Legislature(2019 - 2020)BELTZ 105 (TSBldg)
03/26/2019 01:30 PM Senate LABOR & COMMERCE
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| Audio | Topic |
|---|---|
| Start | |
| SB44 | |
| SJR8 | |
| SB83 | |
| SB52 | |
| Adjourn |
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
| += | SB 69 | TELECONFERENCED | |
| += | SJR 8 | TELECONFERENCED | |
| *+ | SB 83 | TELECONFERENCED | |
| *+ | SB 52 | TELECONFERENCED | |
| + | TELECONFERENCED | ||
| += | SB 44 | TELECONFERENCED | |
SB 52-ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL; ALCOHOL REG
2:30:54 PM
CHAIR REINBOLD reconvened the meeting. She announced that the
next order of business would be SENATE BILL NO. 52, "An Act
relating to alcoholic beverages; relating to the regulation of
manufacturers, wholesalers, and retailers of alcoholic
beverages; relating to licenses, endorsements, and permits
involving alcoholic beverages; relating to common carrier
approval to transport or deliver alcoholic beverages; relating
to the Alcoholic Beverage Control Board; relating to offenses
involving alcoholic beverages; amending Rule 17(h), Alaska Rules
of Minor Offense Procedure; and providing for an effective
date."
2:31:05 PM
SENATOR COSTELLO clarified the original bill was before the
committee. Senator Bishop objected for purposes of discussion.
2:31:31 PM
EDRA MORLEDGE, Staff, Senator Peter Micciche, Alaska State
Legislature, Juneau, paraphrased from the sponsor statement,
which read as follows:
SB 52 modernizes the Title 4 statutes governing the
Alcoholic Beverage Control Board (board). The bill
allows the board to function more efficiently as they
regulate the alcohol industry in a manner that
promotes public safety and health, while supporting
the alcohol industry's continued growth and viability
in today's current climate. This bill is the product
of a seven-year, unprecedented collaboration of over
100 stakeholders from a diverse group of alcohol
industry representatives, public health and safety
entities, local governments and advocates for youth.
Stakeholders established shared goals as the
foundation for developing recommendations:
? Promoting a fair business climate and protect public
health and safety. ? Creating rational regulation for
all tiers of the state's alcohol industry.
? Limiting youth access to alcohol.
? Promoting responsible alcohol use and reduce the
harms of overconsumption.
? Implementing without negative impacts on businesses
and responsible operators. The result is a
reorganization that clearly defines the rights and
obligations of licensees, restructures penalties for
offenses in Title 4, and organizes the statutes in a
logical, common-sense manner for all users of Title 4
statutes.
The bill requires that the director prepare an annual
enforcement, education, training, and prevention
budget and requires the Board to review fees every 10
years. Penalty sections are amended to ensure
consistent enforcement and just outcomes. New
statutory provisions retain the three-tier licensing
system but create more flexibility for small
manufacturers; create a new endorsement system to
expand the boundaries of licensed businesses and
accommodate special events; and modify the permitting
system for clarity. The bill also creates local
control in community population limits, adds
mechanisms to prevent underage access to alcohol,
regulates common carriers who deliver alcohol and
provides for a smooth transitional implementation
period.
2:33:19 PM
MS. MORLEDGE said one of the main goals is to restructure
licensing to make the current licensing clearer and to place
regulatory provisions in statute. The permitting process would
remain in regulation, she said. She said the goal is to
streamline the process, place it under one title and make
regulation easy for the board and industry members. She said
that the goals included promoting a fair business climate,
protecting public health and safety, limiting youth access to
alcohol, promoting responsible alcohol use, reducing the harms
of overconsumption, and implementing change without negatively
harming existing businesses and responsible operators. The other
main goal is to make Title 04 as clear and consistent as
possible for the board, licensees, and law enforcement, she
said.
2:34:43 PM
MS. MORLEDGE explained the key concepts in Title 04 were the
three-tier system, including separating manufacturers,
wholesalers, and retailers to prevent monopolies. Second, it
would restructure and reorganize the licensing system to include
the clearly defined categories. Finally, it would address
population limits, which regulates the number of licenses
available in each community by type. One of the issues raised
has been the length of the bill. She explained that this was
necessary because changes affect many different sections.
2:35:25 PM
SENATOR PETER MICCICHE, Alaska State Legislature, Juneau, spoke
as sponsor of SB 52. He stated that he has worked on a rewrite
of the alcohol beverage control statutes for at least five
years.
2:36:15 PM
SENATOR BIRCH asked whether this was substantially the same as
last year's bill or if there were any substantive changes.
SENATOR MICCICHE answered that it was essentially the same bill
that passed last year, with a few minor changes. The stakeholder
groups met during the interim and some minor changes were made
at their request.
2:37:31 PM
SENATOR MICCICHE explained his interest in the rewrite. As a
legislator, he was initially surprised at the number of bills
that come before the legislature related to alcohol. Then he
discovered that the statutes were outdated, in part, because the
industry has dramatically changed in the last 30 years. He said
the he reviewed the public health and safety issues, including
overserving, serving minors, and the quality of operators. He
said that he realized that these issues were intertwined. He
pulled together a group of stakeholders to address things that
did not make sense. He highlighted that the goals were to
support this industry since it is an important one to the state,
but still obtain the best results for public health and public
safety. He said that SB 52 was the result of this work. He has
observed the interaction between industry and the [Alcoholic
Beverage Control Board (ABC Board). He said that sometimes
people are upset with them when they follow the law, but also
when they do not. This bill would clarify the law, so everyone
would understand expectations for operators. He offered his
belief that this bill would promote a fair business climate,
limit youth access to alcohol, promote responsible alcohol use,
and reduce the harms of overconsumption. He said that this bill
would implement these changes without negatively impacting
existing businesses and responsible operators.
2:39:43 PM
SENATOR MICCICHE said that the legislature has been focused on
the opioid epidemic. However, alcohol still represented about 95
percent of the substance abuse problem in Alaska. He said that
many things that have affected public health and safety in
Alaska for generations, including suicide, sexual abuse, and
domestic violence were all tied to alcohol abuse. He said that
this bill would take it all into account and redistribute the
statutes to make sense. It would add licensing and endorsements
to reflect today's operations and provide a comprehensive
approach that resets how alcohol is managed in Alaska.
2:41:26 PM
MS. MORLEDGE said that pages 1-5 of the summary relate to
chapter 6 of Title 4, the Alcoholic Beverage Control Board.
Chapter 6: Alcoholic Beverage Control Board
Section 1: Declaration of Policy; purpose; finding.
Adds a new section AS 04.06.005 (Pages 1-2.
2:41:57 PM
MS. MORLEDGE read Section 2.
Section 2: Authority of director. Adds a new
subsection AS 04.06.075 to require that the director
of the Alcoholic Beverage Control board (ABC board)
shall include in the agency's budget resources for
administration, enforcement, education, training, and
prevention activities under Title 4. (Page 2)
2:42:16 PM
MS. MORLEDGE referred to the color coded the document; green
referred to new concepts, yellow highlighting showed provisions
that were relocated, and magenta referred to the penalty
provisions.
2:43:01 PM
SENATOR BISHOP complimented staff because this made it easy to
follow.
2:43:42 PM
MS. MORLEDGE read Sections 3 and 4.
Section 3: Delegation of Authority. Amends AS
04.06.080 to add endorsements to the delegated powers
of the director of the ABC board. (Page 2)
Section 4: Powers and duties. Amends AS 04.06.090(b)
to relocate existing language in 04.11.070 and adds
endorsements to the powers of the ABC board. (Page 2)
2:44:05 PM
MS. MORLEDGE reviewed Section 5.
Section 5: Powers and duties. Amends AS 04.06.090(e)
to add endorsements. This section requires the board
to notify all licensees and municipalities of major
changes to Title 4. (Page 2)
She said that the yellow highlighting relates to existing law.
2:44:21 PM
SENATOR COSTELLO acknowledged that this document was
highlighted. She suggested that the committee skip the yellow
highlighted provisions and spend more time on the new concepts
that were highlighted in green and the penalty provisions
highlighted in magenta.
CHAIR REINBOLD agreed.
2:45:22 PM
MS. MORLEDGE read Section 10, "Proposed Chapter 9, Endorsements
and Permits."
Proposed Chapter 9: Licenses, Endorsements and Permits
Section 10: Adds the new Chapter 09 to Title 4
Licenses, Endorsements and Permits. Relocates many
existing licenses and permits from Chapter 11,
organizes into articles of licenses, endorsements and
permits. (Pages 5-50).
2:45:36 PM
MS. MORLEDGE referred to page 3 of the sectional analysis [shown
in magenta].
AS 04.09.150. Failure to pay annual fee or file
affidavit. States that failure to pay an annual
wholesale fee or file an affidavit is a violation and
sets the penalty. (Page 11)
AS 04.09.160. Failure to pay biennial fee or file
declaration. States that failure to pay a biennial fee
and failure to file a declaration are violations and
sets the penalty. (Pages 11-12)
2:46:21 PM
MS. MORLEDGE reviewed page 4, [shown in yellow] that reorganizes
existing retail licenses.
2:46:39 PM
At-ease.
2:47:24 PM
CHAIR REINBOLD reconvened the meeting.
MS. MORLEDGE reverted to page 2, to "New Chapter 9: Licenses,
Endorsements and Permits." She explained that this entire
section pertained to "Article 1, License Types and Article 2,
Manufacturer Licenses," including brewery, winery, and
distillery manufacturer licenses. These provisions refer to
existing licenses, which were put into the new article.
2:47:56 PM
MS. MORLEDGE read AS 04.09.050.
AS 04.09.050. Authorized sales. Allows smaller
manufacturers to self-distribute to retail, wholesale,
permitted and out of state or country licensees.
Requires large manufacturers to go through wholesale
distributors and not hold retail licenses. (Pages 6-7)
MS. MORLEDGE referred to page 3 of the sectional analysis, which
relocated the existing penalties in AS 04.09.060 and AS
04.09.070. She read the new penalty provision in AS 04.09.080.
AS 04.09.060. Unlicensed manufacturing. Relocates the
existing penalty for unlicensed manufacture from
04.11.010. (Page 7)
AS 04.09.070. Unlicensed manufacturing in a local
option area. Relocates the existing penalty for
unlicensed manufacture in a local option area from
04.11.010. (Pages 7-8)
AS 04.09.080. Unauthorized manufacturer sale. Defines
unauthorized manufacturer sale as violating 04.09.050
and sets the penalty. (Page 8)
SENATOR MICCICHE suggested she review the new penalty
provisions.
2:49:20 PM
MS. MORLEDGE read AS 04.09.150 and AS 04.09.160 [shown in
magenta].
AS 04.09.150. Failure to pay annual fee or file
affidavit. States that failure to pay an annual
wholesale fee or file an affidavit is a violation and
sets the penalty. (Page 11)
AS 04.09.160. Failure to pay biennial fee or file
declaration. States that failure to pay a biennial fee
and failure to file a declaration are violations and
sets the penalty. (Pages 11-12)
2:49:40 PM
MS. MORLEDGE referred to page 4, "Article 4. Retail Licensees,"
[shown in yellow] were provisions being relocated and
reorganized. In response to Chair Reinbold, she explained the
reason to reorganize was because some licenses exist in other
areas of the state statutes. She said the sponsor seeks to have
all of the licenses relocated to AS 04.09.
MS. MORLEDGE reviewed page 5 of the sectional analysis to the
provisions [shown in green] related to brewery, winery, and
distillery licenses.
AS 04.09.310. Brewery retail license. Creates new
license type based on existing language in AS
04.11.130 for brewery retail activities, sets biennial
fee at $1,250, requires retail license to be adjacent
to manufacturing location, and sets penalty for
failure to comply with license terms. (Pages 21-22)
AS 04.09.320. Winery retail license. Creates new
license type based on existing language in AS
04.11.140 for winery retail activities, sets biennial
fee at $1,250, requires retail license to be adjacent
to 5 manufacturing location, defines sales volume
limits for cider and mead depending on alcohol
content, and sets penalty for failure to comply with
license terms. (Pages 22-23)
AS 04.09.330. Distillery retail license. Creates new
license type based on existing language in AS
04.11.170 for distillery retail activities, sets
biennial fee at $1,250, requires retail license to be
adjacent to manufacturing location, and sets penalty
for failure to comply with license terms. (Pages 23-
24)
2:51:16 PM
MS. MORLEDGE reviewed AS 04.09.350 and AS 04.09.360 [shown in
green], which were new provisions.
AS 04.09.350. Seasonal restaurant or eating place
license. Creates new license type, sets biennial
license fee at $1,250, defines which communities can
qualify for having this license type, sets out formula
for determining number of allowed licenses per
community, and sets penalty for failure to comply with
license terms. (Pages 26-27)
AS 04.09.360. Winery direct shipment license. Creates
new license type authorizing direct to consumer
(including online) sales of wine for in-state or out-
of-state winery, sets biennial license fee at $200,
directs the board to develop an application form
specifically for this license, prohibits sales by this
license type to local option areas, and sets penalty
for failure to comply with license terms. (Pages 27-
29)
2:51:51 PM
SENATOR MICCICHE explained the brewery, winery, and distillery
references on this slide were incorrect and would be updated.
2:52:16 PM
MS. MORLEDGE reviewed "Article 5. Endorsements," on page 6 of
the sectional analysis [shown in green]. She said that these
provisions would allow for manufacturer licenses to obtain
varying endorsements for activities occurring on their licensed
premises. As an example, she referred to the manufacturer
sampling endorsement under as 04.09.410.
AS 04.09.410. Manufacturer sampling endorsement.
Creates new endorsement for onsite sampling based on
existing language from manufacturing licenses, defines
per person per day volume limits by product type, sets
biennial fee at $200, sets penalties for unendorsed
sampling and endorsement noncompliance. (Pages 30-31)
She explained that breweries currently provide tasting samples.
This provision would create a new endorsement for onsite
sampling.
2:53:11 PM
MS. MORLEDGE reviewed AS 04.09.420.
AS 04.09.420. Multiple fixed counter endorsement.
Creates new endorsement for multiple fixed counters
with language relocated from duplicate license section
in AS 04.11.090, sets biennial fee at $200, sets
initial application fee of $1,250 per counter, sets
penalties for endorsement noncompliance and unendorsed
service. (Pages 31-32)
She said that a bar with several rooms would get an endorsement
under one license rather than obtaining a duplicate license for
each of the rooms.
2:53:30 PM
MS. MORLEDGE reviewed AS 04.09.420.
AS 04.09.420. Multiple fixed counter endorsement.
Creates new endorsement for multiple fixed counters
with language relocated from duplicate license section
in AS 04.11.090, sets biennial fee at $200, sets
initial application fee of $1,250 per counter, sets
penalties for endorsement noncompliance and unendorsed
service. (Pages 31-32)
AS 04.09.430. Hotel or motel endorsement. Creates new
endorsement using some language relocated from AS
04.11.090, sets biennial fee at $200, sets penalties
for unendorsed hotel or motel service and endorsement
noncompliance. (Pages 32-33
AS 04.09.440. Large resort endorsement. Creates new
endorsement using some language relocated from AS
04.11.090, defines a large resort, sets biennial fee
at $200, sets penalties for unendorsed large resort
service and endorsement noncompliance. (Pages 33-35)
2:53:53 PM
SENATOR BISHOP asked if the definition of a large resort was for
a 100-room occupancy.
2:54:58 PM
ANNA BRAWLEY, Title 4 Project Review Coordinator; Senior
Associate, Agnew Beck Consulting, Anchorage, answered that a
large resort would be a place that offers outdoor recreational
activities and overnight lodging for guests. It would also have
at least 10 contiguous acres. She said that it could be one big
property or parcel.
2:55:22 PM
SENATOR BISHOP asked whether 10 acres was the key.
MS. BRAWLEY answered that the language would require overnight
lodging, but it did not require a specific number of rooms.
2:55:39 PM
MS. MORLEDGE suggested that the presentation at the next hearing
would help to clarify some things.
2:56:04 PM
MS. MORLEDGE reviewed AS 04.09.450 [shown in green and yellow].
AS 04.09.450. Restaurant endorsement. Creates new
endorsement using language from the Restaurant
Designation Permit currently in regulation, defines
which license types may qualify for the endorsement,
sets biennial fee at $200, defines situations in which
minors may be present on licensed premises for
employment or dining, and sets penalties for
unendorsed restaurant service and endorsement
noncompliance. (Pages 35-36)
She said that some provisions were being redefined under a
separate endorsement.
AS 04.09.460. Package store shipping endorsement.
Creates new endorsement by relocating language from AS
04.11.150, allows licensees to accept online orders,
sets biennial fee at $200, maintains requirement to
enter orders to customers in local option areas in
written order database, and sets penalties for
unendorsed package store shipping and endorsement
noncompliance. (Pages 36-38)
AS 04.09.470. Package store delivery endorsement.
Creates new endorsement by relocating language from AS
04.11.150, sets biennial fee at $200, sets penalties
for unendorsed package store delivery and endorsement
noncompliance. (Page 38)
AS 04.09.480. Package store repackaging endorsement.
Creates new endorsement by relocating language from
regulation, sets biennial fee at $200, sets penalties
for unendorsed package store repackaging and
endorsement noncompliance. (Page 39)
2:56:56 PM
MS. MORLEDGE turned to page 7 of the sectional analysis.
She referred to AS 04.09.490. Package store sampling endorsement
[shown in green].
AS 04.09.490. Package store sampling endorsement.
Creates new endorsement, defines per person per day
volume limits by product type, sets biennial fee at
$200, sets penalties for unendorsed package store
sampling and endorsement noncompliance. (Pages 39-40)
She reviewed the next three provision [shown in green and
yellow].
AS 04.09.500. Bowling alley endorsement. Creates new
endorsement using language from AS 04.11.090, sets
biennial fee at $200, sets penalties for unendorsed
bowling alley service and endorsement noncompliance.
(Pages 40-41)
AS 04.09.510. Golf course endorsement. Creates new
endorsement using language from AS 04.11.115, allows a
beverage dispensary to serve alcoholic beverages on
its course, sets biennial fee at $200, and sets
penalties for unendorsed golf course service and
endorsement noncompliance. (Pages 41-42)
AS 04.09.520. Brewery repackaging endorsement. Creates
new endorsement by relocating language from AS
04.11.135, limits availability to licensees currently
operating brewpubs as of the bill's effective date,
sets biennial fee at $200, sets penalties for
unendorsed brewery repackaging and endorsement
noncompliance. (Pages 42-43)
2:57:13 PM
MS. MORLEDGE reviewed "Article 6. Permits" [shown in yellow],
which were consolidated in the same place, she said.
She directed attention to AS 04.09.670 [shown in green] on page
8.
AS 04.09.670. Tasting event permit. Creates new
permit, allows a package store to host a tasting event
on the package store's licensed premises, and service
from its product inventory, sets a time limit and food
requirement, and limits to six events per license per
year. (Pages 47-48)
MS. MORLEDGE said that this would allow a package store to host
a tasting event on premise.
She reviewed AS 04.09.700 [shown in magenta].
AS 04.09.700. Failure to comply with a permit
requirement. Sets the penalties for failure to comply
with permit requirements. (Pages 48-49) setting
penalties for requirements
MS. MORLEDGE reviewed "Article 7. Common Carrier Approval"
[shown in green].
AS 04.09.750. Common carrier approval. Requires the
board to approve a common carrier to transport and
deliver alcoholic beverages to persons within the
state in response to a consumer's order and sets
requirements and penalties for common carriers. (Pages
49-50)
2:58:30 PM
MS. MORLEDGE reviewed "Chapter 11. Licensing. Section 14."
Section 14: Purchase from nonlicensee prohibited.
Amends AS 04.11.015 to prohibit the purchase or barter
for alcoholic beverages from a nonlicensee and adds
penalty with $250 fine. (Page 51)
She related that Section 14 [shown in magenta] added a penalty.
2:58:48 PM
MS. MORLEDGE said that Sections 16-19 and Section 21 on page 9
[shown in magenta] added penalty provisions.
Section 16: Board approval of transfers. Adds new
subsections to AS 04.11.040 (d) and (e) to make it an
offense and provide for a penalty for the unauthorized
transfer of an alcoholic beverage license or permit.
It is a violation. (Page 52)
Section 17: Reports required of limited liability
organization. Adds new subsections to AS 04.11.045 (c)
and (d) to add a penalty for failure to report a
change in member interest or manager with $250 fine.
(Page 52)
Section 18: Reports required of corporations. Adds new
subsections to AS 04.11.050 (c) and (d) to add a
penalty for failure to report a stock transfer or
change of officers or board members with $250 fine.
(Page 52)
Section 19: Reports required of partnerships. Adds new
subsections to AS 04.11.055 (c) and (d) to add a
penalty for failure to report a transfer of
partnership interest or change of general partner with
$250 fine. (Page 52)
2:59:08 PM
MS. MORLEDGE said that Section 20 was relocated. She reviewed
Section 21 [shown in magenta], which added a penalty provision.
Section 21: Nonresident distiller, brewer, winery, or
wholesaler. Amends AS 04.11.060 to add a new
subsection (b) to provide a penalty for violating the
previous section, making it a class A misdemeanor.
(Page 53)
MS. MORLEDGE reviewed Section 23 [shown in green].
Section 23: Application for new license or permit.
Amends AS 04.11.260 to exempt winery direct shipment
license from the application process for other license
types. (Page 54)
She said that this provision would exempt a winery direct
shipment license from the application process.
2:59:43 PM
SENATOR BISHOP asked whether he could contact a winery in Oregon
and have wine shipped directly to his home.
MS. MORLEDGE answered that existing wine clubs currently
deliver. However, they were not licensed companies in the state,
but this would provide licensure.
SENATOR MICCICHE explained that the reason it was important is
because anyone can order wine and liquor, but they may not be of
age or be in a dry community. He said the goal is to license
them so the state knows who the companies are and that they
would be taxed similarly to other establishments in Alaska.
[SB 52 was held in committee.]
| Document Name | Date/Time | Subjects |
|---|---|---|
| SB44 Amendment Effective Date Amendment SL&C.pdf |
SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 44 |
| SJR 8 USTR Statement for the Record.pdf |
SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SJR 8 |
| SJR 8 Alaska USMCA and Section 232 Impacts and Benefits.pptx |
SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SJR 8 |
| SB 83 Version M.pdf |
SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 83 |
| SB 83 Sponsor Statement.pdf |
SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 83 |
| SB 83 Sectional Analysis.pdf |
SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 83 |
| SB 83 Supporting Document Myth v Fact Modernizing Alaska's Telecommunications Legislation - Alaska Telecom Assn.pdf |
SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 83 |
| SB 83 Supporting Document Modernizing Alaska's Telecommunications Legislation - Alaska Telecom Assn.pdf |
SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 83 |
| SB 83 Alaska Telecom Association Presentation.pdf |
SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 83 |
| SB 83 - Letters of Support.pdf |
SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 83 |
| SB83-DCCED-RCA-03-20-19.pdf |
SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 83 |
| SB 52 Version U.PDF |
HL&C 3/11/2020 3:15:00 PM SJUD 4/22/2019 6:00:00 PM SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 52 |
| SB 52 Sponsor Statement.pdf |
SFIN 2/11/2020 9:00:00 AM SJUD 4/22/2019 6:00:00 PM SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 52 |
| SB 52 Sectional Analysis 2.19.19.pdf |
SJUD 4/22/2019 6:00:00 PM SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 52 |
| SB 52 Title 4 Bill Summary Changes SB 76 (2018) to SB 52 (2019).pdf |
SJUD 4/22/2019 6:00:00 PM SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
|
| SB 52 Sectional Analysis v.U.pdf |
SJUD 4/22/2019 6:00:00 PM SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 52 |
| SB 52 Summary of Proposed Penalties.pdf |
SJUD 4/22/2019 6:00:00 PM SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 52 |
| SB 52 Summary of Goals.pdf |
HL&C 3/9/2020 3:15:00 PM SFIN 2/11/2020 9:00:00 AM SJUD 4/22/2019 6:00:00 PM SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 52 |
| SB 52 Title 4 Review Report.pdf |
HFIN 3/24/2020 9:00:00 AM SFIN 2/11/2020 9:00:00 AM SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 52 |
| SB52 Title4 Letter Support Firetap Alehouse.pdf |
SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 52 |
| SB 52 Letter of Support ABC Board 2.18.19.pdf |
SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 52 |
| SB52 Title4 Resolution Support Firetap Alehouse.pdf |
SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 52 |
| SB 52 Letter of Support Recover Alaska.pdf |
SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 52 |
| SB 52 Letter of Support ALPHA 3.25.19.pdf |
SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 52 |
| SB 52 Letter of Opposition AK Berries.pdf |
SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 52 |
| SB 52 AK Berries Winery Fees Table.pdf |
SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 52 |
| SB052-DCCED-AMCO-03-22-19.pdf |
SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 52 |
| SB052-DHSS-PS-3-22-2019.pdf |
SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 52 |
| SB052-DCCED-CBPL-02-14-19.pdf |
SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 52 |
| SB052-DOR-TAX-3-21-2019.pdf |
SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SB 52 |
| SJR8-SLAC-03-21-19.pdf |
SL&C 3/26/2019 1:30:00 PM |
SJR 8 |