Legislature(2023 - 2024)SENATE FINANCE 532
04/18/2023 09:00 AM Senate FINANCE
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| Audio | Topic |
|---|---|
| Start | |
| SB41 || SB54 | |
| SB29 | |
| SB87 | |
| SB104 | |
| SB107 | |
| Adjourn |
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
| *+ | HB 54 | TELECONFERENCED | |
| += | SB 54 | TELECONFERENCED | |
| += | SB 41 | TELECONFERENCED | |
| += | SB 29 | TELECONFERENCED | |
| += | SB 87 | TELECONFERENCED | |
| += | SB 104 | TELECONFERENCED | |
| + | TELECONFERENCED | ||
| += | SB 107 | TELECONFERENCED | |
SENATE FINANCE COMMITTEE
April 18, 2023
9:02 a.m.
9:02:44 AM
CALL TO ORDER
Co-Chair Stedman called the Senate Finance Committee
meeting to order at 9:02 a.m.
MEMBERS PRESENT
Senator Lyman Hoffman, Co-Chair
Senator Donny Olson, Co-Chair
Senator Bert Stedman, Co-Chair
Senator Click Bishop
Senator Jesse Kiehl
Senator Kelly Merrick
Senator David Wilson (via teleconference)
MEMBERS ABSENT
None
ALSO PRESENT
Paloma Harbour, Fiscal Management Practices Analyst, Office
of Management and Budget, Office of the Governor; Tim
Lamkin, Staff, Senator Gary Stevens; Ken Alper, Staff,
Senator Donny Olson; Senator Jesse Bjorkman, Sponsor; Laura
Achee, Staff, Senator Jesse Bjorkman; Senator Forrest
Dunbar, Sponsor; Arielle Wiggin, Staff, Senator Forrest
Dunbar; Pete Ecklund, Staff, Senator Bert Stedman; Senator
Cathy Giessel.
PRESENT VIA TELECONFERENCE
Dom Pannone, Administrative Services Director, Department
of Transportation and Public Facilities, Juneau.
SUMMARY
SB 29 CIVICS EDUCATION; EST AK CVCS ED COMM
CSSB 29 (FIN) was REPORTED out of committee with
four "do pass" recommendations, one "no
recommendation" and with one new fiscal note from
the Department of Education and Early Development
SB 41 APPROP: CAPITAL/SUPPLEMENTAL
SB 41 was HEARD and HELD in committee for further
consideration
SB 54 APPROP: SUPPLEMENTAL; REAPPROP; AMENDING
SB 54 was HEARD and HELD in committee for further
consideration
SB 87 LUMBER GRADING PROGRAM
SB 87 was REPORTED out of committee with five "do
pass" recommendations, one "no recommendation",
and with one previously published fiscal impact
note: F1(DNR)
SB 104 CIVIL LEGAL SERVICES FUND
SB 104 was REPORTED out of committee with three
"do pass" recommendations, three "no
recommendations", and with one new fiscal note
from the Department of Commerce, Community and
Economic Development
SB 107 PERMANENT FUND DIVIDEND; POMV SPLIT
SB 107 was HEARD and HELD in committee for
further consideration
SENATE BILL NO. 41
"An Act making appropriations, including capital
appropriations and other appropriations; making
supplemental appropriations; making appropriations to
capitalize funds; and providing for an effective
date."
SENATE BILL NO. 54
"An Act making supplemental appropriations,
reappropriations, and other appropriations; amending
appropriations; capitalizing funds; and providing for
an effective date."
9:04:21 AM
PALOMA HARBOUR, FISCAL MANAGEMENT PRACTICES ANALYST, OFFICE
OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET, OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR, discussed
the presentation, "State of Alaska, Office of Management
and Budget, Supplemental Budget SB54, Senate Finance
Committee; April 18, 2023" (copy on file). She pointed to
slide 2, "FY2023 Supplemental Budget Overview."
Co-Chair Stedman queried the total number.
Ms. Harbour replied that the total supplemental number for
both operating and capital was $113.3 million in UGF; $50.6
million in DFG; $63.8 million other state funds; $125.8
million in federal funds; which totaled around $353.5
million.
Co-Chair Olson wondered how close oil was to the projection
of $87.50 per barrel.
Ms. Harbour replied that as of April 10, 2023 the actual
forecast was $83.55 per barrel. She explained that the
price of oil exceeded that amount over the last eight days.
Co-Chair Stedman queried the number of deficit in oil price
projection for 2023.
Ms. Harbour agreed to provide that information.
Ms. Harbour looked at slide 3, "Operating Supps Department
Summary." She noted that the large requests were the fire
supplementals, Department of Corrections (DOC), Department
of Public Safety (DPS), and University of Alaska (UA)
bargaining unit increases. She noted that the highest
request was $3.7 million for judgments and settlements.
Ms. Harbour pointed to slide 4, "Capital Supps Department
Summary." She outlined the specific requests in the capital
budget supplemental.
Co-Chair Hoffman queried the reason for the switch from
general funds to designated general funds for UA.
Ms. Harbour replied that it was mostly related to receipt
authority.
Co-Chair Hoffman queried the specific project.
Ms. Harbour replied that the project was listed in the
backup details.
Ms. Harbour addressed slide 5, "Senate Finance Question
Responses":
Senator Wilson asked about FY2022 Fire
Suppression/Preparedness activity and why there
appears to be a lapse.
There appears to be a UGF lapse in FY2022 Fire
Suppression Activity, due to the $15 million in ARPA
revenue replacement supplemental funding that was able
to be utilized.
Senator Bishop asked how much of the FY2023 fire
suppression supplemental is remaining for fires.
The supplemental submitted January 31st, was
insufficient to cover spring fires. The supplemental
budget amendments submitted February 14th, include the
last $1.2 million needed to cover fires from Summer
and Fall of 2022, as well as an additional $6.8
million for anticipated Spring 2023 fire activity.
9:10:38 AM
Ms. Harbour pointed to slide 6, "Senate Finance Question
Responses (Dollars in thousands)":
Senator Hoffman asked about the Department of
Correction's plan for managing situations where a
correctional facility is over capacity.
The Department of Corrections has recently taken
proactive measures to ensure that correctional
facilities do not remain overcrowded. Capacity levels
are checked daily and as numbers rise at intake
facilities, the Classification Unit, Central
Transportation Unit, Facility Superintendents, and
Institutional Probation Officers work together to
develop a plan to move offenders to remain below
capacity.
Senator Hoffman asked about the Department of
Correction's plan for managing situations where a
correctional facility is over capacity.
The Department of Corrections is using emergency
contract workers to cover various work such as food
services, maintenance, medical, mental health and
education/programs where needed. The department is
also using on-call non-permanent positions for
medical, mental health, and administrative vacancies.
These efforts provide coverage while recruiting for
permanent classified positions.
Ms. Harbour addressed slide 7, "Senate Finance Question
Responses (Dollars in thousands)":
Senator Stedman asked for more information related to
the increased utility costs within the Department of
Fish and Game as it relates to fuel needs for
hatcheries.
• Hatchery utility costs have risen over the past two
years due to the volatility in fuel oil and natural
gas prices in the Fairbanks markets. For example,
rates increased at the Ruth Burnett Sport Fish
Hatchery (RBSFH) for natural gas, fuel oil and
electricity 4.8 percent, 142.4 percent and 50 percent
respectively, between FY2020 and FY2022. For
perspective, in FY2022, annual consumption rates were
207,495 CCF of natural gas, 34,700 gallons of fuel
oil, and 1,485,840 KWH of electricitythis is
substantial consumption, so even small increases in
utility rates can have a large impact on cost let
alone what has occurred.
• In comparison, William Jack Hernandez Sport Fish
Hatchery (WJHSFH) operates on electricity and natural
gas. Prices have been stable in the Anchorage market.
The FY2023 allocation for utilities to this facility
of $880K reflects a $50K reduction from the FY2022
level of $931K to assist in covering the RBHSFH FY2023
increase.
• Legislative authority appropriated to the new
Anchorage and Fairbanks Hatcheries RDU in FY2023 is
slightly less than the FY2022 level without any
allowance to account for the higher utility/fuel
costs.
• Efforts are underway with the Department of
Transportation and Public Facilities (DOT and PF) to
conduct energy audits that hope to improve
efficiencies at these facilities and translate into
cost saving.
Ms. Harbour pointed to slide 8, "Senate Finance Question
Responses (Dollars in thousands)":
Senator Kiehl asked about the methodology behind
deciding which parks to re-open, and whether or not
there's a prioritized list.
The Division of Parks and Outdoor Recreation (DPOR)
does not maintain a list or methodology to reopen
parks because they are open to the public unless there
is a reason to close. When situations arise that
necessitate a temporary closure of a state park unit,
DPOR works quickly to remedy and address those issues
to reopen public access to outdoor recreation
opportunities.
A park unit may have a gate closed during the winter
months due to management decisions or budget
limitations. Gates are closed to many campgrounds in
the wintertime across the state due to lack of ability
to plow and staff the unit. Many of these areas are
converted into wintertime recreational opportunities
including groomed ski trails. The division also
maintains management control and the ability to limit
specific recreational uses within each.
Ms. Harbour pointed to slide 9, "Senate Finance Question
Responses (Dollars in thousands)":
Senator Olson asked for additional details regarding
the Advanced Air Mobility project.
The Advanced Air Mobility (AAM) Infrastructure study
will result in a report that will inform Alaska's
build out of NextGen technology to improve aviation
safety and reliability. The study will include an
inventory of all existing state, public, federal, and
military infrastructure assets and a gap analysis that
highlights needs for the full implementation of AAM.
Alaska is the most dangerous place to fly according to
the FAA. The AAM is going to look at the current
infrastructure and lack of infrastructure needed to
keep our airspace safe. This study will highlight what
we do have, what we don't have and some potential
solutions. There's a lot of opportunities in front of
Alaska to capture federal funding that can be utilized
to improve the safety of Alaska's airspace. This study
is exploring solutions that fit within current federal
funding streams but will also highlight the needs that
fall outside of current or conventional funding.
Senator Bishop queried the person available from the
Department of Transportation and Public Facilities
(DOT/PF).
Ms. Harbour replied that Mr. Pannone was online from
DOT/PF.
Ms. Harbour highlighted slide 10, "Senate Finance Question
Responses (Dollars in thousands)":
Senator Hoffman requested confirmation regarding
whether or not there are shortages for ice roads that
need to be addressed.
Northern Region (NR) has $250.0 in their budget for
ice roads. They received an increment of $50.0 in
FY2013 for the ice road to Kiana (TORA with Northwest
Arctic Borough (NWAB)) and $200.0 in FY2023 (Tanana,
Rampart, and NWAB). To the best of NR's knowledge
there are no additional needs or identified shortages
for ice roads.
In Alaska's Statewide Transportation Improvement
Program (STIP), there is $2 million in federal funding
for Ice Roads and Seasonal Roads Maintenance Program.
The Department of Transportation established a Safe
Ice Roads for Alaska (SIRA) Program for communities to
competitively access funding for ice roads. This
funding has been awarded to communities and the Native
Village of Napaimute received just under $500.0 for
over 200 miles.
Ms. Harbour looked at Attachment 1 and Attachment 2 (copies
on file).
Co-Chair Stedman asked for the details of the attachments.
Ms. Harbour looked at Attachment 1.
9:15:10 AM
Co-Chair Stedman requested that the highlights be addressed
on each item.
Ms. Harbour noted that fire supplemental.
Ms. Harbour noted that the Department of Administration
(DOA) were all related to one issue, which was lease
payments.
Ms. Harbour noted some cleanup items for bargaining unit
agreements.
Ms. Harbour noted the items related to the Department of
Education and Early Development (DEED).
Senator Bishop noted that electricity rates had increased
by 50 percent.
Ms. Harbour stated that page 9 included additional costs to
the Department of Fish and Game (DFG).
9:20:45 AM
Ms. Harbour noted the supplemental ask from DPS. She
continued to outline the details within the attachment.
Senator Bishop wondered whether the maintenance operator
wage issue had seen resolution.
9:24:15 AM
DOM PANNONE, ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES DIRECTOR, DEPARTMENT
OF TRANSPORTATION AND PUBLIC FACILITIES, JUNEAU (via
teleconference), replied that the department submitted a
supplemental request for funding for the critical incentive
pay in January.
Senator Bishop wanted to ensure that the request was
expedited to ensure the integrity of the workforce.
Co-Chair Olson remarked on some damage to a jet engine from
the Nome Airport. He wanted to know the mission critical
status. He stressed that there was an individual component
that allowed for application for the mission critical
status.
Mr. Pannone agreed.
9:25:46 AM
Co-Chair Olson wondered whether there needed to be an
increase to the amount available for mission critical
status.
Mr. Pannone replied that a 30 percent increase was
effective when utilized as related to recruitment and
retention.
Ms. Harbour agreed.
Ms. Harbour looked at page 24, as related to health
insurance increases for the legislative branch.
9:29:17 AM
Co-Chair Stedman requested a brief overview of all totals.
Ms. Harbour replied that the total for operating
supplementals was $102.4 million in UGF, $20.6 million in
DGF, $15.2 million in other funds, and $115.2 in federal
funds. The total for operating supplementals was $253.5
million.
SB 41 was HEARD and HELD in committee for further
consideration.
SB 54 was HEARD and HELD in committee for further
consideration.
9:35:32 AM
AT EASE
9:40:52 AM
RECONVENED
SENATE BILL NO. 29
"An Act relating to civics education, civics
assessments, and secondary school graduation
requirements; establishing the Alaska Civics Education
Commission; and providing for an effective date."
9:41:26 AM
Senator Bishop MOVED to ADOPT the committee substitute for
SB 29, Work Draft 33-LS0246\R (Marx, 4/14/23).
9:41:48 AM
AT EASE
9:42:04 AM
RECONVENED
9:42:11 AM
Co-Chair Stedman OBJECTED for discussion.
9:42:32 AM
TIM LAMKIN, STAFF, SENATOR GARY STEVENS, introduced the
legislation. The bill put emphasis on civics education in
the state education system.
KEN ALPER, STAFF, SENATOR DONNY OLSON, explained the CS.
9:44:57 AM
RECONVENED
9:45:06 AM
AT EASE
Senator Bishop rescinded his action and restated the moving
of the committee substitute.
Senator Bishop MOVED to ADOPT the committee substitute for
SB 29, Work Draft 33-LS0246\R (Marx, 4/14/23).
Co-Chair Olson OBJECTED for discussion.
Mr. Alper stated that there was a hope that the fiscal note
would be reduced because of the costs associated with the
changes in the committee substitute.
Co-Chair Olson wondered whether the sponsor supported the
changes.
Mr. Lamkin replied in the affirmative.
Co-Chair Olson WITHDREW the OBJECTION. There being NO
OBJECTION, it was so ordered.
Senator Bishop MOVED to REPORT SB 29 from committee with
individual recommendations and attached fiscal notes. There
being NO OBJECTION, it was so ordered.
CSSB 29 (FIN) was REPORTED out of committee with four "do
pass" recommendations, one "no recommendation" and with one
new fiscal note from the Department of Education and Early
Development.
9:47:30 AM
AT EASE
9:49:57 AM
RECONVENED
SENATE BILL NO. 87
"An Act relating to a lumber grading training program
and lumber grading certificates; relating to use of
lumber graded and certified by a person holding a
lumber grading training program certificate; and
providing for an effective date."
9:50:21 AM
SENATOR JESSE BJORKMAN, SPONSOR, provided a recap of the
legislation.
Co-Chair Stedman wondered whether an individual could have
the certification to grade a smaller lumber mill.
Senator Bjorkman replied in the negative. He explained that
a local lumber miller would receive training to grade their
own lumber.
Co-Chair Olson wondered why there was not an inclusion of
allowing someone to grade other lumber.
Senator Bjorkman replied that the legislation was based on
programs that exist in other states. He stated that the
goal was to verify the quality of their own work.
9:55:04 AM
Senator Kiehl surmised that there was nothing in the bill
that addressed the risk of heights of the structures, but
asked for detail of other statutes that addressed that
issue.
Senator Bjorkman deferred to Ms. Achee.
9:55:42 AM
LAURA ACHEE, STAFF, SENATOR JESSE BJORKMAN, replied that
there were other requirements in state law that say that
structures over a certain height required a stamp of an
engineer or architect on the design.
9:57:55 AM
AT EASE
9:58:12 AM
RECONVENED
9:58:17 AM
Senator Wilson wondered whether local grade lumber would be
insurable.
Senator Bjorkman replied in the affirmative.
Senator Wilson wondered whether a home seller or buyer
needed to disclose that they used local wood.
Senator Bjorkman replied that it would be no different than
normal grade standards.
10:00:42 AM
Co-Chair Stedman spoke in support of the bill.
Senator Bishop echoed Co-Chair Stedman's comments.
Co-Chair Olson congratulated Senator Bjorkman on advancing
the bill through the legislature.
Senator Merrick MOVED to REPORT SB 87 out of committee with
individual recommendations and attached fiscal note.
SB 87 was REPORTED out of committee with five "do pass"
recommendations, one "no recommendation", and with one
previously published fiscal impact note: F1(DNR).
10:05:03 AM
AT EASE
10:09:13 AM
RECONVENED
SENATE BILL NO. 104
"An Act relating to appropriations to the civil legal
services fund."
10:09:58 AM
SENATOR FORREST DUNBAR, SPONSOR, provided a summary of the
legislation.
Senator Wilson wanted to ensure that the Alaska Legal Fund
was not the grantee.
Senator Dunbar agreed.
10:11:58 AM
Senator Bishop thanked the bill sponsor.
ARIELLE WIGGIN, STAFF, SENATOR FORREST DUNBAR, introduced
herself, and thanked the committee.
10:12:54 AM
KEN ALPER, STAFF, SENATOR DONNY OLSON, explained the change
in the fiscal note
Senator Bishop wondered whether there was any impact on the
Court System.
Mr. Alper replied that the Court was funded by UGF, so the
filing fees went to general appropriation.
10:14:46 AM
Senator Kiehl MOVED to REPORT SB 104 with individual
recommendations and attached fiscal note. There being NO
OBJECTION, it was so ordered.
SB 104 was REPORTED out of committee with three "do pass"
recommendations, three "no recommendations", and with one
new fiscal note from the Department of Commerce, Community
and Economic Development.
10:14:46 AM
AT EASE
10:24:00 AM
RECONVENED
SENATE BILL NO. 107
"An Act relating to the Alaska permanent fund;
relating to income of the Alaska permanent fund;
relating to the amount available for appropriation and
appropriations from the earnings reserve account;
relating to the permanent fund dividend; and providing
for an effective date."
10:24:45 AM
KEN ALPER, STAFF, SENATOR DONNY OLSON, discussed the
presentation, "Senate Bill 107, How We Got Here: Use of
Savings to Balance the Budget Permanent Fund, CBRF, and the
POMV" (copy on file).
10:25:47 AM
Mr. Alper addressed slide 2, "The Permanent Fund, 1977-
2017":
• For 40 years, the Permanent Fund mostly grew in the
background and was not used for general government in
any way
• Half of statutory earnings, defined by formula, were
distributed as dividends
• The "other half" could have been used by the state,
but was left in the fund
Therefore, the fund now includes the compounded
earnings on the state's "half" that was not used
10:26:32 AM
Mr. Alper pointed to slide 3, "The Permanent Fund, 1977-
2017":
• What would it have been used for?
o Additional state spending
o Larger PFDs
o Lower oil taxes
o Invested separately in another savings fund
• 2016-2017 Dividend Reduced from formula by veto
(2016) or budget action (2017)
• 2018 Passage of SB26, with a sustainable "percent of
market value" draw tied to a five-year lookback fund
value
10:28:13 AM
Mr. Alper discussed slide 4, "Constitutional Budget Reserve
History":
• 1977-1990: Multiple lawsuits between state and oil
industry regarding pipeline tariffs, royalty
valuation, and petroleum taxes
• 1990: As these cases were settling, Art. IX, Sec. 17
passed as a place to hold settlement funds apart from
general revenue
o Two methods to draw funds: by simple majority or by
supermajority
• 1994, Hickel v. Halford, Supreme Court greatly
limited possibility for simple majority draw, making
the "¾ vote" necessary in almost all cases
• 1994-2005, annual budget balancing draws totaling
$5.5 billion
• 2006-2010, budget surpluses were used to pay back
full amount
• 2011-2013, no CBRF draws; budget surpluses saved
elsewhere
• 2014-2017, draws totaling about $11 billion
10:30:10 AM
Mr. Alper displayed slide 5, "Constitutional Budget Reserve
History":
• 2018-2021, ongoing concern of balance hitting zero
• 2022-2023, small repayments due to:
o Failure of "reverse sweep"
o FY22 surplus after spring '22 price spike
o Veto of SBR deposit passed last session
10:31:55 AM
Mr. Alper pointed to slide 6, "POMV, Dividends, and Year
End Balances 2018-2028."
10:34:31 AM
Mr. Alper addressed slide 7, "What If the Senate Version of
SB26 Had Passed?"
• (The House version had similar provisions, including
a 67/33 POMV split, although all were removed by the
conference committee)
• 75/25 Split
• If certain oil revenue (production tax plus UGF
portion of royalty) exceeds $1.2 billion, POMV is
reduced dollar for dollar by the amount over that
o The reduction comes from the GF portion, not
the dividend portion
• When the ERA exceeds four times the current year's
POMV, the amount in excess of this sweeps to the
principal (replaces inflation proofing)
o Internal to the fund, so does not impact this
analysis
• Appropriation cap of $4.1 billion, plus capital
budget and PFD, less debt service, plus inflation from
7/1/16
10:36:45 AM
Mr. Alper pointed to slide 8, "What If the Senate Version
of SB26 Had Passed?"
And then:
• How would budgets have changed?
• Future POMV adjustments due to claw back
• Etc.
10:39:16 AM
Mr. Alper discussed slide 9, "What CSSB107(FIN)\Y Does":
• Establishes the 75/25 Split (25 percent of POMV to
dividends)
• Sets a "trigger" by which the split increases to
50/50 (50 percent of the POMV to dividends):
o If, in any year starting in 2026, the
legislature passes at least $900 million in new
revenue, the POMV split increases to 50/50
o Must be new, annually recurring revenue, versus
what was in statute as the law read on January 1,
2023
o The condition must be agreed to by both the
Commissioner of Revenue and the Director of
Legislative Finance
o If this doesn't happen by 2037, the condition
expires and the 75/25 remains
10:40:39 AM
Mr. Alper pointed to slide 10, "Potential additional
amendments to the POMV":
• Modify the "trigger" (for the switch from 75/25 to
50/50)
o Different revenue amount than $900 million
o Add multiple "steps" of new revenue where the
POMV split would change gradually
• Add additional "triggers"
o Minimum savings amount
o Condition to passing some other legislation
• Add additional pieces from SB26
o lawback" / volatility piece (POMV reduced
when oil revenue is high)
o Automatic sweep from ERA to Principal when ERA
hits certain size
10:42:06 AM
AT EASE
10:43:03 AM
RECONVENED
10:43:03 AM
PETE ECKLUND, STAFF, SENATOR BERT STEDMAN, looked at the
presentation, "Historical Capital Budgets" (copy on file).
He looked at slide 1.
Mr. Ecklund discussed slide 2. He noted that the slide
showed some of the deferred maintenance needs in the state,
and school major maintenance needs.
10:45:36 AM
Mr. Ecklund pointed to slide 3. He remarked that the slide
was from the Office and Management and Budget (OMB), which
addressed preventative maintenance.
Mr. Ecklund looked at slide 4. He stated that the slide was
drafted by Senator Bishop.
Senator Bishop stated that the slide showed that the slide
would slowly address the issue, because it adjusted for
inflation as related to deferred maintenance .
Mr. Ecklund pointed to slide 5. He noted that the slide
pointed to the modeling assumptions.
Mr. Ecklund pointed to slide 6. He remarked that the slide
was built into the assumption for education.
Mr. Ecklund discussed slide 7. He noted that the slide
showed the assumptions, which were similar to other budget
items throughout the session.
10:50:32 AM
Mr. Ecklund pointed to slide 8. He noted that the slide
showed what was needed in revenue to get to a 50/50
dividend.
Mr. Ecklund displayed slide 9, which showed the
probabilistic modeling.
Co-Chair Olson noted the CBR probability.
Mr. Ecklund agreed
Mr. Ecklund addressed slide 10, which showed that the
reduction in the budget would reflect the history of the
budgets.
10:56:09 AM
Co-Chair Olson looked at slide 6, and wondered whether the
supplemental budget was slated at $50 million per year.
Mr. Ecklund replied in the affirmative.
Co-Chair Olson felt that assumption was low for the
supplemental budget.
SB 107 was HEARD and HELD in committee for further
consideration.
Co-Chair Olson discussed the following meeting's agenda.
ADJOURNMENT
10:58:03 AM
The meeting was adjourned at 10:58 a.m.
| Document Name | Date/Time | Subjects |
|---|---|---|
| SB 54 FY2023_Cap_Supp_Summary_Spreadsheet_4-17-23.pdf |
SFIN 4/18/2023 9:00:00 AM |
SB 54 |
| SB 54 FY23CapSuppBackup.pdf |
SFIN 4/18/2023 9:00:00 AM |
SB 54 |
| SB 54 FY23OpSuppBackup.pdf |
SFIN 4/18/2023 9:00:00 AM |
SB 54 |
| SB 54 FY2023_Op_Supp_Summary_Spreadsheet_4-17-23.pdf |
SFIN 4/18/2023 9:00:00 AM |
SB 54 |
| SB 54 23.04.18 OMB Supplemental Budget Overview SFIN.pdf |
SFIN 4/18/2023 9:00:00 AM |
SB 54 |
| SB 104 DCCED DCRA 041523.pdf |
SFIN 4/18/2023 9:00:00 AM |
SB 104 |
| SB 29 Version R Summary of Changes.pdf |
HEDC 4/26/2024 8:00:00 AM SFIN 4/18/2023 9:00:00 AM |
SB 29 |
| SB 29 work draft version R.pdf |
HEDC 4/26/2024 8:00:00 AM SFIN 4/18/2023 9:00:00 AM |
SB 29 |