Legislature(2015 - 2016)HOUSE FINANCE 519

01/25/2016 01:30 PM House FINANCE

Note: the audio and video recordings are distinct records and are obtained from different sources. As such there may be key differences between the two. The audio recordings are captured by our records offices as the official record of the meeting and will have more accurate timestamps. Use the icons to switch between them.

Download Mp3. <- Right click and save file as

Audio Topic
02:32:56 PM Start
02:35:15 PM Presentation: Justice Reinvestment Report
03:32:23 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
-- Below Agenda Recessed from 1/22/16 --
+ Overview of the Governor's FY17 Budget & TELECONFERENCED
10-Year Plan by Pat Pitney, Director, Office of
Management & Budget & Commissioner Randall
Hoffbeck, Dept. of Revenue
- Below 1/25 Agenda Delayed After 1/22 Meeting -
+ Governor's New Sustainable Alaska Plan/10-Year TELECONFERENCED
Plan by David Teal, Director, Legislative
Finance Division
<Above Item Removed from Agenda>
+ Justice Reinvestment Report, December 2015 by TELECONFERENCED
Greg Grazo, Chair & Jeff Jessee, Commissioner,
Alaska Criminal Justice Commission
                  HOUSE FINANCE COMMITTEE                                                                                       
                     January 25, 2016                                                                                           
                         2:32 p.m.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:32:56 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CALL TO ORDER                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman called the House Finance Committee meeting                                                                      
to order at 2:27 p.m.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative Mark Neuman, Co-Chair                                                                                            
Representative Steve Thompson, Co-Chair                                                                                         
Representative Dan Saddler, Vice-Chair                                                                                          
Representative Bryce Edgmon                                                                                                     
Representative Les Gara                                                                                                         
Representative Lynn Gattis                                                                                                      
Representative David Guttenberg                                                                                                 
Representative Scott Kawasaki                                                                                                   
Representative Cathy Munoz                                                                                                      
Representative Lance Pruitt                                                                                                     
Representative Tammie Wilson                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
None                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
ALSO PRESENT                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Greg Razo, Chair and Commissioner, Alaska Criminal Justice                                                                      
Commission; Jeff Jessee, Chief Executive Officer, Alaska                                                                        
Mental Health Trust Authority; Susanne Di Pietro, Executive                                                                     
Director, Alaska Judicial Council.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
SUMMARY                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
^PRESENTATION: JUSTICE REINVESTMENT REPORT                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman reviewed the agenda for the meeting.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
2:35:15 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
GREG RAZO,  CHAIR and  COMMISSIONER, ALASKA CRIMINAL  JUSTICE                                                                   
COMMISSION,   discussed  his   professional  background   and                                                                   
shared that he  currently worked as a vice  president at Cook                                                                   
Inlet  Region  Incorporated  (CIRI).  He  relayed  that  CIRI                                                                   
supported  his work  on the  commission as  it reflected  the                                                                   
values  of the corporation.  He  shared that  in the past  he                                                                   
had practiced  law in Kodiak for  over 20 years. He  had been                                                                   
appointed to  the Alaska Criminal  Justice Commission  by the                                                                   
Alaska  Native  Justice  Center;  he was  the  Alaska  Native                                                                   
representative  to the commission.  He introduced  department                                                                   
commissioners in the audience.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Mr.   Razo   provided  a   PowerPoint   presentation   titled                                                                   
"Alaska's  Justice  Reinvestment   Report"  (copy  on  file),                                                                   
which addressed  how to control  prison growth in  Alaska. He                                                                   
relayed his  intent to spend  extra time  on the cost  of the                                                                   
state's  corrections system,  the  cost  of continued  prison                                                                   
growth if the  legislature did not take action,  and the $424                                                                   
million  that  the commission  projected  could  be  achieved                                                                   
through  smart  justice reforms.  He  spoke  to the  need  to                                                                   
reinvest a  portion of  the money to  increase safety  in the                                                                   
state. He  shared that one  month earlier the  commission had                                                                   
released  the Justice  Reinvestment  Report  (copy on  file),                                                                   
which  contained 21  consensus  recommendations. He  detailed                                                                   
that  the  recommendations   were  aimed  at   making  Alaska                                                                   
families and  communities safer,  holding criminal  offenders                                                                   
accountable  for  their behavior,  curbing  the  skyrocketing                                                                   
costs  of the  state's corrections  system,  and achieving  a                                                                   
better public safety return on the dollars spent.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Razo  addressed  slide  1  titled  "The  Problem  Facing                                                                   
Alaska":                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     · The Cost of Doing Nothing                                                                                                
     · Trends in Alaska's Prison Population                                                                                     
     · Recommendations for Alaska's Lawmakers                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Razo turned  to slides 2 and 3 and communicated  that the                                                                   
state's prison  population had grown  27 percent in  the past                                                                   
decade,  which  was  three  times  the  growth  rate  of  the                                                                   
state's resident  population.  Annually, the state  currently                                                                   
spent  over  $300  million on  corrections  and  hundreds  of                                                                   
millions  more  every   time  it  built  a   new  prison.  He                                                                   
continued that  state spending  on corrections had  increased                                                                   
60  percent  over  the  past   20  years.  He  stressed  that                                                                   
Alaskans  were not  getting a  good public  safety return  on                                                                   
the  spending; nearly  two  out of  three  inmates who  leave                                                                   
Alaska's  prisons  return  to  prison or  jail  within  three                                                                   
years. He emphasized  that unless the state  made changes its                                                                   
prison  population was  projected  to grow  by another  1,400                                                                   
beds in  the next  decade, costing  the state  at least  $169                                                                   
million  above  the current  spending.  A  graph on  slide  3                                                                   
illustrated  the  point in  2017  when the  projected  prison                                                                   
population  would exceed  the state's  capacity to house  its                                                                   
prisoners;  at that  point the  state would  need to come  up                                                                   
with money  to fund a new  prison or to contract  for out-of-                                                                   
state prison beds.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:38:05 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Razo  addressed a  pie chart  showing the state's  prison                                                                   
population  on slide  4. He spoke  to the  current makeup  of                                                                   
the  state's prisons  and  what was  causing  the growth.  He                                                                   
relayed  that on  any given  day  about half  of the  state's                                                                   
prisoners   had  been   sentenced   to  a   term  in   prison                                                                   
(represented on the  right side of the pie  chart). The other                                                                   
half  of the  population were  people who  had been  arrested                                                                   
and charged  with a  crime, but  who had  not yet been  found                                                                   
guilty. These  individuals included  the pretrial  population                                                                   
and  probationers and  parolees who  had been  put in  prison                                                                   
for  technical  violations of  their  supervision  conditions                                                                   
(e.g.  missing  an  appointment,  failing  a  drug  test,  or                                                                   
failing to maintain a job). He read from slide 4:                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     · What is driving this growth?                                                                                             
     · Defendants in prison pretrial are staying for longer                                                                     
        periods of time                                                                                                         
     · Three-quarters of the sentenced population is                                                                            
        convicted of non-violent offenses                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Razo read from slide 5:                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     · Felony offenders are staying 31 percent longer than                                                                      
        in 2004                                                                                                                 
     · 22 percent of prison inmates are there for technical                                                                     
        violations of parole or probation                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Razo  reiterated that technical  violations of  parole or                                                                   
probation  included missing  appointments, drinking  alcohol,                                                                   
and failing  to maintain  a job.  He furthered  that many  of                                                                   
the  individuals stayed  detained  for long  periods of  time                                                                   
for  non-criminal behavior,  which  contradicted research  on                                                                   
truly effective punishments.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:39:54 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Neuman relayed  that  he had  been a  part of  many                                                                   
discussions  on  the  ability   for  offenders  (particularly                                                                   
street drug offenders)  to receive treatment after  arrest as                                                                   
opposed to  after conviction.  He asked  Mr. Razo  to provide                                                                   
recommendations  on changes  the  legislature  could make  to                                                                   
enable treatment  after arrest.  He noted that  Governor Bill                                                                   
Walker  had  asked  for  an increase  in  alcohol  taxes.  He                                                                   
believed  if  there  were  increases  in  taxes  the  revenue                                                                   
should be directed  towards treatment. He  believed treatment                                                                   
would considerably  help the state budget  overall, including                                                                   
within  the Alaska  Court System,  the  Department of  Public                                                                   
Safety  (DPS),   the  Department   of  Law  (DOL),   and  the                                                                   
Department of  Corrections (DOC).  He was interested  to hear                                                                   
how helping  rehabilitate individuals  with addictions  would                                                                   
impact the state's overall budget.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Razo  offered  to  have  Jeff  Jessee  (chief  executive                                                                   
officer  of   the  Alaska  Mental  Health   Trust  Authority)                                                                   
address  the  continuum  of  care   needed  immediately  upon                                                                   
sentencing and before.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson  discussed  that the  legislature  had                                                                   
passed  a   bill  on   electronic  monitoring  the   previous                                                                   
session, which  would enable pretrial individuals  to receive                                                                   
credit for  time served. She  stated that the  private sector                                                                   
was taking  advantage  of the  option, but  DOC was not.  She                                                                   
furthered  that  once an  individual  was  put in  jail  they                                                                   
became a  part of DOC. She  asked for the number  of pretrial                                                                   
individuals (28  percent of the  prison population)  who were                                                                   
currently in  jail and what  the potential savings  would be.                                                                   
She  spoke  to  the  supervision   violation  population  and                                                                   
wondered  about modern  technology  options  that could  help                                                                   
save  money on  things like  monitoring. She  noted that  the                                                                   
Justice Reinvestment  Report addressed the impact  of getting                                                                   
"them  out and  into something"  within the  first 24  hours.                                                                   
She  did not  see  anything  in  the report  about  financial                                                                   
savings  associated with  the  issue. She  remarked that  she                                                                   
had not  been successful in getting  DOC to budge on  the use                                                                   
of electronic monitoring for individuals under its care.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Razo  replied that the  commission had spent  significant                                                                   
time looking at  all of the data and statistics  (it had also                                                                   
had the  technical assistance  of the Pew Charitable  Trusts)                                                                   
and had  spent significant  time discussing the  availability                                                                   
of new  techniques to  do community  supervision rather  than                                                                   
keeping a  person in  prison at a  high cost, which  included                                                                   
electronic  monitoring.  He  believed  the  issue  should  be                                                                   
looked  at to determine  whether  the work  was best done  by                                                                   
DOC or private companies.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr.   Razo   discussed   that  the   previous   session   the                                                                   
legislature   had  created   the   Alaska  Criminal   Justice                                                                   
Commission. He addressed the commission duties on slide 6:                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     The Commission  shall evaluate and  make recommendations                                                                   
     to  improve  criminal  laws and  practices,  keeping  in                                                                   
     mind  the goals  of  enhancing public  safety,  offender                                                                   
     rehabilitation, victim restitution and reducing costs.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Razo turned  to  slide 7  and discussed  the  commission                                                                   
makeup.  The  commission  was  comprised of  13  members  and                                                                   
represented a  broad spectrum  of viewpoints. The  commission                                                                   
included  two non-voting  legislators  (Senator John  Coghill                                                                   
and  Representative Wes  Keller);  three judges  representing                                                                   
the district  court; superior  court, and supreme  court; DOC                                                                   
Commissioner    Walt   Monegan;    three   law    enforcement                                                                   
representatives;   Attorney  General   Craig  Richards;   DPS                                                                   
Commissioner  Gary  Folger;  Lieutenant  Kris Sell  from  the                                                                   
Juneau Police  Department; Public  Defender Quinlan  Steiner;                                                                   
Gregory  Razo from CIRI;  Brenda Stanfill  from the  Interior                                                                   
Alaska Center for  Non-Violent Living; and the  Alaska Mental                                                                   
Health   Trust  Authority   (AMHTA)  CEO   Jeff  Jessee.   He                                                                   
furthered  that  the fact  that  the diverse  commission  had                                                                   
come  to  consensus  on  a  reform  package  meant  that  the                                                                   
policies  had been vetted.  He elaborated  that the  policies                                                                   
had  been thoroughly  vetted  by  discussing  the items  with                                                                   
stakeholder  groups.  He  detailed that  the  commission  had                                                                   
been  broken  into  three  subgroups   to  address  pretrial,                                                                   
sentencing,  and  post-conviction.   He  expounded  that  the                                                                   
subgroups had been  supported by experts from  the Pew Trust.                                                                   
Ultimately  the entire  commission  had reviewed  all of  the                                                                   
recommendations  and consensus  had  been formed  on each  of                                                                   
the  21   recommendations.  He   reflected  on   the  diverse                                                                   
viewpoints of  commission members  and stressed that  each of                                                                   
the  items had  been given  a  very hard  look. He  expounded                                                                   
that  it   had  taken   significant  consensus   building  to                                                                   
establish the best recommendations for the state.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
2:46:18 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Razo turned  to  slide 8.  He shared  that  in the  past                                                                   
eight  months the  commission  had held  public meetings  and                                                                   
hearings  and had  traveled  across the  state  to urban  and                                                                   
rural   communities    to   hear   from    criminal   justice                                                                   
practitioners,  treatment  providers,   and  members  of  the                                                                   
community.    The    commission   toured    Anvil    Mountain                                                                   
Correctional  Center and  had spoken  with staff and  inmates                                                                   
at the  facility. He furthered  that the commission  had held                                                                   
two  crime victim  roundtables  in  Fairbanks  and Bethel  to                                                                   
listen to  the priorities  of victims,  survivors, and  their                                                                   
advocates.  The  commission  had identified  to  advance  the                                                                   
priorities in  its report. Legislative  leaders had  sent the                                                                   
commission a letter  the past fall directing it  to develop a                                                                   
comprehensive reform  plan that  would achieve a  net savings                                                                   
large enough  to make justice reinvestment  possible. Justice                                                                   
reinvestment meant  freeing up state funds ($424  million) by                                                                   
focusing  prison beds on  serious and  violent offenders  and                                                                   
reinvesting  a portion of  the savings  into the things  that                                                                   
did the best job making Alaskans safer.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Razo continued  to address slide 8. He  communicated that                                                                   
reinvestment  priorities included  strengthening  supervision                                                                   
in the  community, providing  programming and treatment  that                                                                   
addressed   criminal   thinking  and   addiction,   expanding                                                                   
services   to  protect   and  support   crime  victims,   and                                                                   
supporting people  coming out of  prison to get them  back to                                                                   
work or into  addiction recovery so they could  be productive                                                                   
members  of  society. He  added  that  it included  having  a                                                                   
place  to  live   in  addition  to  a  place   to  work.  The                                                                   
commission  had delivered  the recommendations  as a  package                                                                   
and not  as a menu  to choose  from. The recommended  changes                                                                   
and the reinvestment  component worked in concert  to achieve                                                                   
the desired outcomes:  to reduce spending and  improve public                                                                   
safety.  The commission  urged  the legislature  to keep  the                                                                   
reform package  whole. He stressed  that the items  were very                                                                   
integrated and  a decision to  pick at one could  potentially                                                                   
unravel another piece.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:48:40 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Razo  turned to  a flow chart  describing the  commission                                                                   
process  (slide  9). The  commission  had spent  hundreds  of                                                                   
hours  examining data  on  Alaska's criminal  justice  system                                                                   
and  how it  worked. The  commission had  been speaking  with                                                                   
practitioners  in  the  criminal  justice  system,  analyzing                                                                   
data,  reviewing  the  research   on  what  works  to  reduce                                                                   
recidivism, and  comparing Alaska's  practices with  those in                                                                   
other states. The  commission had developed the  21 consensus                                                                   
recommendations, which  were data driven and  evidence based.                                                                   
Additionally, the  recommendations provided a  clear road map                                                                   
to a  better criminal  justice system in  Alaska for  a lower                                                                   
cost.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Razo addressed  details in  the  reinvestment report  on                                                                   
slide 10.  He highlighted that  the report provided  detailed                                                                   
data  findings and  summaries  of the  best  research in  the                                                                   
field. The commission  had made specific  recommendations for                                                                   
statutory and  budgetary changes the legislature  should make                                                                   
in  the current  session. He  expressed intent  to provide  a                                                                   
broad  overview   of  the  recommendations  and   offered  to                                                                   
address the report  in further detail over  the coming weeks.                                                                   
He  shared  that   Senator  Coghill  would  also   provide  a                                                                   
thorough walk  through of the  commission's findings  and the                                                                   
specific statutory changes it recommended.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Razo  relayed  that  the   commission's  recommendations                                                                   
followed  the  best  research  in  the  field  and  the  best                                                                   
practices  around   the  country,   to  safely   release  and                                                                   
supervise  nonviolent  pretrial   defendants  while  awaiting                                                                   
their  trials.  The commission  had  spent  significant  time                                                                   
looking at  the bail  situation in  Alaska. He believed  they                                                                   
had  been  completely  surprised  by  the  number  of  people                                                                   
sitting  in jail waiting  for  trial. He stated  that  in the                                                                   
particular  phase   of  incarceration  there   was  not  much                                                                   
happening  other  than  spending  time.  The  recommendations                                                                   
also  included bringing  sentencing  laws in  Alaska in  line                                                                   
with other states  to impose swift and certain  sanctions for                                                                   
probation  violations and  to strengthen  supervision in  the                                                                   
community.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Razo  discussed that  the current discussion  represented                                                                   
a compilation  of  things, but  none of  the information  was                                                                   
new. The  practices had been in  use in parts of  the country                                                                   
for  years; the  ideas behind  reinvestment  and where  money                                                                   
needed to  be spent for prevention  were not new,  but needed                                                                   
to  be utilized.  He  stated that  if  passed  into law,  the                                                                   
comprehensive package  of pretrial sentencing  and correction                                                                   
reform  was  projected  to  reduce   Alaska's  average  daily                                                                   
prison population  by 21 percent over the  next decade (slide                                                                   
15). Additionally,  it was projected  to save the  state $424                                                                   
million.  The reform package  did not  recommend releasing  a                                                                   
large number  of current  prisoners; instead, it  recommended                                                                   
changes  that would  affect  how  many people  were  admitted                                                                   
into the prison  system in the first place and  how long they                                                                   
stayed. He  pointed to a graph  on slide 15 and  relayed that                                                                   
the package  would have  a significant  impact on  the prison                                                                   
population  in  the first  few  years  after  implementation,                                                                   
which would allow for immediate and ongoing savings.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
2:52:14 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Razo  emphasized that  while the  savings would  help the                                                                   
legislature  meet its goals  of reducing  the budget  gap, it                                                                   
was  vital that  a  portion of  the savings  were  reinvested                                                                   
(slide 16).  He stressed  that reinvestment  was critical  to                                                                   
ensuring  public   safety.  Historically  Alaska   had  spent                                                                   
hundreds of millions  of dollars annually on  corrections and                                                                   
hundreds  of  millions  more  each  time  a  new  prison  was                                                                   
required.  Meanwhile,  treatment and  services  that work  to                                                                   
prevent  violence,  reduce  recidivism,   and  support  crime                                                                   
victims,  were under  funded.  Services such  as alcohol  and                                                                   
drug treatment,  cognitive  behavioral programming,  pretrial                                                                   
supervision,  reentry  supports,  and victim  services,  were                                                                   
necessary  to  protect  public safety  and  change  offending                                                                   
behavior.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman addressed  how to get to an  improved system.                                                                   
He wondered  if there  were a  series of  events that  led to                                                                   
the current situation.  He asked if the legislature  had been                                                                   
trying  to   protect  the  public   too  much  when   it  had                                                                   
implemented  laws putting  people  in jail.  He believed  the                                                                   
legislature  had thought it  was doing  the right  thing when                                                                   
it had passed laws putting individuals in jail.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:53:53 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
JEFF JESSEE,  CHIEF EXECUTIVE  OFFICER, ALASKA MENTAL  HEALTH                                                                   
TRUST AUTHORITY,  agreed that  there were basic  places where                                                                   
the state had  started to go wrong. He discussed  pretrial as                                                                   
an example.  He elaborated  that the  legislature had  wanted                                                                   
to  give judges  more options  for  ensuring that  defendants                                                                   
would show up  in court; therefore, judges  had been provided                                                                   
with  a  menu   (e.g.  cash  bail,  third-party   custodians,                                                                   
electronic   monitoring,  interlock   vehicle  devices,   and                                                                   
other). In an  abundance of caution judges had  started to do                                                                   
combinations  of   cash  bail  and  many  other   things.  He                                                                   
stressed  that  if  the  defendants could  do  all  of  those                                                                   
things,  most  would not  have  been  in  jail in  the  first                                                                   
place. Defendants  could not get  it together to meet  all of                                                                   
the  conditions; therefore,  they  remained in  jail with  no                                                                   
treatment  and  no  bail.  He emphasized  that  some  of  the                                                                   
individuals were  innocent and  they were all  innocent until                                                                   
proven guilty. He  believed it had been a big  "ah ha" moment                                                                   
for  the   commission  to  discover   all  of   the  pretrial                                                                   
individuals stacking up in the state's prison system.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Jessee  addressed drug  offences as  another example.  He                                                                   
discussed that the  legislature had wanted to  start teaching                                                                   
drug offenders  a lesson  with incarceration.  The number  of                                                                   
violent  offenders  in  corrections   had  not  substantively                                                                   
increased, but  the number of  nonviolent offenders  had. The                                                                   
state  was spending  a large  amount  of money  (particularly                                                                   
for drug offences)  locking people up. He furthered  that the                                                                   
current administration  was working  to recreate some  of the                                                                   
DOC  programming, but  prior administrations  had  eliminated                                                                   
most of the  programming. Subsequently, individuals  had been                                                                   
jailed  for  long  periods  of time  due  to  addiction,  but                                                                   
nothing had  been done  to treat  their addiction.  The third                                                                   
component  was the  absence of  focus  on obtaining  housing,                                                                   
jobs  and  keeping   individuals  sober  upon   release  from                                                                   
prison. He summarized  that the legislature had  given judges                                                                   
too  many  tools to  lock  up  individuals pretrial,  it  had                                                                   
elected to  be hard on drug  offences, and the state  was not                                                                   
doing enough at  the tail end to ensure that  the individuals                                                                   
did not return to jail.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Razo  elaborated that  with the  technical assistance  of                                                                   
Pew Trust,  the commission had  reviewed a number  of studies                                                                   
reflecting  that sending  a  person to  prison  for a  longer                                                                   
period  of  time  did  absolutely  nothing  to  reduce  their                                                                   
criminal  behavior.  He  stated   that  in  2005  the  felony                                                                   
presumptive  sentencing laws  had been  amended based  on the                                                                   
results  of   a  supreme  court   case.  At  the   time,  the                                                                   
legislature  had specified  that the changes  were not  meant                                                                   
to increase  the length of time  people would spend  in jail,                                                                   
but  10 years  later it  was evident  that  had occurred.  By                                                                   
giving the  courts a large range  to sentence, they  had been                                                                   
sentencing  on the  extreme  edge  of the  range;  therefore,                                                                   
there were  felony offenders  in jail  for longer  periods of                                                                   
time than  just 10  years ago, which  was also a  significant                                                                   
driver.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:57:20 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Saddler took over chairing the meeting.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Razo  continued with  his presentation.  He relayed  that                                                                   
in its  letter to  the commission,  the legislature  had made                                                                   
it  clear  that  reinvestment  would only  be  possible  with                                                                   
significant reductions  in the prison population  that netted                                                                   
significant   savings.   The   commission   had   shown   the                                                                   
legislature how  to find the  revenue by safely  reducing the                                                                   
prison  population;  however,  in  order  to  protect  public                                                                   
safety and  to achieve  savings it was  critical to  view the                                                                   
commission's recommendations  as a  package rather than  as a                                                                   
menu to  choose from.  He detailed that  the state  could not                                                                   
release   more  people   pretrial   without  also   providing                                                                   
pretrial supervision.  He furthered that the state  could not                                                                   
divert  more  low-level  non-violent  offenders  from  prison                                                                   
without  investing in  programs  that reduce  recidivism.  He                                                                   
stressed  that the  state could  not  reintegrate members  or                                                                   
offenders  into the community  after they  had been  released                                                                   
from prison without  also providing some reentry  support. He                                                                   
stated that  perhaps most  importantly,  the state could  not                                                                   
continue to have  a criminal justice system  focused entirely                                                                   
on  offenders.  He  emphasized  the  importance  of  doing  a                                                                   
better   job  of  meeting   the  needs   of  crime   victims,                                                                   
preventing   revictimization,   and   helping   victims   and                                                                   
survivors get back on their feet.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Razo  furthered that a  substantial amount of  the report                                                                   
focused  on community  supervision of  people being  released                                                                   
from jail.  There was almost no  one sentenced to  prison who                                                                   
spent  the rest  of  their life  in  jail;  most people  were                                                                   
adequately  dealt with  in the current  system. However,  the                                                                   
second someone went  to jail, there would be a  point in time                                                                   
when   that  person   was  released.   He  highlighted   that                                                                   
providing some type  of treatment in jail increased  the odds                                                                   
that  a   person  would  not   reoffend  when   released.  He                                                                   
expounded   that  if   a   person  had   adequate   community                                                                   
supervision  once released  from  jail -  by  a probation  or                                                                   
parole  officer  with  a  one-to-one  relationship  with  the                                                                   
parolee - the  odds were that the person would  not reoffend.                                                                   
He  furthered that  it  made a  difference  when a  probation                                                                   
officer cared if  a parolee had a job and place  to live. The                                                                   
model  changed   from  people   going  out  and   terminating                                                                   
probation  to people  who  were helpful  to  the offender  in                                                                   
order to have a safer society.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
3:00:11 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson  understood  where the  incentive  was                                                                   
for the  legislature, the  state, and  the community  to have                                                                   
individuals  in  jail  for  a shorter  amount  of  time  when                                                                   
hopefully  they would  be able  to find  a job  and place  to                                                                   
live.  She wondered  where  the incentive  was  for DOC.  She                                                                   
observed  that the  prisons had  the  beds and  "it was  less                                                                   
people doing  other things if  you don't have as  many people                                                                   
in jail."  She asked how  to incentivize the  department. She                                                                   
stated  that most  of the  items in  the commission's  report                                                                   
were "already  there, to take care  of a big chunk  of this";                                                                   
however, she had  found that the department had  no desire to                                                                   
do so.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Razo  replied  that one of  the things  that resulted  in                                                                   
reducing the  number of people  in jail was creating  a safer                                                                   
situation   for  correctional   officers  administering   the                                                                   
inmates.  He   elaborated  that  it  gave   the  correctional                                                                   
officers  additional   time,  made   the  place   safer,  and                                                                   
alleviated concerns  about safety  and manpower.  He believed                                                                   
correctional  officers would respond  positively to  having a                                                                   
safer environment.  He agreed that for a long  time there was                                                                   
not  a culture  in  DOC that  focused  on  reentry [into  the                                                                   
community] and rehabilitation.  He furthered that  for a long                                                                   
period  of time,  people from  outside DOC  were not  allowed                                                                   
into  the  prisons  to  provide  treatment  including  mental                                                                   
health assessments.  He believed it  had to have  some effect                                                                   
on  the  numbers.  He  reasoned  that  if  prisons  were  not                                                                   
allowing people  to come in to  provide services as  a matter                                                                   
of public  policy, changes to  the overall culture  needed to                                                                   
come from the  top. The commission believed  the changes were                                                                   
possible   and  the   report   provided  recommendations   to                                                                   
implement  that change.  He  believed that  it  was a  strong                                                                   
message  to send to  correctional officers  that the  changes                                                                   
would increase  their job  safety with  more focus  on trying                                                                   
to help inmates to become better citizens.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
3:03:05 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson  spoke to  addressing  the problem  on                                                                   
the frontend  with monitoring  and treatment programs  before                                                                   
people  became  part  of  the   system.  She  discussed  that                                                                   
individuals  received "good  time"  while in  jail, but  they                                                                   
did  not  receive  time  if they  elected  to  do  electronic                                                                   
monitoring  after they  had been sentenced.  She asked  about                                                                   
required electronic  monitoring after  a person  was released                                                                   
from prison  and wondered if  the commission  had recommended                                                                   
looking  at the reason  a person  had been  in prison  in the                                                                   
first  place. She  provided an  example of  a person who  had                                                                   
been  in jail  for  drugs and  reasoned  that hopefully  they                                                                   
would  no  longer  be  on drugs  in  jail.  She  wondered  if                                                                   
electronic monitoring  could be utilized to prevent  a person                                                                   
released  from  prison  from getting  back  into  drugs.  She                                                                   
wondered if it would take legislation or regulation.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Razo  answered that  the commission  had focused  on risk                                                                   
assessment. He  detailed that  risk assessment could  be used                                                                   
when  a bail  decision was  made in  order for  the judge  to                                                                   
have  a  guideline   to  understand  whether   a  person  was                                                                   
dangerous or  not. The other  portion of the  risk assessment                                                                   
happened  when a  person was  in  DOC custody  and they  were                                                                   
assessed individually,  which resulted in an  individual plan                                                                   
carried out  in prison and  under community supervision  upon                                                                   
release.  He  furthered  that  it  was  a  plan  that  should                                                                   
recognize  that any  treatment  a person  received in  prison                                                                   
should count  for something upon  their release.  He believed                                                                   
the  system  did   not  do  a  good  job   dealing  with  the                                                                   
individual  needs of  each prisoner;  one  prisoner would  do                                                                   
well on  electronic monitoring  and some  would benefit  from                                                                   
more or  less supervision. There  were a number of  people in                                                                   
jail for  the first  time who  had learned  their lesson  and                                                                   
would not  repeat an offense  - to make  them lose  their job                                                                   
because of  the mistake resulted  in more criminal  behavior.                                                                   
He reasoned  that it was not  always the biggest  hammer that                                                                   
was   successful  for   everyone;   it   was  an   individual                                                                   
assessment.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:06:26 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson  asked if the current  system conducted                                                                   
risk assessments until  a person was found guilty  and put in                                                                   
a  longer-term prison.  She  stated  that by  requiring  risk                                                                   
assessments  at  the  beginning  it would  not  require  more                                                                   
money, it  would just be provided  at a more helpful  time in                                                                   
the process.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Razo  agreed that providing  the risk assessments  in the                                                                   
beginning  would not require  more money.  He furthered  that                                                                   
the  tools had  been used  successfully in  other states  and                                                                   
the  commission was  recommending  using the  tools that  had                                                                   
been proven to work.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative Guttenberg  observed that most  of the current                                                                   
conversation  had  focused  on  dealing  with  the  prisoners                                                                   
themselves.  He  referred  to   Mr.  Razo's  testimony  about                                                                   
providing  judges  more  options  in  sentencing,  which  had                                                                   
resulted  in more  complex sentencing  instead  of a  tighter                                                                   
focus. He  pointed to Mr.  Razo's statement that  individuals                                                                   
were not  able to meet the  sentencing requirements  and that                                                                   
they would  not have  been criminals  in the  first place  if                                                                   
they  could meet  the  requirements.  He believed  that  most                                                                   
people  thought  judges  did  not  do  longer  sentences.  He                                                                   
mentioned  Mr. Razo's  testimony  that  jails  did not  allow                                                                   
outside  counseling  of  inmates.   He  thought  one  of  the                                                                   
attitudes in  the corrections  community was that  every time                                                                   
a prisoner was  shifted around they were  exposing themselves                                                                   
to more  danger. He  relayed that  someone had complained  to                                                                   
him  about treatment  for  sex  offenders; that  the  federal                                                                   
government had  antiquated practices  they were  pushing over                                                                   
more current  and effective treatments.  He surmised  that it                                                                   
was not  merely the sentencing  practices, but  the community                                                                   
surrounding prisoners,  which needed some nudging  one way or                                                                   
another.  He asked  if  there  were any  recommendations  the                                                                   
commission had on the issue.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
3:09:43 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Razo clarified  that he did not mean to  imply that there                                                                   
were  no treatment  programs currently  underway in  prisons.                                                                   
He explained  that there  had been a  point in the  past when                                                                   
there  had been  none;  there  were programs  currently,  but                                                                   
there  should be  more.  He believed  that  in  terms of  the                                                                   
management  of organizations  like  DOC  there  needed to  be                                                                   
incentives  for   success  instead   of  only  mandates   for                                                                   
officers. He thought  it was possible to build  a system that                                                                   
included  incentives for  prisoners and  people on  probation                                                                   
to complete  treatment. He  noted that  like in the  business                                                                   
world,  the  incentives  could   be  financial.  It  involved                                                                   
changing a culture.  He had spent the past  year working with                                                                   
DOC  as  it began  the  prisoner  reentry  initiative,  which                                                                   
focused  on   the  items   currently  under  discussion.   He                                                                   
believed  that  DOC   had  started  to  do   the  things  the                                                                   
commission  had talked  about, but  it was  in the  beginning                                                                   
stages at  a modest  level in terms  of treatment.  He opined                                                                   
that there was room for more.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Guttenberg  noted  that  he had  worked  with                                                                   
Judge [Raymond]  Funk on therapeutic  court in  Fairbanks. He                                                                   
remarked  that  people  would  rather  be  in  jail  than  go                                                                   
through  the   therapeutic  court  program  because   it  was                                                                   
harder.  He relayed that  prosecutors  had not been  friendly                                                                   
towards the  idea of expanding  the program and he  had taken                                                                   
some  time  to realize  that  it  had  not been  possible  to                                                                   
release  someone  into  a  program   because  there  were  no                                                                   
therapeutic  treatment programs  available. He  asked  if the                                                                   
commission  had evaluated  the capacity  in the programs  and                                                                   
how far behind the state was in fulfilling the need.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Razo  answered that the  availability of  the restorative                                                                   
justice  programs (e.g.  therapeutic  courts, tribal  courts,                                                                   
and  other) and  the way  the criminal  justice system  could                                                                   
utilize  them  was   still  on  the  commission   agenda.  He                                                                   
remarked  that getting  the 21 recommendations  out  the door                                                                   
had been  a massive  task. He  furthered that the  commission                                                                   
had  concluded  a meeting  that  morning  and had  devoted  a                                                                   
portion  of   its  2016  work   plan  towards   dealing  with                                                                   
restorative justice.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Guttenberg believed  the commission  had done                                                                   
a  great  job.  He  recognized   that  corrections  officers,                                                                   
courts, and all  involved were working to do  their best with                                                                   
what they have.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
3:13:23 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Gara  agreed with concerns voiced  by members.                                                                   
He  referred to  Representative  Wilson's  remarks about  the                                                                   
difficulty  of  moving  forward   and  saving  money  due  to                                                                   
resistance from DOC.  He believed there was also  an issue at                                                                   
DOL.  He detailed  that  Co-Chair  Neuman  had made  a  point                                                                   
about  a plan  to file  a bill  to  try to  get treatment  to                                                                   
people upon arrest  rather than waiting for the  person to go                                                                   
through  jail. Co-Chair  Neuman  had been  told  that it  was                                                                   
already the law  and that a prosecutor could do  that if they                                                                   
wanted.  He  wondered  if  the  commission  had  looked  into                                                                   
whether  some of  the state's  prosecutors  were pushing  too                                                                   
hard to  win as much  as possible and  to obtain  the longest                                                                   
sentence possible.  He wondered if it was  necessary to bring                                                                   
in DOL  to change  the culture  of some  of its employees  to                                                                   
make the department more receptive to changes.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Razo replied  that the attorney general and  DOL had been                                                                   
some of  the most  active participants  in the  conversation.                                                                   
He understood  Representative  Gara's comments and  discussed                                                                   
that a  culture existed  in each of  the departments.  In the                                                                   
case of  the commission's study,  it had been clear  from the                                                                   
top  down that  the  recommendations  were important  to  the                                                                   
state  and  that  everyone  had  made  compromises  to  reach                                                                   
consensus.  He had  witnessed  a firm  commitment from  every                                                                   
participant  on the  commission  to make  real changes  (i.e.                                                                   
changes  in culture,  administrative  practices,  and to  law                                                                   
and regulation).                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Jessee  elaborated that for  years he had been  under the                                                                   
misconception  that  the  state's  attorney  general  was  in                                                                   
charge of  all of the criminal  prosecutors in the  state. He                                                                   
corrected that the  prosecutors were all very  autonomous. He                                                                   
furthered  that all of  the best  intentions of the  attorney                                                                   
general  and DOL  did not  necessarily  turn the  prosecutory                                                                   
conduct  in  the  individual   communities.  He  likened  the                                                                   
situation  to  the  same  as   expecting  the  Department  of                                                                   
Education and  Early Development to  turn all of  the state's                                                                   
school districts.  He clarified  that the department  was not                                                                   
in  charge. He  advised keeping  the system  and its  command                                                                   
and control structure  in mind. He explained that  it made it                                                                   
harder to get change with a diffused system.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
3:17:12 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Gara spoke  to  the issue  of low-level  non-                                                                   
violent offenders.  He wondered if throwing a  low-level non-                                                                   
violent offender in  jail made an individual learn  how to be                                                                   
a more effective  criminal, which actually made  society less                                                                   
safe.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Razo replied  in the  affirmative. He  relayed that  the                                                                   
evidence had  become part of  the basis for  the commission's                                                                   
recommendations.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative Edgmon  asked about cost-shifting  between the                                                                   
various  arms  of  the  criminal   justice  system  in  state                                                                   
government. He  used Dillingham  as an example  and explained                                                                   
that DOL  was proposing  to eliminate  the district  attorney                                                                   
position from  the community. He  had spoken with all  of the                                                                   
various  components of  the criminal  justice  system in  the                                                                   
Bristol  Bay  region  and  it   had  become  clear  that  the                                                                   
$340,000 cost  of the position  would probably  not represent                                                                   
a  cost  savings  and would  be  shifted  to  other  criminal                                                                   
agencies.  He pointed to  victims of  the system locally  who                                                                   
ended up paying  for the fact that Dillingham  would not have                                                                   
a  local  district   attorney  to  provide   risk  assessment                                                                   
measures  to  get  to know  who  the  perpetrators  were.  He                                                                   
stated   that   the   local  district   attorney   knew   the                                                                   
individuals   and   families   and  could   make   the   best                                                                   
determination  on the  time an  individual  should or  should                                                                   
not  spend in  jail. He  stated that  if there  was one  good                                                                   
thing about the  exercise of cutting the budget  that perhaps                                                                   
some  of  the proverbial  silos  between  agencies  would  be                                                                   
broken down and  the true costs to one agency  represented no                                                                   
savings  to  the   system  as  a  whole.  He   asked  if  the                                                                   
commission  had  touched on  the  issue.  He referred  to  an                                                                   
incident the preceding  year related to contract  jails where                                                                   
the cost had  gone from DOC to  DPS to the Court  System, but                                                                   
no one had been there to assess the overall picture.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
3:20:19 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Jessee  replied  that  it was  a  challenge  across  the                                                                   
board.  He elaborated  that the  legislature  was facing  the                                                                   
challenge in  all of its  budgetary activities.  He addressed                                                                   
how  the committee  looked  at  the departments'  budgets  in                                                                   
isolation. He  agreed that  it was necessary  to look  at how                                                                   
the departments  interrelated. He furthered that  part of the                                                                   
beauty  of  the  commission  process   was  that  it  brought                                                                   
different  agencies  together to  talk  about  the issue.  He                                                                   
stated that it  was a challenge for all of  the legislature's                                                                   
budget  reduction efforts  - as  long  as an  agency did  not                                                                   
have  to worry  about  the impact  of  a reduction  on  other                                                                   
agencies they  could manage to  a number. He stated  that the                                                                   
legislature  needed to start  looking at  the big  number. He                                                                   
discussed reduction  to mental  health grants and  questioned                                                                   
what would happen  to people without treatment,  who were not                                                                   
stable  in  the  community  and  ended  up  in  the  criminal                                                                   
justice  system.  He reasoned  that  under the  scenario  the                                                                   
state ended  up paying costs  for the individuals  anyway. He                                                                   
observed that the  sad irony was that it ended  up being more                                                                   
expensive  when services  were  lost. He  recognized that  it                                                                   
was very  difficult to  cut budgets  and keep and  integrated                                                                   
vision of how the overall level of effort was working.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Representative Edgmon  thought the commission,  which expired                                                                   
in  June 2017,  may  be  able to  touch  on the  subject.  He                                                                   
believed  the   legislature's  budget  cutting   process  was                                                                   
haphazard at best.  He elaborated that it was  very difficult                                                                   
in a 90-day  session to know  what downstream costs  were. He                                                                   
continued  that one sector  of the  population was  much less                                                                   
intermingled  amongst  various  state  agencies,  which  were                                                                   
going  ahead  with  different  missions.  He  reiterated  his                                                                   
suggestion for the commission to touch on the subject.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Jessee replied  that Co-Chair Neuman had  started much of                                                                   
the process  with legislative  intent two years  earlier that                                                                   
started state agencies  to begin all working  together on the                                                                   
issue of  recidivism. He  stated that  there was some  vision                                                                   
and leadership  on the  subject. He  relayed that  the vision                                                                   
had  been  carried   out  in  the  way  the   commission  had                                                                   
conducted its  work. He stated  they were on the  right track                                                                   
and needed to keep going.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Munoz  expressed   concern  over  the  prison                                                                   
system acting  as a mental  health institution  especially in                                                                   
the  pretrial area  when  individuals  with diagnosed  mental                                                                   
illness  were  held  without   a  more  effective  plan.  She                                                                   
wondered if the topic was a subject of discussion.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Jessee  replied that DOC did  not like being  the largest                                                                   
mental  health provider  in the  state any  more than  anyone                                                                   
else. He  shared that  one of  the committees the  commission                                                                   
had  set up  that morning  would focus  on behavioral  health                                                                   
throughout  the  entire  continuum of  care  (i.e.  pretrial,                                                                   
during  incarceration,  and upon  release).  He relayed  that                                                                   
the commission was  focused on the topic currently  and going                                                                   
forward.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Munoz was concerned  that a  disproportionate                                                                   
percentage of  inmates were Alaska  Natives. She  wondered if                                                                   
the  proportion matched  the  pretrial  population -  violent                                                                   
versus non-violent populations.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
SUSANNE DI PIETRO,  EXECUTIVE   DIRECTOR,   ALASKA   JUDICIAL                                                                   
COUNCIL,  answered   that  four  other  states   had  adopted                                                                   
evidence-based  ways  to  reduce the  prison  population  and                                                                   
reinvest   in  treatment   in  other   types  of   recidivism                                                                   
reduction services.  The states had seen reductions  in their                                                                   
prison   populations   that   disproportionately   positively                                                                   
impact minorities.  She furthered  that some states  had seen                                                                   
the  whole prison  population  decrease with  an even  larger                                                                   
decrease in the  minority population. The council  hoped that                                                                   
similar  results would  occur in Alaska  if the  commission's                                                                   
recommendations   were  adopted.   She  confirmed   that  the                                                                   
council had  found racial disparities  in the rates  in which                                                                   
people were incarcerated pretrial.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Munoz  referred   to  discussion   that  the                                                                   
pretrial population  consisted  of nonviolent offenders.  She                                                                   
wondered  if a  disproportionate  number of  Natives fell  in                                                                   
the pretrial group.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
3:26:55 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Razo  thanked the  legislature for  including a  position                                                                   
for Alaska  Natives on the commission.  He had done  his best                                                                   
to  consider  how the  recommendations  would  affect  people                                                                   
across  the   state,  particularly   in  rural   Alaska,  and                                                                   
particularly  Alaska  Natives.  He  relayed  that  no  matter                                                                   
which  portion of  the  corrections system  a  person was  in                                                                   
(i.e.  pretrial,  sentenced, or  on  community  supervision),                                                                   
Alaska  Natives  were  disproportionately   represented.  The                                                                   
commission  had visited  Anvil  Mountain Correctional  Center                                                                   
in  Nome  and  he  believed  the  staff  were  dedicated  but                                                                   
completely  under  resourced.  He recalled  that  the  prison                                                                   
library contained about six paperback books and three non-                                                                      
functional computers.  He furthered  that the prison  did not                                                                   
have  an  education  coordinator  for  some  period  of  time                                                                   
because  they  could not  find  anyone  that wanted  to  work                                                                   
there.  He expounded  that the  prisoners had  built a  small                                                                   
motors  repair  shop  to  teach  a skill,  but  it  had  been                                                                   
obvious it had  not been used since its construction.  He had                                                                   
noted  only  two  non-Native  people  in  the  entire  prison                                                                   
population.  He   had  asked  the  prisoners   in  the  Anvil                                                                   
Mountain  facility  to  raise  their  hand if  they  were  in                                                                   
prison for  an alcohol-related  offence;  all but six  people                                                                   
had raised  their hands.  He relayed  that the remaining  six                                                                   
inmates had  raised their hands  when he asked who  was there                                                                   
on a  drug-related offence. He  continued that  the prisoners                                                                   
had  significant substance  abuse problems  and no  treatment                                                                   
was provided while  they were in prison. He  stressed that it                                                                   
did not make sense.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
3:29:47 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Razo wrapped  up his  presentation.  He reiterated  that                                                                   
the  recommendations in  the commission's  report were  data-                                                                   
driven.  The   recommendations  were  split  up   into  three                                                                   
sections including pretrial, sentenced offenders, and post-                                                                     
conviction. He  stated that the  recommended reforms  came at                                                                   
a  time  when  major  changes  were needed  in  the  way  the                                                                   
correctional system  did business. He stressed that  it was a                                                                   
perfect  time to  make  the changes.  He  furthered that  the                                                                   
changes would make  people rethink how they did  their jobs -                                                                   
from  the  attorney   general,  the  DOC   commissioner,  and                                                                   
others.  He   hoped  the   legislature  would  consider   the                                                                   
reforms,   which   resulted  in   substantial   savings   and                                                                   
increased safety in  Alaska. He concluded that at  the end of                                                                   
the  day, the  reforms would  benefit  Alaskans returning  to                                                                   
society   and  would   keep  them   from  becoming   criminal                                                                   
offenders. He believed the state could do better.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Saddler  asked how  long  the commission  was  in                                                                   
operation and what its work product plans were.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Razo  answered  the  commission  had done  a  work  plan                                                                   
earlier that  day with a focus  on four different  areas (all                                                                   
of  which  had  been  discussed   during  the  meeting).  The                                                                   
commission had  a three-year lifespan  and would end  in June                                                                   
2017. He observed  that it was  not a long period  of time to                                                                   
deal  with  some substantial  problems.  Its  recommendations                                                                   
included an option  for the legislature to  determine whether                                                                   
the  work would  be concluded  in the  three-year period.  He                                                                   
thanked the committee for its time.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Saddler  thanked the presenters. He  discussed the                                                                   
agenda for the following day.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
ADJOURNMENT                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
3:32:23 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
The meeting was adjourned at 3:32 p.m.                                                                                          

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
ACJC - HFIN Presentation.pdf HFIN 1/25/2016 1:30:00 PM
legal opinion ERA sweep dept law HouseFinltr 1-25-16.pdf HFIN 1/25/2016 1:30:00 PM
OMB - 10YR Plan HFIN 1-22-16
OMB 10-YR Plan documents HFIN 1-22-16.pdf HFIN 1/25/2016 1:30:00 PM
ACJC Reinvestment Report final12-15.pdf HFIN 1/25/2016 1:30:00 PM