Legislature(2021 - 2022)BARNES 124

02/11/2022 09:00 AM House LABOR & COMMERCE

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Audio Topic
09:00:20 AM Start
09:00:42 AM SB9
09:59:27 AM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
-- Please Note Time Change --
+ SB 9 ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL; ALCOHOL REG TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
          SB 9-ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL; ALCOHOL REG                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
9:00:42 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR FIELDS announced  that the only order  of business would                                                               
be CS FOR  SENATE BILL NO. 9(FIN), "An Act  relating to alcoholic                                                               
beverages;   relating  to   the   regulation  of   manufacturers,                                                               
wholesalers, and  retailers of  alcoholic beverages;  relating to                                                               
licenses,   endorsements,   and   permits   involving   alcoholic                                                               
beverages; relating  to common carrier  approval to  transport or                                                               
deliver alcoholic  beverages; relating to the  Alcoholic Beverage                                                               
Control   Board;  relating   to   offenses  involving   alcoholic                                                               
beverages;  amending Rule  17(h), Alaska  Rules of  Minor Offense                                                               
Procedure; and providing for an effective date."                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
9:01:09 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR PETER  MICCICHE, Alaska State  Legislature, as  the prime                                                               
sponsor,  introduced CSSB  9(FIN).   He explained  that about  10                                                               
years ago  people came  together about Title  4, a  hodgepodge of                                                               
single bills that have been added  in as the alcohol industry has                                                               
changed over  the last 40  years.  Title  4 is confusing  and not                                                               
well organized, creating  issues and making it  difficult for the                                                               
Alcoholic Beverage  Control Board, public safety,  and licensees.                                                               
The old Title 4 does not  reflect how the alcohol industry occurs                                                               
in Alaska today.  This rewrite,  SB 9, tries to bring back order,                                                               
recognizing the differences in how  people operate and working to                                                               
make the ABC  Board more responsive and more effective  in how it                                                               
manages alcohol in Alaska.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  MICCICHE  stressed  that  alcohol is  a  very  important                                                               
industry in Alaska.   For those with a  healthy relationship with                                                               
alcohol the problems  aren't so apparent.   However, alcohol also                                                               
destroys  many lives  in  Alaska; it  is by  far  the number  one                                                               
substance that  is abused.  The  bill tries to rebalance  the way                                                               
that the industry currently operates  through the lens of a group                                                               
of people  who came together many  years ago on a  steering team;                                                               
[the  legislature] came  in a  couple years  after they  started.                                                               
These  are  very  diverse  interests  of  public  safety,  public                                                               
health, traditional  license holders, and brewers  and distillers                                                               
and  these  people did  not  agree.    There were  worries  about                                                               
competition,  people  in public  safety  and  public health  were                                                               
worried about  increases in alcohol,  but they were able  to come                                                               
together on this bill.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
9:04:15 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR MICCICHE  cautioned that [legislators] are  going to hear                                                               
about tasting  rooms as though that  is a key issue  in the bill.                                                               
But, he  continued, that  is approximately five  lines in  a 125-                                                               
page bill.   The  bill tries  to balance this  new way  that some                                                               
Alaskans are voting with their  feet into tasting rooms, the bill                                                               
gives  them some  additional latitude  to operate.   There  was a                                                               
give and take by all parties to  arrive at what is in this bill -                                                               
along with the limitation came some  real benefits.  If they want                                                               
to be  a bar, they can  now purchase a  "BDL" and be a  bar, they                                                               
can  have some  events,  they  can stay  open  a  little later                                                                  
instead of a soft  close at 8:00 p.m. they can  stay open until a                                                               
10:00 p.m. hard close.  While  people are going to focus on that,                                                               
the Senate had  these same discussions and  it passed unanimously                                                               
once people realized the many beneficial things.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR MICCICHE  stated that regardless  of whether  one's focus                                                               
is on  public safety and health  or on industry, SB  9 resets how                                                               
alcohol  is  regulated  in  Alaska.    The  series  of  licenses,                                                               
endorsements, and permits  allows someone to dial  in exactly the                                                               
way they  want to operate; a  bill won't have to  be dropped next                                                               
year  because someone  wants to  do  something that  is a  little                                                               
different.   The bill allows  funding for  additional enforcement                                                               
and allows funding  for a database that will  make licensing much                                                               
more efficient.   He said  members can discuss and  ask questions                                                               
about the five lines, but he  urged that members try not to focus                                                               
on those five lines because there  are so many good things in the                                                               
bill.   The  bill will  change how  the industry  operates moving                                                               
forward,  he continued,  and readjustments  through future  bills                                                               
can be  made as  understanding develops on  how all  these pieces                                                               
work together in this ever-changing industry.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
9:07:50 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ANNA  BRAWLEY,  AICP,  Title 4  Review  Coordinator,  Consultant,                                                               
Agnew::Beck  Consulting,   provided  a   PowerPoint  presentation                                                               
titled "Alcoholic  Beverage Control  (ABC) Board, Title  4 Review                                                               
Project, Overview  of Senate  Bill 9."   She  turned to  slide 2,                                                               
"Why Alcohol  Control? Why Title  4?" and stated that  alcohol is                                                               
not like  other commodities  such as shoes.   Alcohol  has social                                                               
costs, so  it is  important to recognize  that every  state since                                                               
Prohibition has  put in place  alcohol laws, and it  is important                                                               
to look at alcohol as a regulated product.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS. BRAWLEY moved to slide 3,  "Goals of Title 4 Review Process."                                                               
She  said the  process began  in 2012,  well before  there was  a                                                               
legislative bill, to look at the  problems in the statutes and to                                                               
find common  ground to  fix them.   The goals  are: 1)  promote a                                                               
fair business climate while protecting  public health and safety;                                                               
and 2)  make Title  4 clear, consistent  legal framework  for the                                                               
ABC Board,  licensees, law enforcement, and  local governments so                                                               
that everyone using  these statutes on a  daily basis understands                                                               
how they work.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS. BRAWLEY  addressed slide 4, "Over  120 Diverse Stakeholders."                                                               
She  noted  that the  many  different  stakeholders included  the                                                               
public  health  sector, the  public  safety  and law  enforcement                                                               
sector,  all three  tiers of  the industry,  community advocates,                                                               
local governments, the  ABC Board, and the  Alcohol and Marijuana                                                               
Control Office (AMCO).                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
9:09:47 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. BRAWLEY  discussed slide 5, "Categories  of Recommendations."                                                               
She outlined  the five categories of  recommendations or policies                                                               
within  the bill.   First  is the  business piece  of the  bill -                                                               
alcohol licenses,  permits, and trade  practices.  Second  is the                                                               
role  and  functions of  the  ABC  Board  and  staff.   Third  is                                                               
underage drinking  and youth  access to alcohol    a  main reason                                                               
for why  the public health  folks came to  the table.   Fourth is                                                               
regulation of internet sales of alcohol.   Fifth, the bulk of the                                                               
bill, is  the technical  and administrative  law changes.   While                                                               
the bill is many pages,  much of it is reorganizing, renumbering,                                                               
and making the statutes work together.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MS. BRAWLEY displayed  slide 6, "The 3-Tier System."   She stated                                                               
that  the general  theory  of alcohol  regulation  is the  3-tier                                                               
system   to  prevent   a  monopoly   where  one   company  makes,                                                               
wholesales,  and  retails  a  product,  thereby  controlling  the                                                               
market.   The traditional view  of the  3-tier system is  to have                                                               
separate   businesses  doing   manufacturing,  distributing   and                                                               
wholesaling,  and  retailing.   That  has  changed over  time  in                                                               
Alaska and across the US with  the advent of brewpubs and tasting                                                               
rooms, so the  intent is to keep the spirit  of the 3-tier system                                                               
in place but allow it to have some give and flexibility.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
9:11:19 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. BRAWLEY stated that slides 7,  8, and 9, all titled "Alaska's                                                               
Liquor  License System:  Proposed Changes,"  illustrate generally                                                               
how the  different license  types fit together.   Almost  all the                                                               
licenses shown on these slides  already exist, she explained, and                                                               
they are either renumbered, or  renamed, or organized so that all                                                               
the  manufacturing   licenses  are   together  in   the  statute.                                                               
Speaking to  slide 7,  she said  the manufacturing  tier includes                                                               
brewery  manufacturers,  winery   manufacturers,  and  distillery                                                               
manufacturers.    The wholesale  tier  includes  the two  license                                                               
types  of general  and limited  beer-wine  for selling  different                                                               
types of  products.  Ms.  Brawley explained that slide  8 depicts                                                               
the  various  retail  licenses:    beverage  dispensaries,  bars,                                                               
package or  liquor stores, restaurants or  eating places, theater                                                               
licenses, and  so forth.   Most of these already  exist [outlined                                                               
in  green  box]  and  there aren't  significant  changes  to  the                                                               
licenses.   New  ones  are  outlined in  yellow  boxes    brewery                                                               
retail,  winery  retail,  and  distillery  retail     which  take                                                               
functions  that already  exist in  the existing  brewery, winery,                                                               
and distillery statutes and make  them a separate license so that                                                               
a business can  choose to make the product, sell  it at a limited                                                               
retail space,  or purchase  a full  retail license,  which cannot                                                               
currently  be  purchased.    Ms. Brawley  said  slide  9  depicts                                                               
additional  retail  licenses  that  are  considered  serving  the                                                               
tourist industry,  so are not  part of the population  limits and                                                               
are available to  communities that have a lot  more visitors than                                                               
residents essentially.   Most of those already exist  or the bill                                                               
is just clarifying their definitions  in statute.  Other proposed                                                               
new  license types  are  the  fair license  that  deals with  the                                                               
nonprofit  state  fair  and   the  manufacturer  direct  shipment                                                               
license.  Some licenses are  being removed from statute, but that                                                               
type  of business  isn't being  removed,  she continued.   It  is                                                               
converting that  license to something  else that  already exists,                                                               
thereby streamlining  and not having different  types of licenses                                                               
that do the same thing.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
9:14:00 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS.  BRAWLEY   highlighted  the   bill's  proposed   changes  for                                                               
businesses.    She moved  to  slide  10, "Proposed:  More  Retail                                                               
Options for  Manufacturers," and qualified that  while brewery is                                                               
the type of manufacturer depicted  on the slide, this applies for                                                               
all three types  of manufacturers.  She  explained that currently                                                               
under a  brewery license as much  product can be made  as wanted,                                                               
but the brewery has very  limited rules through the tasting room,                                                               
so the brewery is  limited on the retail side.   Or, under a brew                                                               
pub license,  there can be  a full bar  or a full  restaurant but                                                               
only so  much beer  can be  made per  year.   The proposal  is to                                                               
combine those two  tracks, keep limits on the  retail side, don't                                                               
put  production  limits on  the  licenses,  and a  brewery  could                                                               
either  choose to  continue to  operate on  a tasting  room model                                                               
with those limited  hours, limited sales volume, and so  on.  Or,                                                               
a brewery could now purchase a  full retail license, and make its                                                               
own beer  and have a  full restaurant.   That is common  in other                                                               
states, but [in Alaska] that is  currently only allowed in a very                                                               
specific situation.  So, this  allows those manufacturers to have                                                               
more choices.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MS.  BRAWLEY proceeded  to slide  11, "Proposed:  Endorsements on                                                               
Licenses."   She  noted that  adding  endorsements is  not a  new                                                               
concept,  an example  being a  driver's  license endorsement  for                                                               
commercial  driving.   In the  context of  alcohol licenses,  she                                                               
continued, it  would give more  flexibility to either  allow more                                                               
activities  than would  normally be  had,  or to  allow a  larger                                                               
premise, such as more  than one room or being able  to serve in a                                                               
larger area  like a  resort.   It would  solve these  issues that                                                               
have come up  with the ABC Board and puts  in place a streamlined                                                               
and consistent process.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS. BRAWLEY  displayed slide  12, "Proposed  Endorsements," which                                                               
read (original punctuation provided):                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
     â?¢ R-7A|Bowling Alley Endorsement                                                                                         
     â?¢ R-7B|Package Store Shipping Endorsement                                                                                
     â?¢ R-7C|Package Store Delivery Endorsement                                                                                
     â?¢ R-7D|Package Store Re-Packaging Endorsement                                                                            
     â?¢ [R-1]Multiple Fixed Counter Endorsement                                                                                
     â?¢ [R-1]Hotel/Motel Endorsement                                                                                           
     â?¢ [R-1]Large Resort Endorsement                                                                                          
     â?¢ [R-3]Package Store Sampling Endorsement                                                                                
     â?¢ [M-1]Brewery Repackaging Endorsement                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MS. BRAWLEY said most of  these proposed endorsements in the bill                                                               
already exist -  some are part of existing licenses;  some are in                                                               
regulation.  The bill takes all  these concepts that are all over                                                               
the place in  the statute and puts  them in one place  so that it                                                               
is clear to businesses what options they have.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS. BRAWLEY  reviewed slide 13,  "Proposed: Limited  Free Samples                                                               
for  Package Stores."   While  not currently  allowed in  Alaska,                                                               
sampling  is common  in  other states,  she said.    If the  bill                                                               
passes,  limited  sampling would  be  allowed  at package  stores                                                               
[with a Package  Store Sampling Endorsement].   Samples and hours                                                               
would be  limited to  ensure that the  health and  safety aspects                                                               
are  cared  for.    Neighborhoods don't  want  to  see  unlimited                                                               
drinking  at  a  package  store,   so  that's  an  example  of  a                                                               
compromise.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS.  BRAWLEY turned  to the  list of  permit types  on slide  14,                                                               
"Standardize  Permits."   She  explained that  a  permit is  time                                                               
limited for  a special event,  such as catering of  a fundraiser,                                                               
versus  a license  where a  business is  serving year-round  full                                                               
time.  She  noted that most of these permits  already exist under                                                               
regulation  and the  bill is  just reorganizing  what is  already                                                               
there.  The  bill proposes [three] new permits  to address issues                                                               
that  have come  up.    For example,  the  Music Festival  Permit                                                               
addresses the situation  where an event in a rural  area with few                                                               
options for bar catering can continue doing what they do today.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
9:17:24 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS.  BRAWLEY  proceeded to  slide  15,  "Proposed: Package  Store                                                               
Tasting  Event Permit."   This  is  new for  package stores,  she                                                               
noted, and  is different than  the sampling permit.   This permit                                                               
would allow  a package store to  hold a tasting event,  such as a                                                               
wine tasting,  with a dinner on  its premises and the  ability to                                                               
showcase the store's  products.  The hours would  be limited, and                                                               
food  must be  served.   As well,  the number  of permits  that a                                                               
package store can  use per year would be limited.   It opens more                                                               
opportunities for businesses to showcase their products safely.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MS.  BRAWLEY  addressed  slide 16,  "Population  Limits:  Current                                                               
Title 4."   She explained that  population limits are a  ratio of                                                               
the number of licenses to the  number of residents and are set by                                                               
community.   A borough has  a set number  of licenses and  a city                                                               
within  that borough  has a  different number  of licenses.   For                                                               
locations not in  a borough or city, there is  a separate process                                                               
for  determining  receipt of  a  license.   There  are  different                                                               
limits for restaurants, there can  be relatively more restaurants                                                               
than  other  types.     Licenses  that  are   still  exempt  from                                                               
population  limits  are depicted  in  green  on this  slide,  she                                                               
continued.   For example, tourism licenses  for a hotel or  in an                                                               
airport do not  have to follow these population  limits, so there                                                               
are already ways to work outside of those limits.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MS.  BRAWLEY   spoke  to  slide   17,  "Proposed   Seasonal  REPL                                                               
[Restaurant or Eating  Place License] Tourism."   She stated that                                                               
this proposed license would be  a way to provide more flexibility                                                               
for  communities that  want to  expand and  have economic  growth                                                               
without  throwing  away  the  system  of limits.    It  would  be                                                               
available  in smaller  communities [less  than 40,000]  and would                                                               
have the  same privileges  as a  year-round restaurant  but would                                                               
only  operate half  the year.   Many  businesses already  operate                                                               
this way  only through  the summer season,  so it  is anticipated                                                               
that some  folks would switch to  this license.  A  formula based                                                               
on the  number of  visitors, not  the resident  population, would                                                               
determine how many licenses a community could get.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MS.  BRAWLEY  moved  to  slide   18,  "Proposed:  Convert  Public                                                               
Convenience Licenses  and Applications."   This is an  example of                                                               
something in  statute that is  intended to give  flexibility, she                                                               
said, but  is cumbersome  for everybody to  use.   Only available                                                               
for  restaurants, [existing  Public  Convenience Licenses,  which                                                               
are not  transferable,] would be converted  to regular Restaurant                                                               
or Eating  Place Licenses (REPLs),  which are transferable  [to a                                                               
new  owner or  location].   This proposal  would discontinue  the                                                               
current system in  which an applicant, a business  wanting to get                                                               
a license,  must get signatures  in the community, and  then that                                                               
process goes to the ABC Board.   Cities have said it is difficult                                                               
to  use, it  can be  arbitrary, and  it is  up to  the individual                                                               
business to do  all the work.  So, this  proposal would make sure                                                               
that there are ways for communities to see more licenses.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
9:20:53 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. BRAWLEY  proceeded to slide  19, "Proposed:  Local Government                                                               
Petition  for  Additional  Alcohol Licenses,"  and  reviewed  the                                                               
proposed process for cities and  boroughs to request from the ABC                                                               
Board that they should have  more licenses.  Under this proposal,                                                               
she said,  the city  would petition  the ABC  Board and  make its                                                               
case not for an individual  business but for multiple licenses in                                                               
the city  or borough  - for  example, one more  bar and  two more                                                               
restaurants over  the next  ten years.   Then,  if the  ABC Board                                                               
says  yes,  these licenses  would  be  permanently available  [to                                                               
apply for] in  that community and they could  be transferred like                                                               
any other license.   If the ABC Board says no  or that the number                                                               
requested is excessive, the city can petition again.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR MICCICHE interjected that this  is an important aspect in                                                               
replacement  of the  petition signature  type  of license,  which                                                               
isn't working.  He stressed that  the numbers used by Ms. Brawley                                                               
are purely  an example  and not representative  of what  might be                                                               
asked for.   Some  communities are lagging  right now  and might,                                                               
for example,  apply for ten  rather than two restaurants  and the                                                               
ABC  Board   might  approve  only  three   additional  restaurant                                                               
licenses and a  bar.  The belief is that  this proposed system is                                                               
the best way for the board  and the municipality to work together                                                               
for additional local control on future licensing.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
9:23:00 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. BRAWLEY continued to slide  20, "Proposed: Option to Relocate                                                               
Some Licenses from a Borough to  a City."  This already exists in                                                               
statute, she  stated, but the  proposal would allow  for transfer                                                               
of a  license.  This is  a specific situation for  a borough that                                                               
has  cities  within it  that  have  different population  limits,                                                               
different numbers  of licenses.   If, for example,  someone wants                                                               
to operate a  package store in a  city and looks for  one that is                                                               
in  the borough  and  available, this  section  of statute  would                                                               
allow that  license to be  permanently moved or relocated  from a                                                               
borough  license to  the  city.   This would  be  another way  to                                                               
concentrate that economic activity  in commercial centers without                                                               
necessarily creating new licenses.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MS.  BRAWLEY   reviewed  slide  21,  "Proposed:   Regulate  Trade                                                               
Practices."   She noted that  [some trade practices]  are illegal                                                               
in federal law  but that there are ways some  businesses, such as                                                               
a manufacturer or  wholesaler, could hold a fair  amount of power                                                               
over a  retailer.  For  example, a  distributor could tell  a bar                                                               
that it  will give the bar  a great discount on  all the products                                                               
the  distributor carries  if  the  bar agrees  to  not carry  the                                                               
products  of the  distributor's competitor.   That  is considered                                                               
illegal under  federal law, she  continued, but these are  not in                                                               
state  law so  there  is  no enforcement  of  those practices  in                                                               
Alaska.  This proposal would take  what is already not allowed in                                                               
federal  law and  move it  into Alaska  state law  so AMCO  could                                                               
address someone who is leaning  on retailers and promoting unfair                                                               
trade practices.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MS. BRAWLEY  next discussed the policy  pieces of the bill.   She                                                               
displayed slide 22,  "Adjust License Fees to  Reflect Current ABC                                                               
Budgetary  Needs,"  and  stated  that  enforcement  is  currently                                                               
limited.   This  proposal,  she explained,  would update  license                                                               
fees so  that they  are fair across  different license  types and                                                               
provide sufficient revenue  to the ABC Board, which  is a receipt                                                               
funded agency.   This would  allow for enforcement,  education of                                                               
businesses and local governments about  Title 4, and enough staff                                                               
to do the administrative work.   A specific need is an electronic                                                               
database to allow for non-paper renewals of licenses.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS.  BRAWLEY spoke  to slide  23, "Proposed:  More Accountability                                                               
for License Fees  Allocated to Local Governments."   License fees                                                               
are relevant to  local governments as well as to  the agency, she                                                               
explained.   Under  current statute,  a portion  of the  fees for                                                               
licenses and renewals goes back  to the local government with the                                                               
idea that the  local government is also  doing administration and                                                               
law enforcement  at the  local level.   Language  in the  bill is                                                               
clarification  calling it a matching allocation, not a refund.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
9:26:58 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS.  BRAWLEY moved  to  slide  24, "Internet  Sales:  No Rules  +                                                               
Loopholes."   She said Alaska is  one of the only  states with no                                                               
rules for internet  sales of alcohol, which  means internet sales                                                               
are legal, but it is unknown  how much is being ordered in state.                                                               
None of  those sales coming from  out of state are  paying Alaska                                                               
excise taxes and there is no  enforcement.  There is possible use                                                               
by  folks under  21  who get  a parent's  credit  card and  order                                                               
online and the  alcohol is shipped to the door  with no questions                                                               
asked.   Businesses  and  public health  folks  have agreed  that                                                               
these rules are needed.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS.  BRAWLEY  reviewed  slides 25  and  26,  "Proposed:  Regulate                                                               
Internet  Alcohol Sales."   Speaking  to slide  25, she  said the                                                               
proposal  is  basically  in  line with  most  other  states  now.                                                               
Alaska  would have  a Direct  Shipment License  that an  in-state                                                               
winery, distillery, or brewery could  get or that an out-of-state                                                               
manufacturer could  get.  This  license would allow them  to sell                                                               
to Alaska  customers.   A customer would  order a  product online                                                               
and there  would be sales limits  per transaction as well  as per                                                               
year to  ensure that folks are  ordering for personal use,  not a                                                               
bootlegging  operation.   The business  would be  responsible for                                                               
checking whether  the customer  is age 21;  making sure  that the                                                               
customer is within their limits  for personal use; and [checking]                                                               
that the  customer doesn't  live in a  Local Option  area because                                                               
there is a  different system for ordering in  Local Option areas.                                                               
It would also  be regulated through common carriers  such as UPS,                                                               
FedEx, and  airlines   it must  be delivered in person,  not just                                                               
left on  the doorstep,  and the  person receiving  it must  be of                                                               
age.   Licensees would be  responsible for collecting  excise tax                                                               
on their  sales to Alaska customers.   Speaking to slide  26, Ms.                                                               
Brawley  stated that  the  ABC  Board would  maintain  a list  of                                                               
approved carriers.   These  carries must  demonstrate to  the ABC                                                               
Board  that they  have  policies and  training  for employees  to                                                               
ensure  that they  handle  alcohol responsibly.    The ABC  Board                                                               
would provide its  list of approved carriers on  an ongoing basis                                                               
to the businesses  that are selling the  alcohol, thereby closing                                                               
loopholes that are potentially causing issues today.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
9:30:27 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. BRAWLEY moved to slide  27, "Tracking Alcohol Orders in Local                                                               
Option  Areas: Current  Title 4."   She  explained that  for damp                                                               
communities  within Local  Option  areas, a  system with  monthly                                                               
limits already exists in statute.   In these communities, someone                                                               
can  order  alcohol from  a  package  store in,  say,  Anchorage.                                                               
Orders  are  tracked  via  a written  order  database.    Package                                                               
stores, law  enforcement, and  AMCO are the  only ones  that have                                                               
access  to this  database.   The  package store  checks that  the                                                               
customer hasn't exceeded  their limit, enters the  order into the                                                               
database, and  then ships the products.   If there are  issues or                                                               
illegal sales, this is where law enforcement has access.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MS.  BRAWLEY discussed  slide 28,  "Proposed: Publish  Community-                                                               
Level  Data from  Local Option  Order  Database."   She said  the                                                               
system  is working  as intended.   However,  the collected  data,                                                               
which  could  potentially  be  useful   to  communities,  is  not                                                               
available because the  database is purged every year  and is just                                                               
a tracking  system.  The bill  proposes some minor changes  - the                                                               
data  would have  to be  kept for  ten years  instead of  one and                                                               
there  would be  no  publishing or  release  of individual  order                                                               
data,  including  the names  of  sellers  and buyers  to  protect                                                               
privacy.   The  ABC Board  would publish  an aggregate  report by                                                               
community level; for  example, in 2021 X gallons  of alcohol were                                                               
sold  [in Region  A].   This  would help  communities pinpoint  a                                                               
bootlegging   or   illegal   sales   operation,   especially   if                                                               
communities are  dry but  seeing a  lot of  alcohol.   This small                                                               
change  would help  communities  and leverage  the  data that  is                                                               
already being collected while protecting privacy.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
9:32:45 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS.  BRAWLEY continued  discussing  policies in  the  bill.   She                                                               
turned  to  slide  29, "Proposed:  Revise  Penalties  for  Lesser                                                               
Offenses."  She stated that  currently most everything in Title 4                                                               
is a Class  A misdemeanor, which means everything  from serving a                                                               
minor down  to incorrectly posting  a sign.   She said  the group                                                               
discussed   how  to   increase  enforcement   and  how   to  make                                                               
enforcement more  consistent so  issues like bad  operators could                                                               
be   addressed  without   unduly   affecting   folks  for   minor                                                               
infractions.   The group  looked at every  violation in  Title 4.                                                               
Under this  proposal, many  of the  things that  are now  Class A                                                               
misdemeanors would become  minor offenses so they  can be treated                                                               
like  traffic tickets.   There  would be  no changes  for serious                                                               
violations, especially  felonies.   The goal  is to  handle minor                                                               
things through a minor offense  charge, not a court appearance or                                                               
a full criminal charge.  The  ABC Board has begun looking at this                                                               
and adopting  it in regulation  or practice, recognizing  that it                                                               
is a more effective system.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS. BRAWLEY continued to slide  30, "Proposed: Licensee Penalties                                                               
for Overserving  an Adult or Serving  a Minor."  She  pointed out                                                               
that  this change  in penalty  targets the  behavior and  ensures                                                               
that licensees are held liable.   Currently in Title 4 a licensee                                                               
or employee  of a  business that serves  an intoxicated  adult or                                                               
serves a  minor is a  Class A misdemeanor,  a serious issue.   To                                                               
attain  the  goal of  consistent  enforcement  and ensuring  that                                                               
business  keep their  employees on  track, the  bill proposes  to                                                               
change the penalty  for both the employee and the  licensee.  For                                                               
the employee, it would be considered  a minor offense with a $500                                                               
fine  and  no  court  appearance; $500  would  be  a  significant                                                               
economic impact  to the employee and  an incentive not to  do it.                                                               
The  business  under  whose  license  it  happens  would  get  an                                                               
administrative penalty of  $250; this lets the  business know the                                                               
violation occurred,  holds the business accountable,  and goes in                                                               
the business's  record.   Currently when  those things  happen it                                                               
may go in the record but the only  time someone may look at it is                                                               
when their  license is next up  for renewal.  The  proposal would                                                               
put in an immediate time piece to ensure there is follow-up.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
9:35:45 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR MICCICHE  emphasized that  the proposal would  not reduce                                                               
the seriousness,  rather it would  hold people accountable.   The                                                               
courts are backlogged, he pointed out,  so serving a minor is not                                                               
going to  make it through  the system.   Based on records  of the                                                               
number that  have been charged  and number convicted,  servers do                                                               
not seem  to take  this seriously.   While it  is likely  a minor                                                               
proportion of  operators in the  state, it is thought  that where                                                               
it happens  often, often  the owner of  the establishment  is not                                                               
aware.  This proposal is a  much more effective system of holding                                                               
people accountable for not being a quality operator.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
9:36:42 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. BRAWLEY concluded her presentation  with slide 31, "Proposed:                                                               
Require Keg Registration."  She  said this addresses a key public                                                               
health  priority  in  the  bill,  which  is  to  reduce  underage                                                               
drinking.   Alaska's  alcohol laws  are  just one  part of  that,                                                               
along with  prevention and treatment.   Already in  Anchorage and                                                               
Juneau municipal laws, this proposal  would be applied statewide.                                                               
Keg  registration   is  an  evidence-based  practice   to  reduce                                                               
underage drinking  and to close  the accountability  loophole for                                                               
adults who  legally purchase alcohol  and then  illegally provide                                                               
it to minors.   Under this proposal, when a  licensee sells a keg                                                               
to  an adult  purchaser,  a  legal transaction,  a  tag would  be                                                               
affixed to  the keg with the  purchaser's name to record  that it                                                               
was legally  sold.   Then, if that  keg ends up  at a  party with                                                               
responsible  adults and  there  are  no issues,  the  tag can  be                                                               
removed when the keg  is returned to the store.   But, if the keg                                                               
ends up  at a party  with underage  drinkers and the  police show                                                               
up, the tag will tell who  bought that alcohol.  Anybody removing                                                               
the tag can  be held liable for that.   This proposal would close                                                               
enforcement loopholes  and ensure  that adults  providing alcohol                                                               
to minors are penalized.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
9:38:36 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR FIELDS opened invited testimony on CSSB 9(FIN).                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
9:38:48 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SARAH  OATES, CEO/President,  Alaska  Cabaret, Hotel,  Restaurant                                                               
and  Retailers  Association   (Alaska  CHARR),  provided  invited                                                               
testimony  in support  of CSSB  9(FIN).   She  noted that  Alaska                                                               
CHARR  is  a  nonprofit  trade association  for  the  hospitality                                                               
industry  and  represents over  800  businesses  statewide.   She                                                               
related  that this  is the  eleventh year  of robust  stakeholder                                                               
work  toward meaningful  sensible  alcohol  regulatory reform  in                                                               
which  she  has  been  involved since  the  beginning.    Through                                                               
challenging yet  thoughtful compromise,  consensus on  a complete                                                               
draft was reached  in 2019 between public  health, public safety,                                                               
state and  municipal regulatory  bodies, and  the three  tiers of                                                               
the industry.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MS. OATES implored  the committee to pass  this vital legislation                                                               
that captures this  delicate compromise which took  so many years                                                               
to reach.   It  will provide long  term regulatory  certainty and                                                               
desperately  needed financial  stability  for  the industry,  she                                                               
continued.   Liquor licensees have suffered  devasting blows over                                                               
these past  two years  of COVID-19  pandemic.   This constituency                                                               
represents  $2 billion  of annual  revenue into  Alaska and  over                                                               
32,000 employees.   In 2020, this  industry statewide experienced                                                               
average revenue losses  of 75 percent and only had  47 percent of                                                               
its regular  employee count working,  and significant  losses and                                                               
hardship continue today.   Many changes are included  in the bill                                                               
that would  benefit all sectors  and stakeholders and  which give                                                               
the industry hope  that it can overcome ongoing  challenges and a                                                               
better regulatory system.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
9:40:49 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
TIFFANY  HALL,  Executive   Director,  Recover  Alaska,  provided                                                               
invited testimony in support of CSSB  9(FIN).  She noted that her                                                               
statewide  organization  is  made   up  of  health,  safety,  and                                                               
prevention leaders and works to  reduce excessive alcohol use and                                                               
harm across the state.  She  said Recover Alaska has been working                                                               
on the contents  of the bill for many years  together with public                                                               
health and  safety proponents, members  of the industry  at every                                                               
level,  and local,  municipal, and  community  leaders.   Recover                                                               
Alaska is  not an abstinence-only organization,  she related, but                                                               
Alaska  struggles with  many  problems  associated with  alcohol.                                                               
Alaskans  are dying  at  a rate  twice as  high  as the  national                                                               
average.  Alcohol costs Alaska $2.4  billion every year.  In 2020                                                               
the leading cause  of visitation to the  emergency department was                                                               
alcohol related disorders for adults 18-64.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS. HALL submitted  that SB 9 is full of  positive policy changes                                                               
which will  help to  change some of  these statistics  over time.                                                               
It would  create a  regulation system  for internet  sales, which                                                               
will mean taxes  coming into the state and requiring  an ID check                                                               
instead of  leaving boxes  of alcohol  on a  doorstep.   The bill                                                               
would restructure  enforcement and  add licensee and  social host                                                               
liability,  both of  which are  best practices  proven to  reduce                                                               
motor vehicle fatalities and reduce  underage drinking.  The bill                                                               
would  close  the  loophole  on  server  education,  making  sure                                                               
everyone  who serves  alcohol has  undergone  a safety  training.                                                               
The  bill  would  regulate  alcohol  outlets,  one  of  the  most                                                               
effective  strategies  for  reducing  excessive  consumption  and                                                               
related harms.   Also,  the bill would  increase license  fees to                                                               
give  AMCO  more  resources  to  do  things  like  education  and                                                               
underage compliance checks.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS. HALL pointed  out that alcohol is not  an ordinary commodity.                                                               
No other product  comes with a multi-billion-dollar  price tag to                                                               
Alaska, she  continued.   A whole title  is required  to regulate                                                               
alcohol and  SB 9 keeps intact  many ways to protect  and promote                                                               
business  while also  keeping in  mind the  necessary health  and                                                               
safety regulations.   Recover  Alaska worked  long and  hard over                                                               
the years  with more than  120 stakeholders  representing various                                                               
sectors, issues, and regions of  the state.  Stakeholders argued,                                                               
listened, and  worked together to  find solutions, and  this bill                                                               
overall will be a huge win for the state of Alaska.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
9:43:36 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
GLEN KLINKHART,  Director, Alcohol  and Marijuana  Control Office                                                               
(AMCO),  provided invited  testimony in  support of  CSSB 9(FIN).                                                               
He  said  his  bosses  on   the  Alcoholic  Beverage  Board  have                                                               
supported this Title 4 rewrite  since its first inception in 2016                                                               
and is  again doing so this  year.  The board  has struggled over                                                               
the  years,  he  explained,  because   the  board's  actions  are                                                               
directed by  statutes that are  20-30 years old and  not updated.                                                               
The board sees the frustrations  from law enforcement, folks like                                                               
Recover Alaska,  and from the industry  to be able to  have other                                                               
options.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR. KLINKHART related  that he was a law  enforcement officer for                                                               
almost  25 years.   When  he came  to AMCO,  he was  surprised to                                                               
learn how  old the statutes were  and that they pretty  much only                                                               
give enforcement  officers "a  hammer."   When a  cop is  given a                                                               
hammer, he explained,  everything is a nail, and that  is not the                                                               
best way to be  able to do business.  This  Title 4 rewrite would                                                               
give law enforcement officers the  opportunity to look at certain                                                               
circumstances  and be  able  to have  the  correct discipline  to                                                               
change  and   correct  actions.     For  repeat   offenders,  law                                                               
enforcement would  then have ways to  be able to show  that, find                                                               
that, and correct them up to and including taking their license.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
9:45:51 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  NELSON  drew attention  to  slide  25 and  online                                                               
sales limits.   He asked  what is  in place currently  to prevent                                                               
someone  from  ordering  the  limit  on one  web  site  and  then                                                               
ordering the limit on another web site.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS. BRAWLEY replied that nothing  is currently in place in Alaska                                                               
for Alaska customers,  so this can be done today.   The bill does                                                               
not propose to  regulate a customer's total order  limits like it                                                               
does for Local Option areas, so  it would not restrict a consumer                                                               
from doing that.   The limit would be per vendor.   It is limited                                                               
to breweries, wineries, and distilleries,  so it would not hamper                                                               
the ability of,  say, a whiskey collector, to get  those types of                                                               
products.  However,  she continued, shipping costs  to Alaska are                                                               
high, so  the practical limit  on someone amassing a  fair amount                                                               
of alcohol through that system is going to be limited.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  NELSON,  regarding  delivery and  verifying  that                                                               
someone is over 21, asked  whether verification would fall on the                                                               
shipping company  itself or on  the delivery driver.   He further                                                               
inquired about  who it would fall  on if charges were  brought up                                                               
for delivering to a minor.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS. BRAWLEY responded  that most of that  responsibility would be                                                               
on  the  shipper, meaning  the  seller,  so the  seller  wouldn't                                                               
legally be  able to complete that  sale.  Most companies  that do                                                               
this for  other states,  she related, already  have an  online ID                                                               
verification  system; so,  they are  used to  doing that  and the                                                               
liability would be  on them.  For example, they  could lose their                                                               
license  if there  is  a pattern  of this  happening.   Once  the                                                               
alcohol  is  in  the  carrier's  custody,  it  is  the  carrier's                                                               
responsibility to  check ID.   The carrier  is assuming  that the                                                               
sale was  legal and that  is not the carrier's  responsibility to                                                               
determine, but the carrier is responsible for where it ends up.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR MICCICHE  pointed out  that entities  like the  ABC Board                                                               
understand the intent of what is  written in statute and will put                                                               
the specifics in  the regulations to eliminate any  ambiguity.  A                                                               
regulation  package for  this bill  will have  to happen,  so the                                                               
board is looking  at that right now in hopes  the bill will pass.                                                               
The statute  doesn't cover  every tiny aspect  about how  it will                                                               
hit the road operationally.  "We"  will be working with the board                                                               
on final regulations as well.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
9:49:23 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR FIELDS commented  that it is self-evident  why this bill                                                               
is  positive for  public health  and good  for newer  models like                                                               
breweries and  distilleries.   He asked how  the bill  would help                                                               
bar owners.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS. OATES answered  that many things in the bill  help the entire                                                               
industry.   Specific to  bars, part of  this compromise  would be                                                               
some bumpers  put on what  manufacturing retail licenses  can do.                                                               
It would set a hard  close time for manufacturing retail licenses                                                               
whereas  currently there  is  no  hard close  time,  just a  stop                                                               
service time.  It would provide  for limitations on the number of                                                               
that specific  type of  license that can  be purchased  but would                                                               
allow for additional opportunities  for manufacturers to purchase                                                               
full  retail licenses  if they  want  additional privileges  like                                                               
staying open later, providing more  entertainment, serving a full                                                               
bar, and other  things.  Currently, a  manufacturer isn't allowed                                                               
to  purchase a  beverage dispensary  license and  vice versa,  so                                                               
there  are loopholes  where some  establishments have  taken some                                                               
backdoor  channels.   But  the  current  bill would  provide  for                                                               
additional  entrepreneurship  and opportunities  for  businesses,                                                               
create a  more level playing field.   The bill also  would create                                                               
actual enforcement.   Current law  has penalties  of misdemeanors                                                               
for  everything  at  the  minimum  and  this  would  create  true                                                               
violations  that would  be like  speeding tickets.   The  lack of                                                               
enforcement on  some things is  concerning for industry  when bad                                                               
operators are  seen and there isn't  punishment happening because                                                               
the penalties are too strict and  so they are not being enforced.                                                               
Most importantly  the bill would streamline  processes, including                                                               
enabling an  online application system.   The current paper-based                                                               
licensing  process  is  cumbersome, challenging  for  staff,  and                                                               
challenging  for the  industry to  navigate.   Many Alaska  CHARR                                                               
constituents have spent tens or  hundreds of thousands of dollars                                                               
on attorney fees trying to  navigate this very complicated system                                                               
to get  their application  through and  trying to  understand the                                                               
laws.  The  bill would help reduce their cost,  help shorten time                                                               
periods so  people can enter  and participate in  commerce, bring                                                               
money into  the state,  and give  more funding  for AMCO  so that                                                               
AMCO could  do more proactive  education for the  industry rather                                                               
than  educating  solely  through  enforcement which  is  what  is                                                               
largely taking place right now.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
9:53:34 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
LEE ELLIS,  President, Brewers Guild of  Alaska, provided invited                                                               
testimony in support of CSSB 9(FIN).   He stated that since Title                                                               
4  was  rewritten in  the  1980s  it  has  been an  evolution  of                                                               
patchwork  legislation, statute,  and  regulations  to bring  the                                                               
industry  up  to  modern  standards.   This  bill  furthers  that                                                               
mission and helps  to bring the craft brewing industry  up to par                                                               
with the other entities in the  alcohol industry in Alaska.  Many                                                               
parts of  the bill took  hard work  to see modernization  for the                                                               
[craft brewing] industry  and it continues to be  a local growing                                                               
industry  in  Alaska.   Currently  the  [craft brewing  industry]                                                               
provides about $330  million of economic impact  and employs over                                                               
2,000 people across Alaska.   That number is expected to continue                                                               
to grow,  and SB 9 is  critical in this regard,  especially given                                                               
the recent difficulties with COVID-19 and loss of tourism.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
9:55:00 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  KAUFMAN commented  that through  the 11  years of                                                               
work  by  many   stakeholder  groups,  SB  9   is  essentially  a                                                               
foundational reset  of a hodgepodge of  accrued requirements, and                                                               
he is interested in hearing more.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  MICCICHE responded  that if  this were  the oil  and gas                                                               
industry, there  would be major  violations and citations  due to                                                               
the interaction of the backward  and confusing statutory support.                                                               
While  the bill  isn't very  concise, it  is a  delicate balance.                                                               
Things have  been discussed by  the hundreds of  stakeholders for                                                               
hours and  years to  get to  this point,  so it  is not  a little                                                               
change [when a legislator brings  forth an amendment].  All those                                                               
stakeholders have agreed  on the balance in this bill.   It is an                                                               
important piece  of legislation, and it  is a reset, and  it does                                                               
capture the way the industry is operating today.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
9:57:25 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR FIELDS asked how the  state fair would be supported here                                                               
without inadvertently  creating a  loophole that would  result in                                                               
lots of fairs  around the state that evade all  the other permits                                                               
and endorsements.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  MICCICHE answered  that it  is thought  there is  a good                                                               
balance.  Stakeholders support the  fair and are working together                                                               
on an  agreement with the  fair.  He  confirmed that if  the bill                                                               
were  to pass  the way  it is  currently written,  he could  do a                                                               
"Peter's  Liquor  Fair"   every  night  this  summer.     So,  he                                                               
continued, the hope  is that stakeholders can come  together on a                                                               
better  agreement  than  what  is   currently  in  the  bill,  an                                                               
agreement that  allows the fair  to operate  the way it  has been                                                               
operating  without opening  a  faucet  of irresponsible  festival                                                               
activity throughout the state on a nightly basis.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
[CSSB 9(FIN) was held over.]                                                                                                    

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
SB 9 CS HFIN ver. G 2.10.22.PDF HL&C 2/11/2022 9:00:00 AM
HL&C 2/16/2022 3:15:00 PM
SB 9
SB 9 Fiscal Note DFCS - PS 2.4.22.pdf HL&C 2/11/2022 9:00:00 AM
HL&C 2/16/2022 3:15:00 PM
SB 9
SB 9 Fiscal Note DOR - TAX 2.4.22.pdf HL&C 2/11/2022 9:00:00 AM
HL&C 2/16/2022 3:15:00 PM
SB 9
SB 9 Fiscal Note JUD - ACS 2.4.22.pdf HL&C 2/11/2022 9:00:00 AM
HL&C 2/16/2022 3:15:00 PM
SB 9
SB 9 Fiscal Note DCCED - AMCO 2.4.22.pdf HL&C 2/11/2022 9:00:00 AM
HL&C 2/16/2022 3:15:00 PM
SB 9
SB 9 Fiscal Note DCCED - CBPL 2.4.22.pdf HL&C 2/11/2022 9:00:00 AM
HL&C 2/16/2022 3:15:00 PM
SB 9
SB 9 Title 4 Presentation 2.11.22.pdf HL&C 2/11/2022 9:00:00 AM
HL&C 2/16/2022 3:15:00 PM
SB 9