Legislature(2021 - 2022)BY TELECONFERENCE

03/06/2021 03:00 PM House HEALTH & SOCIAL SERVICES

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Audio Topic
03:03:35 PM Start
03:05:54 PM Executive Order 119 – Dhss Reorganization
04:13:02 PM HB76
05:01:47 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
-- Please Note Location Change --
+ Executive Order 119 - DHSS Reorganization TELECONFERENCED
-- Invited & Public Testimony --
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
**Streamed live on AKL.tv**
          HB 76-EXTENDING COVID 19 DISASTER EMERGENCY                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
4:13:02 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR SNYDER announced that the  final order of business would                                                               
be HOUSE  BILL NO. 76,  "An Act  extending the January  15, 2021,                                                               
governor's declaration  of a public health  disaster emergency in                                                               
response to  the novel  coronavirus disease  (COVID-19) pandemic;                                                               
providing  for  a financing  plan;  making  temporary changes  to                                                               
state law in  response to the COVID-19 outbreak  in the following                                                               
areas:  occupational and  professional  licensing, practice,  and                                                               
billing; telehealth; fingerprinting  requirements for health care                                                               
providers; charitable  gaming and online ticket  sales; access to                                                               
federal  stabilization funds;  wills; unfair  or deceptive  trade                                                               
practices;  and meetings  of shareholders;  and providing  for an                                                               
effective  date."    [Before  the   committee  was  the  proposed                                                               
committee  substitute  (CS)  for   HB  76,  Version  32-GH1011\B,                                                               
Dunmire,  3/3/21  ("Version  B"),  adopted as  a  work  draft  on                                                               
3/4/21.]                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR SNYDER opened invited testimony on HB 76, Version B.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
4:13:23 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
KEVIN BERRY, PhD, Professor,  Department of Economics" University                                                               
of Alaska Anchorage  (UAA), provided his invited  testimony via a                                                               
PowerPoint presentation  titled "Economic Impacts of  COVID."  He                                                               
began with  slide 2, "Takeaways,"  and noted these  takeaways fit                                                               
with what  is becoming the  consensus of the  research literature                                                               
around pandemic  events and economic  growth.  He said  the first                                                               
takeaway  is  that COVID-19  is  an  unprecedented shock  to  the                                                               
economy.   Simultaneously there is  a health  shock as well  as a                                                               
negative  impact  on people's  ability  to  live prosperous  good                                                               
lives  through  the  negative  impacts of  the  pandemic  on  the                                                               
economy.   The second takeaway,  he stated, is that  the economic                                                               
shock cannot  end until COVID-19 is  dealt with.  For  as long as                                                               
the infectious  disease persists  the shock  to the  economy will                                                               
continue as  well.  Masking,  social distancing,  and vaccination                                                               
drive down case numbers, helping  the economy.  He continued with                                                               
the third takeaway  which is that policies that speed  the end of                                                               
the pandemic  and allow safe economic  activity are pro-business,                                                               
pro-economic  growth, pro-Alaska,  and pro-U.S.   These  policies                                                               
include masks, social distancing, and even travel screening.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DR. BERRY spoke  to slide 3, "Impact  of Declaration Expiration."                                                               
He  said some  of  the  main impacts  of  the  expiration of  the                                                               
emergency declaration  include the  ability to  require pretravel                                                               
testing rather  than suggesting it.   A large body  of literature                                                               
indicates that  requiring things leads to  higher compliance than                                                               
does suggesting  that people  do things.   He specified  that the                                                               
expiration  also  potentially  impacts the  flexibility  and  the                                                               
speed in  response as  the ability  is lost  to have  things like                                                               
emergency  orders, other  restrictions, and  the ability  to lift                                                               
different  regulations in  response  to needs  of  business.   He                                                               
credited Commissioner  Crum and  the administration  for possibly                                                               
solving the problem  of the $8 million  in Supplemental Nutrition                                                               
Assistance Program  (SNAP) funding  that is at  risk.   Mr. Berry                                                               
stated that another  impact of the expiration  of the declaration                                                               
is the uncertainty  for the healthcare sector.   He stressed that                                                               
the  most  important  impact  of  the  expiration  is  the  clear                                                               
communication of the risk of  COVID-19 and that most Alaskans are                                                               
still susceptible  to the disease, and  therefore the possibility                                                               
of a  third wave  that could  lead to the  need for  more blanket                                                               
restrictions that can slow the economy.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
DR. BERRY noted  that the graph on slide 4,  "Total Employment in                                                               
Total Nonfarm,"  depicts the total employment  in nonfarm sectors                                                               
in Alaska  statewide [for the  years 2018,  2019, and 2020].   He                                                               
further noted  that the four graphs  on slide 5 depict  the total                                                               
employment in accommodation, food  services and drinking, leisure                                                               
and hospitality, and  retail trade in Anchorage  [for 2018, 2019,                                                               
and 2020].   He  said slides 4  and 5 highlight  that there  is a                                                               
large  impact to  employment in  Alaska, particularly  focused in                                                               
things that are thought of as  the tourism sector, but these also                                                               
provide services to Alaskans.  So,  he continued, the pain of the                                                               
recession is  not equal across  everyone.  He further  noted that                                                               
in  Alaska the  job  losses are  also focused  on  those who  are                                                               
between the ages  35 and 45, and between 25  and 35, particularly                                                               
amongst  lower  income workers,  mostly  in  these sectors  where                                                               
people are  working face-to-face  high-risk jobs  in restaurants,                                                               
bars, and other locations.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
4:17:20 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DR. BERRY displayed  slide 6, "Total Employment  in Health Care,"                                                               
and pointed  out that the  pain is  felt everywhere.   He related                                                               
that the employment  level in the health care sectors  is down to                                                               
that of 2018 following a steep drop early in the pandemic.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
DR.  BERRY moved  to  slide  7, "COVID-19  is  the problem,"  and                                                               
discussed the driver  of this trouble.  He drew  attention to the                                                               
two studies cited on the slide,  one by Cronin and Evans, and the                                                               
other by Goolsbee  and Syverson.  He explained  that both studies                                                               
basically make the  point that when talking  about the difference                                                               
between  economic  shutdowns  and voluntary  avoidance  behavior,                                                               
voluntary  stay  at  home  behavior  seems  to  explain  a  large                                                               
majority of the  economic consequences of shutdown  orders.  This                                                               
means  that  even when  the  orders  are  lifted these  sorts  of                                                               
slowdowns remain,  they are  driven by the  risk of  the disease,                                                               
not by the  orders themselves.  He allowed it  is a bit difficult                                                               
to  look at  shelter in  place  orders given  Alaska hasn't  been                                                               
under one  for quite some time  now and Anchorage, which  has had                                                               
three different  shutdowns, is not  currently under one.   People                                                               
are responding  to the risk  of the disease,  and so long  as the                                                               
disease  persists economic  malaise  and  less economic  activity                                                               
will be seen.   He advised that  to heal the economy  and be open                                                               
for  business,  COVID-19  must  be   dealt  with  first  and  the                                                               
administration needs the necessary tools to do so.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
DR. BERRY  turned to  slide 8,  "Reopening has  limited effects,"                                                               
and  related that  the graphs  are from  an event  study done  by                                                               
Chetty  et al.   He  said this  study compared  reopening in  New                                                               
Mexico  and Colorado,  two relatively  similar states.   Colorado                                                               
opened first.   He reported that there was  roughly no difference                                                               
between  the  two  states in  consumer  spending  or  employment,                                                               
although there  was a relatively  large difference in  the number                                                               
of businesses open.   This suggests that reopening  early did not                                                               
help with economic  activity, he continued, it  simply meant that                                                               
businesses were  open but didn't  have an increase  in customers.                                                               
So, he  stated, some  portion in  the economic  damage is  due to                                                               
people avoiding getting sick and trying to protect themselves.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
DR.  BERRY  explained that  slide  9,  "People respond  to  COVID                                                               
risk," summarizes  the idea  behind these  previous studies.   He                                                               
said this  is an idea that  is older than himself  and older than                                                               
the studies  he has pointed to.   He related that  the literature                                                               
itself  got kicked  off in  about  2010 by  a study  done by  Eli                                                               
Fenichel  at  the Yale  School  of  Forestry that  suggests  that                                                               
basically  the  course  of  diseases   and  pandemics  are  often                                                               
influenced by  self-protective behavior.   He said  a lot  of the                                                               
economic cost of  infectious disease comes from  people trying to                                                               
avoid  getting sick,  whether to  do  the right  thing for  their                                                               
community,  to  protect  their at-risk  family  members,  protect                                                               
themselves,  or  because  they've   been  told  it's  an  at-risk                                                               
situation  and they  are doing  their best  to respond.   So,  to                                                               
mitigate the  economic cost  of the  disease, which  includes the                                                               
harmed  human health  and the  economic harm,  Mr. Berry  advised                                                               
that the  spread of  the virus  and voluntary  avoidance behavior                                                               
must both  be reduced by  making it  safer.  Lockdowns  and other                                                               
mandates need  to be avoided  and, for this, things  like testing                                                               
matter  as does  the ability  to identify  variants and  stop new                                                               
outbreaks  by detecting  people  when they  are  coming into  the                                                               
state.  He said giving people  good information about the risk in                                                               
their community  is important.   These resources for  groups like                                                               
the Department  of Health and  Social Services (DHSS)  and others                                                               
are vital.   Mr. Berry pointed  out that there is  cost to people                                                               
staying home.   For instance, if  it is decided to  depend solely                                                               
on self-protective  behavior, it will  come at the cost  of lower                                                               
economic  activity, decreased  academic  achievement from  having                                                               
schools  closed, and  increased  calls to  domestic violence  and                                                               
sexual  assault  organizations.   So,  allowing  the pandemic  to                                                               
continue has monetary  cost to the economy as well  as social ill                                                               
costs, he added.   Targeted policies and resources  for the state                                                               
government  to reduce  the risk  of the  disease will  reduce the                                                               
social and economic ills and open the economy safely.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
DR. BERRY  pointed to the  graph on slide 10,  "Passenger Volumes                                                               
at Ted Stevens International Airport."   He said he gathered this                                                               
data from  Kevin Sullivan  who scraped  TSA data  through roughly                                                               
June 2020,  and he personally scraped  the rest of the  data from                                                               
Freedom of Information  Act (FOIA) documents in 2020  and 2021 to                                                               
look  at passenger  volumes through  this  airport as  sort of  a                                                               
measure of the number of visitors  to Alaska.  He said two things                                                               
can be  seen in the graph  of the first four  months of passenger                                                               
traffic over the last four years.   The years 2018 and 2019 see a                                                               
consistent pattern in  the number of visitors to the  state.  The                                                               
year  2020 sees  a discreet  drop-off  around the  timing of  the                                                               
first case  deemed confirmed in  Alaska, the announcement  of the                                                               
emergency  order, the  announcement of  various shutdown  orders,                                                               
and other things  happening.  So, Mr. Berry stated,  it's hard to                                                               
blame  the declining  passenger traffic  solely on  the emergency                                                               
order.  He  further stated that in 2021  passenger volumes remain                                                               
lower.  The data is  unavailable post expiration of the emergency                                                               
order, he  continued, but anecdotally  it's unlikely  Alaska will                                                               
see a  dramatic increase in passenger  load.  What is  being seen                                                               
is that people  are making a choice to avoid  traveling and avoid                                                               
coming to Alaska because of the  risk of COVID-19.  He pointed to                                                               
a study by Yan et  al., published in "Nature Scientific Reports,"                                                               
that found  people are making  this risk  tradeoff.  He  said the                                                               
best thing that can be done to  heal the economy is to reduce the                                                               
prevalence of the disease.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
4:24:18 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  MCCARTY inquired  whether the  graphs on  slide 5                                                               
representing  employment  in  accommodation,  food  services  and                                                               
drinking,  leisure  and hospitality,  and  retail  trade are  for                                                               
Anchorage only or for the state.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
DR. BERRY replied that those graphs are focused on Anchorage.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE MCCARTY  drew attention  to slide 7,  "COVID-19 is                                                               
the problem."  He asked  if, while doing economic indicators, Dr.                                                               
Berry is  seeing a standard deviation  of a delay in  knowing the                                                               
changes, and whether  that delay is days or weeks.   For example,                                                               
he said,  things have  been opened  in Anchorage  and restaurants                                                               
are filling up.   He asked how long before  that economic outcome                                                               
will be seen.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
DR. BERRY confirmed  there is potentially a delay.   He explained                                                               
that potentially people are going  to make calculations about the                                                               
risk that they  face.  Regarding the travel  restrictions that he                                                               
previously mentioned, he  said the requirement to be  tested is a                                                               
signal to people coming to Alaska  that the state is still taking                                                               
COVID-19  seriously.   So, removing  that potentially  could make                                                               
people believe it's riskier to  come here, although it's a burden                                                               
to travelers  and could also  disincentivize people.   If talking                                                               
about a  delay in people  gaining new information as  they change                                                               
their travel  plans, he  stated it is  entirely possible  it will                                                               
take a week or  two to see the effect of policy.   The problem is                                                               
that it's unlikely  something new will be seen,  he continued, so                                                               
people  are still  fairly educated  on the  risk of  COVID-19 and                                                               
that is not significantly changing.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
4:27:23 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE MCCARTY addressed slide  10, "Passenger Volumes at                                                               
Ted  Stevens International  Airport."   He  inquired whether  the                                                               
lower passenger  numbers for 2021  could be attributed  to Alaska                                                               
Airlines  not allowing  the planes  to be  filled and  the Al-Can                                                               
Highway is closed.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
DR. BERRY allowed  it's possible that other  things are impacting                                                               
this.   He  said this  gets back  to the  main point  that Alaska                                                               
Airlines is  imposing these restrictions in  response to COVID-19                                                               
and COVID-19  risk and is  doing this  above and beyond  what the                                                               
state  suggests  as  the  company's   response  to  try  to  make                                                               
passengers  feel  safe.     He  stated  that  one   of  the  best                                                               
communication  strategies he's  seen so  far is  coming from  the                                                               
governor reminding  people that Alaska  is open but also  safe to                                                               
visit.  By giving the  governor additional resources to fight the                                                               
pandemic  and  make   it  safer  to  visit   Alaska  by  speeding                                                               
vaccinations  travel  to Alaska  can  be  encouraged by  reducing                                                               
those risks and making people feel safer on fuller flights.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
4:28:31 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  KURKA  shared that  he  and  his wife  own  small                                                               
businesses in  the Matanuska-Susitna  (Mat-Su) Valley  that serve                                                               
other small  businesses "in terms  of ... the  accounting world,"                                                               
so  they are  in  many networks.    He stated  that  much of  Dr.                                                               
Berry's presentation "doesn't  pass the smell test."   He allowed                                                               
there is  some truth to  the point  that COVID-19 has  brought on                                                               
fear  and therefore  less  people going  out  and doing  consumer                                                               
activities.   But,  he said,  it wasn't  COVID-19 that  shut down                                                               
businesses it  was the  government.  He  asked whether  Dr. Berry                                                               
has done  a comparison of economic  prosperity between businesses                                                               
in Anchorage where  there has been continued  shutdowns and those                                                               
in the Mat-Su,  particularly restaurants.  He related  that he is                                                               
hearing   about  and   seeing  successful   generationally  owned                                                               
restaurants in  Anchorage being shut down  permanently but hasn't                                                               
seen that happening in the Mat-Su.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
DR. BERRY  responded that his  presentation cites  two nationwide                                                               
studies  that compare,  sort of,  county to  county based  on the                                                               
timing  of shutdown  orders and  other restrictions.   He  stated                                                               
that the  Cronin and  Evans study and  the Goolsbee  and Syverson                                                               
study, as well as others,  demonstrate that the bulk of reduction                                                               
in traffic  seems to be  explained by  the local case  counts and                                                               
risk  of  COVID-19,  not necessarily  the  timing  of  shutdowns.                                                               
Anecdotes are  individual data points,  he added, and  it's often                                                               
better  to look  at  the  total dataset  as  widely as  possible.                                                               
There is  also the potential that  many of the businesses  in the                                                               
Mat-Su are relatively  close and a lot of  people commute between                                                               
the Mat-Su and  Anchorage, so it can be hard  to disentangle what                                                               
is happening between those two locations.   He said it would be a                                                               
worthwhile study that he'd be happy to look at.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
DR. BERRY continued his answer  and explained that the nationwide                                                               
studies cited  in his presentation  might, for instance,  look at                                                               
one county  in Iowa and  a county  across the border  in Illinois                                                               
where one  faces a  shutdown order,  and the  other doesn't.   He                                                               
doesn't  mean this  to also  sound like  shutdown orders  have no                                                               
impact  at   all,  he  said,   it's  just  that  they   are  also                                                               
simultaneously often  occurring around  the same time  that COVID                                                               
cases are increasing.  For  instance, he continued, the Anchorage                                                               
shutdowns occurred in  August when the summer  wave was happening                                                               
and  again in  December when  the second  wave was  happening, so                                                               
they are also timed to the  highest risk periods to COVID-19.  He                                                               
allowed Representative  Kurka raises a valuable  point that there                                                               
are some  folks who are  making risk calculations where  they are                                                               
willing to  participate in the  economy regardless of  local case                                                               
counts  and what  is going  on  but advised  that what's  overall                                                               
happening in the  economy depends on everybody's  choices.  There                                                               
is  some subset  of the  population  that is  very responsive  to                                                               
risk, so  mandates that  are not lockdowns  - like  mask mandates                                                               
and  testing -  help  encourage  those people  to  feel safe  and                                                               
return  to their  typical economic  behavior.   Dr. Berry  agreed                                                               
that some  businesses in  the Mat-Su  are potentially  doing well                                                               
and  said that  could  also  be because  some  of  the people  in                                                               
Anchorage  were  making  the  risk   calculation  that  they  are                                                               
unafraid of COVID, or have  decided that their family is unlikely                                                               
to be impacted,  or they don't know anybody who  is high risk, or                                                               
they have  miscalculated their  own risk, and  may be  driving to                                                               
the  Mat-Su and  increasing business  there  as well.   So,  it's                                                               
unclear if  that is a  strategy that  is possible for  the entire                                                               
state at once.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
4:33:05 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
NILS  ANDREASSEN,  Executive  Director, Alaska  Municipal  League                                                               
(AML),  noted AML's  membership is  comprised of  Alaska's cities                                                               
and boroughs.   He pointed out that in  considering the extension                                                               
of the state's emergency declaration,  it is three weeks past the                                                               
declaration's expiration.  That's important, he said, because                                                                   
it's reflective of the overall process that local governments                                                                   
have experienced.  He continued:                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     Over the  course of the  last year the  experience that                                                                    
     local  governments have  had can  best be  described as                                                                    
     frustrating.   For every state  action or  inaction 165                                                                    
     local councils, assemblies, have  wrestled with what to                                                                    
     do  in  response  or  in place  of.    That's  required                                                                    
     thousands of local elected officials  and more than 100                                                                    
     administrators   to  become   public  health   experts,                                                                    
     incident commanders,  and targets.  Together  they have                                                                    
     dealt with  hundreds of state and  federal actions that                                                                    
     provide  guidance  without clarity,  direction  without                                                                    
     data,  and an  emergency declaration  that hasn't  been                                                                    
     firmly  in  place since  November.    That means  since                                                                    
     October and  every 30 days  thereafter, our  members in                                                                    
     AML   have  reached   out  to   the  governor   and  to                                                                    
     legislators  to renew  the declaration  to ensure  that                                                                    
     Alaska's communities  have the  resources they  need to                                                                    
     respond to  this pandemic.  Alaska's  local governments                                                                    
     have managed  through this process  and continue  to do                                                                    
     so.  This means that  they have diverted a large amount                                                                    
     of   their   attention   to   disaster   response   and                                                                    
     management,  to  responding  to   the  needs  of  their                                                                    
     residents  and businesses,  and to  fill the  gap where                                                                    
     the state was enacting at the local level.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     The  governor   has  been  clear   throughout,  placing                                                                    
     emphasis on  local control of  COVID mitigation.   This                                                                    
     has come  up most prominently with  respect to business                                                                    
     closures  or  limitations   or  requirements  for  face                                                                    
     coverings.   So, let's be  clear, those had  nothing to                                                                    
     do   with  the   state's   emergency  declaration   and                                                                    
     everything to  do with  the transfer  of responsibility                                                                    
     from the  state to  the local  level to  make decisions                                                                    
     that  helped contribute  to  flattening  the curve  and                                                                    
     protecting our healthcare  capacity.  In a  lot of ways                                                                    
     local  leaders  have  borne the  brunt  of  the  public                                                                    
     backlash of  these mitigation  measures, but  it's also                                                                    
     true  that   the  public  may  conflate   the  disaster                                                                    
     declaration with these actions.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
     The   loss  of   the  declaration   means  that   local                                                                    
     governments have been scrambling  to fill holes created                                                                    
     in its  absence.   Many declarations  were tied  to the                                                                    
     state's and  have either been  renewed or  now expired.                                                                    
     Many  have   had  to   reconsider  their   own  travel,                                                                    
     quarantine, and  testing restrictions when  the state's                                                                    
     [restrictions] went  from mandatory to optional.   Many                                                                    
     are in  the midst  of operating testing  or vaccination                                                                    
     clinics  with  questions   about  available  resources,                                                                    
     training,  and authorities.   Some  are  now racing  to                                                                    
     address  spikes  in cases.    Many  are looking  at  an                                                                    
     uncertain future, new  strains, variants, supporting of                                                                    
     vulnerable   residents,  preparing   for  an   economic                                                                    
     rebound,   and   preparing   for  the   lack   thereof.                                                                    
     Ultimately,  it's this  uncertainty that  ends up  most                                                                    
     challenging.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     A state  government that is  responsive and  capable at                                                                    
     the   very   least   assists   local   governments   in                                                                    
     stabilizing  their current  operating environment.   In                                                                    
     fact, the  emergency declaration just  makes government                                                                    
     work better  when it's  needed most.   That  means that                                                                    
     while  we,  state  and  local  officials  charged  with                                                                    
     public  welfare, continue  to  try and  respond to  the                                                                    
     public  health needs  of our  communities  and to  take                                                                    
     necessary actions  that support economic  recovery, the                                                                    
     declaration remains just  a tool at our  disposal.  The                                                                    
     Alaska Disaster  Act, which within  HB 76 I  believe is                                                                    
     just Sections  2 and 3,  allows the state  to allocate,                                                                    
     distribute,  and  manage  scarce  resources,  including                                                                    
     vaccine  and   testing  supplies,   much  of   this  in                                                                    
     cooperation   with  and   at  the   request  of   local                                                                    
     governments; allows it to  suspend regulations that may                                                                    
     prevent or  impede the provision of  health services or                                                                    
     COVID  response,  including  many that  businesses  and                                                                    
     organizations  have  depended  on to  ensure  continued                                                                    
     operations;  allows DMVA  [Department  of Military  and                                                                    
     Veterans Affairs]  and DHSS  [Department of  Health and                                                                    
     Social  Services]  to   work  together  within  unified                                                                    
     command structure,  which has  met weekly  or bi-weekly                                                                    
     with our  members; and allows  the state  to coordinate                                                                    
     with  FEMA  [Federal  Emergency Management  Agency]  on                                                                    
     non-congregate  shelters,  which  is  also  intersected                                                                    
     with municipal assets.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     There is  a reason that  the Alaska Disaster Act  is in                                                                    
     place     to  allow  the   state  to  act  quickly  and                                                                    
     efficiently  in  response to  a  disaster.   It's  that                                                                    
     easy.  Any delay to  this simply erodes the partnership                                                                    
     that's   in  place   between   the   state  and   local                                                                    
     governments,  between  the  state  and  its  healthcare                                                                    
     providers,  and ultimately  between the  state and  the                                                                    
     business  community.    If  we  want  to  be  open  for                                                                    
     business,   local  governments   need  a   state  whose                                                                    
     emergency  powers  are  fully  employed  on  behalf  of                                                                    
     exactly that.   Anything  less places  extreme pressure                                                                    
     on  local officials,  slows Alaska's  economic rebound,                                                                    
     and places Alaskans' lives at risk.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     Chair  and  committee   members,  what's  perhaps  most                                                                    
     disheartening  is that  I know  my testimony  today may                                                                    
     not result in a desired  or quick outcome.  Not because                                                                    
     of your  action, but it's  part of the  situation where                                                                    
     we're behind in responding  to this continuing disaster                                                                    
     and  I've   joined  colleagues  from  all   sectors  in                                                                    
     advocating  for the  Disaster Declaration's  extension.                                                                    
     At  this  point it  isn't  just  COVID fatigue  that  I                                                                    
     struggle with, but it's  having this conversation about                                                                    
     whether there is to be,  or not, a disaster declaration                                                                    
     placed when we continue to need exactly that.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
4:39:01 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
KATI CAPOZZI, President & CEO,  Alaska Chamber of Commerce, noted                                                               
the chamber  was founded in 1953  and its mission is  to advocate                                                               
for  a healthy  business environment  in  Alaska.   She said  the                                                               
chamber has  over 700  members and  represents businesses  of all                                                               
sizes and  histories from  across the state.   She  expressed the                                                               
chamber's support for passage of HB 76.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS.  CAPOZZI said  Alaska's  businesses  have suffered  immensely                                                               
over the course of the COVID-19  pandemic, and one year into this                                                               
public health  and economic  crisis many  are struggling  to keep                                                               
their  doors open.   The  business community  has endured  and is                                                               
beginning to see  light at the end of the  tunnel and is plotting                                                               
a  course  for  recovery,  she  continued.    Economic  recovery,                                                               
however, hinges on (indisc.) COVID-19.   The true economic impact                                                               
of  the COVID-19  pandemic to  Alaska  is yet  to be  determined,                                                               
especially  considering recent  policy actions  (indisc.) control                                                               
that  effectively  shut  down the  largest  portion  of  Alaska's                                                               
tourism season for at least another season.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS. CAPOZZI  related that there  is concrete data on  job losses.                                                               
She specified that  [according to the] Department  of Labor there                                                               
were  44,000 fewer  jobs during  peak employment  months in  2020                                                               
than there were in 2019.   Virtually every industry in Alaska was                                                               
negatively impacted,  she said, some far  more significantly than                                                               
others.  The oil and  gas and hospitality industries were hardest                                                               
hit, each ending  2020 with nearly 30 percent  fewer employees in                                                               
their workforce than the year prior.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MS. CAPOZZI  stated it's never  been clearer that  healthy people                                                               
are  the foundation  of  a healthy  economy.   Addressing  public                                                               
health concerns  contributes to Alaska's ability  to recover, she                                                               
pointed  out.    While  Alaska  has had  lower  case  counts  and                                                               
hospitalizations  and  leads  the   nation  in  vaccinations  per                                                               
capita, she  stressed it's important  to keep the tools  in place                                                               
to allow for this positive  trend.  From the business community's                                                               
perspective,  she   continued,  providing  the  state   with  the                                                               
appropriate authorities  and tools to continue  COVID-19 response                                                               
and recovery does not represent  more restrictions and burdensome                                                               
mandates but quite the opposite.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MS. CAPOZZI  noted that before the  Emergency Declaration expired                                                               
in February the  chamber had expressed concern that  any lapse in                                                               
the state's  ability to receive  and expend  healthcare resources                                                               
would immediately  impede the progress made  and add unacceptable                                                               
uncertainty to the state's collective  recovery, from both health                                                               
and economic perspectives.  She  advised that without some of the                                                               
regulatory   flexibility  provisions   provided  within   HB  76,                                                               
operations  throughout  the  state and  across  many  industries,                                                               
particularly  the healthcare  industry,  are forced  to do  their                                                               
best  to  comply  with  confusing and  unclear  guidance.    This                                                               
unnecessarily   adds  increased   uncertainty  to   the  business                                                               
community, she added.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS.  CAPOZZI concluded  by emphasizing  the need  for action  and                                                               
reiterating that  the chamber  supports passage of  HB 76  or any                                                               
legislation  that provides  the  state  authority to  effectively                                                               
address  ongoing COVID-19  response  and recovery  efforts.   She                                                               
stressed that Alaska's economic health is depending on it.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
4:42:13 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE MCCARTY stated  he would like to  see data showing                                                               
the differentiation between areas and  businesses.  He said COVID                                                               
is a  real thing.  He  related that he has  heard some businesses                                                               
have  adapted and  done well,  some  have adapted  and stayed  in                                                               
business, and  some were not  allowed to  adapt and had  to close                                                               
their doors.   But, he added,  he is also hearing  the "Stockholm                                                               
Syndrome" where  some businesses want  to stay the way  it's been                                                               
with COVID and  not go back to  the way it was before  COVID.  He                                                               
asked whether Ms. Capozzi has also been hearing that.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS. CAPOZZI requested  clarification regarding businesses wanting                                                               
to stay the way it is with COVID.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  MCCARTY asked  whether  Ms.  Capozzi is  familiar                                                               
with the Stockholm Syndrome.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. CAPOZZI responded yes.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE MCCARTY  related that some restaurants  were given                                                               
the privilege  of drive-through pickup  of alcohol, but  now will                                                               
have  to go  back  to the  old  way  of doing  things.   He  said                                                               
restaurants have  done great in adapting  and want to be  able to                                                               
continue those adaptations.  He  inquired whether Ms. Capozzi has                                                               
heard of  other examples about  businesses wanting to  stay under                                                               
the COVID structures that they've adapted.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS.  CAPOZZI  answered  that  there  have  been  some  regulatory                                                               
rollbacks  or pauses  which allowed  businesses  to innovate  and                                                               
adapt,  and thrive  in  some  cases, and  the  alcohol pickup  is                                                               
certainly one of  them.  She pointed out that  another small, but                                                               
important, piece that the Senate  is currently considering is the                                                               
ability for  nonprofits to hold  their board  meetings virtually,                                                               
which is important  for all nonprofits and  something the chamber                                                               
hopes to  see permanently changed  moving forward.  She  said she                                                               
has  heard   anecdotally  of   opportunities  that   have  become                                                               
available throughout COVID and mostly  have to do with businesses                                                               
that  innovated and  pivoted virtually  overnight to  be able  to                                                               
thrive in this environment.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  MCCARTY  requested  Ms. Capozzi  to  provide  the                                                               
committee with information regarding the aforementioned.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MS. CAPOZZI agreed to do so.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
4:45:59 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MICHELLE  DEWITT, Executive  Director, Bethel  Community Services                                                               
Foundation  (BCSF),  noted  BCSF  is  the  entity  designated  by                                                               
statute  that sponsors  the Kuskokwim  Ice Classic,  a small  and                                                               
highly  localized  ice classic,  as  opposed  to the  Nenana  Ice                                                               
Classic with  which people tend to  be familiar.  She  stated the                                                               
foundation operates  a very similar fundraising  contest, visible                                                               
primarily  in  the  Yukon-Kuskokwim   (YK)  Delta  Region,  where                                                               
customers  guess  the month,  day,  and  time  of breakup.    The                                                               
foundation dedicates  the net revenue to  nonprofit organizations                                                               
that provide services  in the community, most of  which are youth                                                               
groups.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS. DEWITT recounted  that in pre-COVID times  youth groups would                                                               
sell tickets  in stores to  earn money  for their club  or group.                                                               
But last year  at the time ticket sales were  about to begin BCSF                                                               
began  to  grasp the  devastation  of  the pandemic.    Realizing                                                               
tickets  could  not  be  safely  sold in  person,  she  said  the                                                               
foundation pivoted to  a phone sales strategy,  which resulted in                                                               
a logistics  nightmare for this  fundraiser.  She  explained that                                                               
Ice Classic  staff and  the volunteer groups  tried to  staff the                                                               
phones, but  the phones  were easily  and quickly  overwhelmed at                                                               
peak times.  The process relied  on a very slow routine of taking                                                               
down the  customer's name, contact information,  their guess, and                                                               
details about which  nonprofit group they wanted  to support with                                                               
their purchase.   The guess,  she specified, must be  100 percent                                                               
accurate, and must be verified  with the caller.  With volunteers                                                               
receiving the  information, the accurate  recording of  the guess                                                               
was out  of the  customer's hands and  into a  volunteer's hands.                                                               
But, she noted, this transaction didn't stop there.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MS.  DEWITT explained  that volunteers  work remotely  from their                                                               
homes  for COVID-19  safety, with  phones forwarded  to different                                                               
people every few  hours.  Folks working the  phones wrote guesses                                                               
as quickly as they could on  the forms, she related, and then the                                                               
forms then had  to be transferred to actual  Ice Classic guesses.                                                               
All the guesses  in the forms now located at  homes of volunteers                                                               
throughout  town had  to be  retrieved and  physically sorted  in                                                               
chronological order.   After all this, as a  method of validating                                                               
accuracy  again,  guesses are  entered  into  a spreadsheet,  she                                                               
further explained.   So again, a volunteer had to  receive a call                                                               
and complete  a form,  transfer the  data to  a ticket,  sort the                                                               
ticket into  the entire pool  of tickets in  chronological order,                                                               
and then enter guesses into a  database.  This was four layers of                                                               
work 6,000  times over.   A  reduction in sales  of more  than 20                                                               
percent  was seen,  she reported.   Normally,  between 7,500  and                                                               
10,000  guesses are  received, but  with the  phone-only approach                                                               
about 6,000 were logged.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MS. DEWITT stated  that now, in 2021, the foundation  is about to                                                               
go into  a similar position.   A  vaccine is here,  many COVID-19                                                               
safety precautions  and adaptations  have been embraced,  and the                                                               
foundation  is moving  into  an era  of  decreasing members,  she                                                               
said.   But it's  not yet  safe or appropriate  to return  to in-                                                               
person sales  for this sort of  fundraiser.  So, BCSF  is staring                                                               
down this potentially cumbersome process  and the language in the                                                               
bill  offers substantial  relief.   She  asked  the committee  to                                                               
support  this  language, which  will  allow  this fundraiser  and                                                               
undoubtedly many  others around the  state to continue in  a safe                                                               
way online in the pandemic.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS. DEWITT  emphasized that the  true benefit of  this [proposed]                                                               
adaptation will  be reaped by  the groups the  foundation serves,                                                               
which most  recently included  a youth  dance company,  the group                                                               
that  offers swim  passes and  free swim  lessons at  the fitness                                                               
center, the  pet rescue nonprofit,  the student council,  and the                                                               
local youth group  Teens Acting Against Violence.   She said that                                                               
groups like  these have had  nearly all their venues  for raising                                                               
funds  disappear in  this year  of COVID.   An  online adaptation                                                               
will  provide them  with the  ability  to raise  funds for  their                                                               
programs by using technology, she stated in conclusion.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
4:50:07 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR ZULKOSKY requested  Ms. Dewitt to talk  about why having                                                               
an  online adaptation  is worthwhile  moving into  2021, and  the                                                               
importance of being able to do this online versus phones.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS.  DEWITT  replied  that  the   online  adaptation  allows  for                                                               
increased efficiencies with the fundraiser.   By phone, she said,                                                               
it  is  a four-step  process  repeated  over and  over  literally                                                               
thousands  of times.   Online  keeps everyone  safe, reduces  the                                                               
significant stress,  and keeps the  accuracy in the hands  of the                                                               
customer who  can submit  his or  her own guess  and not  have to                                                               
rely on  somebody at the  receiving end  to write down  the guess                                                               
accurately.   It is a  huge benefit for  the customer as  well as                                                               
for the volunteers on the receiving end in terms of efficiency.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
4:51:50 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
THOMAS  QUIMBY,  MD,  Vice  President,   Alaska  Chapter  of  the                                                               
American College  of Emergency  Physicians, noted  he is  a full-                                                               
time  practicing  emergency physician.    He  said that  to  date                                                               
Alaska has  weathered the COVID-19  pandemic relatively  well and                                                               
there  are indicators  that the  pandemic is  winding down.   The                                                               
number   of  vaccines   administered  thus   far  in   Alaska  is                                                               
encouraging and  is seen as  a critical step towards  achieving a                                                               
degree of  herd immunity.   The chapter  is optimistic  about the                                                               
future, he  added, and is hoping  for a return to  a semblance of                                                               
normality soon.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
DR. QUIMBY cautioned that, despite  the many positive indicators,                                                               
there  remains considerable  vulnerability to  additional surges.                                                               
He  noted  that currently  there  are  worrisome case  counts  in                                                               
Petersburg and  the Mat-Su Valley.   Repeatedly, a  resurgence in                                                               
cases  has  been  seen  throughout the  country  and  globe  when                                                               
mitigation  measures  are relaxed.    Even  though vaccine  rates                                                               
increase daily and  there is thought to be a  degree of naturally                                                               
acquired immunity,  he said  the data does  not suggest  that the                                                               
population  has  yet reached  a  degree  of immunity  that  would                                                               
guarantee invulnerability to future surges.   He related that his                                                               
hospital continues to see COVID  related complaints as an average                                                               
of 30-40  percent of its  daily emergency department volume.   As                                                               
well, he  advised, the  threat of  new, more  infectious variants                                                               
remains to be fully understood.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
DR. QUIMBY  stated that there are  significant practical concerns                                                               
with the lapse  of the emergency disaster  declaration.  Broadly,                                                               
he explained,  the declaration provides important  flexibility in                                                               
resources  for   rapidly  responding  to  the   dynamics  of  the                                                               
pandemic.   The  situation can  change rapidly,  he pointed  out.                                                               
For example,  within a  recent two-day  period his  hospital went                                                               
from  zero   COVID  patients  to  thirteen,   a  significant  and                                                               
concerning increase  for a hospital  with just  sixteen intensive                                                               
care unit (ICU) beds.   Specifically, he further explained, there                                                               
is  concern  about  loss  of  access  to  a  variety  of  federal                                                               
(indisc.) waivers,  with many potential  implications.   This may                                                               
affect alternative care  sites and there is  much uncertainty now                                                               
regarding the  legality of  existing sites  and whether  they can                                                               
continue  to operate.   The  Lake  Otis Testing  Center has  shut                                                               
down,  he continued.   It  is known  that testing  is a  critical                                                               
component  of managing  the pandemic  to take  intermediate steps                                                               
before   healthcare   systems   become   completely   overwhelmed                                                               
necessitating  shutdowns.     He  said  the   Alaska  Chapter  is                                                               
concerned  about  other  existing  sites  and  whether  they  can                                                               
continue  to  operate.    With  the  lapse  of  the  declaration,                                                               
patients  have  lost  access  to  tele-health  providers  due  to                                                               
concerns about liability.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
DR.  QUIMBY  stated that  his  organization  believes a  bill  to                                                               
permanently allow non-Alaska  state license tele-health providers                                                               
is  the wrong  answer.    He specified  that  an emergency  order                                                               
extending  access  temporarily  allows  Alaska to  craft  a  more                                                               
nuanced permanent  bill that  can serve  Alaskans in  the future.                                                               
He further  noted that travel  related testing has  been severely                                                               
curtailed.  He  pointed out that this has been  an important tool                                                               
for many  rural communities with  limited healthcare  services to                                                               
prevent  outbreaks.   He advised  that mandatory  airport testing                                                               
will help protect Alaskans, should  be in place until vaccination                                                               
is more widespread, and allows  for detection control of COVID-19                                                               
variant strains.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
DR. QUIMBY  further related that some  [case management] facility                                                               
regulations  have also  been waived  in the  meantime that  allow                                                               
placement  for  personal  protective  equipment  (PPE)  supplies,                                                               
temporary  walls   and  barriers,  and  other   modifications  to                                                               
facilities necessitated by COVID  related protocols.  He stressed                                                               
that  the Alaska  Chapter has  concerns for  potential misuse  of                                                               
accessing supplies from the state  and national stockpiles, which                                                               
include  PPE  such  as  masks, gloves,  gowns,  and  powered  air                                                               
purifying  respirators (PAPRs);  and essential  medical equipment                                                               
such as ventilators, high-flow nasal  canula devices, and testing                                                               
supplies.   He  shared  that  at one  point  during the  November                                                               
[2020] surge his  hospital was down to only one  or two high-flow                                                               
nasal  canula  devices  available,  none were  available  on  the                                                               
commercial market.  His hospital was  able to quickly get 15 from                                                               
the state but  it's uncertain whether his hospital  would be able                                                               
to do  that in the  future.  He pointed  out that during  much of                                                               
the pandemic  these items have  been unreliably available  on the                                                               
private  market and  the ability  to  get them  quickly from  the                                                               
state has made all the difference during surges.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
DR. QUIMBY  advised that there  is also increased  complexity and                                                               
difficulty with a variety of  procurement issues, such as lengthy                                                               
standardized contract  processes that  prohibit rapid  hiring for                                                               
vaccine  distribution, testing,  and delivery  of health  care as                                                               
needed.   He stated there  is concern for  communications between                                                               
agencies and  facilities given the  loss of the  Incident Command                                                               
System (ICS).   Also, he said, potential messaging  to the public                                                               
of  the   need  for  personal   caution  and   responsibility  in                                                               
protecting  the community  has been  reduced.   This  would be  a                                                               
great mistake, Dr. Quimby counseled,  especially with the rapidly                                                               
improving  situation.    To date,  countless  examples  of  large                                                               
surges  have been  seen when  communities, states,  and countries                                                               
have relaxed  mitigation measures,  such as  physical distancing,                                                               
indoor gathering,  and masking, prior to  widespread vaccination.                                                               
These  surges invariably  tax  the  healthcare system's  capacity                                                               
which   necessitates   shutdowns    that   have   many   negative                                                               
consequences such as harming  the economy, restricting liberties,                                                               
and affecting mental health.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DR. QUIMBY allowed  there are many promising  indicators that the                                                               
end of  the pandemic draws  near but  cautioned that "we  are not                                                               
there yet."   While dropping case counts is  very encouraging and                                                               
the desire to send the  public positive messaging is appreciated,                                                               
he  continued, failure  to extend  the emergency  declaration has                                                               
many negative  consequences for those  working in  healthcare and                                                               
still very  much involved in  managing the pandemic.   He related                                                               
that,  most  of  all,  repeal  of  the  declaration  has  created                                                               
considerable  confusion and  created uncertainty  in addition  to                                                               
loss of  access to important  tools for combatting  the pandemic.                                                               
He pointed out  that, overall, there is no  apparent financial or                                                               
other  significant   negative  consequences  to   continuing  the                                                               
declaration  for the  immediate future.   He  further noted  that                                                               
alternative solutions through patchwork  legislation thus far did                                                               
not  thoroughly  address the  issues  created  by repeal  of  the                                                               
declaration and  had many potential unintended  consequences.  He                                                               
said  the Alaska  Chapter of  the American  College of  Emergency                                                               
Physicians  therefore respectfully  requests  that the  committee                                                               
renew the disaster declaration.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
4:58:47 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE MCCARTY,  regarding the recent COVID  surge in the                                                               
Mat-Su  Valley  mentioned  by  Dr.  Quimby,  inquired  about  the                                                               
severity of these COVID cases compared to the past.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
DR. QUIMBY  replied that current  cases are not looking  like the                                                               
November surge.  He said  cases rapidly climbed several weeks ago                                                               
and have started to  drop off some.  Part of  his concern is that                                                               
a  significant outbreak  among younger  and  healthier people  is                                                               
being  seen.   There  was a  school outbreak  and  many of  those                                                               
people  are showing  up  in the  emergency  department, but  they                                                               
aren't requiring  hospitalization consistent  with what  has been                                                               
seen  other places.   The  concern, he  stated, is  that if  this                                                               
spills  over into  the more  vulnerable population  another large                                                               
surge could be seen.   He said it is manageable  at this time but                                                               
could change very quickly as mentioned in his testimony.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
5:00:03 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  SNYDER  opened  public  testimony  on  Version  B,  the                                                               
proposed CS for  HB 76, then closed it after  ascertaining no one                                                               
from the  public wished  to testify.   She said  public testimony                                                               
would be reopened at the bill's next hearing on 3/9/21.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR SNYDER announced that HB 76 was held over.                                                                             

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
EO 119, Legislative Legal Memo, 3.6.2021.pdf HHSS 3/6/2021 3:00:00 PM
EO 119
HB 76; Invited Testimony, Prof. Berry - UAA Econ, 3.6.2021.pptx HHSS 3/6/2021 3:00:00 PM
HB 76
HB 76 Sectional Analysis Version 32 GH1011 A.pdf HHSS 3/2/2021 3:00:00 PM
HHSS 3/6/2021 3:00:00 PM
HB 76
HB 76 Transmittal Letter.pdf HHSS 3/2/2021 3:00:00 PM
HHSS 3/6/2021 3:00:00 PM
HB 76
HB 76 Version 32 GH 1011 A.pdf HHSS 3/2/2021 3:00:00 PM
HHSS 3/6/2021 3:00:00 PM
HB 76
HB0076-1-2-021821-CED-N.pdf HHSS 3/4/2021 3:00:00 PM
HHSS 3/6/2021 3:00:00 PM
HB 76
HB0076-2-2-021821-DHS-N.pdf HHSS 3/4/2021 3:00:00 PM
HHSS 3/6/2021 3:00:00 PM
HB 76
HB0076-3-2-021821-DPS-N.pdf HHSS 3/4/2021 3:00:00 PM
HHSS 3/6/2021 3:00:00 PM
HB 76
HB0076-4-2-021821-MVA-Y.pdf HHSS 3/4/2021 3:00:00 PM
HHSS 3/6/2021 3:00:00 PM
HB 76
HB 76(HSS)-DOR-TAX-02-10-21.pdf HHSS 3/4/2021 3:00:00 PM
HHSS 3/6/2021 3:00:00 PM
HB 76
CSHB76 32-GH1011B.pdf HHSS 3/4/2021 3:00:00 PM
HHSS 3/6/2021 3:00:00 PM
HB 76
HSCR - EO 119.pdf HHSS 3/6/2021 3:00:00 PM
EO 119
ASHNHA Letter of Support for HB 76 (Final).pdf HHSS 3/6/2021 3:00:00 PM
HB 76
Facing Foster Care Alaska HSS Testimony on EO 119.pdf HHSS 3/6/2021 3:00:00 PM
EO 119
FFC Alaska - Preventing Early Departures Among the Child Welfare Workforce.pdf HHSS 3/6/2021 3:00:00 PM
EO 119
HSCR - EO 119.pdf HHSS 3/6/2021 3:00:00 PM
EO 119
LAW HOUSE HSS memo.final 2.25.21.pdf HHSS 3/6/2021 3:00:00 PM
EO 119
ANHB to Commissioner Crum re. DHSS Reorganization - Final.pdf HHSS 3/6/2021 3:00:00 PM
EO 119
Alaska Healthcare Transformation Letter - EO 119.pdf HHSS 3/6/2021 3:00:00 PM
EO 119
DHSS_Law EO 119 Sectional Analysis.pdf HHSS 3/6/2021 3:00:00 PM
EO 119
EO 119 FULL.pdf HHSS 3/6/2021 3:00:00 PM
EO 119
FFC Alaska - 2020 HB 151 Report to the Legislature.pdf HHSS 3/6/2021 3:00:00 PM
FFC Alaska - Caseload briefing paper Multi-page NCWWI.pdf HHSS 3/6/2021 3:00:00 PM
EO 119
FFC Alaska - NCWWI Caseload-Workload 2011 One Pager.pdf HHSS 3/6/2021 3:00:00 PM
EO 119
House HSS Response - EO 119 - Cover Letter and Attachments.pdf HHSS 3/6/2021 3:00:00 PM
EO 119