SB 100-MUNICIPAL LIENS: AUTHORITY FOR & PRIORITY  2:32:47 PM CHAIR COGHILL announced the consideration of SB 100. 2:33:27 PM SENATOR DENNIS EGAN, Alaska State Legislature, sponsor of SB 100, introduced the bill speaking to the following sponsor statement: SB 100 is at the request of a number of Alaska city attorneys. It fixes an unintended consequence of a 1998 bill aimed at ending unauthorized 'common law' liens that were being used to go after public servants when individuals disagreed with a government action. Liens are a tool local governments across America use to recoup unpaid costs of providing services or abating dangerous situations. In Alaska, many rural municipalities provide utility services for their communities. Those municipalities use liens to collect from people who use services but don't pay. Liens have historically also been used to recover local governments' costs when they have to abate dangerous, dilapidated, or public nuisance properties. In 2012, the Alaska Supreme Court held that because liens based solely on municipal law were not included in the code of civil procedure, municipal liens without a hook to some other state law were not valid. SB 100 puts the tools back in municipalities' hands by giving liens under municipal law the same authority as state and federal law liens under Alaska statutes. 2:35:33 PM SENATOR COSTELLO asked if he was aware of any opposition to the bill. SENATOR EGAN said no. CHAIR COGHILL held SB 100 in committee for further review.