SENATE BILL NO. 303 An Act relating to certain grants awarded by the Department of Environmental Conservation. 2:04:48 PM GINGER BLAISDELL, STAFF, SENATOR LYDA GREEN, explained that the bill changes the population requirements for certain match rates from 5,000 to 10,000 for a grant that would receive 70% state funding with a 30% municipal match. She referred to a community population list (Copy on File), that shows Anchorage, Fairbanks, and Juneau at over 30,000; eight communities between 10,000 and 5,000; the remainder of Alaskan communities are under five thousand. Current match rates are: communities 5,000 and higher pay a 50/50 match; $1,000 to 5,000 pay 70/30; and below 1,000 pay 85/15. The main reason to change the population criteria is to bring in the eight communities just above 5,000 to give them more state participation for water and sewer projects. Rapidly escalating prices in steel and construction costs means smaller communities cannot make the 50/50 match. Representative Thomas pointed out that Haines was not on the list. Ms. Blaisdell assured him that Haines and Skagway are still eligible. Co-Chair Meyer OPENED PUBLIC TESTIMONY. 2:08:05 PM JOHN COMBS, MAYOR, CITY OF PALMER, spoke in support of the legislation. He represented not only Palmer but Wasilla, Kenai, Homer, Ketchikan, Sitka, Kodiak, Bethel, Haines, and Skagway. Palmer has 3200, and cannot absorb the expenses of water and sewer projects. Local projects are on the shelf due to an inadequate economic base. He asserted that the issue is public safety. BILL ALLEN, CITY MANAGER, PALMER, spoke in support of the bill. He referenced a letter from Alaska Municipal League Executive Director Kathie Wasserman (Copy on File). Communities that are growing find themselves supporting infrastructure and utilities that supply more and more people, yet are eligible for less grant money. He added the cities of Barrow, Unalaska and Valdez would soon be impacted as well. Palmer has 50-year-old, thin-wall pipes that are failing. Pressure tests have revealed a 40% leakage rate in the water supply. They have also been notified that they are out of compliance with the Environmental Protection Agency for water safety. The cost of coming into compliance is over $1 million. There is not a large enough tax-paying base to raise that much money. 2:15:25 PM PUBLIC TESTIMONY CLOSED. Vice-Chair Stoltze commented on the difficulty of explaining why other parts of the state get grants when large neighborhoods attached to larger cities have many similar problems. He voiced his frustration and listed problems in the city of Anchorage. 2:18:41 PM Representative Thomas asked if the program was capped. BILL GRIFFITH, FACILITY PROGRAMS INSPECTOR, DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION, answered that the program was not capped but limited by the amount of money made available each year for capital projects. Representative Thomas asserted that water and sewer were a priority and thought more money should be put into the program. SB 303 was HEARD and HELD in Committee for further consideration.