Legislature(2017 - 2018)HOUSE FINANCE 519

11/01/2017 01:00 PM House FINANCE

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Audio Topic
01:17:25 PM Start
01:18:22 PM SB54
01:18:25 PM Presentation: Ak Criminal Justice Commission Report Appendix F
02:35:15 PM Fiscal Notes
04:11:12 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
-- Delayed 15 Minutes --
+= SB 54 CRIME AND SENTENCING TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Testimony <Invitation Only> --
Discussion: AK Criminal Justice Commission
Report Appendix F with Susanne DiPietro, Exec.
Dir., AK Judicial Council
Fiscal Notes
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
                  HOUSE FINANCE COMMITTEE                                                                                       
                  FOURTH SPECIAL SESSION                                                                                        
                     November 1, 2017                                                                                           
                         1:17 p.m.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
1:17:25 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CALL TO ORDER                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster  called the House Finance  Committee meeting                                                                    
to order at 1:17 p.m.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative Neal Foster, Co-Chair                                                                                            
Representative Paul Seaton, Co-Chair                                                                                            
Representative Les Gara, Vice-Chair                                                                                             
Representative Jason Grenn                                                                                                      
Representative David Guttenberg                                                                                                 
Representative Scott Kawasaki                                                                                                   
Representative Dan Ortiz                                                                                                        
Representative Lance Pruitt                                                                                                     
Representative Steve Thompson                                                                                                   
Representative Cathy Tilton                                                                                                     
Representative Tammie Wilson                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
None                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
ALSO PRESENT                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Suzanne  Di  Pietro,  Executive  Director,  Alaska  Judicial                                                                    
Council;   John  Skidmore,   Director,  Criminal   Division,                                                                    
Department of  Law; April  Wilkerson, Director,  Division of                                                                    
Administrative Services, Department  of Corrections; Randall                                                                    
Burns, Director,  Division of Behavioral  Health, Department                                                                    
of  Health  and  Social  Services;  Matt  Davidson,  Program                                                                    
Officer, Division of Juvenile  Justice, Department of Health                                                                    
and   Social   Services;  Representative   Andy   Josephson;                                                                    
Representative  Geran  Tarr;  Representative  Zach  Fansler;                                                                    
Representative   Gabrielle    LeDoux;   Representative   Ivy                                                                    
Spohnholz.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
PRESENT VIA TELECONFERENCE                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dean  Williams,  Commissioner,  Department  of  Corrections;                                                                    
Tony   Piper,  Manager,   Alcohol  Safety   Action  Program,                                                                    
Department  of  Health  and Social  Services;  Dan  Spencer,                                                                    
Director,  Division of  Administrative Services,  Department                                                                    
of Law;  Kelly Howell, Director, Division  of Administrative                                                                    
Services, Department of Public Safety.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
SUMMARY                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
CSSB 54(FIN)                                                                                                                    
          CRIME AND SENTENCING                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
          CSSB 54(FIN) was HEARD and HELD in committee for                                                                      
          further consideration.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
PRESENTATION:   AK   CRIMINAL  JUSTICE   COMMISSION   REPORT                                                                    
APPENDIX F                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster addressed the meeting agenda.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CS FOR SENATE BILL NO. 54(FIN)                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     "An Act  relating to crime  and criminal  law; relating                                                                    
     to violation  of condition of release;  relating to sex                                                                    
     trafficking;  relating   to  sentencing;   relating  to                                                                    
     imprisonment;   relating   to   parole;   relating   to                                                                    
     probation;  relating  to  driving  without  a  license;                                                                    
     relating   to  the   pretrial  services   program;  and                                                                    
     providing for an effective date."                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
1:18:22 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
^PRESENTATION:   AK  CRIMINAL   JUSTICE  COMMISSION   REPORT                                                                  
APPENDIX F                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
1:18:25 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster  reminded members  that amendments  were due                                                                    
at  5:00 p.m.  in the  current  day. He  invited Suzanne  Di                                                                    
Pietro  to the  table to  begin her  presentation. He  noted                                                                    
that Representative Andy Josephson had joined the audience.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
SUZANNE  DI  PIETRO,  EXECUTIVE  DIRECTOR,  ALASKA  JUDICIAL                                                                    
COUNCIL, introduced  herself and relayed that  she worked as                                                                    
staff  to the  Criminal  Justice  Commission. She  indicated                                                                    
that  the   project  attorney   for  the   Criminal  Justice                                                                    
Commission, Barbara Dunham,  was on the phone.  She would be                                                                    
taking  the committee  through  the  recommendations of  the                                                                    
commission that  resulted from two  meetings that it  had on                                                                    
January 19,  2017 and January  27, 2017. She  explained that                                                                    
the reason Appendix  F was listed at the top  was because it                                                                    
was  Appendix F  of the  commission's annual  report to  the                                                                    
legislature.  She  would  be  guiding  members  through  the                                                                    
document and  was happy to  answer any questions  during her                                                                    
presentation.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Di  Pietro  shared  that   when  the  commission  first                                                                    
convened itself the commissioners  discussed how they wanted                                                                    
to do their  work. Senate Bill 64,  legislation that created                                                                    
the   commission,  had   a  lengthy   list  of   duties  and                                                                    
methodologies  that the  commission  had to  adhere to.  The                                                                    
commissioners took that into  consideration and also decided                                                                    
as  a group  to  do two  things. First,  they  would act  in                                                                    
response  to empirical  data,  to be  data  driven in  their                                                                    
study  and  recommendations.  Second, the  commission  would                                                                    
always  try to  act by  consensus even  though it  would not                                                                    
always be  possible. She reported  that almost every  one of                                                                    
the   commission's   recommendations   that  came   to   the                                                                    
legislature in December of 2015  for criminal justice reform                                                                    
were consensus recommendations.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di  Pietro continued that after  criminal justice reform                                                                    
went into  effect, the commission began  to receive comments                                                                    
from  a variety  of people  in the  community including  law                                                                    
enforcement, citizens,  and prosecutors  expressing concerns                                                                    
about  criminal  justice  reform.  The  commission  had  two                                                                    
meetings where it discussed issues  brought to it by members                                                                    
of the  community. Out  of the  two meetings  the commission                                                                    
made  recommendations  to  the  legislature  that  were  the                                                                    
subject of Appendix F.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
1:22:02 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di  Pietro mentioned  a slightly  different methodology.                                                                    
She elaborated  that although the original  criminal justice                                                                    
reform recommendations  were based on meta-analyses  of what                                                                    
worked  and what  did not  work to  reduce recidivism  and a                                                                    
very detailed  assessment of  how Alaska's  Criminal justice                                                                    
system   was   operating.   The   recommendations   to   the                                                                    
legislature   were  derived   from  a   different  kind   of                                                                    
knowledge; hearing  anecdotal stories  from the  public. The                                                                    
commission,   when  making   the  current   recommendations,                                                                    
specifically focused on four criteria  listed in Appendix F:                                                                    
The need  to rehabilitate  the offender; the  sufficiency of                                                                    
state resources  to administer the criminal  justice system;                                                                    
the  effect of  state  laws  and practices  on  the rate  of                                                                    
recidivism; and peer-reviewed  and data-driven research. The                                                                    
commission also,  according to  SB 64,  had other  things to                                                                    
consider: The need  to confine offenders to  prevent harm to                                                                    
the   public;  the   effect  of   sentencing  in   deterring                                                                    
offenders; and  the need  to express  community condemnation                                                                    
of crime.  She wanted  to convey to  the committee  that the                                                                    
recommendations in Appendix F relied  more on the last three                                                                    
factors than the other factors the commission had used.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di  Pietro reviewed the first  recommendation, which was                                                                    
to return  the crime of  Violation of Conditions  of Release                                                                    
(VCOR) to misdemeanor status.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Foster recognized  Representative  Geran Tarr  and                                                                    
Representative Zack Fansler  in the audience. Representative                                                                    
Gara  had stepped  in the  meeting a  few moments  prior. He                                                                    
indicated that  questions would  be held to  the end  of the                                                                    
presentation.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
1:24:25 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Di   Pietro  continued   with  her   presentation.  She                                                                    
explained  that  violating  conditions of  release  occurred                                                                    
when a person  had been arrested but not yet  convicted of a                                                                    
crime,  charged,  and released  on  bail  while waiting  for                                                                    
their case to  be resolved. A judge would  impose some court                                                                    
ordered  stipulations  which   might  include  not  drinking                                                                    
alcohol or  not contacting  the victim. Doing  those things,                                                                    
when  a judge  ordered  a person  not to,  could  lead to  a                                                                    
misdemeanor.  The  commission  in  criminal  justice  reform                                                                    
recommended that it be turned  into a non-criminal offense -                                                                    
a violation  - but  people could still  be arrested,  put in                                                                    
confinement,  and brought  before a  judge. The  judge might                                                                    
keep  them confined,  set new  conditions, or  whatever they                                                                    
thought was  appropriate. That was  the way it  was supposed                                                                    
to work.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di Pietro  reported that there had  been confusion about                                                                    
how   it    was   supposed   to   work,    confusion   about                                                                    
implementation. It  had been brought to  the commission that                                                                    
a good way to  clear up the confusion would be  to make it a                                                                    
crime  again.  The  Court  System   and  the  Department  of                                                                    
Corrections  (DOC)  had  worked together  to  implement  the                                                                    
process  of bringing  the defendant  back  and putting  them                                                                    
before the judge.  Changes to forms and  procedures had been                                                                    
made. Some members of the  commission felt that the remedies                                                                    
were working or should be  given time to work. Other members                                                                    
thought it was  too confusing and that VCOR  should become a                                                                    
crime again.  The commission recommended that  VCOR become a                                                                    
Class B misdemeanor punishable up  to five days in jail. She                                                                    
referenced Section  18 of the  bill where it  addressed VCOR                                                                    
and  the  corresponding  penalty   of  five  days  in  jail,                                                                    
consistent with the commission's recommendation.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster noted that  Representative Pruitt had joined                                                                    
the meeting.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Di Pietro  mentioned  that the  recommendation was  not                                                                    
unanimous. She noted that one  concern that had been brought                                                                    
up  by the  victims' representative  on the  commission. She                                                                    
was concerned that  by making VCOR a crime  again during the                                                                    
plea  negotiation process  it might  be tempting  to convict                                                                    
the person  of the VCOR  and dismiss the  underlying charge.                                                                    
The  commission stated  that  it did  not  condone that  and                                                                    
would revisit the issue if it were to happen.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
1:27:30 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Guttenberg was concerned  that a condition of                                                                    
release might not ordinarily be a misdemeanor.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di Pietro replied that it was currently a violation.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Representative Guttenberg provided  a scenario where someone                                                                    
was arrested and given conditions  of release. He asked if a                                                                    
person  could be  charged with  a misdemeanor  that was  not                                                                    
normally  a  misdemeanor  if  the   person  had  never  done                                                                    
anything.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Ms.   Di  Pietro   thought  Representative   Guttenberg  was                                                                    
characterizing  the  underlying   conduct.  A  violation  of                                                                    
condition  of  release  would  be  conduct  that  would  not                                                                    
normally be a crime. However,  if the legislature decided to                                                                    
return  it to  a  crime, it  would be  a  crime because  the                                                                    
person would have done something  the judge had ordered them                                                                    
not to do.  For example, if a person was  intoxicated and it                                                                    
was  a condition  of bail,  they could  be arrested  if they                                                                    
were caught drinking. Drinking was  not against the law, but                                                                    
a person  could be  arrested under current  law. If  the law                                                                    
was  changed to  a  misdemeanor as  was  recommended by  the                                                                    
commission, then  the person  could also  be charged  with a                                                                    
misdemeanor.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Guttenberg  was  concerned  about  a  person                                                                    
stacking   up  misdemeanors   by  violating   conditions  of                                                                    
release. He  thought it would  have a compounding  effect on                                                                    
other crimes. He asked if it  would become an issue down the                                                                    
road.  He thought  the misdemeanors  resulting  from a  VCOR                                                                    
would build a bigger case against someone.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:30:24 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Di Pietro  answered that  the commission  discussed the                                                                    
issue.  It  was   one  of  the  reasons  why   some  of  the                                                                    
commissioners did not want to reinstate it to a crime.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Representative Guttenberg  asked what would happen  down the                                                                    
road if misdemeanors started stacking  up. He asked where it                                                                    
was relevant.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Di  Pietro  stated  that  if  a  VCOR  charge  was  not                                                                    
dismissed, a  person might  be convicted  of the  charge and                                                                    
would have  the misdemeanor on  their record in  addition to                                                                    
their underlying charge.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di Pietro moved to  the next recommendation which was to                                                                    
increase  penalties  for  repeat theft  for  offenders.  She                                                                    
relayed  that several  people  testified  to the  commission                                                                    
that there  were problems with  repeat shoplifters.  Theft 4                                                                    
was stealing  something or  concealing merchandise  that was                                                                    
less  than  $250  in  value.   The  original  penalty  under                                                                    
criminal  justice reform  was that  a first  time or  second                                                                    
time  offender would  not face  active  jail time,  although                                                                    
they  would  be subject  to  paying  victim restitution  and                                                                    
fines.  The  third  time  they  would  receive  a  suspended                                                                    
sentence and the fourth time  they could receive active jail                                                                    
time. The  commission had deemed  that a third time  Theft 4                                                                    
should be punishable  up to 10 days in jail.  She pointed to                                                                    
Section  19  of the  current  version  of  SB 54  where  the                                                                    
penalties   exceeded  the   penalties  recommended   by  the                                                                    
commission. Under  SB 54, a first-time  offense would result                                                                    
in a five-day suspended sentence.  No active jail time would                                                                    
be  required unless  a person  violated conditions  of their                                                                    
suspension, which, then, could  become active jail time. For                                                                    
the second  offense they  would serve up  to five  days, and                                                                    
for anything more  than that they would serve up  to ten. It                                                                    
would  still be  a  B  Misdemeanor and  the  limit  for a  B                                                                    
Misdemeanor was ten days.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
1:33:42 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di Pietro relayed  there had been substantial discussion                                                                    
around the topic.  The decision was not  unanimous. A couple                                                                    
of  [Alaska Criminal  Justice Commission]  commissioners who                                                                    
did not support this  particular recommendation thought that                                                                    
a  third-time  offense  should  be elevated  to  a  Class  A                                                                    
misdemeanor. She thought  a bump to the  Class A misdemeanor                                                                    
for the recidivist  was contained in SB 54.  She noted there                                                                    
was   a   drafting   ambiguity   that   needed   tightening.                                                                    
Commissioner [Chris] Sell spoke  about petty theft offenders                                                                    
he had  known who were  so accustomed  to going to  jail for                                                                    
theft that  they had started  using it as a  housing option.                                                                    
Commissioner Stanfill  in Fairbanks had spoken  of the issue                                                                    
several times.  Jail was  a warm place  for people  to live.                                                                    
The   commission  had   been   unanimous   that  low   level                                                                    
misdemeanants had a  very high recidivism rate.  The root of                                                                    
their  problems needed  to be  addressed. She  commended the                                                                    
municipality of  Juneau for reaching  out to  the commission                                                                    
about what  to do about chronic  recidivist shoplifters. The                                                                    
commission  partnered with  the  City  and Borough  Juneau's                                                                    
attorney  and   came  up  with  the   Juneau  Avert  Chronic                                                                    
Shoplifting  Project.  The  commissioner  worked  to  secure                                                                    
funding  for  the  program through  the  Bureau  of  Justice                                                                    
Assistance. The Judicial Council  would evaluate the project                                                                    
after  about one  year to  determine its  effectiveness. The                                                                    
point  of the  project was  to try  to work  with recidivist                                                                    
shoplifters to get to the root of their problem.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
1:36:33 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.   Di   Pietro   addressed   the   next   recommendation,                                                                    
Recommendation 3-2017,  was to  allow municipalities  to set                                                                    
different  non-incarceration  punishments  for  non-criminal                                                                    
offenses that  have state equivalents.  The issue  was taken                                                                    
care  of  in SB  55  {omnibus  crime legislation  passed  in                                                                    
2017].  She  moved to  Recommendation  4-2017  which was  to                                                                    
revise the  sex trafficking statute. She  clarified that the                                                                    
provisions  of SB  91 [criminal  justice reform  legislation                                                                    
passed in  2016] with  respect to  sex trafficking  were not                                                                    
recommendations of  the commission. The  legislative history                                                                    
suggested that  the provisions were intended  to ensure that                                                                    
sex workers  simply working together but  not exploiting one                                                                    
another should be able to  be prosecuted for sex trafficking                                                                    
each    other   or    themselves.   The    commission   made                                                                    
recommendations about  how to clarify  the language  so that                                                                    
sex  workers working  together to  protect each  other would                                                                    
not  be  subject  to  prosecution.   She  relayed  that  the                                                                    
provisions  in   SB  91   needed  clarification   which  the                                                                    
commission recommended. She added  that SB 54 had provisions                                                                    
related to sex trafficking in  Section 5 and 6; however, the                                                                    
version  before  the  committee  contained  amendments  that                                                                    
essentially restored  the language  that was  in SB  91. She                                                                    
believed the sex trafficking issue needed more work.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster  asked Ms.  Di Pietro  to delve  more deeply                                                                    
into the subject.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
1:39:12 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Pruitt wanted  to ensure  he understood  the                                                                    
bill.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
JOHN  SKIDMORE, DIRECTOR,  CRIMINAL DIVISION,  DEPARTMENT OF                                                                    
LAW,  relayed  that  there  were  amendments  in  the  House                                                                    
Judiciary Committee that would  have eliminated the changes.                                                                    
However,  those  amendments  did   not  pass  in  the  House                                                                    
Judiciary Committee.  In fact, the amendment  was withdrawn.                                                                    
He  relayed that  what  was  currently in  SB  54 fixed  the                                                                    
loophole that  was found and  was the recommendation  of the                                                                    
commission.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di Pietro stood corrected.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson  asked  for  an  explanation  of  the                                                                    
loophole.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Skidmore answered that when  criminal justice reform had                                                                    
passed, there  had been concerns  about how  sex trafficking                                                                    
laws were being  used. The concept was  that the legislature                                                                    
did not  want the  sex trafficking laws  used to  punish two                                                                    
sex  workers that  might  live together  or  were trying  to                                                                    
provide  services in  a  way that  was  not trafficking.  He                                                                    
noted in particular  where the focus was  in sex trafficking                                                                    
in the  third degree, which  talked about operating  a place                                                                    
of  prostitution.  He  explained   that  what  happened  was                                                                    
criminal justice reform  amended the laws to  try to provide                                                                    
appropriate protections.  In the process of  doing so, there                                                                    
was  a   loophole  that  was  inadvertently   included.  The                                                                    
loophole was that for an  individual who operated a place of                                                                    
prostitution,  if they,  themselves,  offered themselves  up                                                                    
for  a  sex act  in  exchange  for  money, they  would  have                                                                    
engaged  in  some  from  of prosecution  and  could  not  be                                                                    
prosecuted  for  sex  trafficking   for  owning  the  entire                                                                    
operation. They could only be  prosecuted for the same crime                                                                    
that any other sex worker  would - the crime of prosecution.                                                                    
The  idea  was  that  the  person who  owned  the  place  of                                                                    
prostitution was at  a higher level than a  mere sex worker.                                                                    
The language in  the current bill was language  worked on by                                                                    
the Department of  Law (DOL) and the  Public Defender agency                                                                    
worked on  collaboratively to attempt to  close the loophole                                                                    
making  sure  to  treat  those   who  operated  a  place  of                                                                    
prosecution differently  than a prostitute. He  believed the                                                                    
language closed the loophole.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
1:42:29 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Gara noted  that  prostitution  was currently  a                                                                    
misdemeanor and sex trafficking was  a felony because it was                                                                    
a much more serious time. He  spoke to a loophole in the law                                                                    
that could  have allowed a  misdemeanor prostitute as  a sex                                                                    
trafficker.  He asked  for verification  the office  had not                                                                    
been doing that.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Skidmore  agreed  that DOL  had  not  been  prosecuting                                                                    
individuals engaging in prostitution  as sex traffickers. He                                                                    
was not  certain the  law had  allowed for  that previously,                                                                    
but he knew concerns had  been expressed about the issue. He                                                                    
cited a  case in Fairbanks  where a law  enforcement officer                                                                    
originally  filed sex  trafficking  charges against  someone                                                                    
who had only been engaged  in prostitution; the charges were                                                                    
ultimately reduced by the DOL  prosecutor's office. The laws                                                                    
had been  changed to clarify  the intent; in the  process of                                                                    
the changes  there had been  a small oversight,  which would                                                                    
be fixed by SB 54.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Gara thanked  the  department  for offering  the                                                                    
commitment the issue.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
1:44:41 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Di Pietro  moved to  recommendation 5-2017  to enact  a                                                                    
zero to  90-day presumptive sentencing range  for first-time                                                                    
Class C  felonies. She  detailed that  the commission  had a                                                                    
number of goals in mind  when it made the recommendation for                                                                    
first-time Class C  felons to have a suspended time  of 0 to                                                                    
18  months. First,  being on  felony  probation meant  being                                                                    
held  accountable in  the community.  The commission  viewed                                                                    
being  on  felony  probation  as a  way  to  hold  offenders                                                                    
accountable  and  to encourage  the  offender  to engage  in                                                                    
rehabilitative   activities   including  treatment,   paying                                                                    
victim  restitution,  and  getting  a  job  -  whatever  the                                                                    
probation  officer thought  the person  should be  doing and                                                                    
what the  judge may have  ordered as a  probation condition.                                                                    
Another  justification  for   the  recommendation  was  that                                                                    
putting offenders  just getting  familiar with  the criminal                                                                    
justice system  in prison with other  offenders convicted of                                                                    
more   serious   crimes    was   detrimental   to   low-risk                                                                    
individuals. When  the individuals  were released  they were                                                                    
more likely to  commit a new offence  (criminogenic) than if                                                                    
they had not  gone to prison and had been  supervised in the                                                                    
community.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di  Pietro continued  that after the  recommendation had                                                                    
gone  into effect,  the commission  had heard  from numerous                                                                    
people,  including prosecutors,  that some  violent Class  C                                                                    
felonies warranted jailtime even  for a first offense. There                                                                    
were also concerned  there was not enough  incentive with no                                                                    
active  jailtime  to  get   offenders  into  treatment.  The                                                                    
commission had  substantial debate on considering  the right                                                                    
incentives  to  get  a  person  into  treatment.  Under  the                                                                    
commission's  recommendation of  0  to  18 months  suspended                                                                    
there  was the  possibility  of the  suspended time  hanging                                                                    
over a person's head, but  people thought that some jailtime                                                                    
would be  appropriate to  express community  condemnation in                                                                    
certain instances  or the appropriate  level of  coercion to                                                                    
get  them to  engage  in treatment  or other  rehabilitative                                                                    
activities  that would  prevent  recidivism. The  commission                                                                    
ultimately  recommended  (the  decision was  not  unanimous)                                                                    
that first-time  Class C felonies  carry a  presumptive term                                                                    
of  0 to  90 days  and  to retain  the  up to  18 months  of                                                                    
suspended time.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
1:48:51 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di  Pietro detailed  that Section 15  of SB  54 included                                                                    
penalties for  first-time Class  C felonies of  0 days  to 1                                                                    
year in prison, which had been the position of DOL.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Gara stated that under  SB 91 first-time C felons                                                                    
could receive  jailtime if the crime  included an aggravator                                                                    
(e.g. physical injury or use of a weapon).                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di Pietro  agreed that the penalty for a  crime with the                                                                    
addition   of  an   aggravator  would   be  different.   The                                                                    
presumptive term  was for the typical  offender committing a                                                                    
typical offense.  An aggravated offense would  be subject to                                                                    
harsher penalties.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di  Pietro relayed  that the commission  acknowledged it                                                                    
had no research to suggest  the magic [jail time] number was                                                                    
0 to 90. The recommendation was a channeling of the idea of                                                                     
community condemnation. The  next item had been  to enact an                                                                    
aggravator  for Class  A  misdemeanors  for defendants  with                                                                    
prior  a  conviction of  similar  conduct.  She shared  that                                                                    
under criminal justice reform there  was a presumptive range                                                                    
of 0 to 30 days for  a Class A misdemeanor. Importantly, the                                                                    
provision  excluded many  kinds  of  crimes. She  elaborated                                                                    
that for  certain violent offenses  and sex offenses  or for                                                                    
cases where the conduct was  among the most serious included                                                                    
in  the  definition   of  the  offense,  the   0  to  30-day                                                                    
presumptive  range  did  not  apply.  The  commission  heard                                                                    
prosecutors  and others  saying  that  the provision  should                                                                    
allow  for  a  longer  sentence  for  defendants  with  past                                                                    
convictions for similar conduct;  the provision had existed,                                                                    
but it  applied to  individuals with  two or  more offenses.                                                                    
The   commission   recommended    enacting   an   additional                                                                    
aggravator for Class A misdemeanors  for defendants with one                                                                    
prior conviction  for similar conduct, which  would enable a                                                                    
judge  to  impose a  sentence  up  to  60 days  (located  in                                                                    
Sections 17 to 22 of the bill).                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster  recognized Representative  Gabrielle LeDoux                                                                    
in the audience.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
1:52:21 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di  Pietro moved to recommendation  7-2017: clarify that                                                                    
ASAP is  available for  Minor Consuming  Alcohol [page  6 of                                                                    
Appendix   F].  She   believed  the   committee  had   heard                                                                    
significant testimony  on the Alcohol Safety  Action Program                                                                    
(ASAP)  the previous  day.  The  commission had  recommended                                                                    
that minor consuming be included  in the types of cases that                                                                    
could be referred to ASAP.  She noted statute allowed people                                                                    
charged with the  offense to receive credit if  they went to                                                                    
and complied with  the program. The commission  viewed it as                                                                    
a way to  align the two parts of the  law. Under the current                                                                    
version of SB 54, she did  not believe a person charged with                                                                    
the  offense  could  be  referred to  ASAP.  She  looked  at                                                                    
Section 47  of the bill  that referred to people  charged or                                                                    
convicted  of   a  misdemeanor;  however,   Minor  Consuming                                                                    
Alcohol  was now  a violation.  Although the  other language                                                                    
referred to  "alcohol related" it  specified "referred  by a                                                                    
court  in  connection  with  a charge  or  conviction  of  a                                                                    
misdemeanor  involving the  use of  alcohol or  a controlled                                                                    
substance."                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson  asked if Ms. Di  Pietro had specified                                                                    
Section  47. Ms.  Di  Pietro replied  in  the affirmative  -                                                                    
page 31, line 30.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson asked  if  Ms. Di  Pietro had  stated                                                                    
that the bill did not add  anyone to the program because "it                                                                    
was not a misdemeanor, it's a citation."                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di Pietro corrected "violation."                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson stated  adding additional  people [to                                                                    
eligible ASAP  participants] was an amendment  passed by the                                                                    
House  Judiciary Committee.  She thought  Ms. Di  Pietro was                                                                    
testifying  that the  bill did  not add  anyone else  to the                                                                    
program.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di  Pietro replied in  the negative. She  clarified that                                                                    
she had  been referring  to the  commission's recommendation                                                                    
regarding  people  charged  with   the  violation  of  Minor                                                                    
Consuming  Alcohol.  She  observed  that  as  the  bill  was                                                                    
currently  written,  it  did not  appear  those  individuals                                                                    
could  be referred  by a  court to  ASAP. She  had not  been                                                                    
speaking about  how the amendment  may have expanded  or not                                                                    
expanded the  types of cases  going to ASAP. She  added that                                                                    
the  amendment  did pertain  to  a  person charged  with  or                                                                    
convicted of  a misdemeanor involving alcohol  or controlled                                                                    
substances.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson  understood Ms. Di Pietro  was talking                                                                    
about  recommendations   from  the  commission,   which  was                                                                    
separate from  the amendment.  She stated  her understanding                                                                    
that the amendment had not  been discussed by the commission                                                                    
and that  Ms. Di Pietro  was not speaking to  the amendment,                                                                    
but  was  explaining  why  the   individuals  had  not  been                                                                    
included in SB 91.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di Pietro replied in the affirmative.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
1:56:19 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Di  Pietro  moved  to Recommendation  8-2017:  Enact  a                                                                    
provision requiring  mandatory probation for  sex offenders.                                                                    
The recommendation  was a technical fix  to ensure mandatory                                                                    
probation of 15  years for sex offenders (Section  16 of the                                                                    
bill).  She reviewed  Recommendation  9-2017 that  clarified                                                                    
the length of probation allowed  for Theft 4. Some ambiguity                                                                    
may  have existed  in statute  about whether  a probationary                                                                    
term could  be imposed for a  first and second time  Theft 4                                                                    
offenses. Section 19 of the bill addressed the concern.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di  Pietro highlighted Recommendation  10-2017 regarding                                                                    
victim  notification,  which had  been  addressed  in SB  55                                                                    
[omnibus crime  legislation passed in  2017]. Recommendation                                                                    
11-2017: felony  DUI sentencing provisions should  be in one                                                                    
statute. The  commission had noticed that  sentencing ranges                                                                    
for felony DUI and refusal were  found in Title 28 and under                                                                    
regular sentencing  statute in Title 12,  meaning there were                                                                    
two  punishment  provisions  for the  same  offenses,  which                                                                    
could create confusion. The  commission had recommended that                                                                    
the  legislature put  the penalty  provision for  felony DUI                                                                    
and  refusal in  one place  or the  other. She  believed the                                                                    
recommendation was addressed  in Section 48 of  SB 54, which                                                                    
included repealers.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di Pietro addressed  Recommendation 12-2017: clarify who                                                                    
will be  assessed by  pretrial services.  The recommendation                                                                    
was addressed in  Section 26. She explained that  when SB 91                                                                    
was drafted it had  included language that Pretrial Services                                                                    
would do  a pretrial risk  assessment on all  people charged                                                                    
with a crime. She believed  it had been overlooked that many                                                                    
people charged with  a crime may not come to  a DOC facility                                                                    
and  be detained.  Some people  may be  issued a  summons to                                                                    
appear in  court by  an officer  instead of  being arrested,                                                                    
and  some  people may  be  released  on a  misdemeanor  bail                                                                    
schedule.  She elaborated  that  DOC  had expressed  concern                                                                    
that  it would  be spending  its resources  assessing people                                                                    
who  were  not in  pretrial  detention.  The commission  had                                                                    
recommended  clarifying  the  language   to  direct  DOC  to                                                                    
conduct  its risk  assessments on  people  in detention  and                                                                    
anyone else  requested by the prosecutor.  She characterized                                                                    
it as a common-sense provision  and a way to ensure Pretrial                                                                    
Services  was  spending  its resources  on  the  people  who                                                                    
mattered most.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
1:59:55 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di  Pietro stated that  the rest of  the recommendations                                                                    
were technical. She was available for any questions.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative Grenn spoke  about a potential recommendation                                                                    
(not  included  in  the  January  recommendation)  regarding                                                                    
barriers   to   reentry.   He   referenced   the   CourtView                                                                    
recommendation  on page  9 of  the  Alaska Criminal  Justice                                                                    
Commission  Annual Report  dated October  22, 2017  (copy on                                                                    
file). He  wondered if the  agency hoped  the recommendation                                                                    
would make  it into  SB 54  as an amendment  or if  it could                                                                    
wait to for future revisions.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di Pietro  was certain the commission  would be thrilled                                                                    
the   committee   had   noticed  the   recommendation.   The                                                                    
commission  had  worked  hard  on the  topic;  it  had  been                                                                    
brought to  the commission and  sent back to the  work group                                                                    
numerous times. She did not  know if the commissioners had a                                                                    
preference on  timing, but  she guessed  it would  be sooner                                                                    
rather than later.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Representative Grenn referred  to Recommendation 3-2017 that                                                                    
would   allow   municipalities   to   set   different   non-                                                                    
incarceration punishments.  He relayed that Anchorage  had a                                                                    
problem  with  [the drug]  spice  several  summers back.  He                                                                    
wondered  why municipalities  should not  be able  to handle                                                                    
their own local  issues in a different manner  than what may                                                                    
be the standard for the rest of the state.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Ms.   Di  Pietro   addressed   the  commission's   CourtView                                                                    
recommendation. The  commission had debated whether  to make                                                                    
the recommendation  to the legislature  or the  court system                                                                    
and  had decided  to make  the recommendation  to the  court                                                                    
system.  She  returned  to Representative  Grenn's  question                                                                    
pertaining  to municipalities  and relayed  the commission's                                                                    
thought behind  the binding provision -  that a municipality                                                                    
should not  be able to  enact ordinances that  would involve                                                                    
larger  jail penalties  than  the state  -  was to  preserve                                                                    
prison  beds  for  more  serious  offenders  (municipalities                                                                    
typically  handled misdemeanors).  She  believed  it was  an                                                                    
oversight  -  she  did  not   believe  the  commission  ever                                                                    
believed the  municipalities should not have  the ability to                                                                    
enact  larger  fines  or  other   types  of  sanctions.  The                                                                    
commission's  focus  had been  on  jailtime,  which was  the                                                                    
reason it had recommended the clarification.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:04:06 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Grenn   referred    to   recommendation   2                                                                    
[Recommendation  1-2017] regarding  VCOR.  He observed  that                                                                    
the recommendation was  punishable up to five  days in jail.                                                                    
He asked what the penalty had been pre-SB 91.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di Pietro did not recall.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Grenn  asked   about  the   aggravators  in                                                                    
recommendation 6. He noted  that the recommendation included                                                                    
jailtime up to  60 days. He asked what the  penalty had been                                                                    
prior to the passage of SB 91.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di Pietro  replied that most Class  A misdemeanors (some                                                                    
had mandatory minimums) the statutory  jailtime was 0 to 365                                                                    
days. There was also a presumptive range.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:05:30 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Kawasaki discussed  that the last legislature                                                                    
had directed  the commission to  look at what it  would look                                                                    
like if  there were 15  percent fewer individuals  in prison                                                                    
and   a   couple   of    other   scenarios.   He   mentioned                                                                    
Recommendation  1-2017 related  to  VCOR, Recommendation  2-                                                                    
2017  on  repeat  Theft 4  offenses,  Recommendation  5-2017                                                                    
pertaining to  Class C  felonies, and  Recommendation 9-2017                                                                    
related  to  probation times.  He  asked  if Ms.  Di  Pietro                                                                    
anticipated a large fiscal impact  or an increased number of                                                                    
individuals in jail under probation or pretrial status.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di  Pietro thought  almost anyone  would agree  that the                                                                    
provisions would increase the state's  use of jail beds. She                                                                    
stated that trying  to quantify the increase would  be up to                                                                    
the departments;  the commission  was also looking  into it.                                                                    
She  relayed  that  Class  C   felons  represented  a  large                                                                    
percentage of  convicted felons.  First-time Class  C felons                                                                    
made up  the majority of  convicted C felons.  She addressed                                                                    
repeat Theft 4 and reported  that in 2014 (pre-reform) there                                                                    
were  324 people  admitted to  prison for  the offense.  The                                                                    
commission had conducted a mini-study  do determine what the                                                                    
individuals were  stealing. Even though the  range was $0.00                                                                    
to $250  for the  offense, most  people were  stealing items                                                                    
significantly under  $250. Items  were typically  around $50                                                                    
and  include  things  like toiletries,  food,  and  alcohol.                                                                    
Individuals convicted of  the crime served an  average of 24                                                                    
days.  She emphasized  that  24 days  was  an average;  some                                                                    
individuals in  on their  first offense  only served  1 day,                                                                    
whereas  individuals in  for  a 10th  or  15th theft  served                                                                    
significantly more  time. She stressed it  was a significant                                                                    
use  of  jail  resources  for  people  stealing  very  small                                                                    
quantities.  The  commission  also  knew  that  misdemeanant                                                                    
property offenders  recidivate at  high rates.  She believed                                                                    
the  state  could anticipate  there  would  be a  number  of                                                                    
people  convicted of  the offense  and that  they would  use                                                                    
more jail beds.  She clarified most would not  be using jail                                                                    
beds for 20  days because the penalties were  less than they                                                                    
had been pre-reform.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
2:09:30 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Kawasaki  remarked   on  Ms.   Di  Pietro's                                                                    
testimony that in Juneau people  found it fairly easy to use                                                                    
Theft  4  as a  way  to  get  housing.  He believed  it  was                                                                    
terrible.  He   noted  Ms.  Di  Pietro   had  specified  the                                                                    
commission may  be looking at recommendations  in the future                                                                    
that would prevent the issue  from happening. He opined that                                                                    
jails   were  not   the  appropriate   place  for   homeless                                                                    
individuals  looking  for  shelter.   He  asked  what  other                                                                    
recommendations may be forthcoming from the commission.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Di Pietro  clarified the  narrative of  people using  a                                                                    
conviction of  a small crime to  get a warm home  during the                                                                    
winter was anecdotal from a  couple of commissioners who had                                                                    
experience with  the individuals. She looked  forward to the                                                                    
evaluation of  the Juneau Avert Chronic  Shoplifting Project                                                                    
that  used  incentives  instead  of  sanctions.  Prosecutors                                                                    
already knew  who the 30  to 40 chronic shoplifters  were in                                                                    
Juneau.  The program  was  designed  to metaphorically  meet                                                                    
them where they  are and determine if they  could be pointed                                                                    
towards resources, ideas, or  encouragement to address their                                                                    
root  problem. She  relayed the  project would  be evaluated                                                                    
and she believed it was  something to watch. She shared that                                                                    
when the commission had worked  with the City and Borough of                                                                    
Juneau attorney  they had done significant  research on what                                                                    
had worked in other places  for petty theft and shoplifters.                                                                    
There was not a substantial  amount out there, which was the                                                                    
reason  the   Juneau  city  attorney  had   decided  to  try                                                                    
something.  The  project was  innovative  and  was based  on                                                                    
research  on what  works, which  is  incentives (often  more                                                                    
than sanctions).  The goal  was to  get at  the root  of the                                                                    
problem. She believed the program  had a good design and its                                                                    
success was yet to be determined.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
2:11:55 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Kawasaki referred  to Recommendation  1-2017                                                                    
related to  VCOR. When the  legislature had worked on  SB 91                                                                    
there  had   been  much  discussion  about   the  number  of                                                                    
incarcerated  individuals  in  pretrial status  or  who  had                                                                    
returned to jail for breaking  conditions of release. One of                                                                    
the examples  the committee had  heard about  repeatedly was                                                                    
not drinking  alcohol or  going near a  bar even  though the                                                                    
underlying crime  was not  related to  alcohol. He  asked if                                                                    
there was  a way to  quantify the number of  individuals who                                                                    
were essentially  receiving an  extra charge  while awaiting                                                                    
trial.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di  Pietro answered that  she had done some  research on                                                                    
the topic when  the commission had been  debating the issue.                                                                    
She detailed  that VCOR  charges were very  common -  in the                                                                    
thousands,  but  research  she  had  done  showed  about  68                                                                    
percent  were dismissed.  She did  not believe  there was  a                                                                    
good way  to quantify  how much jailtime  a VCOR  charge may                                                                    
involve. She  believed it  would be some  in some  cases and                                                                    
dismissed  in  other cases;  it  was  a difficult  thing  to                                                                    
research.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Kawasaki referred  to the  fiscal notes  and                                                                    
discussed that part  of SB 91 had  dealt with rehabilitation                                                                    
and  reformation  -  things  that  were  needed  within  the                                                                    
criminal justice  system. Some  of the  recommendations that                                                                    
the  commission had  made and  some that  had come  from the                                                                    
last committee of  referral appeared to cost  the state more                                                                    
money,  which   would  leave  less  money   for  reform  and                                                                    
rehabilitation.  He   asked  how  it  would   challenge  the                                                                    
criminal  justice recommendations  pertaining to  reform and                                                                    
rehabilitation.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Di Pietro  thought  the commission  would  like her  to                                                                    
communicate  that  it   was  recommending  frontloading  the                                                                    
rehabilitative  piece of  reform.  She believed  the use  of                                                                    
prisons had decreased in the  first year of criminal justice                                                                    
reform and  had decreased  more than predicted.  Whether all                                                                    
of the decrease  was due to SB 91 was  difficult to say, but                                                                    
much  of  it was.  She  believed  the legislature  could  be                                                                    
reasonably  confident the  reductions in  the use  of prison                                                                    
beds  would continue  as predicted.  She referenced  a slide                                                                    
from  Commissioner  Razo  [Commissioner  Greg  Razo,  Alaska                                                                    
Criminal  Justice   Commission  (ACJC)]  presented   to  the                                                                    
committee showing that  the state's current trend  was a bit                                                                    
better than  predicted. She believed  the state  would reach                                                                    
its  goal  of  a  13  percent  reduction.  The  commission's                                                                    
recommendations  pertaining  to  SB  91  was  a  13  percent                                                                    
predicted reduction  in prison. She believed  the commission                                                                    
was  looking  for  a decision  to  frontload  the  resources                                                                    
(instead of  waiting). She  believed it  was possible  to be                                                                    
fairly certain that  the savings would come.  She noted that                                                                    
prison  bed  savings  could  slow  a  bit  if  some  of  the                                                                    
recommendations  were enacted,  but the  current status  was                                                                    
good  and  the  commission  would  prefer  frontloading  the                                                                    
resources.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:16:24 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Gara   addressed  the  probation   violation  of                                                                    
committing a crime. He asked  for verification that a person                                                                    
could  be charged  and sentenced  for the  crime, which  was                                                                    
also a probation violation.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di Pietro replied in the affirmative.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Gara stated that  there were probation violations                                                                    
that did  not involve a  crime. He  used an example  where a                                                                    
person convicted of stalking a  person was not allowed to go                                                                    
near the  person's house or  call them. There had  been some                                                                    
testimony  and his  experience in  the past  that even  if a                                                                    
crime had nothing  to do with alcohol and the  person had no                                                                    
alcohol problem,  the judge often  imposed the  condition of                                                                    
no consumption of  alcohol. The condition meant  if a person                                                                    
was caught  drinking alcohol it  was a  probation violation.                                                                    
He  discussed  that  the  bill  would  return  jailtime  for                                                                    
probation violation,  which he understood the  argument for.                                                                    
He  asked if  the commission  had discussed  conditions that                                                                    
were overused.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Di Pietro  asked if  Vice-Chair Gara  was referring  to                                                                    
violation  of  conditions  of   probation  or  violation  of                                                                    
conditions of release.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Gara   clarified  he   was  interested   in  the                                                                    
violation of conditions of  release (pre-sentencing and pre-                                                                    
conviction), which  often had the  no alcohol  condition. He                                                                    
asked if there had been  any discussion about the overuse of                                                                    
the no consumption  of alcohol provision for  people with no                                                                    
alcohol problem  and a crime  not related to  alcohol. There                                                                    
were a  number of  circumstances where some  people believed                                                                    
the law went too far the other way.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di  Pietro answered  that the  commission had  not heard                                                                    
complaints about  judges imposing conditions of  release not                                                                    
to  consume alcohol  in situations  where the  crime had  no                                                                    
connection  to alcohol.  She deferred  to the  practitioners                                                                    
about  the  frequency of  the  scenario.  The conditions  of                                                                    
release  were designed  to  ensure  the individual  attended                                                                    
their court  hearings and to  ensure the individual  did not                                                                    
do anything  to get  rearrested. She  continued that  to the                                                                    
extent   there  were   restrictive  conditions   related  to                                                                    
alcohol,  the thinking  would be  that somehow  it would  be                                                                    
related to  the possibility that  the person would  get into                                                                    
trouble because of alcohol use.  She could not say how close                                                                    
the connection was in practice.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Gara would  ask  Ms. Di  Pietro  to confer  with                                                                    
Quinlan   Steiner,   Director,   Public   Defender   Agency,                                                                    
Department of Administration, at a later time.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di Pietro agreed.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
2:20:23 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Ortiz referred to  the current version of the                                                                    
bill   that   included   the   House   Judiciary   Committee                                                                    
amendments. He  asked if the  current bill met the  needs of                                                                    
the commission recommendations.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di Pietro answered that  it was difficult to answer. She                                                                    
had  conferred  with  [ACJC]  Chair  Razo  on  the  question                                                                    
because it had  come up in the past. The  commission had not                                                                    
had  time to  meet  or discuss  its  position, concerns,  or                                                                    
support  of  SB  54.  Chair  Razo  had  suggested  a  better                                                                    
approach  given time  constraints  would  be for  individual                                                                    
[ACJC]  commissioners to  provide the  committee with  their                                                                    
views   on    how   SB    54   addressed    the   commission                                                                    
recommendations.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Ortiz  looked  at  the  recommendations  the                                                                    
commission had  received the legislature in  2015, which had                                                                    
primarily  pertained to  the  goal of  reducing  the use  of                                                                    
prison  beds. He  believed Ms.  Di Pietro's  response to  an                                                                    
earlier  question by  Representative Kawasaki  was that  the                                                                    
goal was being  met. He asked if the goals  specified by the                                                                    
legislature (third paragraph on page  1 of Appendix F) would                                                                    
be met.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Ms.    Di   Pietro    responded   that    the   commission's                                                                    
recommendations  enacted in  SB 91  did not  meet the  goals                                                                    
exactly. She detailed  that as enacted, SB  91 was projected                                                                    
to decrease the  prison population by 13  percent. She noted                                                                    
the guideline  had not  been included  in the  bullet points                                                                    
provided  by  the  legislature,  but  it  was  part  of  the                                                                    
legislative process. The commission  was interested not in a                                                                    
dollar for  dollar reinvestment rule, but  that reinvestment                                                                    
be  frontloaded in  a  reasonable  expectation. She  relayed                                                                    
that even  with changes made  [in SB 54] it  appeared likely                                                                    
the state would continue to save on prison beds.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Grenn  referred   to  Recommendation  5-2017                                                                    
pertaining to  first-time C Class felonies.  He believed the                                                                    
public  outcry was  strongest pertaining  to  the issue.  He                                                                    
noted that  the list of  felonies was lengthy and  broad and                                                                    
included a range of crimes  such as tampering with evidence,                                                                    
vehicle theft,  cruelty to animals,  and other.  He remarked                                                                    
that from  the attorney general  there was a willing  from a                                                                    
compromise for  violent offenders and  nonviolent offenders,                                                                    
but it was not the recommendation from the commission.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di  Pietro agreed.  The discussion  had occurred  at the                                                                    
commission level.  At the time  it had been  determined that                                                                    
separating  violent from  nonviolent would  be complex.  She                                                                    
did not  recall an  objection to the  approach, but  that it                                                                    
was  more of  a logistical  challenge. She  agreed that  the                                                                    
list of Class C felonies was lengthy.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Grenn wondered  if  the  idea of  separating                                                                    
violent  and  nonviolent criminals  could  be  looked at  in                                                                    
future  recommendations. He  reiterated  the  wide range  of                                                                    
crimes that constituted a Class  C felony (e.g. tampering of                                                                    
evidence, cruelty  to animals, and stalking).  He encouraged                                                                    
a future recommendation from the commission.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Di Pietro  replied that  several people  had asked  her                                                                    
whether the  commission had ever  considered whether  all of                                                                    
those behaviors  should be classified  as a Class  C felony.                                                                    
She  remarked that  some other  places had  more than  three                                                                    
levels  of  felonies;  some  places   had  four,  five,  and                                                                    
possibly six levels. She added  that Alaska's system had the                                                                    
advantage of  not being as  complex as other  locations with                                                                    
more levels. She would bring  the feedback to the commission                                                                    
for consideration.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:26:06 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson asked if  the commission would analyze                                                                    
whether changes had the intended effect (if SB 54 passed).                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di Pietro replied in the affirmative.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson asked if  the commission looked at the                                                                    
composition of  the prisons and  the utilization  of halfway                                                                    
houses  and   electronic  monitoring.  She   understood  the                                                                    
numbers were dropping  in all three areas,  but she believed                                                                    
the  numbers  should  be   dropping  more  substantially  in                                                                    
prisons. She hoped  the other two areas  were being utilized                                                                    
as "step downs" towards  transitioning individuals back into                                                                    
society.  She  wondered  if  the  commission  ever  analyzed                                                                    
whether individuals in jail were  not being stepped down and                                                                    
what the reason was (e.g.  no family, housing, skills to get                                                                    
a job, or  that prison was a better place  to sleep than the                                                                    
street).                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di  Pietro responded that  the commission had  looked at                                                                    
the  issue  for its  annual  report  and had  provided  some                                                                    
initial  assessments.  The  commission looked  at  how  many                                                                    
people in prison were in  pretrial status, how many had been                                                                    
sentenced  and were  serving their  sentences, and  how many                                                                    
were  in jail  for a  supervision violation.  The commission                                                                    
had also  looked at the  CRC [community  residential center]                                                                    
usage and  had received  information from DOC.  She believed                                                                    
Commissioner Williams had told  the committee that CRCs were                                                                    
not  being utilized  as much.  She  reiterated that  details                                                                    
were included in the commission's report.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:28:01 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative    Pruitt    referenced   the    commission's                                                                    
recommendation to  change the penalty for  driving without a                                                                    
license to  a refraction, which  was incorporated in  SB 54.                                                                    
He  wondered why  people would  continue to  be required  to                                                                    
have a  license to begin  with if it was  not that big  of a                                                                    
deal for  people to have  a license. He provided  an example                                                                    
of a person who  had not had a license for  15 years and had                                                                    
provided his  expired license to  authorities. The  date had                                                                    
on  the  expired  license  had  not  been  noticed  and  the                                                                    
individual ended  up endangering numerous young  peers while                                                                    
driving a passenger van on the  ice. He surmised that if the                                                                    
punishment  was  merely an  infraction,  it  meant a  person                                                                    
could take  their chances  with the  knowledge that  if they                                                                    
got caught the penalty was merely  a ticket. He added that a                                                                    
person did not even have to  give their real name or pay for                                                                    
the ticket. He wondered about  the necessity of a license if                                                                    
the police  could not  potentially utilize  it to  help them                                                                    
seek additional  opportunities if  they pull someone  over -                                                                    
in  terms  of someone  who  may  not  be driving  for  other                                                                    
reasons.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Di  Pietro believed Representative Pruitt  was referring                                                                    
to  the second  bullet point  under Recommendation  14-2017.                                                                    
She believed  the question  went to  the larger  issue about                                                                    
why driving with  a license suspended had  been changed from                                                                    
a crime  to a violation  under criminal justice  reform. She                                                                    
clarified  that  the  change did  not  apply  to  situations                                                                    
involving a  DUI. The  reasoning was  that when  the offense                                                                    
was a  crime, people stacked  up violations and  were having                                                                    
trouble  getting relicensed.  Some individuals  did not  get                                                                    
relicensed.  She  continued  that individuals  were  getting                                                                    
pulled  over and  convicted of  crimes.  The commission  had                                                                    
made  an entire  study  of the  issue  at the  legislature's                                                                    
direction   (the  Title   28  report   was  posted   on  the                                                                    
commission's  website).  The idea  was  using  jail beds  to                                                                    
correct  behavior for  those types  of offenses  were not  a                                                                    
particularly  good use  of  jail time  and  that the  person                                                                    
could be encouraged to correct  behavior through other means                                                                    
such as fines.  There was also the crime  of driving without                                                                    
a  valid  license, which  was  different  and had  not  been                                                                    
changed  in  SB 91;  the  offense  was  still a  crime.  The                                                                    
offense of  driving without a  valid license  was punishable                                                                    
at a higher  level than driving with a  revoked license. She                                                                    
stated that  it had  not seemed fair,  which was  the reason                                                                    
for the recommendation.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:32:37 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Pruitt  surmised that  instead of  going back                                                                    
and  reanalyzing how  the state  was dealing  with suspended                                                                    
licenses  it  had been  decided  to  lower the  penalty  for                                                                    
driving without  a valid license.  He had concerns  with how                                                                    
law  enforcement  could  utilize   driving  with  a  license                                                                    
suspended. He believed officers  would say they had concerns                                                                    
with the issue. He thought  lowering the penalty for another                                                                    
offense would expand  the area of the  officers' concern. He                                                                    
explained that  if an  officer pulled  someone over  and had                                                                    
reasonable suspicion  they may need to  further investigate,                                                                    
the ability to  only write a ticket limited  what they could                                                                    
do. He  did not  know whether the  concerns of  the officers                                                                    
had been  listened to  related to  driving with  a suspended                                                                    
license,  otherwise  he  thought the  legislature  would  be                                                                    
asking questions about why they  would lower another offense                                                                    
to  the  same level.  He  thought  the conversations  should                                                                    
perhaps be held outside  the committee setting because there                                                                    
were officers who did not want  to come on the record out of                                                                    
fear  of  punitive  action  being  taken  against  them.  He                                                                    
thought  the provision  would  create additional  challenges                                                                    
for officers and that the provision had gone the wrong way.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
^FISCAL NOTES                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:35:15 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster moved to a discussion of fiscal notes.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:36:27 PM                                                                                                                    
AT EASE                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:43:54 PM                                                                                                                    
RECONVENED                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Foster  provided  the order  the  committee  would                                                                    
address the fiscal notes.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
APRIL  WILKERSON,   DIRECTOR,  DIVISION   OF  ADMINISTRATIVE                                                                    
SERVICES,   DEPARTMENT   OF   CORRECTIONS,   addressed   the                                                                    
indeterminate fiscal  note, OMB Component Number  1381, from                                                                    
DOC for  the Institution Director's Office  based on version                                                                    
T of SB  54. The bill made several changes  that were passed                                                                    
under SB 91,  which would impact the  length of imprisonment                                                                    
of   individuals  under   the   department's  custody.   The                                                                    
department  was  unable  to determine  the  total  potential                                                                    
impact. She  provided an estimated  range based  on calendar                                                                    
year   2015  offender   data  and   the  future   sentencing                                                                    
assumptions  from   DOL.  The  department   anticipated  the                                                                    
changes could increase the  prison system's daily population                                                                    
by anywhere from  108 to 285 people per  day. The department                                                                    
did  not have  sufficient  data to  determine  of the  other                                                                    
elements of SB 91 that would  stay in place such as pretrial                                                                    
diversion,  the department  could not  quantify how  many of                                                                    
the individuals  would come under  its custody.  However, if                                                                    
it was  that number  of individuals  it would  cost anywhere                                                                    
from $1.6 million  up to $4.3 million based  on the marginal                                                                    
daily rate from the DOC cost of care.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Wilkerson  detailed that  the  department  had a  daily                                                                    
average cost per inmate of  approximately $149.62, which was                                                                    
all  inclusive   (fixed  cost   and  operating   cost).  The                                                                    
department had  worked with the  Pew Foundation under  SB 91                                                                    
to come up with a  marginal rate, which excluded and removed                                                                    
all of the fixed costs and  equaled $41.49 per day (based on                                                                    
FY 15 actuals  and offender population). There  was a slight                                                                    
increase to  the marginal rate  of approximately  $0.20. For                                                                    
consistency  DOC believed  it would  be more  appropriate to                                                                    
stay with the marginal rate moving forward.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:48:04 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Kawasaki referred  to  the costs  associated                                                                    
with slight  changes to Felony  C and Theft 4  crimes, which                                                                    
would perhaps require more  incarceration. He believed there                                                                    
would  be  a cost.  He  did  not like  indeterminate  fiscal                                                                    
notes. He  remarked that  the fiscal note  that came  out of                                                                    
the Senate  Judiciary Committee had a  cost of approximately                                                                    
$4.3 million.  The Senate Finance Committee  had reduced the                                                                    
cost estimates and made the  note indeterminate. He wondered                                                                    
why.                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Wilkerson deferred to the DOC commissioner.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
DEAN WILLIAMS, COMMISSIONER,  DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS (via                                                                    
teleconference), shared  that there  had been  struggle with                                                                    
the  fiscal note  for multiple  days during  the development                                                                    
process.  He explained  that  prior  to SB  91  it had  been                                                                    
possible  to look  at the  numbers and  estimate anticipated                                                                    
costs regarding  prison population numbers and  trends. When                                                                    
SB  91   had  passed  it   had  been  possible   to  project                                                                    
anticipated savings.  When SB  54 first  came into  play, it                                                                    
did not  dial all the way  back to where they  had been with                                                                    
SB 91,  but they were creating  a third version of  what the                                                                    
department anticipated the numbers  would be. The department                                                                    
had  used multiple  assumptions  to get  to the  anticipated                                                                    
amount. He had not done many  fiscal notes and it was not an                                                                    
area he had full comfort with.  He felt that the numbers had                                                                    
become very speculative and broad  at between $1.5 [million]                                                                    
and $4.3 [million]. The department  did not have enough data                                                                    
even with  the current  changes to  determine what  the cost                                                                    
may be. He understood  the frustration with an indeterminate                                                                    
note, but  he could not  in good conscious provide  a number                                                                    
(only  an extremely  broad range).  The  version before  the                                                                    
committee was another iteration of  the bill and each of the                                                                    
changes  either increased  or decreased  cost and  there was                                                                    
very little  history to go  on. After much  consultation and                                                                    
discussion, he  believed an indeterminate note  was the best                                                                    
answer. He added  that he could also provide  the broad cost                                                                    
range.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:52:54 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Kawasaki  observed there was a  difference in                                                                    
the indeterminate  fiscal note  from the Senate  compared to                                                                    
the  current indeterminate  note.  He remarked  that Ms.  Di                                                                    
Pietro  had testified  that  Class C  felonies  and Theft  4                                                                    
would  probably increase  the  prison  population. He  noted                                                                    
that Ms. Di  Pietro had testified that felony C  and Theft 4                                                                    
offenders and  people violating conditions of  release would                                                                    
have  significant  day  rates -  increasing  the  number  of                                                                    
people in jail. He pointed to  the analysis on page 2 of the                                                                    
fiscal note  that had come  from Senate that included  a low                                                                    
estimate of  108 people per  day and  an upper limit  of 285                                                                    
people. He inferred that based  on changes made in the House                                                                    
Judiciary  Committee   a  larger   influx  of   inmates  was                                                                    
anticipated at the lower level.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Williams replied  that the narrative recognized                                                                    
that the changes  could increase the influx of  inmates to a                                                                    
particular number. He stated that  the revisions made by the                                                                    
House  Judiciary Committee  would mean  numbers would  rise,                                                                    
not decrease.  He agreed with the  premise of Representative                                                                    
Kawasaki's  question -  recent revisions  to the  bill would                                                                    
drive numbers  up somewhat. He  referenced a Class  A felony                                                                    
amendment from  the House Judiciary  Committee -  the number                                                                    
of  people in  prison for  Class  A felonies  was small.  He                                                                    
explained  DOC  had  not  made a  revision  for  the  change                                                                    
because they  did not know if  there was even one  person in                                                                    
jail for  that offense  classification, they  believed there                                                                    
was,  but they  were not  sure  whether a  law change  would                                                                    
impact  a  sentence. Those  issues  were  more difficult  to                                                                    
articulate, but  he recognized it  was likely to  drive some                                                                    
of  the   population  up  over  what   had  originally  been                                                                    
determined the past March.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Kawasaki noted  that  he and  Representative                                                                    
Wilson  served  on  the DOC  budget  subcommittee  and  they                                                                    
wanted to  make sure the  numbers were as tight  as possible                                                                    
in  order to  know what  was anticipated  in the  coming and                                                                    
future years.  He did not  like indefinite fiscal  notes and                                                                    
appreciated the range.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Foster recognized  Representative Zach  Fansler in                                                                    
the audience.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:56:36 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson  expressed concern about  the numbers.                                                                    
She noted the average daily  cost of care in the institution                                                                    
was $142.66  in FY 14, $141.17  in FY 15, and  $149.62 in FY                                                                    
16.  She  continued  that  suddenly they  were  going  to  a                                                                    
marginal rate  of $41.49.  She asked if  it was  accurate to                                                                    
indicate that every inmate would only cost $41.49.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Wilkerson  replied  that the  marginal  rate  had  been                                                                    
developed  because it  became the  whole  number of  $149.66                                                                    
when looking  at the overall institution.  She detailed that                                                                    
for any  individual coming in  the department was  not going                                                                    
to hire another superintendent  or correctional officer. The                                                                    
marginal  rate was  to identify  that every  incoming person                                                                    
would get  an assessment,  food, and clothing;  however, the                                                                    
department's  utilities  and  staffing structure  would  not                                                                    
change. The  number did  include some  of the  overtime that                                                                    
may be incurred because  the population staffing needs could                                                                    
not be met based on routine staffing.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Williams provided  an  example  of a  facility                                                                    
that  housed  a  group  of  500  people.  Expenses  included                                                                    
housing, guarding,  feeding, and providing medical  care for                                                                    
the  inmates. He  explained that  adding  or subtracting  50                                                                    
people  from   the  group  would  not   change  the  overall                                                                    
fundamental  base rate;  all of  the services  and employees                                                                    
would still  be required. However,  it would mean  more food                                                                    
would  need  to  be  purchased  staffing  would  incur  more                                                                    
overtime in  certain occasions.  The marginal  rate measured                                                                    
having the smaller groups of  people. The daily rate for the                                                                    
overall $149 was the divided  cost per person for the entire                                                                    
facility. A few  more people in or out would  not change the                                                                    
overall bottom  line cost.  The explanation  highlighted the                                                                    
difference between the $149 rate and the $42 rate.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:59:38 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson  asked where healthcare fell  into the                                                                    
analysis. She believed inmates received free healthcare.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Williams answered  that part  of the  marginal                                                                    
rate assumed  the individuals would  cost more  because they                                                                    
were under  the system's  care; however,  it did  not change                                                                    
the number of  nurses or doctors needed.  The department was                                                                    
still paying  for their salary  and all of the  other things                                                                    
needed  to  run a  facility.  He  agreed that  every  person                                                                    
coming into  the prison  added to  the healthcare  cost. The                                                                    
calculation was  not scientific,  but the marginal  rate was                                                                    
supposed to measure  what it would cost on  an average basis                                                                    
to feed and provide medical care for inmates.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Wilson  asked   if  the   location  of   an                                                                    
individual's  incarceration  mattered when  considering  the                                                                    
cost. She asked for verification  the average $41.49 per day                                                                    
applied statewide.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Wilkerson  agreed and  relayed that  the number  was the                                                                    
average incorporating all facilities.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson  wanted to see potential  savings from                                                                    
SB  91.  It  had  been her  understanding  they  were  using                                                                    
something higher  [a higher  daily rate].  She spoke  to the                                                                    
safety of Alaskans for a $41  savings for some of the people                                                                    
who may be put back on the street made her want to rethink.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:01:35 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Seaton looked  at the third paragraph on  page 3 of                                                                    
the  fiscal  note pertaining  to  felony  C convictions.  He                                                                    
pointed  to DOC's  estimate  of an  increase  in the  prison                                                                    
population  from approximately  108 per  day up  to 163  per                                                                    
day.  He  observed that  the  department  had been  able  to                                                                    
refine the  figures somewhat for specific  provisions of the                                                                    
bill. However, in the second  paragraph on page 2 he pointed                                                                    
to the range of  108 per day up to 285  per day. He believed                                                                    
the third  page of the  fiscal note indicated the  range was                                                                    
no longer valid because the  108 number would change to 163.                                                                    
He  was  trying  to   determine  the  differential  estimate                                                                    
between what had been done  previously and the version of SB
54 as it came to the  committee. He was concerned the fiscal                                                                    
note did not  narrow the range if there was  less ability to                                                                    
save a portion of the population.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Wilkerson replied  that based on SB 54 as  passed by the                                                                    
Senate, the department  had a range of 108 to  163; the same                                                                    
range  had  carried  over.  The  department  still  had  the                                                                    
inability  to determine  of the  108 that  could potentially                                                                    
come into DOC's custody  along with sentencing assumptions -                                                                    
the  changes  to  the  C  felony gave  the  courts  and  DOL                                                                    
discretion and  DOC did  not know  of those  individuals who                                                                    
would  divert  to  pretrial  or  a  diversion  program.  The                                                                    
department's understood  that the provision would  allow the                                                                    
court  an opportunity  to  request a  sentence  or impose  a                                                                    
sentence of a  given duration, not that they  would impose a                                                                    
sentence.  Without  knowing  what   would  happen  with  the                                                                    
courts,  diversion programs,  or other  provisions under  SB
91, the information used was the department's best guess.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Seaton asked for confirmation  that the fiscal note                                                                    
did not  reflect changes in  the House  Judiciary Committee,                                                                    
which would  increase sentencing and decrease  the amount of                                                                    
anticipated savings.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Wilkerson  answered that the  items passed by  the House                                                                    
Judiciary   Committee   did   not  change   the   sentencing                                                                    
guidelines under  the C felonies; therefore,  the department                                                                    
believed   the  prior   analysis   for   that  section   was                                                                    
appropriate to carry over.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Seaton asked  how the  department  would have  the                                                                    
figure refined by December 15 for  a FY 19 budget. He stated                                                                    
that DOC would need a budget  to provide to the governor. He                                                                    
wondered how the process would work.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
3:06:35 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Wilkerson  answered that the  department was  working on                                                                    
the budget;  it had  needed a  $10 million  supplemental the                                                                    
previous  year.  She  explained   that  the  department  was                                                                    
beginning  to see  an increase  in the  prison population  -                                                                    
prisons were  back at  91 percent  capacity at  present. She                                                                    
deferred to Commissioner Williams for further detail.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Williams  communicated he  was not  happy about                                                                    
providing a  fiscal note without much  more specific detail.                                                                    
He reiterated his earlier testimony  that the bill was up to                                                                    
three  or  four iterations  of  where  they expected  things                                                                    
would be. In  March he had believed the numbers  were a fair                                                                    
guesstimate  about where  things would  go. There  were some                                                                    
updates made  to the fiscal  note after changes made  by the                                                                    
House Judiciary  Committee. He believed there  would be some                                                                    
additional prison bed  costs. Without solid data  to look at                                                                    
the past year,  even the March estimate was  even very shaky                                                                    
because the  only way to get  some sense of what  the future                                                                    
would hold for cost was knowing  what the past had been. The                                                                    
past had  changed dramatically due  to reform  efforts. Some                                                                    
of the  prison population  had decreased,  but DOC  had also                                                                    
needed a  $10 million  supplemental. Every time  people were                                                                    
put  in it  cost money.  For example,  DOC had  one dialysis                                                                    
patient  it was  saving $35,000  per month  on because  they                                                                    
sent   the  person   out-of-state.  He   had  been   looking                                                                    
aggressively at those savings.  The corrections business was                                                                    
very  difficult because  medical costs  of inmates  could be                                                                    
very expensive.  He would  circle back  to determine  if the                                                                    
analysis could be articulated more clearly.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Seaton  appreciated  it.  He  explained  that  the                                                                    
committee  was  making  decisions  on the  bill,  which  was                                                                    
difficult with very broad fiscal notes.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
3:10:15 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Gara understood  that Commissioner  Williams had                                                                    
not been in the job for  20 years. However, he surmised that                                                                    
if  Representative   Wilson  offered   a  bill   with  ankle                                                                    
monitoring the bill would get  a fiscal note. He stated that                                                                    
someone  had to  estimate the  cost; they  did not  know for                                                                    
certain because  they would not  know how many  people would                                                                    
use  ankle monitors.  He  was  carrying a  bill  that had  a                                                                    
fiscal note around $1.7 million  that could probably give or                                                                    
take $500,000.  He emphasized  that SB 54  would cost  a few                                                                    
million dollars. He reasoned that  public safety cost money.                                                                    
He  mentioned  the need  to  hire  more prosecutors,  public                                                                    
defenders, and people at the  Office of Public Advocacy. The                                                                    
bill meant the state would  need to hire people because more                                                                    
people would be  in prison. He did not  understand passing a                                                                    
fiscal note  that did not  include an estimate. As  a person                                                                    
who believed in  raising revenue to fill the  budget gap, it                                                                    
was  necessary  to  know what  government  was  costing.  He                                                                    
believed  they  should know  how  much  the additional  cost                                                                    
would  be. He  stated that  indeterminate fiscal  notes were                                                                    
typically left for things that have minimal to no cost.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Williams  replied that  the point was  not lost                                                                    
on  him. The  fiscal note  had been  a highly  debated issue                                                                    
with his team. He stated that  perhaps it was his mistake as                                                                    
a new  commissioner and he  was willing to reflect  on that.                                                                    
The  department was  not trying  to hide  anything from  the                                                                    
committee.  He explained  that the  variations  of the  bill                                                                    
were widely  divergent possibilities and the  information in                                                                    
the note  reflected what  he believed  the middle  ground to                                                                    
be.  He  was  not  happy  to  ask  for  supplemental  budget                                                                    
requests. The  department had tried to  be transparent about                                                                    
the range  of costs.  He would  continue to  contemplate the                                                                    
information.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson  was concerned that the  committee had                                                                    
heard  the prison  system was  at 91  percent capacity.  She                                                                    
noted that  as of FY 18  the prison system had  increased by                                                                    
114 individuals.  She asked if  the system had  the capacity                                                                    
for another 285 people per day.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Williams answered that  500 beds had been taken                                                                    
out  of   the  system   when  he   had  closed   the  Palmer                                                                    
Correctional Center.  He noted  that the facility  was still                                                                    
there. He believed the system  would be close to capacity if                                                                    
285 individuals  were put back in  per day. He spoke  to his                                                                    
dissatisfaction about the  housing of 50 men  in a gymnasium                                                                    
that was supposed  to be used for a  gymnasium in Fairbanks.                                                                    
He believed it  was a problem; it had been  done in the past                                                                    
prior to his time with the  department. He believed it was a                                                                    
false reflection of the system  capacity. It was a difficult                                                                    
question to  answer. On the one  hand he could say  they had                                                                    
capacity for most of the 285  [per day], but it impacted the                                                                    
system.  He explained  there was  vacancy in  some locations                                                                    
and  maximum capacity  had been  reached in  other locations                                                                    
such as Fairbanks and Anchorage.  The best thing he could do                                                                    
in  terms  of  population  was  to  continue  with  pretrial                                                                    
efforts  to bring  down pretrial  population numbers,  which                                                                    
would  provide some  breathing room.  He concluded  that the                                                                    
system  could probably  take the  additional 285  people per                                                                    
day, but it would not be good.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson had  heard that  the estimate  of 285                                                                    
people  was  too  low  due  to changes  made  in  the  House                                                                    
Judiciary Committee. She asked  if Commissioner Williams was                                                                    
considering reopening the Palmer Correctional Center.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Williams replied in  the negative. He clarified                                                                    
that  if the  system exceeded  capacity the  Palmer facility                                                                    
was still  there. He explained  that in  every consideration                                                                    
about  the system  capacity he  had to  recognize where  the                                                                    
trend line  was going.  He had made  the decision  on Palmer                                                                    
because it was  clearly the assumption the  trend line would                                                                    
continue  to   decline;  the  system  had   some  space  [in                                                                    
facilities] to  make the  decision at  the time.  He assumed                                                                    
the space would still be  available but depending on whether                                                                    
the  daily influx  of inmates  went from  108 to  280 people                                                                    
meant   different  operation   decisions  about   where  the                                                                    
individuals would  go. He would need  to contemplate whether                                                                    
the state  should retain  the Palmer  facility for  the next                                                                    
five  years.   He  believed  the  system   could  take  some                                                                    
individuals back in without adding  additional beds in terms                                                                    
of reopening  the Palmer facility;  however, much  more than                                                                    
that would  require reopening the  facility. The  other part                                                                    
of the issue  was the massive cuts the  department had taken                                                                    
in  anticipation  of  the  reducing  numbers.  Depending  on                                                                    
whether the  numbers went back  up, a given number  of staff                                                                    
on shift  to run  the facility were  still needed.  He would                                                                    
know more when he got a  sense of where the final bill would                                                                    
land.  He  stated  it  was  a difficult  area  to  make  the                                                                    
determinations.  The  best  estimate  the  department  could                                                                    
produce  was   included  in  the  fiscal   note  before  the                                                                    
committee. He would  review the revisions made  in the House                                                                    
Judiciary  Committee   to  determine  if  the   fiscal  note                                                                    
information could be further articulated.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:18:03 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson  stated  that finding  out  what  the                                                                    
provision would do  after the bill passed was  too late. She                                                                    
stressed  the legislature  needed to  know what  the options                                                                    
were  when considering  adding various  provisions. She  did                                                                    
not want to necessarily  reopen another prison. She remarked                                                                    
on  Commissioner  Williams's  testimony that  he  needed  to                                                                    
determine  where  the trend  line  was  going; however,  she                                                                    
noted he had told the  committee earlier that the department                                                                    
did not  have the data,  which was  the reason he  could not                                                                    
look  at  the bill  to  come  up  with  a fiscal  note.  She                                                                    
understood  another  option  was sending  prisoners  out  of                                                                    
state  versus opening  up another  prison. She  believed the                                                                    
issue  would be  discussed in  the DOC  budget subcommittee.                                                                    
Her biggest concern was being  faced with voting on the bill                                                                    
without an accurate number.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson  stressed that  the committee  was the                                                                    
finance  committee and  was responsible  for looking  at the                                                                    
numbers and  determining how to  come up with the  money and                                                                    
where it would  come from. She believed  it was unacceptable                                                                    
to  not  have  any  idea  of the  potential  cost.  She  was                                                                    
concerned  to hear  the system  was at  91 percent  capacity                                                                    
because it  was up  141 inmates since  the beginning  of the                                                                    
fiscal year.  She emphasized that the  prison population was                                                                    
increasing. She  stated that  the population  could increase                                                                    
up to 285  people [per day] without  factoring in amendments                                                                    
made in the House  Judiciary Committee, which could increase                                                                    
the  number.  She  was  uncomfortable  voting  on  the  bill                                                                    
without  more accurate  information. She  added that  it was                                                                    
the  only fiscal  impact note  -  the others  were all  zero                                                                    
notes.  She did  not support  giving  a blank  check to  the                                                                    
department.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:20:18 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Foster  moved  to the  Department  of  Health  and                                                                    
Social Services fiscal note OMB Component Number 305.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
RANDALL  BURNS,  DIRECTOR,  DIVISION OF  BEHAVIORAL  HEALTH,                                                                    
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND SOCIAL  SERVICES, reported that the                                                                    
fiscal note had been revised to  reflect zero cost for FY 18                                                                    
and indeterminate cost  for FY 19 and  beyond. He understood                                                                    
there was some  concern from the committee  about the impact                                                                    
changes in  SB 54  would have on  the Alcohol  Safety Action                                                                    
Program (ASAP).  He detailed that if  the provisions passed,                                                                    
given the time  lag from the court system, there  would be a                                                                    
minimal impact on  the program through FY 18. For  FY 19 and                                                                    
beyond,  the program  was moving  forward on  development of                                                                    
regulations that  it believed could have  mitigating effects                                                                    
on  the  numbers  (particularly on  carryover  numbers  each                                                                    
year,   which   added   substantially  to   the   caseload).                                                                    
Additionally,  the  program  was  looking  more  closely  at                                                                    
setting  standards  for  monitoring.  The  fiscal  note  was                                                                    
indeterminate  because it  was  possible  the program  could                                                                    
continue serving  participants with  the current  staff even                                                                    
with  an  increase of  2,000  individuals.  However, if  the                                                                    
program's belief about  the ability to regulate  some of its                                                                    
work through  new standards  failed, ASAP may  need up  to 2                                                                    
additional   probation   officers.    The   department   was                                                                    
submitting the  indefinite note while  it made an  effort to                                                                    
really define the program.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
3:23:51 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Guttenberg  discussed that concerns  had come                                                                    
up the  previous day. He  requested that Mr.  Burns consider                                                                    
building  in  a  stronger  way   to  measure  the  program's                                                                    
effectiveness  and results.  He  was  interested in  knowing                                                                    
which referrals  for treatment  were more  effective, better                                                                    
administered,  and  had  better outcomes.  The  issues  were                                                                    
difficult to evaluate. He  referenced public testimony where                                                                    
individuals  had testified  about the  number of  times they                                                                    
had done  treatment until  it worked.  He understood  it was                                                                    
difficult to  evaluate treatment programs and  the multitude                                                                    
of  program types  such as  faith-based, and  boot camp-type                                                                    
treatment.  The   program  that  would  work   was  hard  to                                                                    
determine.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Burns  replied that  the  department  had been  talking                                                                    
about   the   idea  and   it   would   endeavor  to   follow                                                                    
Representative  Guttenberg's suggestions  as it  drafted and                                                                    
implemented policies for ASAP.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster  recognized Representative Ivy  Spohnholz in                                                                    
the audience.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
3:26:22 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson recalled  that the  previous day  Mr.                                                                    
Burns had testified  that ASAP did not do  any monitoring of                                                                    
the treatment  programs. She asked  why it  was incorporated                                                                    
into the fiscal note.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Burns responded  that statute  asked the  department to                                                                    
implement  standards for  ASAP,  which it  had not  formally                                                                    
done.  The department  would  be  adopting regulations  that                                                                    
would put  the standards in  place, which would give  it the                                                                    
basis to  begin looking at  the type of questions  raised by                                                                    
Representative Guttenberg.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson  highlighted  that  in  the  previous                                                                    
meeting the discussion had been  about whether ASAP followed                                                                    
whether  participants  completed the  program  successfully.                                                                    
She  noted that  Mr. Burns  had  told the  committee he  was                                                                    
looking  for the  information but  did not  necessarily have                                                                    
it. She pointed  out that part of the  fiscal note addressed                                                                    
intensive monitoring requirements. She  did not know whether                                                                    
it  meant ASAP  would  do the  monitoring  or the  treatment                                                                    
programs  would  monitor  participants. She  referenced  the                                                                    
$180,000 included in  the note and asked if Mr.  Burns had a                                                                    
projection  for the  number of  additional individuals  that                                                                    
would come to the program.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Burns responded  that  ASAP  also included  therapeutic                                                                    
courts  and the  programs  attached  to therapeutic  courts.                                                                    
Those programs  were highly  monitored, their  success rates                                                                    
were known,  and ASAP  followed up.  He detailed  that those                                                                    
program numbers were much smaller.  He volunteered to have a                                                                    
discussion  with  the  committee  in  conjunction  with  the                                                                    
therapeutic courts  coordinator regarding the  success rates                                                                    
and progress for  those individuals. He noted  that the ASAP                                                                    
program served  thousands of people, unlike  the therapeutic                                                                    
courts.  In  misdemeanor  cases  where  the  judge  believed                                                                    
alcohol or  drugs were a  factor and where the  person could                                                                    
benefit from treatment or education  on the impacts of their                                                                    
behaviors, they were referred to  ASAP. The program screened                                                                    
and  monitored   the  individuals   and  referred   them  to                                                                    
treatment. The  way the  program knew  whether a  person was                                                                    
successful was their completion of  the program and when the                                                                    
judge  agreed  and  released   them.  The  program  required                                                                    
individuals to assume some responsibility.  They were in the                                                                    
program because  of their actions  that brought  them before                                                                    
the  court. The  program was  tracking participants  ability                                                                    
and ASAP  support for  the individuals  as they  got through                                                                    
the court system, were released,  and received their car and                                                                    
driver's license back.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
3:30:42 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson clarified she  wanted to know how many                                                                    
more people the department  anticipated would participate in                                                                    
ASAP to account for the $180,000 in the fiscal note.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Burns  answered  the $180,000  reflected  the  cost  of                                                                    
hiring two additional staff.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson reiterated  her previous question. Mr.                                                                    
Burns answered  that the department  was uncertain  what the                                                                    
numbers   would   be,  which   was   the   reason  for   the                                                                    
indeterminate  fiscal note.  The  department  was hoping  to                                                                    
have  a much  better picture  at the  end of  FY 19  after a                                                                    
year's  worth of  time regarding  how  the changes  impacted                                                                    
ASAP. Eventually  one or  two additional  probation officers                                                                    
may  be required  (there were  currently  four serving  over                                                                    
3,500 people).                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson referred to  Mr. Burns' testimony from                                                                    
the  previous day  that individuals  paid to  participate in                                                                    
the program.  She wondered what  percentage of the  cost was                                                                    
paid by participants.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Burns answered  that the  individuals  paid the  entire                                                                    
cost for treatment.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson  asked for verification that  the only                                                                    
thing the participants did not  pay was Mr. Burns' salary or                                                                    
whoever was conducting the intake.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Burns replied that ASAP  funding went to paying for ASAP                                                                    
staff and rural ASAP offices in other communities.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson  wondered if  there was  a possibility                                                                    
to look at  increasing the fees to cover  the entire program                                                                    
expense. She thought  it meant the committee  would not have                                                                    
to  worry  about  indeterminate fiscal  notes,  meaning  the                                                                    
committee could zero the current note out.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster recognized  Representative Harriett Drummond                                                                    
in the audience.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
3:33:52 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Kawasaki  stated  that the  Alaska  Criminal                                                                    
Justice  Commission  had  recommended referrals  be  limited                                                                    
unless   more   funding   was  allocated.   He   noted   the                                                                    
recommendation was  included on  slide 18 of  a presentation                                                                    
provided by  ACJC about one  week earlier  ["Alaska Criminal                                                                    
Justice Commission:  House Finance Committee"  dated October                                                                    
26,  2017  (copy on  file)].  He  remarked  that SB  91  had                                                                    
limited referrals  to the most  high-risk offenders,  but it                                                                    
also  increased   workload  for  ASAP.  He   understood  the                                                                    
amendments taken  up by the House  Judiciary Committee would                                                                    
expand the referrals again. He  asked if that was Mr. Burns'                                                                    
understanding.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Burns answered in the affirmative.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Kawasaki stated  the presentation  delivered                                                                    
the  previous  day by  Mr.  Piper  [Manager, Alcohol  Safety                                                                    
Action Program,  Department of  Health and  Social Services]                                                                    
indicated  that in  FY 15  there  were about  8,900 new  and                                                                    
remaining  cases under  ASAP's purview  prior to  SB 91  and                                                                    
approximately 8,047  in FY 16.  Post-SB 91 (in FY  17) there                                                                    
were only  5,271 cases. He  referenced slide 13 of  the same                                                                    
presentation  pertaining to  ASAP FY  16 actuals.  The slide                                                                    
showed ASAP  had 13 permanent  full-time positions in  FY 16                                                                    
and FY  17. He  surmised the total  number of  referrals had                                                                    
dropped  under SB  91. He  thought it  may be  a good  thing                                                                    
because  ASAP had  been underfunded  and  its high  workload                                                                    
meant it may  not have been as effective as  it could be. He                                                                    
believed under  SB 54  it appeared that  ASAP would  have an                                                                    
increased  number of  referrals and  workload. He  asked for                                                                    
verification that ASAP  had done that in the  past with only                                                                    
13 staff.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Burns  agreed, but  the workload  had been  different in                                                                    
the sense  that the  screening (use of  the LSI-R  [Level of                                                                    
Service Inventory-Revised]) and  the monitoring requirements                                                                    
were different. He  explained it was one of  the issues ASAP                                                                    
wanted  to  address  more  fully through  a  review  of  the                                                                    
program and  the adoption  of standards  - whether  it could                                                                    
control and  mitigate some of  that through the  adoption of                                                                    
standards. He  referenced the slide's information  about the                                                                    
number  of cases  held  over each  year,  which jumped  from                                                                    
1,600 to  2,200 and back down  to 1,700. He believed  it was                                                                    
important  to determine  the reason  in order  to have  some                                                                    
impact on that caseload as well.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
3:37:37 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Seaton  stated that the  legislature had  been told                                                                    
that  ASAP  was  less  effective when  caseloads  were  high                                                                    
(around 9,000).  He elaborated  that SB  91 had  reduced the                                                                    
classifications  referrals  to  6,000, which  had  increased                                                                    
probation officer  follow up. The legislature  had been told                                                                    
the changes  made the  program more  effective. He  found it                                                                    
problematic to  go back to  8,000 or 9,000  participants. He                                                                    
continued  that  an  effective program  would  require  case                                                                    
management and probation officers.  He pointed to the second                                                                    
to the last paragraph on page  2 of the fiscal note and read                                                                    
"...based  on  a  determination   of  the  risks  and  needs                                                                    
present,  the amount  of  intensive  monitoring needed,  and                                                                    
other factors." He  thought it meant the  program may decide                                                                    
to  provide  the  same  level   of  service  that  had  been                                                                    
ineffective in the past. He  was unsure what the program was                                                                    
saying to the legislature. He  asked if it could handle more                                                                    
referrals but  not the workload.  He asked about  looking at                                                                    
implementing  a delayed  effective  date  for expanding  the                                                                    
program  to additional  people. The  delayed effective  date                                                                    
would  allow the  state to  know whether  the program  would                                                                    
have monitoring and case management.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Burns  addressed monitoring. He stressed  the importance                                                                    
of   knowing  what   the  monitoring   entailed.  For   some                                                                    
individuals it was relatively  modest if almost nonexistent.                                                                    
He explained that if a  person was very committed, ASAP sent                                                                    
them to  education for  12 hours, they  went back  to court,                                                                    
and  got their  license back.  He  relayed that  it did  not                                                                    
require a  significant amount of  monitoring for  people low                                                                    
on the  scale of recidivism.  There were also people  on the                                                                    
higher end.  The program did  not know how to  estimate what                                                                    
the numbers would be over time.  Prior to SB 91, many of the                                                                    
individuals   assigned  to   ASAP   had  domestic   violence                                                                    
misdemeanor charges; some of those  individuals did not need                                                                    
significant screening and others  did. The department needed                                                                    
the  opportunity to  track and  determine what  a particular                                                                    
score on  the LSI-R meant  in terms of ASAP's  commitment to                                                                    
monitoring;  it would  also share  the information  with the                                                                    
other offices  and would  determine the  impact. He  did not                                                                    
want to  hire people merely to  fill slots until they  had a                                                                    
much better idea of what they  would be asked to do and what                                                                    
was required based on the scores and screenings.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Burns addressed the idea  of a delayed effective date to                                                                    
the beginning  of the next  fiscal year. He did  not believe                                                                    
there  would be  numerous  referrals  between the  immediate                                                                    
effective  date under  the current  version of  SB 54  and a                                                                    
delayed date of  July 1 [2018]. Delaying  the effective date                                                                    
for a year  would allow the program to  create the standards                                                                    
it  wanted by  looking  at the  population  it continued  to                                                                    
serve,  which  may  better  prepare   the  program  for  any                                                                    
changes.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
3:43:59 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Seaton noted  they were talking about  over half of                                                                    
the fiscal  year. He  continued that  if the  referrals were                                                                    
the same as in the past  the program would see at least half                                                                    
of  the  number  in  the coming  fiscal  year  (without  any                                                                    
additional  funding). He  remarked that  the department  had                                                                    
testified  in  the House  Judiciary  Committee  that it  was                                                                    
maxed out  on funding resources.  He was confused  about how                                                                    
the  department  anticipated it  would  be  possible to  add                                                                    
another 1,500 or  2,000 referrals to the  ASAP system before                                                                    
July 1, 2018 and provide the same level of service.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Burns answered  that  it  would take  a  while for  the                                                                    
individuals  and the  court  system to  be  apprised of  the                                                                    
change. Additionally,  it would  take time  before referrals                                                                    
began  occurring at  the level  they  had in  the past.  The                                                                    
department  believed  it would  not  be  seeing double  [the                                                                    
referrals] in the  next six months - it would  take time for                                                                    
the  transition to  occur. He  reasoned that  the number  of                                                                    
referrals  would  grow during  that  timeframe,  but not  as                                                                    
astronomically  as it  could, or  most likely  did in  prior                                                                    
years.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
3:46:50 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Tilton pointed  to language on page  2 of the                                                                    
fiscal note  specifying that the increased  referrals to the                                                                    
program  would  offset the  receipts.  She  asked if  people                                                                    
referred to  the program  paid a fee.  She wondered  who was                                                                    
responsible for paying  for the program. She  asked if costs                                                                    
to participate in the program  were higher in ASAP satellite                                                                    
offices where ASAP administered  the treatment programs. She                                                                    
queried  the  payment  structure. She  reiterated  that  the                                                                    
fiscal  note  specified  ASAP  would   not  need  to  offset                                                                    
receipts,  which  she  assumed showed  up  under  designated                                                                    
general funds on the budget.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
3:48:32 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Burns deferred to a colleague.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
TONY   PIPER,  MANAGER,   ALCOHOL  SAFETY   ACTION  PROGRAM,                                                                    
DEPARTMENT    OF   HEALTH    AND   SOCIAL    SERVICES   (via                                                                    
teleconference),   replied  that   there  was   a  statutory                                                                    
requirement for  a $200 case  management fee to  help offset                                                                    
some  of the  ASAP  costs.  The fee  went  to the  Anchorage                                                                    
office  and  for  outlying grantee  offices  it  helped  the                                                                    
grantee offset  some of the  case management costs.  The fee                                                                    
was paid directly by the individual.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Tilton asked  if  program participants  were                                                                    
required to pay  the $200 fee and the additional  cost of an                                                                    
outside treatment program.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Piper  replied  that the  treatment  or  education  was                                                                    
always outside of  the ASAP office. He detailed  it could be                                                                    
in the  same agency  in outlying  areas, but  the additional                                                                    
fee  for  treatment  or  education  would  be  paid  by  the                                                                    
individual, their insurance, Medicare,  or whatever they had                                                                    
to  cover  it.  In  some cases,  there  were  programs  that                                                                    
assisted with the funding  (e.g. the Veterans Administration                                                                    
or  Alaska  Native  hospitals). He  added  there  were  some                                                                    
programs with no fee, but typically  the fee was paid by the                                                                    
individual.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Tilton  thought  the  program  may  want  to                                                                    
consider  an increase  in the  fee if  it was  not currently                                                                    
covering the program costs.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Grenn asked  what  happened  if someone  was                                                                    
referred to the program but could not pay.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Piper answered  that for the most  part, the individuals                                                                    
would  be   seen  by  ASAP  regardless.   He  continued  the                                                                    
individuals  could  have  a payment  plan  and  do  whatever                                                                    
necessary  to pay  off the  case  management fee.  Treatment                                                                    
agencies tried  to have a  sliding scale  fee. Additionally,                                                                    
there  were some  grant programs.  He  elaborated that  ASAP                                                                    
tried to  find a way to  assist individuals when they  had a                                                                    
need. The  individual would  be seen  by ASAP  regardless of                                                                    
ability to pay.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Representative Grenn was trying to  determine if there was a                                                                    
trigger point when the program  would feel the need to bring                                                                    
on more probation officers.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:52:16 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Piper answered  that it was a goal, but  the program had                                                                    
not  identified a  specific number  of cases  assigned to  a                                                                    
particular  individual and  had not  determined the  tipping                                                                    
point. The  number of  caseloads was one  of the  things the                                                                    
program wanted  to standardize.  Additionally, the  goal was                                                                    
to solidify  the requirements  necessary for  each probation                                                                    
officer to manage the  program appropriately under standards                                                                    
that would be implemented.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Gara  believed there  was an  overutilization and                                                                    
underutilization of  ASAP. He remarked that  ASAP was needed                                                                    
for  people  needing  alcohol   treatment.  He  stated  that                                                                    
frequently cases  where there  was no  evidence of  the need                                                                    
for alcohol treatment were also  referred to the program. He                                                                    
spoke  to a  change by  the House  Judiciary Committee  that                                                                    
would add cost.  He wondered how effective  the change would                                                                    
be and whether it was needed.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Piper asked Vice-Chair Gara to clarify.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Gara rephrased his question.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Burns answered that the  ASAP program had been operating                                                                    
for  some time.  He had  heard  only good  things about  the                                                                    
program.  He  recently  read  a   report  published  by  the                                                                    
University  related  to  a cost/benefit  ratio.  The  report                                                                    
indicated that  for every state  dollar invested,  the state                                                                    
was receiving  $1.50 in return;  the return was not  as high                                                                    
as some  of the other  programs but was  certainly providing                                                                    
service. He  continued that because  standards had  not been                                                                    
set, it was  difficult to gage ASAP success. He  did not yet                                                                    
have the answer, but the program was working on it.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Gara clarified he was  asking whether the changes                                                                    
in  the House  Judiciary Committee  were positive  and cost-                                                                    
effective given the added cost.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Burns replied that he  understood the goal of the change                                                                    
was to provide  courts with the option to  allow more people                                                                    
to  be  served  (than  under  changes made  by  SB  91).  He                                                                    
understood there  was value and  it was nice to  know people                                                                    
believed  the ASAP  program  could  help misdemeanants  with                                                                    
alcohol and  drug involvement. He appreciated  the goal, but                                                                    
he did  not know what  the changes would cost  long-term. He                                                                    
assured the committee that the  department would run ASAP to                                                                    
the best  of its  ability; if  additional funds  were needed                                                                    
they would ask.  He believed that in one year  they would be                                                                    
on  a better  footing to  know what  the program  would need                                                                    
(after  some history  and the  implementation of  standards)                                                                    
and how new requirements  for screening and monitoring would                                                                    
impact the office.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
3:57:48 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Gara was asking if  the changes made in the House                                                                    
Judiciary  Committee were  a good  idea and  would be  cost-                                                                    
effective. Mr. Burns answered in the affirmative.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Seaton shared that DOL  had just confirmed that the                                                                    
referral  system  to ASAP  could  apply  to a  sentence  for                                                                    
conduct that  occurred prior to  the bill's  effective date;                                                                    
the  program could  start getting  referrals from  the court                                                                    
system immediately due to the immediate effective date.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
DAN SPENCER, DIRECTOR,  DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES,                                                                    
DEPARTMENT  OF LAW  (via teleconference),  relayed that  DOL                                                                    
had one  zero fiscal note.  He deferred to Mr.  Skidmore for                                                                    
questions.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Skidmore  provided detail  on the  zero fiscal  note. He                                                                    
highlighted that  SB 54 would  adjust sentences and  the way                                                                    
the department may handle work  it was already provided. The                                                                    
vast majority  of the amendments  in the bill would  not add                                                                    
work for DOL.  The only thing that would  potentially add to                                                                    
the department's cost was the  addition of Pink and Tramadol                                                                    
to the  scheduled drug  list; however, he  did not  know the                                                                    
number of  cases that would  come to DOL and  the department                                                                    
assumed  it would  be  able  to absorb  the  cases into  its                                                                    
current  workload. He  did not  mean to  imply that  DOL was                                                                    
flush financially,  but prosecutors had discretion  on which                                                                    
cases to bring;  therefore, DOL had the  ability to regulate                                                                    
how much work the bill would create.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
4:01:29 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Kawasaki   spoke   to   the   addition   of                                                                    
presumptive  sentencing,   amendments  to  the   offense  of                                                                    
violating  conditions  of release,  and  a  couple of  other                                                                    
items  that  favored prosecution.  He  surmised  it did  not                                                                    
necessarily  mean   the  department  would   prosecute  more                                                                    
frequently.  He  asked for  verification  it  meant DOL  may                                                                    
prosecute different crimes and  that it had discretion about                                                                    
cases it chose.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Skidmore  used the violation of  conditions [of release]                                                                    
as an  example. Currently, if  an individual charged  with a                                                                    
crime  and  released  pretrial violated  the  conditions  of                                                                    
release it would  most likely result in a  bail hearing. The                                                                    
department's prosecutors  would have  work to do  to address                                                                    
the violation. The difference the  bill made was the type of                                                                    
work  DOL may  do  or  how it  would  address  the work.  He                                                                    
believed the addition of violation  of conditions of release                                                                    
would increase  efficiency for  the department  because when                                                                    
someone  was  arrested and  a  charge  was filed,  the  bail                                                                    
hearing  was more  likely to  automatically come  about. The                                                                    
change  was  smoother than  the  current  process where  the                                                                    
department had to find out what  was going on, had to try to                                                                    
get the  person into court, and  had to file other  sorts of                                                                    
paperwork. He  explained that  it would  not alter  the fact                                                                    
that  a  person had  violated  their  conditions or  that  a                                                                    
response  to the  violation had  to take  place. The  change                                                                    
would provide DOL with more tools to respond with.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Skidmore  highlighted  Class   C  felonies  as  another                                                                    
example.  The bill  would change  the penalty  from 0  to 18                                                                    
months of  probation time to  0 up to  1 year of  jail time.                                                                    
The  bill  changed  what  the sentencing  may  be,  but  not                                                                    
whether the crime was prosecuted.  He explained that DOL may                                                                    
alter the sentencing  memorandum filed for a  case, but they                                                                    
would   still   be   required  to   file   the   memorandum.                                                                    
Additionally, the  department would still have  to negotiate                                                                    
the  case. There  would  be different  tools,  but the  work                                                                    
would not change - with  the exception of Pink and Tramadol;                                                                    
there may be  additional cases for possession  of the drugs,                                                                    
but he  did not  know how  many cases there  would be  - the                                                                    
cases would have  to be factored into  the workload. Nothing                                                                    
else in  the bill increased workload  but provided different                                                                    
tools to address existing work.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
4:04:22 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
KELLY   HOWELL,   DIRECTOR,   DIVISION   OF   ADMINISTRATIVE                                                                    
SERVICES, DEPARTMENT OF  PUBLIC SAFETY (via teleconference),                                                                    
spoke to  the department's  zero fiscal note  [OMB Component                                                                    
Number  2325]. The  department did  not anticipate  proposed                                                                    
changes  in SB  54 would  have a  significant impact  on the                                                                    
enforcement efforts of the Alaska  State Troopers (AST). She                                                                    
noted  that  AST  Captain  Dan   Lowden  was  available  for                                                                    
questions.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
4:05:36 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Foster   moved  to  Judiciary  fiscal   note,  OMB                                                                    
Component  Number 768.  He relayed  that  Alaska Courts  and                                                                    
Juvenile  Justice  fiscal   notes  remained  unchanged  from                                                                    
previous versions of  the bill. He asked  members to provide                                                                    
questions to his office.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MATT  DAVIDSON,   PROGRAM  OFFICER,  DIVISION   OF  JUVENILE                                                                    
JUSTICE,   DEPARTMENT  OF   HEALTH   AND  SOCIAL   SERVICES,                                                                    
addressed the  zero fiscal note  OMB Component  Number 2134.                                                                    
He detailed  that the division  had submitted a  zero fiscal                                                                    
note  on the  initial version  of the  bill. The  department                                                                    
handled  juveniles referred  to  the  division for  criminal                                                                    
offenses  based on  their  risks and  needs,  so changes  to                                                                    
sentences and  adult probation did not  generally impact the                                                                    
division. The  addition of the  drugs Pink and  Tramadol may                                                                    
bring  in  some  additional   referrals,  but  the  division                                                                    
believed it  would handle them internally.  The division had                                                                    
not updated the  fiscal note based on the  latest version of                                                                    
the bill. He  was happy to update the note  if the committee                                                                    
desired; the fiscal note would continue to be zero.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
4:07:25 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson  asked to  hear from  DOC Commissioner                                                                    
Williams  [Commissioner  Williams  was no  longer  available                                                                    
during  the  meeting]. She  asked  for  a breakdown  of  the                                                                    
marginal daily  rate of $41.49.  She wanted to know  how the                                                                    
rate was determined.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster would follow up on the issue.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Wilson  requested   the  formula   for  the                                                                    
marginal rate prior to amendments  the following morning via                                                                    
email. Ms. Wilkerson agreed.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster asked members if they had questions.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson  hoped Commissioner Williams  would be                                                                    
online  for the  meeting the  following day.  She emphasized                                                                    
the importance of real numbers.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
4:10:31 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster  relayed that Nancy Meade,  General Counsel,                                                                    
Alaska Court System was available for any questions.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
CSSB 54(FIN)  was HEARD  and HELD  in committee  for further                                                                    
consideration.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Foster addressed  the schedule  for the  following                                                                    
day.                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
ADJOURNMENT                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
4:11:12 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
The meeting was adjourned at 4:11 p.m.                                                                                          

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
SB 54 HCS JUD Fiscal Notes Pkt..pdf HFIN 11/1/2017 1:00:00 PM
SB 54
SB 54 ACJC Report Appendix F HFIN Discussion.pdf HFIN 11/1/2017 1:00:00 PM
SB 54