02/28/2020 03:30 PM Senate RESOURCES
| Audio | Topic |
|---|---|
| Start | |
| SB159 | |
| SB189 | |
| Adjourn |
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
| *+ | SB 159 | TELECONFERENCED | |
| *+ | SB 189 | TELECONFERENCED | |
| + | TELECONFERENCED |
ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE
SENATE RESOURCES STANDING COMMITTEE
February 28, 2020
3:29 p.m.
MEMBERS PRESENT
Senator Peter Micciche, Chair
Senator John Coghill, Vice Chair
Senator Cathy Giessel
Senator Jesse Kiehl
MEMBERS ABSENT
Senator Click Bishop
Senator Joshua Revak
Senator Scott Kawasaki
COMMITTEE CALENDAR
SENATE BILL NO. 159
"An Act relating to salt water sport fishing operators and salt
water sport fishing guides; and providing for an effective
date."
- HEARD & HELD
SENATE BILL NO. 189
"An Act relating to the fish and game fund; establishing the
sport fishing enhancement surcharge; relating to the repeal of
the sport fishing facility surcharge; providing for an effective
date by amending the effective date of sec. 21, ch. 18, SLA
2016; and providing for an effective date."
- HEARD & HELD
PREVIOUS COMMITTEE ACTION
BILL: SB 159
SHORT TITLE: SALT WATER FISHING: OPERATORS/GUIDES
SPONSOR(s): RULES BY REQUEST OF THE GOVERNOR
01/22/20 (S) READ THE FIRST TIME - REFERRALS
01/22/20 (S) RES, FIN
01/22/20 (S) RES RPT RECD W/CS AWAIT TRANSMITTAL NXT
02/28/20 (S) RES AT 3:30 PM BUTROVICH 205
BILL: SB 189
SHORT TITLE: SPORT FISHING ENHANCEMENT SURCHARGE
SPONSOR(s): RULES BY REQUEST OF THE GOVERNOR
02/12/20 (S) READ THE FIRST TIME - REFERRALS
02/12/20 (S) RES, FIN
02/28/20 (S) RES AT 3:30 PM BUTROVICH 205
WITNESS REGISTER
DAVID RUTZ, Director
Division of Sport Fisheries
Alaska Department of Fish and Game
Palmer, Alaska
POSITION STATEMENT: Provided an overview of SB 159.
RACHEL HANKE, Legislative Liaison
Alaska Department of Fish and Game
Juneau, Alaska
POSITION STATEMENT: Provided a sectional analysis of SB 159 and
answered questions.
TOM TAUBE, Deputy Director
Division of Sport Fisheries
Alaska Department of Fish and Game
Juneau, Alaska
POSITION STATEMENT: Answered questions regarding SB 159.
CHERYL BROOKING, Assistant Attorney General
Alaska Department of Law
Anchorage, Alaska
POSITION STATEMENT: Answered questions regarding SB 189.
BRIAN FRENETTE, Assistant Director
Division of Sport Fisheries
Alaska Department of Fish and Game
Juneau, Alaska
POSITION STATEMENT: Answered questions regarding SB 189.
ACTION NARRATIVE
3:29:55 PM
CHAIR PETER MICCICHE called the Senate Resources Standing
Committee meeting to order at 3:29 p.m. Present at the call to
order were Senators Kiehl, Coghill, Giessel, and Chair Micciche.
SB 159-SALT WATER FISHING: OPERATORS/GUIDES
3:30:31 PM
CHAIR MICCICHE announced that the first order of business would
be Senate Bill 159, "An Act relating to salt water sport fishing
operators and salt water sport fishing guides; and providing for
an effective date."
3:31:36 PM
DAVID RUTZ, Director, Division of Sport Fisheries, Alaska
Department of Fish and Game, Palmer, Alaska, explained that SB
159 would reinstate sport fishing guide and operator licensing
standards and fees for salt water guides and operators. The
legislature adopted the sport fish guide and operator licenses
that took effect in 2005 and sunsetted on December 31, 2014. The
legislature reinstated the legislation and it sunsetted in 2018.
The department would like to see the operator licensing
standards and fees in statute in perpetuity. The license fees
pay the cost of collecting logbook data which is the reporting
section of SB 159.
He detailed that the department has collected logbook data from
salt water sport fishing businesses and guides since 1998.
Logbook data is critical to upholding the state's obligations
for the United States and Canadian Pacific Salmon Treaty as well
as providing crucial data to the International Pacific Halibut
Commission. Logbook data is also critical for the North Pacific
Fisheries Management Council for managing federal fisheries and
avoiding duplicative reporting mechanisms that place undue
burden on the charter fishing industry.
MR. RUTZ noted that committee members received a logbook use
summary that lays out all the needs and obligations the program
provides.
3:34:47 PM
RACHEL HANKE, Legislative Liaison, Alaska Department of Fish and
Game, Juneau, Alaska, provided the following sectional analysis
for SB 159, version A:
Section 1
Establishes license fees for salt water guides and
operators.
• Guide license - $200
• Operator license - $400
• Operator and guide combined license - $400
Section 2
Adds new Article to AS 16.40
• AS 16.40.262 provides stipulations for the salt
water operator license and defines the license
type.
• AS 16.40.272 provides stipulations for the salt
water guides and combined license and defines
both license types.
• AS 16.40.282 establishes reporting requirements
for salt water guides and operators.
• AS 16.40.292 establishes penalties for
violations the chapter.
• AS 16.40.301 defines "salt water sport fishing
guide" and "salt water sport fishing guide
services.
Section 3
Adds salt water sport fishing operator and guide
license to AS 25.27.244(s)(2) which defines "license.
Section 4
Effective date of January 1, 2021.
3:36:02 PM
CHAIR MICCICHE asked what the fees were when the program expired
in 2018.
MR. RUTZ answered that they were $200 for the guide and operator
fee and $100 for the guide fee, which is half of what SB 159
asks for.
CHAIR MICCICHE asked if the combined fee has always been the
same as the salt water fishing operator license.
3:37:01 PM
TOM TAUBE, Deputy Director, Division of Sport Fisheries, Alaska
Department of Fish and Game, Juneau, Alaska, explained that the
combined fee has been the same as the operator license. The
combined fee in SB 159 is $400 and previously the fee was $200.
An operator who is also a guide would pay the full amount as a
business does.
SENATOR COGHILL noted that the amended legislation adds a new
section. He asked if the new section adds new verbiage to the
legislation.
MS. HANKE answered that the new section is mostly the same, but
the bill reinstates the reporting requirement from the original
legislation.
3:38:42 PM
SENATOR KIEHL asked for the number of salt water guides and the
total number of guides in the state.
MR. TAUBE answered that there are approximately 1,200 to 1,300
salt water guides. The approximate total of both fresh water and
salt water guides is 2,200 to 2,400.
SENATOR KIEHL pointed out that logbooks are important to the
Board of Game and advisory committees. He asked why the bill
only requires logbook data from salt water guides.
MR. TAUBE answered that the department specifically submitted
salt water guides because the salt water guide industry supports
the legislation. The department dropped fresh water logbooks at
the beginning of 2019 partly due to not having sufficient
funding to continue the program and a lack of support from the
fresh water guide industry to complete the logbooks. The fresh
water guiding industry felt that the division was not using
their logbook data for management purposes.
He explained that after in-season logbook data collection, the
department releases data during the post season. However, the
department is converting to an electronic logbook (e-logbook)
system for the 2021 season. The department will mandate all salt
water guides to complete their e-logbooks. The logbook
conversion should expedite data processing and information
compilation.
MR. TAUBE detailed that the department releases king salmon data
by mid-July to determine where the state is with regards to
Pacific Salmon Treaty obligations. They start generating halibut
harvest reports at the same time for the North Pacific Fishery
Management Council for the fall.
3:41:14 PM
SENATOR KIEHL remarked that all the listed logbook data benefits
were in-season management benefits. He opined that providing
more data would seem to help the Board of Game and biologists to
do a better job, especially with the e-logbook implementation
providing in-season information for just about everybody.
MR. TAUBE replied in-season is a relative term, but preliminary
data access would occur within weeks of the e-logbook
compilation. However, data analysis during the in-season would
take some time.
CHAIR MICCICHE asked why the legislation sunsetted twice in the
last six years.
MR. TAUBE replied he does not know the rationale for the sunset
clauses. The initial legislation adopted in 2005 had a five-year
sunset with two-year sunsets afterwards.
CHAIR MICCICHE remarked that this is obviously a priority for
the department. He asked why the legislation was not a priority
during the previous times when it sunsetted and then expired.
MR. TAUBE answered that he believes it was a priority for the
department, but he isn't certain why the sunset provisions were
inserted.
SENATOR COGHILL pointed out that the fiscal note indicated
concerns over the fresh water guide licensing logbook. He
recalled that the fresh water logbook discussion related to
whether the process provided value.
SENATOR COGHILL asked how the department records individual
licensing and boat labeling [registration].
3:44:04 PM
MR. TAUBE explained that the department requires licensed guide
businesses to register their vessel and get logbooks for their
staff. Within the logbook there is a vessel registration form
that identifies the vessel utilized by the business during the
season. The guide business can contact the department to add a
replacement vessel if their registered vessel goes down during
the season.
He explained that vessel registration allows the department to
track vessels used for guiding. Each vessel receives a large
gold and green decal, often called "the watermelon." The guide
businesses receive annual renewal tags that go on each side of
their registered vessel.
SENATOR COGHILL asked how the department holds licensed
individuals accountable for logbook data.
MR. TAUBE explained that logbook instructions require logbook
entries to be completed before offloading passengers and fish.
The department can issue citations to individuals that do not
comply. Licensed guide businesses must submit completed logbooks
to the department within a two-week timeframe when reports are
due.
He noted that the department has been lenient on reporting
provisions if someone operates in a remote location and requires
an end of season waiver. However, the department has cited
individuals for incorrectly completing logbooks, falsely
completing them, or not turning them in within the required
timeframe.
3:46:51 PM
SENATOR COGHILL asked if using e-logbooks will allow faster data
downloading and cleaner accountability.
MR. TAUBE answered yes. He detailed that a guide or business
will upload logbook information after a fishing trip once they
have connectivity. The department will allow a guide or business
up to two days to make corrections to the logbook but after that
the data is uploaded and changes are no longer allowed.
Citations or violations will be the same for failure to
correctly complete e-logbooks. It's just a more efficient means
of collecting information.
MR. TAUBE detailed that the e-logbook process will be efficient
for guides taking clientele out multiple days. Guides will be
able to repeat clientele information in future days to record e-
logbook entries. Guides will also be able to scan licenses to
automatically upload client information. The idea behind the e-
logbooks was to make things more efficient for guides and
acquisition of the data easier for the department.
3:48:36 PM
SENATOR COGHILL asked how many licensed operators can be on a
tagged boat.
MR. TAUBE explained that each vessel has one logbook and
generally there is one guide per vessel. There could be multiple
guides on a single vessel, but guides would be recording into
the same logbook. Usually the second guide acts as a deckhand
and the lead guide records logbook trip information.
SENATOR COGHILL inquired if logbook accountability is an
economic or legal relationship.
MR. TAUBE answered it's a legal relationship.
SENATOR COGHILL recapped that there is one boat and one guide.
MR. TAUBE added that there is one logbook in that circumstance.
CHAIR MICCICHE asked if a deckhand has licensing requirements.
MR. TAUBE answered that the definition of sport fishing guide
services excludes a deckhand from licensing requirements. He
explained that deckhands fall under the guide's license.
CHAIR MICCICHE asked if the department requires a deckhand to
have a current sport fishing license.
MR. TAUBE answered yes.
3:50:37 PM
CHAIR MICCICHE asked if insurance, first aid, holding a driver's
license and other requirements are the same as they have been in
the past.
MR. TAUBE answered yes.
CHAIR MICCICHE read the following provision on page 4, line 28:
A person who is required to complete reports under
this section may not provide false information or omit
material facts in a report.
He asked if he agrees that in the State of Alaska a person who
is under 16 years of age does not require a sport fishing
license.
MR. TAUBE clarified that an Alaskan resident under the age of 18
and a nonresident under the age of 16 does not require a
license.
CHAIR MICCICHE asked what protects a guide from the charge of
filing a false report if the parents of a nonresident 17-year-
old claim their child is under age 16 and the truth comes out
when the boat is boarded and IDs are checked.
3:52:12 PM
MR. TAUBE answered that the determination is up to the
investigating enforcement officer. If the guide made every
effort to get the correct information, the clients would be
responsible. He said the department does not require guides to
ask for birth certificates.
CHAIR MICCICHE noted that the guide in the referenced case was a
very uncomfortable winner. He said he brought it up to bring
clarity to the case to ensure that the incident does not happen
again.
MR. TAUBE the committee to support SB 159 without a sunset
clause, if possible.
CHAIR MICCICHE noted his concern about the rollercoaster
management of the guidebook program and the unfair requirements
it places on salt water operators who have a lot of other things
worry about.
3:54:07 PM
CHAIR MICCICHE opened public testimony; finding none, he stated
he would keep it open. He encouraged written testimony be
submitted to [email protected].
3:54:48 PM
CHAIR MICCICHE held SB 159 in committee.
SB 189-SPORT FISHING ENHANCEMENT SURCHARGE
3:55:00 PM
CHAIR MICCICHE announced that the final order of business would
be Senate Bill 189 (SB 189), "An Act relating to the fish and
game fund; establishing the sport fishing enhancement surcharge;
relating to the repeal of the sport fishing facility surcharge;
providing for an effective date by amending the effective date
of sec. 21, ch. 18, SLA 2016; and providing for an effective
date."
3:55:13 PM
DAVE RUTZ, Director, Division of Sport Fisheries, Alaska
Department of Fish and Game (ADF&G), Palmer, Alaska, explained
that the legislature approved a bond measure in 2005 to
construct two sport fish hatcheries: the William Jack Hernandez
Sport Fish Hatchery in Anchorage and the Ruth Burnett Sport Fish
Hatchery in Fairbanks.
He detailed that ADF&G crafted a bond repayment plan that added
a $9 sportfish license surcharge for residents and a bit higher
surcharge for nonresidents. The surcharge goes directly to bond
repayment, except for an annual $500,000 payment for hatchery
production in Southeast Alaska. The surcharge plan has been so
successful, ADF&G will be able to pay off the bond five years
early. The final payment is scheduled for December 2020.
He noted that the legislature made a promise initially that the
surcharge would be eliminated after the final bond payment. The
scheduled repeal of the surcharge and associated statutes is the
end of 2020.
3:57:06 PM
MR. RUTZ said the department remembers the promised repeal but
also recognizes the benefit of the surcharge to sport fish
enhancement operations. With that in mind, they propose a
compromise to reduce the surcharge 34 percent so Alaska
residents would pay $4 and nonresidents would contribute a
little more. The department would collect the surcharge funds in
a separate ADF&G account that would only be used for sport fish
enhancement programs and sport fish hatchery facilities.
He noted that upon repayment of the current bond, there is an
immediate $500,000 funding loss to Southeast Alaska. Targeted
sites in Southeast use the surcharge funds to raise and release
1.4 million chinook salmon smolt that mainly benefit Alaskan
sport fish anglers.
3:58:34 PM
MR. RUTZ detailed that the sport fishing enhancement program
annually releases 7.2 million fish into 270 locations, most of
which are lakes, and 1.4 million chinook salmon in Southeast
Alaska. The enhancement efforts generate hundreds of thousands
of sport fish angler days which in turn contributes
significantly to local economies. The fishing efforts focused on
enhanced chinook salmon in Southeast and Southcentral Alaska
reduces the harvest of wild chinook salmon stocks that are
currently in a state of recovery.
MR. RUTZ noted that the department redirected nearly $5 million
of Dingell-Johnson Act funds to pay for operations and
maintenance after the Ruth Burnett and William Jack Hernandez
hatcheries came on line. Any needed repairs and maintenance to
date have come from existing operating budget funds at the
expense of other division needs. Several larger and more
expensive needs were deferred. Maintenance needs will grow and
place undue burden on existing programs as facilities age.
Having the ability to tap into a funding source will allow the
department to cover sport fish enhancement without impacting
other needs.
4:00:17 PM
MR. RUTZ detailed that the surcharge generates an average of
$6.4 million in revenue. The division allocates approximately $7
million to enhancement related programs and projects with most
tied to the Anchorage and Fairbanks hatchery operations and
maintenance.
He summarized that establishing the new reduced enhancement
surcharge would cover existing enhancement program costs,
address deferred maintenance and maintenance needs, and ensure
funds are available for unforeseen facility events to avoid
supplemental budget requests or facility shutdown.
4:01:50 PM
RACHEL HANKE, Legislative Liaison, Alaska Department of Fish and
Game, Juneau, Alaska, provided the following sectional analysis
for SB 189:
Section 1
Amends AS 16.05.130(e) to name the newly created sub-
account of the fish and fund the sport fishing
enhancement account. This section also restricts the
use of the sub-account to maintenance of sport fishing
facilities as well as sport fish enhancement programs.
This section also removes all language which
references the enterprise account and the revenue
bond. These amendments will go into effect January 1
the year following the bond being paid and closure of
the enterprise account.
Section 2
Amends AS 16.05.340(j) to reference the new
enhancement surcharge and new funding purpose, it
removes all language referencing the revenue bond, it
also reduces all existing license surcharge amounts by
$5. These amendments will go into effect January 1 the
year following the bond being paid and closure of the
enterprise account.
Section 3
Repeals Section 21, ch. 18, SLA 2016. This section
made a conforming amendment which removed reference to
16.05.340(j) because the section would have been
repealed once the revenue bond is satisfied.
Section 4
Removes AS 16.05.130(e) and AS 16.05.340(j) from
Section 34, ch. 18, SLA 2016, which is the repealing
section. This will retain the sections after the
revenue bond has been satisfied and allow the
amendments from sections 1 and 2 of this legislation
to go into effect.
Section 5
Amends uncodified law in Section 35, ch. 18, SLA 2016
to remove reference to Section 21, ch. 18, SLA 2016.
This section effectively removed reference to AS
16.05.340(j) upon repayment of the revenue bond. This
section will now be retained therefore, the repeal is
removed.
Section 6
Adds transition language to uncodified law which
transfers the balance of the enterprise account to the
new sport fishing enhancement account January 1
following the calendar year that the revenue bond
obligation is satisfied.
Section 7
Adds new conditional effect to uncodified law which
states that sections 1 and 2 of this legislation will
only go into effect once the commissioner of fish and
game notifies the revisor of statutes that the
principal amount of the bond and any other obligations
of the bond have been paid.
Section 8
Amends Section 36, ch. 18, SLA 2016 to remove
reference to AS 16.05.340(j).
Section 9
Effective date section which states that January 1 of
the calendar year following the commissioner notifying
the revisor of statutes as required in section 7,
sections 1 and 2 of this legislation go into effect.
Section 10
Establishes an immediate effective date for sections
3-10.
CHAIR MICCICHE asked if the bill was clean enough to not
compromise the dedicated fund issues.
4:04:16 PM
CHERYL BROOKING, Assistant Attorney General, Civil Division,
Natural Resources Section, Alaska Department of Law, Anchorage,
Alaska, answered yes. She said the surcharge program currently
has an established account for the bonds and the bill would
continue the practice to some extent.
CHAIR MICCICHE asked if she would do additional research and
provide the committee with a more thorough answer.
MS. BROOKING answered yes.
SENATOR KIEHL asked for assurance that the proposal does not
raise any legal concerns for the Department of Law.
MS. BROOKING replied the bill does not trigger the Privileges
and Immunities Clause that the Carlson v. State case impacted.
The Privileges and Immunities Clause only applies to commercial
operations and not sport fishing. The clause protects the
ability of people to work and make a living in different states.
Sport fishing fees for residents and nonresidents can be
different.
CHAIR MICCICHE asked what the definitions of enhancement and
maintenance to make it clear what the expected activities from
funding bill be.
4:06:23 PM
TOM TAUBE, Deputy Director, Division of Sport Fisheries, Alaska
Department of Fish and Game, Juneau, Alaska, specified that
surcharge funding for enhancement and maintenance means
supporting sport fish production at the Anchorage and Fairbanks
hatcheries. Maintenance would include adding a backup well at
the Fairbanks hatchery in addition to addressing corroded pipes,
upgrading effluent system, and improving public access at the
Anchorage hatchery. Maintenance would also encompass general
wear and tear on hatchery equipment.
CHAIR MICCICHE asked if there is a reason the bill does not
specify maintenance funding associated to sport fishing
facilities.
MR. TAUBE answered that including enhancement would allow for
fund dispersement to Southeast Alaska that currently occurs with
the bond package. The intent is to maintain the $500,000 going
to Southeast Alaska for king salmon production.
4:08:46 PM
SENATOR COGHILL said Interior Alaska is grateful that the
Fairbanks hatchery provides local king salmon. However, the
legislature promised constituents that the surcharge would go
away. He conceded that the operational and maintenance
expectations for the hatcheries via the bond did not come in the
way that people expected.
SENATOR GIESSEL recalled that the Fairbanks hatchery struggled
with finding a suitable water source. She imagined that a second
backup well in Fairbanks is going to be an expensive endeavor.
MR. TAUBE answered that a second well would cost approximately
$1 million. High iron content in the water would require an
elaborate water filtration system as well as heat exchangers to
better grow fish. Both hatcheries have been functioning well,
but the aging facilities require maintenance.
4:12:00 PM
SENATOR GIESSEL commented that there is quite a backlog of
deferred maintenance on buildings and other facilities. The
State risks losing the hatchery facilities due to deferred
maintenance and keeping the fund going seems prudent.
SENATOR COGHILL explained that legislators always want to keep
their promises. However, hatchery maintenance and enhancement to
meet sport fishing expectations is a place that does not allow
the legislature to keep a promise of not adding the surcharge
into perpetuity.
4:13:13 PM
CHAIR MICCICHE opened public testimony.
He noted his appreciation that the fiscal note provided clarity
for ongoing hatchery maintenance. He said he served on the board
for the Cook Inlet Aquaculture Association and confirmed the
importance of hatcheries and their requirement for maintenance.
The fiscal noted clearly states on page 2 that funding provides
ongoing hatchery maintenance. He admitted that he is more
comfortable with the language in the fiscal note than in the
bill.
MR. TAUBE noted that the bill references the hatcheries as sport
fishing facilities.
CHAIR MICCICHE said he did not see anyone asking to testify.
4:15:23 PM
SENATOR KIEHL referred to an estimated nonresident revenue
report for one-day sport fishing licenses that showed the
revenue going down 65 percent when the surcharge goes down 50
percent. He asked why estimated revenue goes from $1.2 million
to $550,000 when the surcharge is reduced from $10 to $5.
4:17:00 PM
BRIAN FRENETTE, Assistant Director, Division of Sport Fisheries,
Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Juneau, Alaska, explained
that the revenues are a function of license sales volume. He
noted that there is a significant number of one-day nonresident
sales, particularly in Southeast Alaska tied to the cruise ship
industry, and that accounts for the big difference in revenue.
SENATOR KIEHL pointed out that Southeast Alaska is expecting
increased numbers of cruise ship passengers. He restated his
question about the decreased revenue estimate for one-day
nonresident license sales.
CHAIR MICCICHE asked the division get back to the committee with
an answer to Senator Kiehl's question regarding the decreased
revenue estimate.
MR. FRENETTE replied that he would clarify the one-day
nonresident license purchase amount.
4:18:32 PM
CHAIR MICCICHE announced that public testimony would remain open
for SB 189.
He said both SB 189 and SB 159 are simple bills, but the
legislation may require a bit of clarity. He asked the
departments to answer the questions that committee members
posed.
4:19:23 PM
CHAIR MICCICHE held SB 189 in committee.
4:19:44 PM
There being no further business to come before the committee,
Chair Micciche adjourned the Senate Resources Standing Committee
meeting at 4:19 p.m.
| Document Name | Date/Time | Subjects |
|---|---|---|
| SB 159 ver. A.pdf |
SRES 2/28/2020 3:30:00 PM |
SB 159 |
| SB 159 Transmittal Letter 1.28.2020.pdf |
SRES 2/28/2020 3:30:00 PM |
SB 159 |
| SB 159 Sectional Analysis 1.28.2020.pdf |
SRES 2/28/2020 3:30:00 PM |
SB 159 |
| SB 159 Fiscal Note DFG-DSF-01.14.2020.pdf |
SRES 2/28/2020 3:30:00 PM |
SB 159 |
| SB 159 ADFG Letter of Support 1.28.2020.pdf |
SRES 2/28/2020 3:30:00 PM |
SB 159 |
| SB 159 Logbook Use Summary 1.28.2020.pdf |
SRES 2/28/2020 3:30:00 PM |
SB 159 |
| SB 189 v. A.PDF |
SRES 2/28/2020 3:30:00 PM |
SB 189 |
| SB 189 Transmittal Letter ver. A 2.18.2020.pdf |
SRES 2/28/2020 3:30:00 PM |
SB 189 |
| SB 189 Sectional Analysis - ver. A 2.18.2020.pdf |
SRES 2/28/2020 3:30:00 PM |
SB 189 |
| SB 189 Fiscal Note DFG-SF 02.03.2020.pdf |
SRES 2/28/2020 3:30:00 PM |
SB 189 |
| SB 189 Support Doc - DOR Redemption Letter 2.13.2020.PDF |
SRES 2/28/2020 3:30:00 PM |
SB 189 |
| SB 189 Support Doc - Surcharge Revenue Breakdown 2.18.2020.pdf |
SRES 2/28/2020 3:30:00 PM |
SB 189 |