Legislature(2015 - 2016)HOUSE FINANCE 519

04/21/2016 01:30 PM House FINANCE

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01:36:26 PM Start
01:37:43 PM SB91
03:55:51 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
-- Recessed to a Call of the Chair --
+= SB 91 OMNIBUS CRIM LAW & PROCEDURE; CORRECTIONS TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
                  HOUSE FINANCE COMMITTEE                                                                                       
                      April 21, 2016                                                                                            
                         1:36 p.m.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
1:36:26 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CALL TO ORDER                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Thompson   called  the  House   Finance  Committee                                                                    
meeting to order at 1:36 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                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Senator  John  Coghill,  Sponsor;  Jorden  Shilling,  Staff,                                                                    
Senator   John   Coghill;   Dean   Williams,   Commissioner,                                                                    
Department  of  Corrections;  Diane Casto,  Policy  Advisor,                                                                    
Division  of  Behavior  Health,  Department  of  Health  and                                                                    
Social Services; Nancy Meade,  General Counsel, Alaska Court                                                                    
System;  Lauree  Morton,   Executive  Director,  Council  on                                                                    
Domestic Violence  and Sexual Assault, Department  of Public                                                                    
Safety;  Representative   Dan  Ortiz;   Representative  Mike                                                                    
Chenault.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
PRESENT VIA TELECONFERENCE                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Brann   Wade,   Chief   Probation   Officer,   Division   of                                                                    
Institutions,  Department  of Corrections;  Audrey  O'Brien,                                                                    
Manager, Division of Motor Vehicles, Department of                                                                              
Administration.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
SUMMARY                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
CSSSSB 91(FIN) AM                                                                                                               
         OMNIBUS CRIM LAW & PROCEDURE; CORRECTIONS                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
          CSSSSB 91(FIN) AM was HEARD and HELD in committee                                                                     
          for further consideration.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Thompson discussed the meeting agenda.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
CS FOR SPONSOR SUBSTITUTE FOR SENATE BILL NO. 91(FIN) am                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     "An  Act  relating  to   criminal  law  and  procedure;                                                                    
     relating   to   controlled  substances;   relating   to                                                                    
     immunity   from   prosecution    for   the   crime   of                                                                    
     prostitution;  relating   to  probation;   relating  to                                                                    
     sentencing;  establishing a  pretrial services  program                                                                    
     with pretrial  services officers  in the  Department of                                                                    
     Corrections; relating  to the publication  of suspended                                                                    
     entries of  judgment on  a publicly  available Internet                                                                    
     website;   relating   to  permanent   fund   dividends;                                                                    
     relating   to   electronic  monitoring;   relating   to                                                                    
     penalties  for  violations   of  municipal  ordinances;                                                                    
     relating   to   parole;    relating   to   correctional                                                                    
     restitution   centers;  relating   to  community   work                                                                    
     service;    relating   to    revocation,   termination,                                                                    
     suspension, cancellation, or  restoration of a driver's                                                                    
     license;  relating  to  the excise  tax  on  marijuana;                                                                    
     establishing  the recidivism  reduction fund;  relating                                                                    
     to the Alaska Criminal  Justice Commission; relating to                                                                    
     the disqualification of  persons convicted of specified                                                                    
     drug offenses from participation  in the food stamp and                                                                    
     temporary assistance  programs; relating to  the duties                                                                    
     of the commissioner of  corrections; amending Rules 32,                                                                    
     32.1,  38,  41,  and  43,   Alaska  Rules  of  Criminal                                                                    
     Procedure, and  repealing Rules  41(d) and  (e), Alaska                                                                    
     Rules  of  Criminal  Procedure; and  providing  for  an                                                                    
     effective date."                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
1:37:43 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Thompson discussed the meeting agenda. [Note: the                                                                      
committee was addressing bill version CSSS SB 91(JUD).]                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR JOHN  COGHILL, SPONSOR, spoke  to the  oversight and                                                                    
reform  issues. He  referred to  the  color coded  sectional                                                                    
analysis provided by his office  (copy on file). He directed                                                                    
attention  to Section  175 (page  105, line  10) related  to                                                                    
powers and duties  of the commission. He  relayed his intent                                                                    
to   address  additional   duties  and   oversight  of   the                                                                    
commission and  how it would  report to the  legislature. He                                                                    
explained the  commission had been directed  to evaluate the                                                                    
effect of  sentencing laws; criminal justice  practices; the                                                                    
criminal  justice system;  and whether  the sentencing  laws                                                                    
and criminal  justice practices provided protection  for the                                                                    
public, community  condemnation of the offender,  the rights                                                                    
of the victims of crimes, the  rights of the accused and the                                                                    
person  convicted,   restitution  from  the   offender,  and                                                                    
principles of reformation. The commission  had done its best                                                                    
to come forward with  the recommendations. Additionally, the                                                                    
commission had  been tasked with providing  cost ranges from                                                                    
the  most  expensive  to  least  expensive.  The  bill  also                                                                    
included a  requirement for an annual  recommendation to the                                                                    
governor and  the legislature on  the savings that  could be                                                                    
reinvested. The  changes were not necessarily  about cutting                                                                    
the  budget or  setting  criminals out,  but  about how  the                                                                    
state could  reinvest for  the specified  outcomes including                                                                    
public protection,  community condemnation of  the offender,                                                                    
the  rights of  the victims  of  crimes, the  rights of  the                                                                    
accused  and  the  person convicted,  restitution  from  the                                                                    
offender, and principles of reformation.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Senator Coghill turned  to page 106 (line  17) and addressed                                                                    
that  the commission  may  appoint a  new  working group  to                                                                    
review    and   analyze    the    implementation   of    the                                                                    
recommendations and to report  on the implementation status.                                                                    
He pointed to  page 107 related to  the commission's ability                                                                    
to track  and assess  outcomes from the  recommendations the                                                                    
commission  had  made  and  corresponding  criminal  justice                                                                    
reforms. He  believed the language  needed to be  cleaned up                                                                    
due to some  redundancies. He referred to  subsection (3) at                                                                    
the   top  of   page   107  related   to  the   commission's                                                                    
responsibility  to request,  receive,  and  review data.  He                                                                    
noted  the following  sections would  specify  how the  work                                                                    
would be done.  He detailed a new section had  been added on                                                                    
page 107  directing agencies  to report  data (line  17) and                                                                    
the judiciary to report (line 28).  He moved to page 108 and                                                                    
pointed to requirements for the  Department of Public Safety                                                                    
(DPS) to report  (line 4) and the  Department of Corrections                                                                    
(DOC)  to report  (line 13).  He added  the bill  included a                                                                    
list of  things the  agencies were  intended to  report. The                                                                    
language related  to the  review process  that would  be set                                                                    
into motion by the commission.  The process would also alert                                                                    
every  agency  dealing with  a  criminal  justice system  to                                                                    
review and  report the outcomes  along the way.  He remarked                                                                    
there would be numerous eyes reviewing the structure.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Senator  Coghill turned  to Section  177 on  page 109  where                                                                    
annual  report  and  recommendations had  been  amended.  He                                                                    
detailed  the section  addressed  how  the commission  would                                                                    
recommend  to  reinvest any  intended  savings  in order  to                                                                    
reduce  recidivism, which  was the  bill's primary  goal. He                                                                    
stressed that  a reduction in recidivism  would mean reduced                                                                    
crime. The  performance metrics would be  produced and shown                                                                    
to the  legislature. He  believed the  state would  see real                                                                    
time  data  that  was  better than  ever  before  in  Alaska                                                                    
related to the review,  report, and recommendations from the                                                                    
commission. Page  110 included specific items  that were not                                                                    
yet  known  for  sure,  including a  percentage  of  inmates                                                                    
returning  to  prison  within  three   years  and  the  same                                                                    
percentage of  those individuals who return  for new crimes.                                                                    
The  commission  would  also   recommend  reforms  that  may                                                                    
include    recommendations    to   the    legislature    for                                                                    
administrative actions.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
1:44:31 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Senator Coghill pointed  to Sections 178 and  179 (page 110)                                                                    
specifying   the  commission   would   submit  reports   and                                                                    
recommendations  no later  than November  of each  year. The                                                                    
current  bill version  would extend  the commission  to June                                                                    
30, 2021.  He noted  a couple  of other  places in  the bill                                                                    
included  language related  to specific  recommendations for                                                                    
the  treatment  of  sexual  abuse   and  sexual  crimes.  He                                                                    
believed the language appeared in  Section 196. He asked for                                                                    
his staff to identify the specific location.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
JORDEN SHILLING,  STAFF, SENATOR JOHN COGHILL,  referred the                                                                    
committee to  language on page  119 related to  some special                                                                    
reports  the   commission  was  required  to   provide.  The                                                                    
commission  was   to  provide   reports  on   driving  while                                                                    
intoxicated  and other  Title  28  issues, restitution,  and                                                                    
social impact  bonds. The specific working  group related to                                                                    
sexual offences was located on  page 107, line 5, subsection                                                                    
(4).  The  section  required the  commission  to  appoint  a                                                                    
working group to review and  analyze sexual offence statutes                                                                    
and report  to the  legislature if there  were circumstances                                                                    
under   which   victims'    rights,   public   safety,   and                                                                    
rehabilitation of  offenders were better served  by changing                                                                    
existing laws.  He noted there was  some additional language                                                                    
as well.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Senator Coghill remarked that the  bill asked the commission                                                                    
to  do   a  substantial   amount  by  December   [2016].  He                                                                    
recommended  asking  for  preliminary  and  primary  reports                                                                    
during the  first session  of the  30th legislature.  He was                                                                    
uncertain whether  the commission could complete  all of the                                                                    
working group  issues. There were three  working groups plus                                                                    
new  commission duties;  the bill  asked  the commission  to                                                                    
report by November, which was  fine, but he guessed it would                                                                    
be  a preliminary  report. He  assumed the  bill may  not go                                                                    
into effect or  be passed until July and  agencies could not                                                                    
begin work until  it was handed to them by  the governor, in                                                                    
which  case the  commission  would probably  have less  than                                                                    
four  months  to  complete  the  project.  He  believed  the                                                                    
commission and  the agencies would  do a review  and report.                                                                    
He mentioned  law enforcement  by the police  as one  of the                                                                    
areas the state  needed to understand how  things would land                                                                    
on  the ground,  which he  did  not believe  would be  known                                                                    
until  a  year into  changes  brought  on  by the  bill.  He                                                                    
continued that  watching what was  done along the  way would                                                                    
be very important,  which he believed every  agency would be                                                                    
doing.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
1:48:32 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Neuman stated  that  the  bill included  reporting                                                                    
requirements for  the commission to  provide recommendations                                                                    
on  where  to spend  expected  savings.  He asked  what  the                                                                    
expected savings may be annually.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Senator Coghill replied that the  fiscal notes would provide                                                                    
information about  the anticipated [savings]. He  noted that                                                                    
the commission  and Pew Trust  had looked at  an anticipated                                                                    
averted  cost (jail)  and marginal  cost  (jail time  days).                                                                    
Costs  had   been  added  due  to   pretrial  and  increased                                                                    
probation/parole officers.  The first  year of  savings were                                                                    
close to  $60 million;  the expected  savings could  be $150                                                                    
million  over   the  next  five  years   if  implemented  as                                                                    
currently  proposed.  The averted  cost  would  be the  $300                                                                    
million or  so for  a correctional  facility or  around $150                                                                    
million  if  prisoners were  sent  out  of state.  He  still                                                                    
believed there would  be a savings; it then  became a matter                                                                    
of  how to  reinvest the  money to  make Alaska's  society a                                                                    
better  place  and hold  people  accountable  in the  proper                                                                    
ways.  For  example,  the   recidivism  reduction  fund  was                                                                    
established  by  the   bill  and  could  be   used  to  make                                                                    
appropriations  to DOC,  DPS, and  the Department  of Health                                                                    
and   Social  Services   (DHSS)  for   recidivism  reduction                                                                    
programs (page 105). He detailed  people would have to apply                                                                    
and savings would be rolled into the fund.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Senator  Coghill  pointed  to  page 116,  Section  186  that                                                                    
established  the  recidivism  reduction program  to  promote                                                                    
rehab  for persons  on probation  or parole  or incarcerated                                                                    
for  offences   and  recently  released   from  correctional                                                                    
facilities;  the program  would potentially  be funded  with                                                                    
savings.  Additionally,  [the   DOC]  commissioner  had  new                                                                    
duties to  work with the Alaska  Criminal Justice Commission                                                                    
on  the   evidence-based  programs.  He  explained   it  was                                                                    
necessary to  have continual reach-out  related to  the best                                                                    
practices the state could benefit  from. Page 117 included a                                                                    
definition for "evidence-based" to  demonstrate the need for                                                                    
well-reviewed,  credible  programs.  He explained  they  had                                                                    
worked to specify the commission  should review, report, and                                                                    
make  recommendations.   Additionally,  the   agencies  were                                                                    
directed to  reach out  and a fund  had been  created, which                                                                    
the Office of  Victims' Rights, Victims for  Justice, or the                                                                    
domestic violence network  could be a part  of. He specified                                                                    
problems  related  to  behavioral health,  drug  or  alcohol                                                                    
addiction, or  sexual addiction  had to  be included  in the                                                                    
lowering of the recidivism rate.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
1:53:24 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Senator Coghill  stated that the bill  included models where                                                                    
restitution became  a bit easier.  They had made  efforts in                                                                    
the  bill  to  make  restitution  a  better  possibility  if                                                                    
someone was thieving for a living.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Neuman remarked  that he  and Senator  Coghill had                                                                    
been working together for several  years. He addressed where                                                                    
the  state would  spend the  money it  was supposed  to save                                                                    
under the legislation. He asked  if there was any particular                                                                    
program the commission  had discussed as one  that would see                                                                    
the highest value for cost  savings (e.g. behavioral health,                                                                    
addiction, or other).                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Senator Coghill  answered that there were  three areas where                                                                    
change was  necessary. He was  glad that Jeff  Jessee (chief                                                                    
executive  officer   of  the  Alaska  Mental   Health  Trust                                                                    
Authority (AMHTA))  had been part of  the commission because                                                                    
the  behavioral health  element was  huge. He  stressed that                                                                    
something  had to  change. He  continued  that people  still                                                                    
needed to be held accountable  for bad action. The trust had                                                                    
agreed  to help  out and  was looking  for ways  to go  from                                                                    
treatment to housing. He discussed  planning for getting out                                                                    
of  jail  and  relayed  jobs, housing,  and  treatment  were                                                                    
paramount;  money   had  to  be  invested   in  the  state's                                                                    
behavioral health system. He explained  the alcohol and drug                                                                    
abuse  problems in  Alaska were  probably hurting  the state                                                                    
more than  anything else. He  surmised alcohol  was probably                                                                    
the entry level, but perhaps  marijuana would take its place                                                                    
as it  had become  legal. Alcohol  problems were  factors in                                                                    
things like forth degree assault  on a school yard, domestic                                                                    
violence, and  road rage. He  stressed that damage  was done                                                                    
in major ways. He continued  that people were different when                                                                    
drunk and  if they could  be held accountable and  could get                                                                    
over  the hump  of addiction,  society would  be better.  He                                                                    
remarked the  same thing applied  to drugs. He added  it was                                                                    
harder on drugs.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Edgmon pointed  to  Section 174,  subsection                                                                    
(d), which  mentioned appropriations to DOC,  DHSS, and DPS.                                                                    
He  wondered if  there was  any room  in the  legislation to                                                                    
include  language about  partnerships with  Native nonprofit                                                                    
organizations.   He   detailed   the  Bristol   Bay   Native                                                                    
Association was working on a  major reentry program directly                                                                    
tied to recidivism that he  believed would be groundbreaking                                                                    
in the region. He thought  other nonprofits around the state                                                                    
were working on the issue.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Senator Coghill  answered in the  affirmative. He  asked his                                                                    
staff to point to the specific location in the bill.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Shilling  directed  attention  to page  107,  lines  13                                                                    
through 16,  which tasked  the commission  to look  into the                                                                    
idea.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
1:57:22 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Senator Coghill discussed that separately  from SB 91 he had                                                                    
introduced  a bill  related  to the  need  for a  structural                                                                    
agreement  between state  and  tribal  groups pertaining  to                                                                    
misdemeanants.  He  noted  there were  some  memorandums  of                                                                    
understanding (MOU), but  he wanted a formal  agreement so a                                                                    
citizen would not  have to give up  Alaska state citizenship                                                                    
to  become  a tribal  enrollee.  He  did not  believe  there                                                                    
should be  a contest between  those two rights.  He believed                                                                    
some methodologies would be found  in the bill. He added the                                                                    
issue  was  something  that  required  answering  sooner  or                                                                    
later.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Guttenberg referred  Section 174  related to                                                                    
the  to the  recidivism  reduction fund.  The bill  language                                                                    
addressed taxes and he asked for detail.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Shilling  replied that  the tax  referred to  in Section                                                                    
174 was  the marijuana tax  revenue that would  be collected                                                                    
in the  upcoming years.  The tax was  one of  the mechanisms                                                                    
the Senate Finance Committee had  used in order to fund some                                                                    
of  the reinvestment  priorities highlighted  in the  fiscal                                                                    
notes.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Senator Coghill added  that the language had been  put in by                                                                    
the  Senate   Finance  Committee   based  on   the  upcoming                                                                    
marijuana tax.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Guttenberg stated  that hopefully  reduction                                                                    
in  recidivism would  mean fewer  people and  fewer days  in                                                                    
jail and significant cost savings to the state.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:00:04 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Senator  Coghill   stated  that   the  first  part   of  the                                                                    
commission's report  had provided a good  high-level view of                                                                    
proven  practices and  statistics.  He noted  it  was not  a                                                                    
heavy study and was a useful tool.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Thompson relayed  the committee  would hear  about                                                                    
the bill sections related to reentry.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
DEAN  WILLIAMS,  COMMISSIONER,  DEPARTMENT  OF  CORRECTIONS,                                                                    
shared that  Sections 156  and 158  articulated the  area of                                                                    
reentry and  new related requirements  for DOC. Both  of the                                                                    
sections  stepped up  the requirements  and expectations  of                                                                    
the  department  in  a  number of  ways.  He  furthered  the                                                                    
sections included  requirements DOC had started  on its own,                                                                    
but they provided a benchmark  for going forward in terms of                                                                    
reentry planning  for inmates getting  released. One  of the                                                                    
section  requirements increased  the planning  for prisoners                                                                    
getting released  from 30 days  to 90 days. He  detailed the                                                                    
bill backed  up the release  planning to ensure  issues were                                                                    
being addressed.  He noted the  provision was logical  as it                                                                    
took longer  to get  some of the  things done.  The sections                                                                    
required DOC to coordinate with  the Department of Labor and                                                                    
Workforce Development  (DLWD) in  terms of job  training and                                                                    
ensuring the state was fully  utilizing DLWD's job placement                                                                    
resources.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Williams pointed  out the  bill would  require                                                                    
DOC to  assist inmates  with obtaining  state identification                                                                    
or drivers  licenses prior to  their release date.  He noted                                                                    
it was  real, but  important work.  He continued  that items                                                                    
specified in the sections would  make it easier for a chance                                                                    
of  successful reentry  once a  prisoner  was released  from                                                                    
custody. Part  of the bill  created an expectation  that DOC                                                                    
would have  better partnerships with nonprofits  in order to                                                                    
get past the  notion that the individuals  were DOC's inside                                                                    
the  prison system  and that  it would  only cooperate  more                                                                    
fully  once the  prisoners were  released. The  bill set  an                                                                    
expectation  that  people  could   and  should  be  visiting                                                                    
facilities to  work with inmates and  prisoners before their                                                                    
release. He stressed the department  should be embracing the                                                                    
idea and  he personally did.  He believed it  would solidify                                                                    
the  expectation. The  sections  also established  standards                                                                    
for  electronic monitoring  (EM) by  private contractors  to                                                                    
ensure  the  state  was  monitoring  the  program  and  that                                                                    
standards were set in order  to prevent something from going                                                                    
sideways. He reiterated  that the bill required  a ramped up                                                                    
effort - part of the way  the work would be accomplished was                                                                    
as  inmate  populations  hopefully  began  to  decline,  the                                                                    
department could reallocate some  of its existing resources.                                                                    
He  communicated the  provisions  would require  significant                                                                    
work for  DOC, but the work  was valuable and would  put the                                                                    
department on the  line, which he thought was  a good thing.                                                                    
The  provisions were  all designed  to make  sure the  state                                                                    
could address the 62 percent recidivism rate.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:06:17 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DIANE CASTO,  POLICY ADVISOR,  DIVISION OF  BEHAVIOR HEALTH,                                                                    
DEPARTMENT OF  HEALTH AND SOCIAL SERVICES,  relayed that she                                                                    
had  recently  been hired  to  oversee  the Medicaid  reform                                                                    
related to  behavioral health. She remarked  that throughout                                                                    
the  process  substance  abuse and  mental  health  came  up                                                                    
repeatedly;  therefore, DHSS  saw its  role very  clearly in                                                                    
reentry and recidivism reduction.  She highlighted that some                                                                    
the  sections   mentioned  by  Commissioner   Williams  were                                                                    
critical.  She  referred to  Section  158  and relayed  that                                                                    
Medicaid  reform   would  complement  the  bill   well.  She                                                                    
addressed  partnering with  other state  agencies to  enable                                                                    
prisoners  to  sign up  for  their  state identification  or                                                                    
driver's license; the other  important component was getting                                                                    
people signed  up for Medicaid. She  furthered that Medicaid                                                                    
expansion   would  allow   a  significant   number  of   the                                                                    
individuals  coming out  of the  correctional  system to  be                                                                    
eligible for  Medicaid (primarily men without  children that                                                                    
fell below  136 percent of  the federal poverty  level). She                                                                    
elaborated it  would be  a huge  benefit to  get individuals                                                                    
signed up for Medicaid in order to access needed services.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Casto continued  that it  was  evident through  surveys                                                                    
that the  number one  reason people  did not  seek treatment                                                                    
for substance abuse and mental  health services was they did                                                                    
not believe  they needed  it. The  second reason  people did                                                                    
not seek treatment was the  inability to afford the service.                                                                    
The department  was hopeful through Medicaid  reform and its                                                                    
behavioral health component that it  would be able to assist                                                                    
individuals  coming   out  of  prison  to   gain  access  to                                                                    
Medicaid;  the  hope was  to  reach  people prior  to  their                                                                    
departure  from the  correctional institutions  in order  to                                                                    
provide them  access to  services they did  not have  in the                                                                    
past.  She recalled  an earlier  question  about the  things                                                                    
people really needed in order  to be successful when leaving                                                                    
jail.  First, people  needed treatment  for substance  abuse                                                                    
and  mental health  services, which  was a  major issue  for                                                                    
many individuals  in Alaska.  Second, people  needed housing                                                                    
in order to get their lives  back together. She noted it was                                                                    
not  possible  to  be  on EM  without  a  residence.  Third,                                                                    
individuals needed  a job  in order  to integrate  back into                                                                    
the community.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Casto  relayed that in  January [2016] the  governor had                                                                    
called  a housing  summit, which  had  included a  workgroup                                                                    
related  to housing  for individuals  coming out  of prison.                                                                    
She detailed  the report  had come out  earlier in  the week                                                                    
and provided specific  ideas about how the state  could do a                                                                    
better  job   working  with   the  Alaska   Housing  Finance                                                                    
Corporation  (AHFC),  private,  and  nonprofit  partners  to                                                                    
ensure adequate  housing for individuals.  She spoke  to the                                                                    
need for individuals to gain  employment. She referred to an                                                                    
employment specialist  position to  be funded by  AMHTA that                                                                    
would   work  specifically   with  DOC   partners  and   DOC                                                                    
institutions  to ensure  people  were  coordinated with  job                                                                    
coaches and  opportunities upon  their release  from prison.                                                                    
There were many things underway  that would help move things                                                                    
forward.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Thompson  asked if the committee  had the [housing]                                                                    
report.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:11:16 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Casto provided  the report  to  staff for  distribution                                                                    
[note: the  handout included a letter  addressed to Governor                                                                    
Bill  Walker  from  AHFC  dated   April  14,  2016  and  the                                                                    
"Governor's  Housing Summit"  report  (copy  on file)].  She                                                                    
referred to  Representative Edgmon's earlier  question about                                                                    
community   partnership.  She   explained   DHSS  was   very                                                                    
interested  in   expanding,  enhancing,  and   working  with                                                                    
community  partners.  There  were currently  four  community                                                                    
reentry  coalitions  in  Mat-Su, Anchorage,  Fairbanks,  and                                                                    
Juneau;  the  entities  were grassroots  organizations  that                                                                    
were receiving  a small amount  of funding from AMHTA  to do                                                                    
an assessment of their service  system and capacity they had                                                                    
to   meet   the   needs  of   individuals   returning   from                                                                    
incarceration.  Additionally,  there  were  four  developing                                                                    
coalitions  in  Bethel,  Nome, Dillingham,  and  Kenai.  She                                                                    
added that  the coalition in Dillingham  was currently doing                                                                    
incredible  work. The  department  was  hoping that  through                                                                    
some  of the  reinvestment  dollars to  give the  additional                                                                    
four coalitions enough  money to hire a  coordinator to keep                                                                    
the momentum going.  The hope was the  coalitions would have                                                                    
the ability to start addressing  some of the things included                                                                    
in   the  bill   related   to   partnering  with   nonprofit                                                                    
organizations to provide services.  She added the coalitions                                                                    
were  very eager  and ready  to do  that. There  was also  a                                                                    
partner  reentry program  currently working  with reentrants                                                                    
in Anchorage. She noted hopefully  the coalitions would move                                                                    
towards a  more structured program that  referred reentrants                                                                    
to coalitions  where they would  work with the  reentry plan                                                                    
developed while  they had been  in prison to help  link them                                                                    
to services.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:13:45 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Casto  addressed  Section   181  related  to  temporary                                                                    
assistance. She shared  that Alaska was one  of seven states                                                                    
that still had  a ban on allowing a person  with a past drug                                                                    
conviction from ever obtaining  public assistance (e.g. food                                                                    
stamps  and   other).  Section  181  allowed   with  certain                                                                    
conditions that  someone could regain the  ability to access                                                                    
the services,  which were critical  in helping a  person get                                                                    
back on their  feet. The department was hopeful  it would be                                                                    
another critical  piece of giving people  the opportunity to                                                                    
get themselves settled, back on  their feet, into a job, and                                                                    
off of  any assistance  in the  future. She  mentioned other                                                                    
items  in the  bill related  to reentry  including the  24/7                                                                    
alcohol  testing  program,  and the  Alcohol  Safety  Action                                                                    
Program  (ASAP)  where  individuals were  monitored  in  the                                                                    
community. She  noted the program coordinator  was available                                                                    
online if needed.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Casto thought  it was very important that  reentry was a                                                                    
critical step.  She stressed  the need  to stop  the cycling                                                                    
into and  out of the prison  system. She had worked  for DOC                                                                    
for  a  short  time  in  reentry  and  she  had  dealt  with                                                                    
substance abuse  and behavioral health  more often and  in a                                                                    
more serious way at DOC than  in her 12 prior years with the                                                                    
Division  of Behavioral  Health.  She believed  that as  the                                                                    
state partnered  some of the Medicaid  and behavioral health                                                                    
reform, it  would get treatment  to individuals  earlier and                                                                    
hopefully prevent individuals  from committing crimes, going                                                                    
to jail, and coming out for treatment.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:16:33 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman  spoke to the  need for  treatment, housing,                                                                    
and jobs.  He reasoned  a person  needed treatment  prior to                                                                    
acquiring  a job  in  order  to be  drug  and alcohol  free.                                                                    
Currently there  was not enough treatment,  jobs, or housing                                                                    
available.  He  asked if  the  money  was available  whether                                                                    
there were sufficient treatment  programs, housing, and jobs                                                                    
available.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Casto  replied that  the state  did not  have sufficient                                                                    
capacity  to meet  the need.  She detailed  that during  the                                                                    
past three years  DHSS had been focusing on  the three areas                                                                    
clearly  and  deliberately;  the department  had  recognized                                                                    
where  the needs  were  and  was starting  to  move in  that                                                                    
direction  to  increase them.  She  spoke  to treatment  and                                                                    
explained  the  department  believed  the  system  could  be                                                                    
expanded. She specified  that the state did  not have enough                                                                    
detox  and sobering  centers to  help people  early on.  The                                                                    
plan was to  start building some of the  services to utilize                                                                    
Medicaid  payments  in  an efficient  way,  cut  costs,  and                                                                    
increase services. The  work was at the  starting point, but                                                                    
the department  had compiled  numerous reports  to determine                                                                    
the  state's capacity  versus its  need. She  conceded there                                                                    
was currently a clear gap.  She reasoned the point of moving                                                                    
forward  with  behavioral  health   systems  reform  was  to                                                                    
increase  the capacity.  She relayed  she had  met with  the                                                                    
director  of the  Alaska Behavioral  Health Association  the                                                                    
previous day  and had talked about  ways to do a  better job                                                                    
expanding. She  hoped that through reform,  changes would be                                                                    
made to broaden the population  eligible for Medicaid and to                                                                    
expand Medicaid  to some of  the private providers  who were                                                                    
currently  not eligible,  which should  also expand  some of                                                                    
the  service delivery.  She summarized  there was  currently                                                                    
not enough treatment available to  meet the demand; it would                                                                    
need to  be expanded as the  state was also looking  at what                                                                    
the increased need may be.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:19:55 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Neuman wondered  what  the success  rate would  be                                                                    
amongst the prisoners, if treatment,  housing, and jobs were                                                                    
available.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Casto  asked for clarity  on the question. She  asked if                                                                    
he was referring to individuals enrolled in Medicaid.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Neuman  elaborated  he   was  speaking  about  the                                                                    
overall  corrections population.  He explained  some may  be                                                                    
Medicaid eligible,  but the amount was  probably minimal. He                                                                    
guessed  the amount  would  be around  200  due to  Medicaid                                                                    
restrictions. He estimated the  current prison population at                                                                    
6,000 and  believed about one-third of  the population could                                                                    
potentially  receive treatment.  He  stated about  one-third                                                                    
may  never  figure it  out  and  the remaining  third  would                                                                    
figure it out because they did  not want to go back to jail.                                                                    
Under the  scenario, he wondered what  the treatment success                                                                    
rate would be for the 33 percent who were treatable.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Casto replied the answer  involved "looking a little bit                                                                    
into the  crystal ball." She  stated that  treatment usually                                                                    
took  more  than  one  time because  addiction  was  a  very                                                                    
powerful  thing.  She  believed  if people  were  given  the                                                                    
opportunity, 60  to 70 percent  of the individuals  could be                                                                    
successful.  Additionally,  a   person's  success  was  also                                                                    
dependent on  whether or  not they wanted  to get  clean and                                                                    
sober. Often times  having a job, home,  family, and support                                                                    
system  helped people  to be  successful  in treatment.  She                                                                    
furthered  that   having  those   things  often   helped  an                                                                    
individual  to make  a decision  to  get treatment  quicker.                                                                    
Without some of  those things it was very easy  for a person                                                                    
to slip back into addiction,  which was seen many times with                                                                    
individuals coming  out of prison.  She provided  an example                                                                    
of a  person getting out of  jail with plans to  live with a                                                                    
girlfriend and work for  their brother-in-law. Frequently in                                                                    
that situation the relationship breaks  up and the job fails                                                                    
to follow through. She continued  that many times the person                                                                    
began  aftercare,   but  without   a  support   system  they                                                                    
frequently relapsed. She spoke  to the importance of looking                                                                    
at the  entire picture, the  necessity of having all  of the                                                                    
things moving at  the same time, and having  support for the                                                                    
individuals.  She   believed  the  combination   would  mean                                                                    
individuals would be more apt to be successful.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:23:25 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman  was concerned that there  were thousands of                                                                    
Alaskans losing their  jobs with the recession  who were not                                                                    
felons and had  no criminal records. He  guessed there would                                                                    
be an  increase in housing  available when people  moved out                                                                    
of the state.  He reasoned it was necessary  to have housing                                                                    
near  jobs. For  example, it  did  not matter  if there  was                                                                    
housing available in Big Lake  because there were no jobs in                                                                    
that area.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Thompson spoke  to  Section  158, which  addressed                                                                    
starting a  program 90 days  prior to a  prisoner's release.                                                                    
He  asked  if some  individuals  who  received probation  or                                                                    
parole could  slip through  the cracks  and not  receive the                                                                    
program.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Williams  imagined   many  things  would  slip                                                                    
through the cracks  due to the significant  change and work.                                                                    
He  believed  setting the  desired  expectation  was a  good                                                                    
thing.  He was  doubtful  everything would  work just  right                                                                    
immediately  after   being  launched.  The   department  was                                                                    
currently  implementing a  plan  for prisoners  on a  30-day                                                                    
basis. He detailed people recognized  the need, but the bill                                                                    
would set  the date back  90 days,  which was a  good thing.                                                                    
All  of the  changes  were realigning  expectations for  the                                                                    
department. He  furthered the implementation phase  would be                                                                    
a lift for DOC, but the  work was good. He added there would                                                                    
be some slipups, but he believed  it was the future in terms                                                                    
of how the recidivism issue was addressed.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson  was struggling  with the  sections of                                                                    
the  bill  currently  under   discussion.  She  referred  to                                                                    
parents in the Office of  Children Services (OCS) system who                                                                    
could not  get the treatment  they need. She  continued that                                                                    
as a result  they could not get their children  back and due                                                                    
to  a lack  of  jobs  they could  not  find employment.  She                                                                    
believed  the  bill would  direct  more  resources and  more                                                                    
attention  to  individuals   who  made  substantially  worse                                                                    
choices.  She asked  what would  happen to  the OCS  parents                                                                    
without services.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Williams understood  the concern.  He did  not                                                                    
believe  anything in  the bill  discounted  the concern  and                                                                    
work  to be  done within  OCS. He  surmised there  were many                                                                    
state  systems deserving  significant attention  and reform.                                                                    
He explained  the state was spending  a lot of money  on its                                                                    
corrections  system.   He  referred  to  the   state's  high                                                                    
recidivism  rate. The  bill represented  one  step in  doing                                                                    
something  to   improve  recidivism  rates.   He  referenced                                                                    
successful methods used by other  states. He used Wyoming as                                                                    
an  example and  relayed  it  had a  recidivism  rate of  25                                                                    
percent. He noted there was  something about work being done                                                                    
inside  the Wyoming  facilities,  but he  believed it  would                                                                    
also  be  prudent  to  study how  it  was  handling  reentry                                                                    
issues. He added a number  of states were making significant                                                                    
progress.  He   emphasized  that   the  bill   would  reduce                                                                    
recidivism and  would bring crime down.  He acknowledged the                                                                    
bill did  not fix  the other  parts of  the system  that may                                                                    
need attention; however, it did  do a significant amount. He                                                                    
explained  the bill  employed  similar  strategies to  those                                                                    
used  in other  states.  He emphasized  that recidivism  and                                                                    
crime would  go down  as a  result. He  added that  if crime                                                                    
increased  with  the  passage  of  the  bill  something  was                                                                    
seriously wrong.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:28:27 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson  countered that  other states  did not                                                                    
have the  problems that Alaska  did related  to specialties,                                                                    
which was  her concern. She did  not want to see  people put                                                                    
back in  jail either, but  she was not willing  to sacrifice                                                                    
parents due to a lack  in resources. She stated she believed                                                                    
the bill's  action was great,  but she believed most  of the                                                                    
help  would   not  come  to  the   target  population  until                                                                    
individuals were  released from prison because  Medicaid was                                                                    
not  available  to  prisoners.   She  mentioned  a  lack  in                                                                    
behavioral  health  professionals.  She wondered  if  people                                                                    
coming out of prison would  bump parents trying to get their                                                                    
children  back  from the  state  off  the waiting  list  for                                                                    
services. She  stated her concern  was about  the particular                                                                    
section,  which  would   increase  needed  organization  and                                                                    
management; however,  she did  not want  parents in  the OCS                                                                    
system to have less opportunity for needed services.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Casto  answered that  she  had  a background  in  child                                                                    
protection   and   understood   the  concern   outlined   by                                                                    
Representative  Wilson. She  explained that  many people  in                                                                    
the state's  prison system  were parents.  Additionally, she                                                                    
had  visited  women  at  the  Hiland  Mountain  Correctional                                                                    
Center numerous  times; many of the  incarcerated women were                                                                    
working with  OCS. There were  many connections  between the                                                                    
men and women  in prison and OCS. She  relayed hopefully the                                                                    
state could  continue to look at  both issues. Additionally,                                                                    
Medicaid   and  behavioral   health  reform   was  targeting                                                                    
everyone in  the state; OCS  was a key player,  because DHSS                                                                    
realized  that the  population needed  better mental  health                                                                    
and  substance abuse  services.  She had  formerly been  the                                                                    
director of  the Division of  Youth Services and one  of her                                                                    
largest  concerns had  been how  the  state handled  parents                                                                    
with substance  abuse problems. She explained  that children                                                                    
had been removed from their  homes, the parents were sent to                                                                    
treatment,  nothing had  been done  for the  kids, and  they                                                                    
were brought  back together after the  parents became sober,                                                                    
but  the children  continued to  react to  their parents  as                                                                    
they had before the parents  had become sober. She explained                                                                    
that it had  been a disaster. She remarked it  was no wonder                                                                    
there  were then  additional incidents  of child  abuse. She                                                                    
furthered  the state  was working  to  improve how  services                                                                    
were   provided  in   the  specific   area.  She   addressed                                                                    
behavioral health reform  and detailed the goal  was to look                                                                    
at  the integrated  and overlapping  systems as  a whole  to                                                                    
determine   capacity  for   everyone.   She  stressed   that                                                                    
substance abuse was killing Alaska.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Wilson  expressed   appreciation  for   Ms.                                                                    
Casto's  work for  the  state. She  asked  what happened  if                                                                    
providers did not  come due to the  state's small population                                                                    
(compared to other states).                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Casto  answered  that part  of  behavioral  health  and                                                                    
Medicaid reform  was workforce development. She  agreed that                                                                    
the  state   did  not  have  enough.   Through  reform,  the                                                                    
department   was   looking   at    how   to   utilize   more                                                                    
paraprofessionals (i.e.  behavioral health aides  and other)                                                                    
to provide some of the  services under the direction of some                                                                    
of  the  specialists  the  state did  not  have  enough  of.                                                                    
Additionally,  there  were  a  number  of  programs  at  the                                                                    
University   aiming   to   expand  the   state's   workforce                                                                    
particularly  in rural  areas  where the  state was  missing                                                                    
specialists. She  elaborated that  some specialists  came to                                                                    
Alaska for a few years and  then moved back to the Lower 48.                                                                    
She  elaborated the  University  of Alaska  Fairbanks had  a                                                                    
rural  human  services  program   through  the  social  work                                                                    
department  where  a student  could  get  a certificate  for                                                                    
working in  rural Alaska. She detailed  the certificate then                                                                    
applied to  bachelor's and  master's degrees.  She continued                                                                    
there  were  more and  more  individuals  from rural  Alaska                                                                    
going  that route.  She hoped  the state  could continue  to                                                                    
build its workforce in that  way because it was necessary to                                                                    
stop  relying  on experts  coming  from  out of  state.  She                                                                    
emphasized  the  importance  of  building  the  state's  own                                                                    
capacity  in  order  to retain  people  who  understand  the                                                                    
culture,   needs,  and   geography.   She  reiterated   that                                                                    
workforce   development   was   a  critical   component   of                                                                    
behavioral  health reform  and how  the state  would improve                                                                    
its reentry and recidivism reduction.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
2:35:07 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson  wanted to  ensure that the  state did                                                                    
not end up sacrificing one population for another.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Guttenberg   referred   to   Section   156,                                                                    
subsection (8),  page 96 of  the bill related to  the duties                                                                    
of the  [DOC] commissioner.  He referred to  the requirement                                                                    
to provide a  case plan for a prisoner within  90 days after                                                                    
sentencing.  He referred  to  different 90-day  requirements                                                                    
under  Section  156,  subsection   (9)  and  asked  for  the                                                                    
difference between the two subsections.  He surmised that if                                                                    
a sentence was  90 days the department had  to begin working                                                                    
on  the  plan  on  day   one.  He  pointed  to  language  in                                                                    
subsection  (8)  requiring  the department  to  establish  a                                                                    
procedure providing  for each prisoner required  to serve an                                                                    
active term  of imprisonment  of 30 days  or more  within 90                                                                    
days of  sentencing. He  assumed that  a sentence  began and                                                                    
the department had 90 days  to establish a plan. He observed                                                                    
that  subsection   (9)  included  a  requirement   that  DOC                                                                    
establish  a program  to begin  reentry  planning with  each                                                                    
prisoner serving an  active term of imprisonment  of 90 days                                                                    
or more  within 90  days. He asked  about the  difference in                                                                    
the sentencing guidelines.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner   Williams  deferred   the   question  to   Mr.                                                                    
Shilling.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Shilling  answered that the  subsections applied  to two                                                                    
separate  plans. The  first [subsection  (8)]  applied to  a                                                                    
written  case  plan  containing  different  things,  whereas                                                                    
subsection (9)  related to  the reentry  program individuals                                                                    
would go through 90 days prior to release.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative Guttenberg  asked Mr. Shilling to  repeat the                                                                    
information.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Williams  restated the remarks.  One subsection                                                                    
related  to a  plan requiring  DOC  to provide  a case  plan                                                                    
within 90 days for prisoners in  jail for more than 30 days.                                                                    
The second  subsection required the department  to develop a                                                                    
reentry plan for individuals 90  days prior to their release                                                                    
from prison.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Thompson asked  if  the  release plan  requirement                                                                    
applied to  individuals with jail  time exceeding  one year.                                                                    
Mr.  Shilling  answered that  the  reentry  program was  for                                                                    
individuals serving a prison sentence of 90 days or more.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Thompson pointed to language  Section 158, page 98,                                                                    
line 4:                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     The commissioner shall establish a program to prepare                                                                      
     a prisoner who is serving a sentence of imprisonment                                                                       
     exceeding one year for the prisoner's discharge                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Shilling  answered  that  he would  follow  up  with  a                                                                    
response.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:39:30 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Guttenberg  referred  to  Section  156,  new                                                                    
subsection  (10) related  to establishing  minimum standards                                                                    
for EM. He asked if there were currently no EM standards.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Shilling  replied that  the language  was an  attempt to                                                                    
provide some modicum of oversight  over private EM companies                                                                    
in  the  same  way  DOC  provided  oversight  for  interlock                                                                    
companies.  He  did not  believe  there  were currently  any                                                                    
minimum standards set by DOC for private EM companies.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Representative Guttenberg asked  for verification there were                                                                    
no standards for a person  with an ankle bracelet or another                                                                    
monitoring application. He asked  how the state assumes that                                                                    
an ankle bracelet or smart  phone app complied with anything                                                                    
if there was no minimum standard.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Thompson  noted that  Representative Dan  Ortiz was                                                                    
present in the room.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner   Williams  replied   in  the   affirmative  to                                                                    
Representative   Guttenberg's    question.   The   provision                                                                    
directed   the  department   to   establish  standards,   to                                                                    
determine what worked best, and  to implement some oversight                                                                    
of private EM, which did not currently exist.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:41:35 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Kawasaki  remarked that Sections 156  and 158                                                                    
provided context  for the reentry  program. He  wondered how                                                                    
reentry was  currently conducted. He surmised  there must be                                                                    
some type of current reentry program operated by DOC.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Williams deferred  the question  to department                                                                    
staff.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
BRANN   WADE,   CHIEF   PROBATION   OFFICER,   DIVISION   OF                                                                    
INSTITUTIONS,     DEPARTMENT     OF     CORRECTIONS     (via                                                                    
teleconference),   restated   his   understanding   of   the                                                                    
question.   He   explained   that  currently   an   offender                                                                    
management  plan  (OMP)  was   developed  by  DOC  for  each                                                                    
incoming   prisoner   within   approximately  30   days   of                                                                    
sentencing.  He  detailed  the plan  followed  the  prisoner                                                                    
through  their  entire  incarceration;   it  was  a  working                                                                    
document that was never complete.  The closer a prisoner got                                                                    
to their release date the  department began working with the                                                                    
person  on   housing  and  existing  needs   and  risks.  He                                                                    
reiterated  the  plan  followed  a  prisoner  through  their                                                                    
entire period of incarceration.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Representative Kawasaki surmised  the department already did                                                                    
some  of  the  things   required  in  the  provisions  under                                                                    
discussion [Sections  156 and 158].  He referred  to current                                                                    
statute and stated  that the written plan due  90 days prior                                                                    
to  release  included  housing,  employment  or  alternative                                                                    
means  for support,  options for  treatment and  counseling,                                                                    
education  and  job  services,   and  obtaining  a  driver's                                                                    
license and other. He asked for detail.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Wade  answered   that  DOC  currently  did   not  do  a                                                                    
significant amount regarding  identification. However, if an                                                                    
offender was in  a halfway house on  furlough the department                                                                    
worked  with  them  to obtain  identification  because  they                                                                    
could not  get a job  without it. He believed  DOC currently                                                                    
did a  much better  job working  with individuals  once they                                                                    
were out  in the community  because it was easier  to assist                                                                    
them in obtaining identification.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Kawasaki  referred  to  the  requirement  to                                                                    
develop the  OMP 90 days  prior to a prisoner's  release and                                                                    
asked if it was a  realistic goal at present. Alternatively,                                                                    
he  wondered  if   it  would  take  more   time,  staff,  or                                                                    
resources.  He asked  about how  it worked  in rural  versus                                                                    
urban  Alaska  where  there  may   not  be  things  such  as                                                                    
alternative  means of  support or  treatment and  counseling                                                                    
services.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Wade spoke  to  the second  component  of the  question                                                                    
related  to how  the  OMP worked  in  rural communities.  He                                                                    
stated  there was  less housing  and  job opportunities  [in                                                                    
rural Alaska]. He  detailed that due to  limited housing the                                                                    
department sometimes  put individuals up in  halfway houses.                                                                    
He did not  have an answer related to  the employment aspect                                                                    
-  he noted  it  was  even difficult  in  Anchorage to  find                                                                    
employment  for individuals.  He stated  the requirement  to                                                                    
develop the  OMP 90 days  prior to a prisoner's  release was                                                                    
very   reasonable.   Currently,   the   department   did   a                                                                    
significant  portion of  the release  planning  at 30  days;                                                                    
therefore,  it was  reasonable to  move  it to  90 days  for                                                                    
prisoners serving enough time.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
2:46:26 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Kawasaki  remarked  that the  bill  proposed                                                                    
some significant changes to the  way the state did business.                                                                    
He recognized  the need for  rehabilitation and  reentry. He                                                                    
believed treatment and counseling  services were more easily                                                                    
done  in jail  with a  confined setting  compared to  out of                                                                    
jail  where  a  person's  day  was  not  as  regimented.  He                                                                    
commented  there appeared  to be  more ability  to change  a                                                                    
person's attitudes  within a confined setting  versus a non-                                                                    
confined setting. He asked for comment from the department.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Williams  agreed  there   was  more  time  and                                                                    
opportunity when a person was  incarcerated. He detailed the                                                                    
department  had been  discussing how  to enhance  everything                                                                    
possible while  a person  was in  prison versus  requiring a                                                                    
person  to go  to treatment  after release  while they  were                                                                    
simultaneously  trying  to  find employment  and  other.  He                                                                    
specified it was a heavy  load and failure rates existed. He                                                                    
explained  the  bill  contemplated numerous  area  including                                                                    
doing as  much as possible during  a person's incarceration.                                                                    
He continued it  was not possible to  know whether something                                                                    
stuck  until  after  a  person  was  released  from  prison;                                                                    
therefore,  failure rates  would  occur on  a regular  basis                                                                    
until  treatment stuck.  The model  was to  keep individuals                                                                    
actively engaged  in treatment.  The department  was working                                                                    
to answer whether its  expectations for individuals released                                                                    
from  prison reasonable.  He  reiterated  the importance  of                                                                    
doing as much as possible while  a person was in prison. The                                                                    
bill forced  DOC to  contemplate the  same questions  and he                                                                    
believed the  department would  be forced  to take  some new                                                                    
directions, which he believed was a good thing.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:49:11 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Saddler referred  to page  Section 159,  page 98                                                                    
regarding correctional  restitution centers (CRC).  He noted                                                                    
that  earlier on  during consideration  of the  bill he  had                                                                    
thought  CRC  stood  for community  residential  center.  He                                                                    
asked  if a  correctional restitution  center was  a halfway                                                                    
house.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Williams  responded  in  the  affirmative.  He                                                                    
noted  he   had  also  thought   CRC  stood   for  community                                                                    
residential   center;    however,   it    was   correctional                                                                    
restitution center.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Saddler  asked how  many  CRCs  were located  in                                                                    
Alaska and whether the capacity was sufficient.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Williams  stated  that  there  were  currently                                                                    
vacancies in  the CRCs.  He continued  there was  a struggle                                                                    
around  why  the CRCs  were  not  filled.  He spoke  to  two                                                                    
reasons  for  the  struggle.  The  first  reason  indirectly                                                                    
related to  the goal  of Section 159,  which was  to monitor                                                                    
quality assurance and what was  taking place in the CRCs. He                                                                    
explained that  CRCs were a  valuable resource and  the cost                                                                    
was about half  of the cost for a hard  bed. However, it was                                                                    
a  real  risk  factor   associated  with  understanding  the                                                                    
dangers  when  choosing to  place  a  person  in a  CRC.  He                                                                    
detailed it was necessary to  ensure a valid risk assessment                                                                    
for  pre-trial and  post-trial individuals  placed in  CRCs.                                                                    
Second,  the  provisions  in Section  159  would  force  the                                                                    
department  to  know what  was  happening  in the  CRCs.  He                                                                    
communicated  that  a  drug problem  existed  in  the  CRCs;                                                                    
therefore, he  did not  believe it was  a good  location for                                                                    
people  with substance  abuse issues.  He had  discussed the                                                                    
issue with  the contractor; if  the state was going  to have                                                                    
CRCs he wanted the drugs  out. He stressed the locations had                                                                    
to  be places  where he  and others  would feel  comfortable                                                                    
putting  a family  member; however,  there  was currently  a                                                                    
ways to go.  Section 159 of the bill codified  the effort he                                                                    
planned to initiate  to clean up the CRCs.  He remarked that                                                                    
as  progress was  made  it  would be  much  easier to  place                                                                    
people in  the facilities.  Part of the  situation pertained                                                                    
to the  systemic issue of how  to get people in;  there were                                                                    
systemic reasons  every CRC  bed was  not filled,  which was                                                                    
bothersome because  it was a  waste of money.  He emphasized                                                                    
the  state  should be  utilizing  every  CRC bed  available,                                                                    
which would  enable the department  to make  cuts elsewhere.                                                                    
He  welcomed   the  legislation  because  it   codified  the                                                                    
department's efforts.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
2:53:18 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Saddler   reiterated  his  question   about  the                                                                    
current CRC capacity.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Williams deferred the question to Mr. Wade.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Wade responded  that statewide  halfway house  capacity                                                                    
was 819.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Saddler  spoke to the requirement  in Section 159                                                                    
directing   DOC   to    provide   certain   offenders   with                                                                    
comprehensive  treatment  for   substance  abuse,  cognitive                                                                    
behavior   disorders,  and   other  criminal   risk  factors                                                                    
including aftercare  support. He stated the  requirement was                                                                    
a tremendous lift and mission.  He wondered if DOC was being                                                                    
held  responsible for  creating a  new tranche  of substance                                                                    
abuse treatment  centers and  whether the  bill sufficiently                                                                    
funded and staffed the requirement.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Williams responded  the  work was  anticipated                                                                    
with the  current contracts; there were  several contractors                                                                    
- the  largest being the  GEO Group. The bill  included that                                                                    
requirements  would   be  enhanced.   He  had   spoken  with                                                                    
contractors and everything would  be economic dependent. The                                                                    
reinvestment  piece of  the  legislation  was diminished  in                                                                    
some  ways,  which caused  him  concern.  He continued  that                                                                    
whatever happened the  department would do its  best to work                                                                    
with what it had; it was  currently doing some of the things                                                                    
required in the bill, but  it increased the expectation. The                                                                    
contractor was  doing some  of the  things. He  had recently                                                                    
been  in Bethel  and he  knew programming  was being  slowly                                                                    
added; it was not a  complete rebuild, but an enhancement of                                                                    
the department's work.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:55:26 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Saddler remarked  that it was a  huge mission. He                                                                    
referenced  earlier testimony  that a  parent had  put their                                                                    
daughter in  a correctional  facility because she  could not                                                                    
find  access  to treatment  any  other  place; however,  the                                                                    
woman  had died  in custody.  He wished  the department  the                                                                    
best possible  luck with the  work. He pointed to  page 111,                                                                    
which  listed  three  conditions  when  a  person  could  be                                                                    
eligible to  reacquire food stamps  or adult  assistance. He                                                                    
referenced the requirement for a  person to participate in a                                                                    
drug   or   alcohol   treatment   program.   He   asked   if                                                                    
participation and treatment services  at a CRC qualified. He                                                                    
asked about the meaning of participation.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Shilling replied  that  any one  of  the factors  would                                                                    
suffice   to   comply.   He  stated   using   the   language                                                                    
"participation" instead  of "successfully  completed" opened                                                                    
the  door a  bit, which  was something  the committee  could                                                                    
choose to address.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Saddler  asked  if  participation  in  substance                                                                    
abuse treatment at a CRC  qualified to meet the condition on                                                                    
page 111, line 11.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Shilling read the section  to mean that participation in                                                                    
programming in a halfway house  would suffice to comply with                                                                    
the condition.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Saddler added  "and to  the satisfaction  of the                                                                    
department."                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Gara asked if the  capacity would be built in                                                                    
a fairly timely manner.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Casto replied  that it was the  department's intent. She                                                                    
stated that it  was a heavy lift and  Medicaid expansion was                                                                    
a huge endeavor.  She spoke to building  capacity in primary                                                                    
care  settings,  which would  enable  the  state to  address                                                                    
people's  needs sooner.  They would  continue  to build  the                                                                    
services to a more serious end  - it was about determining a                                                                    
balance and what capacity Alaska could maintain.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:59:40 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Gara  recalled that  in the distant  past the                                                                    
Alcoholics Anonymous  (AA) program had operated  in prisons,                                                                    
but  there had  not been  additional treatment  services. He                                                                    
questioned  whether  treatment  programs  had  increased  in                                                                    
prisons.   He  asked   about   patients  needing   six-month                                                                    
inpatient  alcoholism  treatment.  He   did  not  believe  a                                                                    
program was  currently available  in Alaska and  wondered if                                                                    
the individuals  would be treated out-of-state.  He reasoned                                                                    
that a  three-month program  would not  suffice if  a person                                                                    
needed a six-month program.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Casto answered  that programs  provided in  the state's                                                                    
prisons  exceeded the  AA program.  She elaborated  that the                                                                    
prisons  had  three-month  residential  treatment  programs.                                                                    
Additionally, there was an  outpatient treatment program and                                                                    
support   services.   She   referred  to   a   question   by                                                                    
Representative Kawasaki about the  need in prison versus out                                                                    
of  prison. She  detailed that  even prisoners  who received                                                                    
intensive treatment  in prison  needed ongoing  aftercare in                                                                    
order to be  successful. She reasoned a  person's ability to                                                                    
manage a  job, housing,  children, and life  without falling                                                                    
back on drugs or alcohol  was difficult. She elaborated that                                                                    
aftercare was  another critical piece to  build on treatment                                                                    
received  inside  in  order   for  individuals  to  maintain                                                                    
sobriety. She  noted that  AA was  one component,  but there                                                                    
were  many other  support systems.  As the  department built                                                                    
the  behavioral health  system it  was identifying  existing                                                                    
gaps (e.g.  long-term treatment)  and determining  the need,                                                                    
with the  goal of  matching the two.  She added  that things                                                                    
like sobering and detox centers were critical.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
3:02:43 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Gara  referred  to  Commissioner  Williams's                                                                    
testimony  that   one  of  the  reentry   or  rehabilitation                                                                    
sections had been  diminished. He asked if  something in the                                                                    
bill had been diminished that was cause for concern.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Williams answered that  there had been hopes in                                                                    
terms  of what  the  reinvestment piece  would be  regarding                                                                    
what the state  would put upfront in  reference to substance                                                                    
abuse treatment  inside the prison.  He remarked  that other                                                                    
states had the same struggle. He  added that Alaska was in a                                                                    
very strained  fiscal climate at present.  He explained that                                                                    
if some  of the in-house  treatment services were  ramped up                                                                    
it  would  provide  more treatment  inside  the  facilities.                                                                    
However, he would play with the  cards he had been dealt and                                                                    
would  make the  best use  of the  reinvestment dollars  for                                                                    
treatment services.  He specified  the more the  state could                                                                    
invest on the frontend  to provide treatment services inside                                                                    
facilities  would give  him additional  options  as the  DOC                                                                    
commissioner. He noted  that earlier on there  had been some                                                                    
discussion of greater reinvestment  on some of the treatment                                                                    
services.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Representative Gara understood  the limitations; however, he                                                                    
wondered  what the  committee should  look at  before moving                                                                    
the bill  if the commissioner felt  the reinvestment portion                                                                    
would constrain success.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner   Williams  responded   that  there   would  be                                                                    
differing opinions about the issue.  He would feel better if                                                                    
there   were   enhanced   reinvestment   opportunities   for                                                                    
treatment,  but the  subject represented  a policy  call for                                                                    
the  legislature. He  stressed  the importance  of the  bill                                                                    
even  if   it  did   not  look  precisely   how  departments                                                                    
implementing  the plan  would like.  He stated  he would  of                                                                    
course like to  see some enhancements in  terms of increased                                                                    
treatment. For  example, there were many  more sex offenders                                                                    
than the state  had treatment for. He considered  all of the                                                                    
issues in  terms of  how to  decrease prison  populations in                                                                    
order  to  reinvest  in treatment  services  for  high  risk                                                                    
individuals. He  appreciated a provision the  Senate Finance                                                                    
Committee had  included related to using  some marijuana tax                                                                    
to decrease recidivism.  He hoped that in a year  if he came                                                                    
back  to  the  committee   with  a  request  for  additional                                                                    
treatment the committee  would consider increasing treatment                                                                    
capacity  to deal  with people  inside the  state's prisons;                                                                    
however, he did  not want the bill to currently  get tied up                                                                    
on  the particular  nuance because  he believed  the overall                                                                    
picture was too important.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Thompson surmised that  the commissioner was saying                                                                    
that  the  bill  was  a good  start.  Commissioner  Williams                                                                    
replied in the affirmative.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:06:40 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Thompson relayed  the committee  would move  on to                                                                    
address limited licenses.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
NANCY MEADE, GENERAL COUNSEL, ALASKA  COURT SYSTEM, spoke to                                                                    
limited  licenses   under  Sections   99  and  106   of  the                                                                    
legislation, which  provided a mechanism for  more people to                                                                    
obtain  a type  of  driver's license  after  a DUI  (driving                                                                    
under the  influence). She clarified  that the  Alaska Court                                                                    
System was neutral on the specific  issue and on the bill in                                                                    
its  entirety. She  explained the  limited driver's  license                                                                    
was  not truly  a court  related issue,  but she  had worked                                                                    
with  the  sponsor's office  and  staff  over the  years  on                                                                    
trying  to  get  something  that  would  logistically  work.                                                                    
Additionally  she  had  pointed  out  some  flaws  in  prior                                                                    
drafts; therefore, she had become  involved in the issue and                                                                    
was  working to  address the  sponsor's concern  that people                                                                    
without a  license may still  drive; the court system  saw a                                                                    
high  number of  individuals for  driving with  suspended or                                                                    
revoked licenses. She  understood that legislators sometimes                                                                    
heard from constituents  about how difficult it  was to live                                                                    
in Alaska without a driver's license.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Mead  explained  that   currently  individuals  with  a                                                                    
misdemeanor   DUI   (i.e.   first  or   second   DUIs   were                                                                    
misdemeanors,  as was  a third  or  more if  the others  had                                                                    
occurred more  than ten years  earlier) lose  their driver's                                                                    
license for a  very specific period of  time. Unlike others,                                                                    
DUI  misdemeanors  had  very specific  consequences  set  in                                                                    
statute  by the  legislature.  She  detailed first-time  and                                                                    
second-time  DUI offenders  lost their  license for  90 days                                                                    
and  1  year  respectively.  The bill  did  not  impact  the                                                                    
current law that enabled misdemeanants  with a DUI to obtain                                                                    
a limited  driver's license. Based  on information  from the                                                                    
Division of  Motor Vehicles (DMV) around  200 people applied                                                                    
for and received the limited license annually.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Mead communicated  that the  bill addressed  felony DUI                                                                    
offenders  who currently  had no  means  to obtaining  their                                                                    
driver's  license. By  statute,  felony  DUI defendants  had                                                                    
their driver's licenses permanently  revoked, but a separate                                                                    
subsection  of the  law noted  a  person may  apply to  have                                                                    
their license  restored after ten  years. She  detailed that                                                                    
ten  years  was  a  lengthy   time  period  and  a  person's                                                                    
eligibility  required a  clean record  during that  ten-year                                                                    
period. She  noted the requirement  was quite  difficult for                                                                    
people  to achieve  and had  only been  in law  since either                                                                    
2012  or  2014.  She  continued that  not  many  people  had                                                                    
applied  and   few  applicants  met  the   requirement.  She                                                                    
elaborated  that many  of the  individuals  had been  caught                                                                    
driving  with  a  suspended   license  during  the  ten-year                                                                    
period.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Mead pointed to Section  99, page 62 of the legislation,                                                                    
which would  enable individuals to obtain  a limited license                                                                    
privilege.  She  noted  the   page  listed  five  conditions                                                                    
individuals had to meet: 1) an  individual had to be a felon                                                                    
(there was  a separate section dealing  with misdemeanants);                                                                    
2)  the  individual had  to  be  in  or have  completed  the                                                                    
court's  therapeutic  court  program   (the  program  was  a                                                                    
minimum  of  18  months  of intensive  meetings  with  court                                                                    
staff,  the  Division  of  Behavioral  Health,  a  probation                                                                    
officer,  the  district  attorney  and the  PD  to  help  an                                                                    
individual overcome the addiction  or other issue, which led                                                                    
to  a DUI);  the individual  was required  to have  proof of                                                                    
insurance;  the  individual was required to  use an ignition                                                                    
interlock device;  and the individual  could not have  had a                                                                    
limited  license revoked  in the  past.  She furthered  that                                                                    
insurance  and  the  use  of   an  ignition  interlock  were                                                                    
standard and were also  required for misdemeanants obtaining                                                                    
a limited license. She explained  people could apply for the                                                                    
limited  license  through  DMV by  showing  the  appropriate                                                                    
certification  they  had  completed  the  therapeutic  court                                                                    
program.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Mead turned  to language  in Section  106 beginning  on                                                                    
page  66   specifying  the  department  shall   restore  the                                                                    
person's license  fully if they  had been driving  under the                                                                    
limited license for three years  without a problem, they had                                                                    
completed  the  therapeutic  court  program,  they  had  not                                                                    
received  another  DUI,  and they  were  otherwise  eligible                                                                    
(i.e. they had  paid a reinstatement fee and did  not have a                                                                    
certain number of points or revocations stacked).                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
3:13:06 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Thompson asked the  Department of Administration to                                                                    
address how the bill would impact DMV.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
AUDREY  O'BRIEN,   MANAGER,  DIVISION  OF   MOTOR  VEHICLES,                                                                    
DEPARTMENT OF  ADMINISTRATION (via  teleconference), relayed                                                                    
that the bill would enable  the division to assist felons to                                                                    
obtain the  limited license, which  had previously  not been                                                                    
available.  She  detailed  the  bill  seemed  to  provide  a                                                                    
mechanism for  people to work  their way to  the termination                                                                    
or revocation  to obtain their full  driving privileges back                                                                    
[in the future].                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
3:14:42 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Kawasaki  asked about the five  conditions an                                                                    
individual would  be required  to meet  to obtain  a limited                                                                    
license. He  surmised the conditions  included participation                                                                    
in  a  therapeutic  court   program,  a  felony  conviction,                                                                    
insurance,  an  ignition  interlock  device,  and  that  the                                                                    
individual  had  not  previously   been  granted  a  limited                                                                    
license. He mentioned a friend  with a felony who he thought                                                                    
had  gone   through  a  court  that   was  not  specifically                                                                    
therapeutic.  He   wondered  if  the  individual   would  be                                                                    
precluded from  obtaining the  limited license.  He believed                                                                    
therapeutic   courts  were   new  in   some  locations   and                                                                    
nonexistent in other places.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Mead  replied that the  person in the  scenario provided                                                                    
would be  precluded [from obtaining a  limited license]; the                                                                    
bill  required an  individual to  go  through a  therapeutic                                                                    
court  program.  She believed  the  sponsor  would view  the                                                                    
provisions in  the bill as  a beginning. The bill  would not                                                                    
address every Alaskan  with a felony DUI who  may feel their                                                                    
addiction  had been  overcome and  who  some people  believe                                                                    
ought  to  be  driving  again.  The bill  was  a  start  and                                                                    
addressed  a  group  of individuals  where  there  was  some                                                                    
assurance  that  the   individuals  had  overcome  addiction                                                                    
because they had gone through a structured program.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Kawasaki   asked  for   verification   that                                                                    
therapeutic   courts    were   not   available    in   every                                                                    
jurisdiction.  Ms. Mead replied in the affirmative.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Representative Kawasaki surmised  that if therapeutic courts                                                                    
were  only  available in  the  state's  major urban  centers                                                                    
(i.e. Fairbanks,  Anchorage, Juneau, and  potentially Kenai)                                                                    
it  would  prevent a  person  with  a  felony DUI  in  other                                                                    
locations from  obtaining the  limited license.  He believed                                                                    
it unfairly hurt  a certain group of Alaskans.  He asked for                                                                    
comment.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Mead  replied that the issue  was a policy call  for the                                                                    
legislature. She  believed the bill sponsor's  view would be                                                                    
that  the provisions  in the  bill represented  a beginning.                                                                    
She  detailed  that  from a  public  safety  standpoint  the                                                                    
sponsor wanted  some assurance  that the  person would  be a                                                                    
good candidate get their driver's  license back, in light of                                                                    
the  legislative intent  in current  DUI  statute stating  a                                                                    
license was permanently revoked for DUI felons.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
3:17:34 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Kawasaki asked how  limited licenses would be                                                                    
revoked  (e.g. speeding  ticket, DUI,  or any  small thing).                                                                    
Ms. Mead  referred to page  62 of the bill,  which specified                                                                    
the limited  license would be  revoked if an  individual was                                                                    
convicted of  a DUI  or refusal or  for a  similar municipal                                                                    
code  or  ordinance.  The  individual  would  not  lose  the                                                                    
limited license for a minor offence.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Kawasaki asked  for verification  that under                                                                    
the bill  an individual  would get  their license  back just                                                                    
like any other  person if a limited license  was revoked for                                                                    
points.  Ms. Mead  answered that  the limited  license would                                                                    
only be  revoked for  another DUI or  refusal. She  added it                                                                    
would  be a  problem for  a  person if  they had  nonrelated                                                                    
revocations the  DMV considered to  be stacked,  which could                                                                    
preclude the individual from obtaining their license.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Wilson   asked    which   communities   had                                                                    
therapeutic   courts.  Ms.   Mead  answered   most  of   the                                                                    
communities on the road  system including Anchorage, Palmer,                                                                    
Fairbanks, Bethel, Juneau, and possibly Ketchikan.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Thompson  asked if Kenai  had a  therapeutic court.                                                                    
Ms. Mead  did not  believe there  was one  in Kenai  but she                                                                    
would follow up.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson asked  if  anything  would prevent  a                                                                    
person  living in  a community  without a  therapeutic court                                                                    
from traveling  to access the program  in another community.                                                                    
Alternatively,  she  wondered  if   there  was  a  provision                                                                    
requiring a person  to be a resident in  the community where                                                                    
a program existed.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Mead responded  that the court system  would be amenable                                                                    
to allowing a  person to participate in  a therapeutic court                                                                    
program in  a location away  from their home  community. For                                                                    
example,  if  a  case  began  in  Kenai,  the  person  could                                                                    
participate in  a program in  Anchorage. She  specified that                                                                    
participation in therapeutic courts  was with the consent of                                                                    
all involved  parties (i.e.  the district  attorney, defense                                                                    
attorney, and  the court).  She could not  think of  a court                                                                    
hurdle  from having  a person  participate outside  of their                                                                    
home town.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson  asked how full the  therapeutic court                                                                    
programs were. She wondered how hard  it was to get into the                                                                    
program.  Ms.   Mead  answered  that  it   depended  on  the                                                                    
location, but  generally the program could  accommodate more                                                                    
people.  She  noted that  the  Fairbanks  program tended  to                                                                    
operate at  full capacity, but  there was a good  balance in                                                                    
terms of the demand and supply.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Gara  asked  for  details  of  the  driver's                                                                    
license revocations  for a first, second,  third, and fourth                                                                    
DUI offense.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Mead  answered that a  driver's license was  revoked for                                                                    
90 days for  the first DUI offense, one year  for the second                                                                    
offense, three years  for the third offense,  and five years                                                                    
above a third offense. She  detailed that if a third offense                                                                    
occurred within  ten years  of a prior  offense it  became a                                                                    
felony, at which point the  revocation became permanent. She                                                                    
explained  that  some  third-time offenses  would  remain  a                                                                    
misdemeanor   if   there   was  a   ten-year   gap   between                                                                    
occurrences. She noted that  most third-time offenses became                                                                    
felonies  because   ten  years   had  not   elapsed  between                                                                    
occurrences.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Gara   asked  if   a  license   was  revoked                                                                    
permanently once a person reached  the DUI felony level. Ms.                                                                    
Mead answered in the affirmative.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative Gara asked for  verification that the loss of                                                                    
a license  time period could be  shortened for misdemeanants                                                                    
by the granting of a limited license.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Mead answered  that misdemeanor  limited licenses  were                                                                    
not addressed  in the legislation and  were already provided                                                                    
for. Representative Gara replied that was what he meant.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
3:22:29 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Gara asked  if DMV  was allowed  to issue  a                                                                    
driver's license  revocation that  was longer than  a length                                                                    
of  time designated  by the  court. Alternatively,  he asked                                                                    
whether  DMV  was  responsible  for  following  the  court's                                                                    
determination.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Mead  answered that  the administrative  revocations set                                                                    
by DMV, which  usually occurred more quickly  than the court                                                                    
system, were the same time  periods she previously mentioned                                                                    
[for  DUI  offenses];  the statutes  referred  to  the  same                                                                    
subsection of statute for periods of revocation.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Gara  spoke  to  the  group  of  individuals                                                                    
without access to a therapeutic  court. He noted there was a                                                                    
limited number of judges and  the programs were offered in a                                                                    
limited number of  locations. He wondered if  there had been                                                                    
discussion   about   providing   another  way   (outside   a                                                                    
therapeutic  court) for  an individual  to demonstrate  they                                                                    
had addressed their alcohol problem.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Mead answered  that an  expansive list  of options  had                                                                    
been discussed  by legislators and  staff for at  least four                                                                    
years. There  was difficulty with  someone proving  they had                                                                    
overcome  their   addiction.  She  reiterated   her  earlier                                                                    
testimony  that the  sponsor viewed  the  provisions in  the                                                                    
bill as a beginning.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative Gara asked Ms. Mead  to elaborate on a couple                                                                    
of  the other  options that  had been  discussed related  to                                                                    
individuals who did not qualify for a therapeutic court.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Mead  answered  that legislators  had  asked  questions                                                                    
about whether  a person could  present certification  to the                                                                    
DMV  from two  licensed health  professionals verifying  the                                                                    
individual no longer had a  substance addiction. She did not                                                                    
have  another  example  related  to  ideas  individuals  had                                                                    
entertained.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Saddler  had heard from  friends that  the number                                                                    
of hoops a person had to  jump through in order to get their                                                                    
license back  was "Kafkaesque."  He hoped  the bill  was not                                                                    
establishing more hoops,  but that the provisions  set out a                                                                    
practical,  workable way  for a  person  to reacquire  their                                                                    
driving  privileges.  He  surmised  that  a  person  with  a                                                                    
revoked license  could receive a  limited license  for three                                                                    
years and after successful probation  they could apply for a                                                                    
permanent license  through the  DMV. He understood  it would                                                                    
not be allowable for a person  to get another DUI while on a                                                                    
limited license,  but he wondered  about an offense  such as                                                                    
rolling through a stop sign.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Mead answered  that a person would have to  get a DUI or                                                                    
refusal to have the limited license revoked.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
3:26:20 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Munoz referred  to a  constituent who  had a                                                                    
DUI and  had eventually  had the  court-imposed restrictions                                                                    
removed  by   the  court   after  meeting   the  appropriate                                                                    
timeframe; however,  he had been  unable to get  his license                                                                    
restored by  DMV. She  thought Ms.  Mead had  testified that                                                                    
the DMV could not go beyond restrictions set by the court.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Mead  answered that  there  were  numerous issues  with                                                                    
people trying  to get their  licenses back. For  example, it                                                                    
was  very  expensive  and potentially  not  possible  for  a                                                                    
person  to get  insurance  (the issue  was  up to  insurance                                                                    
companies  like  State  Farm   and  Progressive).  The  bill                                                                    
established  a way  for individuals  to  get their  licenses                                                                    
back, but there were very  practical problems with doing so.                                                                    
Individuals also needed an  ignition interlock device, which                                                                    
was  expensive  and  difficult for  people  to  handle.  She                                                                    
detailed the requirement meant people  had to take their car                                                                    
in   to  be   calibrated  and   other.  Additionally,   many                                                                    
individuals in the category were  not good drivers and would                                                                    
have  their  license suspended  or  revoked  within the  DMV                                                                    
database  into the  future for  other reasons.  For example,                                                                    
people could have  their license revoked for  failure to pay                                                                    
child support or for committing  perjury. She furthered that                                                                    
DMV used  the same  checklist as the  one put  into statute,                                                                    
but  many people  did not  realize  the stacked  revocations                                                                    
were an  issue. She noted there  was not an apparent  way to                                                                    
overcome the issue.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Munoz provided  more  information about  her                                                                    
constituent. She  explained the individual  had a DUI  and a                                                                    
refusal  to  take  a  breathalyzer  on  a  second  DUI.  She                                                                    
furthered the second  charge had been dropped  by the court,                                                                    
but  DMV was  not  recognizing the  second  charge as  being                                                                    
dropped;  therefore,  the  individual was  not  eligible  to                                                                    
receive his commercial driver's license (CDL).                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Mead deferred the question to DMV.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
3:29:42 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  O'Brien replied  that every  [driving] record  was very                                                                    
different and she spoke in  generalities. She explained that                                                                    
there   were   administrative    revocations,   which   were                                                                    
independent  and separate  from court  convictions. She  was                                                                    
guessing  the  specific  individual  had  an  administrative                                                                    
refusal, which  was later convicted  of a DUI.  However, the                                                                    
individual would  not have  a lifetime  CDL disqualification                                                                    
unless  there were  two separate  DUI  incidents. She  noted                                                                    
alcohol related  incidents was  a requirement  under federal                                                                    
law.  She  believed  there  must   have  been  two  separate                                                                    
[alcohol  related] incidents  that would  have impacted  the                                                                    
CDL.                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Munoz  replied   that  the  description  was                                                                    
correct,  but the  second  charge had  been  dropped by  the                                                                    
court.  She wondered  why  DMV did  not  follow the  court's                                                                    
direction.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Ms. O'Brien  answered that under  AS 28.15.161, there  was a                                                                    
requirement  for  the  DMV to  implement  an  administrative                                                                    
revocation  if  an  individual   provided  a  breath  sample                                                                    
(implied consent)  over .08 or  they refused to  provide the                                                                    
sample   during   a   law   enforcement   stop.   After   an                                                                    
administrative revocation  was issued the individual  had an                                                                    
opportunity  within  the  first  seven  days  to  request  a                                                                    
hearing  to contest  the revocation.  She continued  that if                                                                    
the individual did not request  the hearing or they lost the                                                                    
administrative appeal,  the revocation  was placed  on their                                                                    
record  immediately.  She explained  that  if  a person  was                                                                    
later convicted  of a  related action (e.g.  a DUI)  for the                                                                    
same  incident,   the  revocation  backed  up   to  the  DMV                                                                    
revocation, which  usually went on a  person's record sooner                                                                    
than  a court  conviction. She  added that  the records  ran                                                                    
independently because  the Alaska  administrative revocation                                                                    
was  taken   under  a  different  statute   than  the  court                                                                    
conviction.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:32:19 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Mead pointed  out that Section 97 of  the bill addressed                                                                    
something that may  be of concern to  members. She explained                                                                    
the bill  acknowledged that DMV  revoked a  license whenever                                                                    
someone blew  a .08  or refused a  breathalyzer and  the new                                                                    
provision stated that  if a court acquitted or  the case was                                                                    
dismissed,  the administrative  revocation  would stop.  The                                                                    
language was a first attempt  to try to coordinate the items                                                                    
better.  Additionally, SB  91 and  2014 legislation  (SB 64)                                                                    
tasked   the  Alaska   Criminal   Justice  Commission   with                                                                    
conducting   a  comprehensive   review  of   AS  Title   28,                                                                    
specifically   related    to   administrative    and   court                                                                    
revocations, ignition interlocks,  and several other related                                                                    
items.  She  expected  the   legislature  would  be  getting                                                                    
something from  the commission soon; the  change included in                                                                    
the  bill was  not from  the commission.  She referenced  an                                                                    
earlier  question  by  Representative Gara  [related  to  an                                                                    
alternative  option  to  therapeutic  court].  She  recalled                                                                    
another  idea  had  been  to   change  the  DUI  statute  so                                                                    
individuals did not receive a permanent license revocation.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:33:54 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Thompson  asked the Department of  Public Safety to                                                                    
address how the bill would impact victims.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
LAUREE  MORTON,  EXECUTIVE  DIRECTOR,  COUNCIL  ON  DOMESTIC                                                                    
VIOLENCE AND  SEXUAL ASSAULT,  DEPARTMENT OF  PUBLIC SAFETY,                                                                    
spoke  briefly  about  the two  victim  survivor  roundtable                                                                    
discussions mentioned  by a Ms.  Stanfill from  the previous                                                                    
day.  Additionally, a  national  crime  victim advocate  who                                                                    
helped   the  Pew   Charitable   Trust   with  its   justice                                                                    
reinvestment initiatives  met with  close to 20  victims and                                                                    
survivors  in the  Anchorage area  and included  all of  the                                                                    
information  in a  report, which  had  been disseminated  to                                                                    
members  prior  to  the current  meeting.  She  relayed  the                                                                    
report had  been the  impetus for Section  195 of  the bill,                                                                    
which  placed the  Council on  Domestic Violence  and Sexual                                                                    
Assault  (CDVSA)  in  uncodified  language  to  further  its                                                                    
violence prevention  and victims service  efforts throughout                                                                    
the state.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Ms.   Morton  spoke   provided  detail   on  the   council's                                                                    
priorities: 1)  improve victim assistance services  in rural                                                                    
and  remote areas;  2) continue  to  provide and  strengthen                                                                    
crime  prevention and  bystander  intervention services;  3)                                                                    
ensure basic  victim services during  the pretrial  phase of                                                                    
the  process   were  created   to  guarantee   victims  were                                                                    
appropriately   notified,  involved,   and   safe;  4)   the                                                                    
development and  expansion of evidence-based  and culturally                                                                    
competent  programming  and  supervision for  offenders;  5)                                                                    
improved capacity  by DOC  to monitor  inmate communications                                                                    
including  phone  calls  and  visits  in  order  to  protect                                                                    
victims  from  unwanted  contact; 6)  the  consideration  of                                                                    
crime  victims  as clients  during  the  parole and  reentry                                                                    
phase  of   the  criminal   justice  system   (often  people                                                                    
reentering  society  were  reentering   into  the  lives  of                                                                    
victims) in order to educate  victims about their rights and                                                                    
roles;  7) institutionalized  training for  criminal justice                                                                    
professionals  related to  what constituted  victims' rights                                                                    
including understanding  victim sensitivity, trauma,  how to                                                                    
talk to  victims, and cultural diversity  and competence; 8)                                                                    
additional  training  and   oversight  for  law  enforcement                                                                    
officers   responding   to   domestic  violence   calls   in                                                                    
identifying the  principal aggressor; 9)  increased services                                                                    
for child victims and witnesses  statewide; and 10) improved                                                                    
language  accessibility  throughout   the  criminal  justice                                                                    
system.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Morton  continued  that  Alaska  was  the  first  state                                                                    
participating  in  the  Pew reinvestment  initiative,  which                                                                    
incorporated  victims'  services  into  recommendations  and                                                                    
priorities. She  believed it was  a good recognition  of how                                                                    
seriously    policy   makers    all   Alaska's    executive,                                                                    
legislative, and  judicial branches  of government  took the                                                                    
issue  of  victims'  services  and  the  effort  to  balance                                                                    
victims' rights with those of  the offender. The council was                                                                    
appreciative  of  the strong  inclusion  in  the report  and                                                                    
commission's   [Alaska  Criminal   Justice  Commission]   21                                                                    
recommendations.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Morton relayed that victims'  services and concerns were                                                                    
woven  throughout  the bill;  she  did  not believe  it  was                                                                    
possible  to address  the  criminal  justice system  without                                                                    
having a victim concern.  She appreciated the willingness of                                                                    
the commission, the bill  sponsor, and legislative committee                                                                    
chairs  to  meet  with victims,  survivors,  victim  service                                                                    
providers  and their  efforts to  address  the concerns  and                                                                    
have   a   sensitivity   to  offender   reentry,   community                                                                    
condemnation, and approximate justice for victims.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
3:39:38 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Morton  continued that a  victim's life  was irrevocably                                                                    
changed  after an  incident of  domestic violence  or sexual                                                                    
assault.  She   continued  that   a  victim   could  receive                                                                    
approximate   justice  and   the   person   could  be   held                                                                    
accountable, but  the victim's  life was forever  changed in                                                                    
ways that were not always  recognizable. She relayed that it                                                                    
was  not always  possible  to receive  complete justice  for                                                                    
victims; sometimes  only approximate justice  was available,                                                                    
which  could  hopefully  eventually allow  victims  to  move                                                                    
forward with some closure.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Morton addressed  four areas in the  Senate version that                                                                    
did not end up in  the House committee substitute. The first                                                                    
was in  Section 75, page 43,  line 29 related to  the period                                                                    
of probation for  misdemeanants (including domestic violence                                                                    
assaults). She elaborated that  originally the bill included                                                                    
a probation period of four  years, which had been reduced to                                                                    
three  years by  the Senate  Finance Committee,  and reduced                                                                    
further to  two years in  the current version.  She detailed                                                                    
that  some  rehabilitation   programs  for  perpetrators  of                                                                    
domestic violence  were six  months to  one year  in length.                                                                    
The  council  believed it  would  be  appropriate to  extend                                                                    
probation to three  years to provide time  to understand and                                                                    
monitor  whether the  programs  had an  opportunity to  take                                                                    
effect in a person's life.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Morton  turned to the  second area on Section  131, page                                                                    
82,  line  27. She  believed  the  issue  may have  been  an                                                                    
oversight. She  explained that under current  law victims of                                                                    
domestic   violence   were   required  to   receive   victim                                                                    
notification regarding possible parole  of the offender. The                                                                    
Senate version  had added victims  of sexual assault  to the                                                                    
provision;  however, they  had been  removed in  the current                                                                    
committee substitute. The council  hoped the committee would                                                                    
add victims of sexual assault back into the language.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Morton moved to the third  area in Section 155, page 94,                                                                    
line 29  related to allowing  sex offenders to  reduce their                                                                    
sentence  by one-third  after completion  of treatment.  The                                                                    
Senate Finance Committee version  had completely removed the                                                                    
language.  She continued  the  provision  did not  represent                                                                    
current  practice  and  was  not  supported  by  CDVSA.  She                                                                    
advocated  for the  language in  the Senate  version of  the                                                                    
bill. She  referenced testimony by the  public defender from                                                                    
the previous  day related how  sex offenders had  the lowest                                                                    
rate  of recidivism.  She acknowledged  that it  may be  the                                                                    
lowest in the  2011 Alaska Judicial Council  survey, but low                                                                    
did  not mean  little.  She detailed  that  18 percent  were                                                                    
rearrested in their  first year of release,  32 percent were                                                                    
remanded back  into prison during  their first year,  and 20                                                                    
percent  were convicted  within  two years  of release.  She                                                                    
conceded that the  rate may be the lowest,  but she stressed                                                                    
that it  was too  much. She emphasized  that the  number was                                                                    
staggering  and was  not acceptable.  She remarked  that Co-                                                                    
Chair  Neuman was  not currently  present in  the room,  but                                                                    
that  he could  relay  a significant  amount of  information                                                                    
about the  effort because  of his work  on the  sex offender                                                                    
issue in terms  of how the system worked.  She detailed that                                                                    
before an offender  reached the point of being  picked up by                                                                    
law  enforcement they  had committed  many sexual  assaults.                                                                    
She  explained  that  sometimes a  polygraph  done  after  a                                                                    
person was convicted  showed they had over  100 victims. She                                                                    
stressed that it was not easy  to get arrested in Alaska for                                                                    
sexual  assault and  it was  not  easy for  victims to  come                                                                    
forward to tell  their story; sexual assault was  one of the                                                                    
least reported  crimes nationwide.  She underscored  that it                                                                    
was not acceptable to say the recidivism rate was low.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
3:45:35 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Morton  continued that  there were  too many  people who                                                                    
suffered  lifelong sentences  of  having  their souls  taken                                                                    
away, which she believed people  needed to be respectful of.                                                                    
The  fourth  area was  geriatric  parole.  Under the  Senate                                                                    
version the parole  applied to individuals age  60 or older,                                                                    
but the current CS reduced the  number to age 55. The Senate                                                                    
version had carved  out felony sex offences  and the current                                                                    
CS  version  did  not,  which  CDVSA  did  not  believe  was                                                                    
appropriate, particularly for  pedophiles. She detailed that                                                                    
a pedophile offender  could be 70 years of  age. The council                                                                    
did not support the reduction.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Morton  relayed the council believed  it was appropriate                                                                    
to have a  working group look at the sex  offences and range                                                                    
and  would appreciate  the opportunity  to participate  with                                                                    
the commission  on the effort. Additionally,  CDVSA believed                                                                    
that the Safe  Children Justice Act, "Erin  and Bree's Law,"                                                                    
would  be  a help  in  situations  where young  people  were                                                                    
exploring  their sexuality.  She  addressed  if child  abuse                                                                    
awareness  started in  kindergarten  and  went through  high                                                                    
school  (and dating  violence awareness  and training)  with                                                                    
teachers,  kids,   and  parents,  people  would   be  better                                                                    
equipped to understand how to  interact with each other. She                                                                    
believed it was  critical to enact the  opportunities in the                                                                    
state's  schools.  She  emphasized that  12  year-olds  were                                                                    
still children  even in cases  where they looked  older. She                                                                    
stressed  that a  19 year-old  knew that  12 year-olds  were                                                                    
still children. She  stated if that was not  the case, shame                                                                    
on the  19 year-old and shame  on society for not  making it                                                                    
clear.  She  underscored  it was  not  appropriate  to  have                                                                    
sexual contact between 12 year-olds and 19 year-olds.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Morton acknowledged  communities working  day-to-day on                                                                    
prevention  that were  trying to  prevent heinous  acts from                                                                    
happening  and  to  create  different  societal  norms.  She                                                                    
referred  to a  statewide 2010  Alaska Victimization  Survey                                                                    
conducted  through   the  University  of   Alaska  Anchorage                                                                    
Justice Center. The  survey had reported that 58  out of 100                                                                    
adult women  in Alaska  suffered intimate  partner violence,                                                                    
sexual  violence, or  both. A  five-year  lookback had  been                                                                    
conducted in  2015; the  number was  still horrible,  but it                                                                    
was better  and had dropped to  50 out of 100.  She spoke to                                                                    
the  difference   in  those  5   years  -   shelters,  first                                                                    
responders,  rape   crisis  centers,  and   personal  safety                                                                    
classes in  schools, had all  existed in 2010 and  2015. One                                                                    
of  the changes  was the  primary prevention  activities and                                                                    
programming  the state  started in  2011. She  mentioned the                                                                    
council's fiscal note that had  started out at $2.5 million.                                                                    
She  elaborated  that  throughout  discussions  around  cost                                                                    
savings  and reinvestment  it had  become important  to show                                                                    
savings at  the bottom  line instead of  knowing all  of the                                                                    
savings would  go towards reinvestment. Therefore,  the note                                                                    
had been  reduced to  $1 million. She  stressed the  need to                                                                    
continue successful programming.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
3:51:22 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Morton  spoke She referred  to programs like  Green Dot,                                                                    
Compass (developed  in Alaska by  Alaska Native  men working                                                                    
with  young   men  aged  12   to  18),  Girls  on   the  Run                                                                    
International (the  program had become stabilized  in Juneau                                                                    
and  coordinated  the  statewide   effort  for  the  program                                                                    
targeting  girls in  5th through  8th  grade), and  Coaching                                                                    
Boys  Into Men  (where high  school athletic  coaches worked                                                                    
with sports  teams to learn  what it meant to  respect women                                                                    
and girls). There were 19  communities with prevention teams                                                                    
that came  together to look  at ways  individual communities                                                                    
could support  the evidence-based programs and  efforts. She                                                                    
commended  effective  programming  efforts  and  asked  that                                                                    
efforts  and progress  not be  taken a  step backwards.  She                                                                    
explained the  operating budget contained  no money  for the                                                                    
programs; without a financial  structure it was not possible                                                                    
to   continue  to   support   communities  to   autonomously                                                                    
integrate the concepts and change.  She stressed that Alaska                                                                    
could  be  the  state  that stopped  domestic  violence  and                                                                    
sexual assault and  everyone could work together  to make it                                                                    
happen. She added that the  state had a responsibility to do                                                                    
the work. She  believed the bill represented  a step forward                                                                    
in that direction.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Saddler referred  to Section  131 and  asked Ms.                                                                    
Morton to  restate her objection. He  believed the provision                                                                    
included that  both victims of  sexual assault  and domestic                                                                    
violence  would be  informed [regarding  possible parole  of                                                                    
the  offender].  The  only  change he  saw  in  the  section                                                                    
involved deletion of the term "discretionary."                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Morton  responded that  she  believed  that victims  of                                                                    
sexual assault had been left  out. She noted perhaps she had                                                                    
seen an earlier version of the bill.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Saddler pointed  to page 82, line 27  and read "a                                                                    
victim  of  a crime  involving  domestic  violence or  of  a                                                                    
sexual assault under  AS 11.41.110 shall be  informed by the                                                                    
board" before considering parole.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Morton thanked Vice-Chair Saddler and stood corrected.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson  asked  about the  fiscal  note.  She                                                                    
wondered if certain  parts of the bill  were associated with                                                                    
the  $1 million  cost (e.g.  geriatric parole  or good  time                                                                    
that put people back on the street).                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Morton  replied that  the cost  was associated  with the                                                                    
uncodified language in Section  195, which directed CDVSA to                                                                    
expand violence prevention and victim service efforts.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Thompson asked  for verification  the fiscal  note                                                                    
had been  reduced from  over $2 million  to $1  million. Ms.                                                                    
Morton  replied  in  the  affirmative;  the  note  had  been                                                                    
reduced from $2.5 million to $1 million.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
CSSSSB  91(FIN)  AM was  HEARD  and  HELD in  committee  for                                                                    
further consideration.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Thompson discussed  the agenda  for the  following                                                                    
meeting.  He recessed  the meeting  to a  call of  the chair                                                                    
[note: the meeting never reconvened].                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
ADJOURNMENT                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
3:55:51 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
The meeting was adjourned at 3:55 p.m.                                                                                          

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
SB 91 National Crime Advocate Anne Seymour.pdf HFIN 4/21/2016 1:30:00 PM
SB 91
SB 91 Supporting Doc AHFC.pdf HFIN 4/21/2016 1:30:00 PM
SB 91
SB 91 - Changes between N and V.pdf HFIN 4/21/2016 1:30:00 PM
SB 91