release relative to the  environment to                                                               
which it  is released.   So, she  said, when talking  about these                                                               
limits and  the concentrations in  the type of  environment, such                                                               
as soil, groundwater, and drinking  water, it is specific to what                                                               
is being  addressed.  In this  bill, she continued, the  limit is                                                               
420 ppt  for PFOS in  drinking water,  so anything below  that is                                                               
okay.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SCHRAGE clarified  that  he is  asking about  the                                                               
pollution potential  for products that have  PFAS chemicals bound                                                               
into them as  part of the production  process versus firefighting                                                               
foams.   He  asked whether  he is  right that  when bound  into a                                                               
product one  can be pretty  sure that that  is not the  source of                                                               
PFAS contamination.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MS. LARSON confirmed that that  is correct and said the principal                                                               
source of PFAS in groundwater in Alaska is from AFFF release.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:30:36 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SCHRAGE posed a scenario  in which he accidentally                                                               
knocks a  barrel of a known  contaminant out of his  truck into a                                                               
lake.   He asked whether  he would  be held liable  under current                                                               
statute.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MS. CURRIE confirmed that he would be liable under AS 46.03.822.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PATKOTAK remarked that he  understands the idea of ensuring                                                               
that  volunteer  fire  departments  aren't liable  but  that  the                                                               
liability now would be "kicked over" to somebody.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  GILLHAM commented  that  the  numbers are  "mind-                                                               
boggling" because by his calculation  someone would have to drink                                                               
42,000 gallons of water per day [to be in the PFAS danger zone].                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:33:54 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  RAUSCHER noted  that the  bill's language  states                                                               
"PFAS substances"  and argued that  if it was talking  about AFFF                                                               
it would  be listed that  way.   He said he  is trying to  get an                                                               
understanding of  the generics versus  absolutes and how  that is                                                               
being looked at legally.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  HANNAN replied  that there  are hundreds  of PFAS                                                               
compounds and components, and the  legislation is focusing on the                                                               
seven  that  are  the  primary   components  in  AFFF,  which  is                                                               
firefighting foam.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE RAUSCHER responded, "It doesn't say that."                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HANNAN drew  attention to page 2 of  Version I and                                                               
stated that the  seven substances listed [on lines  10-16 are the                                                               
seven  primary components  in  AFFF].   She  then explained  that                                                               
Alaska  laws  are not  written  in  colloquial speech,  and  with                                                               
hazardous substances "they've" asked to be very specific.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  RAUSCHER  said  he will  visit  with  Legislative                                                               
Legal Services to figure out why it is written the way it.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  PATKOTAK  interjected  that he  understands  the  concerns                                                               
about  opening  the can  of  worms  not  specific  to AFFF.    He                                                               
observed  that Section  1, Sec.  46.03.340, doesn't  say anything                                                               
about firefighting  substances until  page 2, line  18.   He said                                                               
there is  a general understanding amongst  committee members that                                                               
PFAS/PFOA is an  issue, but it is a matter  of differences in how                                                               
to find a way to address  the issue, which will require work with                                                               
the bill sponsors in both bodies.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
2:37:08 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SCHRAGE  related that  he has been  thinking about                                                               
the scenario of  someone causing a fire that requires  the use of                                                               
PFAS  firefighting foams.    He said  the  scenario presented  by                                                               
Representative McKay seems  like a genuine concern,  because as a                                                               
private pilot himself  it would be a hard decision  as to whether                                                               
to let  the fire burn  or put it out  at the risk  of permanently                                                               
polluting  the  drinking  water  of  thousands  of  people.    He                                                               
inquired  about  the  intent  and  who  was  in  mind  when  this                                                               
liability  was envisioned.    For example,  he  continued, he  is                                                               
thinking  about chemical  production  facilities  that deal  with                                                               
hazardous  materials all  the time  and whether  there are  other                                                               
laws  on  the books  requiring  special  liability insurance  for                                                               
cleanups that would be massive.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MS. CURRIE responded that AS  46.03.822 establishes liability for                                                               
the release of  hazardous substances.  She said it  does not have                                                               
this  as a  category of  people that  are liable;  this is  a new                                                               
category of people  that are liable under state law.   She stated                                                               
she doesn't know if other  states have established the person who                                                               
causes the  fire as a  person liable either regular  liability or                                                               
joint and several liability.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SCHRAGE  said this  will  have  to be  worked  on                                                               
offline.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  PATKOTAK stated  there  is plenty  of  work for  committee                                                               
members to  do offline together  with either the bill  sponsor or                                                               
the department to answer the committee's specific questions.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:40:10 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE MCKAY  asked whether "these types  of things" must                                                               
be shipped to the Lower 48 for proper disposal.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
JASON OLDS, Acting Director, Division  of Air Quality, Department                                                               
of  Environmental Conservation  (DEC),  answered  that [DEC]  has                                                               
permitted two facilities that are  currently capable of thermally                                                               
remediating PFAS.  In further  response regarding their location,                                                               
he said  one facility is in  Moose Creek near North  Pole and the                                                               
other in Valdez.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PATKOTAK inquired whether  the PFAS/PFOA is eliminated when                                                               
incinerated  or whether  it  becomes caught  up  in the  filters,                                                               
thereby contaminating the filters.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR.  OLDS replied  that it  is 99.9999  percent destruction.   He                                                               
said  there are  several  treatment technologies  in the  process                                                               
where it would be captured  or where other product pollutants are                                                               
captured.   It's an industrial  process, he continued, but  a lot                                                               
of controls go on with that.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:42:25 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  CRONK asked  whether water  that is  contaminated                                                               
with PFAS is contaminated forever.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. BATES responded  that once PFAS are in the  water they are in                                                               
the  water  column  and  persist.   In  what  concentration  they                                                               
persist is a different question, he added.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:43:15 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE RAUSCHER  asked how PFAS  arrive in Alaska  and in                                                               
what form.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS. LARSON answered that it comes  up in the form of aqueous film                                                               
forming foam  (AFFF), which is  a firefighting substance.   Apart                                                               
from that, she  said, the family of PFAS  compounds is ubiquitous                                                               
and  comes in  all  kinds of  forms, such  as  nonstick pans  and                                                               
microwavable popcorn  bags.  The AFFF  comes to Alaska by  tug or                                                               
barge and  all the rest  comes via the common  shipping pathways.                                                               
It is  everywhere, she noted, and  it is in every  person in some                                                               
form or another.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:44:44 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HANNAN  provided closing  comments.  She  said DEC                                                               
currently lists two of the  PFAS/PFOA compounds as hazardous, but                                                               
[she] believes all  seven in the bill are  significantly toxic to                                                               
humans  and exist  in the  water columns  because of  AFFF.   She                                                               
related that DEC  says it doesn't have a database  of where it is                                                               
and where  it has  been used.   But, she  maintained, it  is long                                                               
past due given  at least two state agencies  have been collecting                                                               
data since  2018.  So,  as the data  is collected on  where these                                                               
forever  chemicals  have  been  used,  stored,  or  spilled,  the                                                               
database needs to  be built because whether it  is addressed this                                                               
legislature or 10  years down the road, it is  being found by the                                                               
EPA  and state  agencies  that the  exposure  limits that  create                                                               
toxic response  go down.   Representative Hannan agreed  that the                                                               
small [concentrations]  for significant  health concern  are mind                                                               
blowing but added  that while not letting it  into Alaska's water                                                               
system is  best, [it  is good]  to know  where it  is and  try to                                                               
remove  it.   One of  the  earliest PFAS  contamination sites  in                                                               
Alaska is in Representative Cronk's  district, she stated, and it                                                               
was caused  by the U.S.  Department of  Defense (DoD).   The fish                                                               
from the  lakes cannot  be eaten  due to PFAS  in the  water, she                                                               
continued,  and while  that  is  rare in  Alaska,  it isn't  rare                                                               
across the  U.S.   She stressed  that Alaska  doesn't want  to be                                                               
like the rest of the U.S.,  so Alaska cannot wait for federal EPA                                                               
decisions to  be had because it  will be years, not  months given                                                               
that the EPA  is dealing with hundreds of compounds  and not just                                                               
AFFF.    She  urged  that  the  state  start  with  [these  seven                                                               
substances] for the health and safety of Alaskans.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PATKOTAK  recounted that in  preparing for  today's meeting                                                               
there  was discussion  about  a list  that  prioritized the  safe                                                               
drinking  water  limits throughout  Alaska  into  which AFFF  was                                                               
leaked.   He said  he looks  forward to  that follow-up  from the                                                               
department and  making it available  to all committee  members in                                                               
preparation for the bill's next hearing.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PATKOTAK announced that HB 171 was held over.                                                                             

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
HB 171 Testimony Packet 4.27.2022.pdf HRES 4/27/2022 1:00:00 PM
HB 171
HB 171 Draft Fiscal Note DEC AQ 4.27.2022.pdf HRES 4/27/2022 1:00:00 PM
HB 171
HB 171 Draft Fiscal Note DOT COM 4.27.2022.pdf HRES 4/27/2022 1:00:00 PM
HB 171
HB 171 Draft Fiscal Note DEC EH 4.27.2022.pdf HRES 4/27/2022 1:00:00 PM
HB 171
HB 349 Explanation of Changes Version B 4.27.2022.pdf HRES 4/27/2022 1:00:00 PM
HB 349
HB 349 Sponsor Statement.pdf HCRA 3/29/2022 8:00:00 AM
HCRA 4/5/2022 8:00:00 AM
HCRA 4/7/2022 8:00:00 AM
HRES 4/27/2022 1:00:00 PM
HB 349
HB 349 Supporting Document - Image.pdf HCRA 4/14/2022 8:00:00 AM
HRES 4/27/2022 1:00:00 PM
HB 349
HB 171 LAA Legal Memo re Version I 4.25.2022.pdf HRES 4/27/2022 1:00:00 PM
HB 171
HB 349 AOGCC Examples of Well Spacing Issues 4.27.2022.pdf HRES 4/27/2022 1:00:00 PM
HB 349
HB 171 Draft CS Version I 4.27.2022.pdf HRES 4/27/2022 1:00:00 PM
HB 171
HB 171 Ver. A to Ver. I Changes 4.27.2022.pdf HRES 4/27/2022 1:00:00 PM
HB 171
HB 171 Ver. I Sectional Summary 4.27.2022.pdf HRES 4/27/2022 1:00:00 PM
HB 171
HB 349 AOGCC Presentation to House Resources 4.27.2022.pdf HRES 4/27/2022 1:00:00 PM
HB 349
HB 171 DEC Comments to House Resources 4.27.2022.pdf HRES 4/27/2022 1:00:00 PM
HB 171
HB 171 DOTPF Statewide PFAS Prioritization List Airports 4.27.2022.pdf HRES 4/27/2022 1:00:00 PM
HB 171
HB 171 Testimony Packet Two 4.27.2022.pdf HRES 4/27/2022 1:00:00 PM
HB 171