HB 218: REPEAL 58 FT. LIMIT FOR SEINE VESSELS CHAIRMAN MOSES opened up testimony on HB 218. MIKE LOPEZ testified in support of HB 134 first, and also in support of HB 218, explaining that if a person can buy a bigger boat, they should be able to. With one boat you can do a lot more fishing, he said. CHAIRMAN MOSES clarified the committee had a proposed committee substitute (CSHB 218 (FSH)) which would have the Board of Fisheries decide on the length restrictions for any region of the state. ROBIN SAMUELSON testified in opposition to HB 218. As a member of the Alaska Board of Fisheries from 1989 to 1991, he said he heard a lot of testimony from people across the state. Most people are happy with the seine limit, he believed. People want stability in their fisheries, he noted, and since most fisheries are over-capitalized anyway, repealing the 58 foot limit would add more uncertainty. For the sake of stability, he would oppose any change. KATE TROLL, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF THE SOUTHEAST ALASKA SEINERS ASSOCIATION, testified in support of the proposed CSHB 218 (FSH). She said her executive committee supported the committee substitute because the seine vessel length is the only length in statute. The 32 foot Bristol Bay limit is a Board of Fish regulation. This is a board of fish matter, she said, not a legislative matter. She acknowledged she did not know whether or not Southeast seiners would want the length restriction changed. Some are interested, she said, because there is no place on a boat now for extra crew to do value-added work. MS. TROLL advised another concern her group had was that taking off the limit would lower the value of the current 58 foot boats. This discussion, she further stated, would come out before the Board of Fish on a region by region basis. The way the legislation is written, she pointed out, it dovetails when the Board takes up Southeast issues, but language to keep the limit in place until the Board of Fish cycle reaches each region might be desirable. ALVIN OSTERBACK testified in opposition to HB 218, claiming the bill would result in dropping the price of limited seiners. He asked who would gain from the bill.