Legislature(2015 - 2016)BARNES 124

04/04/2016 01:00 PM House RESOURCES

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* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ SB 32 TIMBER SALES TELECONFERENCED
Moved HCS CSSB 32(RES) Out of Committee
-- Public Testimony --
*+ HB 112 REPEAL CFEC; TRANSFER FUNCTIONS TO ADFG TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Public Testimony --
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
+= HB 266 BOARD OF GAME REGULATION PROPOSALS TELECONFERENCED
Moved CSHB 266(RES) Out of Committee
         HB 112-REPEAL CFEC; TRANSFER FUNCTIONS TO ADFG                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:27:22 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR TALERICO announced  that the final order  of business is                                                               
HOUSE  BILL NO.  112,  "An Act  repealing  the Alaska  Commercial                                                               
Fisheries  Entry  Commission and  transferring  its  duties to  a                                                               
commercial   fisheries   entry   division  established   in   the                                                               
Department  of Fish  and Game  and the  office of  administrative                                                               
hearings;  and  providing for  an  effective  date." [Before  the                                                               
committee was CSHB 112(FSH).]                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR NAGEAK moved to adopt  the proposed committee substitute                                                               
(CS) for  HB 112,  Version 29-LS0485\N,  Bullard, 3/2/16,  as the                                                               
working document.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE TARR objected for discussion purposes.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE LOUISE STUTES, Alaska  State Legislature, spoke as                                                               
the  sponsor of  HB 112.    She explained  that Version  N is  in                                                               
response  to Governor  Walker's  Administrative  Order (AO)  279,                                                               
which  moves the  administrative  and research  functions of  the                                                               
Alaska  Commercial  Fisheries  Entry  Commission  (CFEC)  to  the                                                               
Alaska  Department of  Fish &  Game (ADF&G).   Version  N defines                                                               
executive  compensation  for  the three  CFEC  commissioners  and                                                               
compensation for CFEC employees that  are moved from an exempt to                                                               
a  classified   service.    Staff  salaries   would  take  effect                                                               
immediately  and  commissioner  salaries  would  take  effect  on                                                               
January 1, 2017.   She deferred to her aide,  Mr. Reid Harris, to                                                               
elaborate further on the bill.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
REID HARRIS,  Staff, Representative  Louise Stutes,  Alaska State                                                               
Legislature,  reiterated  that  [Version  N] is  in  response  to                                                               
Administrative Order 279.   The prior version of HB  112 did much                                                               
of  what AO  279 accomplished  and therefore  the bill  went down                                                               
from about 58 pages  to one and a half pages.   Version N defines                                                               
executive compensation  for the CFEC commissioners,  setting them                                                               
at  Range 27A,  and changes  the  commissioners from  being on  a                                                               
monthly rate to a daily, much like  what is done for the Board of                                                               
Fisheries and Board  of Game.  Version N also  provides that CFEC                                                               
employees who were transferred from  exempt to classified service                                                               
under ADF&G will remain at the same  rate of pay.  Sections 3 and                                                               
4 of Version N are the effective dates.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:31:26 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SEATON  asked whether the bill  has any provisions                                                               
that  are   not  consistent  with  the   recommendations  of  the                                                               
legislative audit that was performed.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR.  HARRIS   responded  that   the  bill   is  drafted   to  the                                                               
recommendations of the audit.   The audit recommended that over a                                                               
three-year period  the commissioners go  to less than 15  hours a                                                               
week without  benefits.  The  sponsor felt, however, that  due to                                                               
the administrative order being such  a shock to the commission it                                                               
would be unfair  to ask them to  go to less than 15  hours a week                                                               
in such a short timeframe and  would not give the commission time                                                               
to get its house  in order.  So, the bill  adjusts their pay rate                                                               
from a monthly to  a daily rate and at a future  date it would be                                                               
a good  idea for this body  to revisit this and  consider putting                                                               
different stipulations on the hours of the commissioners' work.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:32:49 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  TARR  removed  her  objection.   There  being  no                                                               
further objection, Version N was before the committee.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:32:55 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR TALERICO opened public testimony.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MARTIN LUNDE,  Southeast Alaska Seiners Association,  stated that                                                               
his  association is  opposed to  anything  in HB  112 because  it                                                               
would  help  to implement  Administrative  Order  279, which  the                                                               
association has severe  difficulties with.  If done  at all, this                                                               
should  have been  done with  an executive  order rather  than an                                                               
administrative order.  The association  cannot in good conscience                                                               
support anything  that is implementing Administrative  Order 279,                                                               
which is specifically addressed in  Version N.  Additionally, the                                                               
association  has questions  about the  financial implications  of                                                               
moving [staff] from  exempt to classified and  what the long-term                                                               
fiscal  impacts of  that  would be.   He  assumed  it would  mean                                                               
higher  rates  of  overtime pay  during  licensing  and  research                                                               
functions at the  time when fishermen need to have  their gear in                                                               
the water,  because if  there are  difficulties during  that time                                                               
there would be higher costs  associated with that.  Fundamentally                                                               
it  is  frustration over  the  administrative  order and  further                                                               
implementing it.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:35:32 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  TARR  noted the  audit  results  have been  under                                                               
consideration  for some  time now.    She asked  how Mr.  Lunde's                                                               
organization would have addressed the  audit results to provide a                                                               
solution  had Administrative  Order 279  not been  put in  place.                                                               
The conversation  had been that  a bill would be  forthcoming and                                                               
that there  would be  some changes.   She  asked what  could have                                                               
been  done that  would  have  been more  in  line  with what  the                                                               
Southeast Alaska Seiners Association might have been expecting.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. LUNDE replied that there  certainly was room for streamlining                                                               
within  the agency,  which  he believes  the  agency was  already                                                               
doing.    At  issue  is  that the  CFEC  is  funded  entirely  by                                                               
commercial fishing  fees.   The [fishing  industry] pays  its own                                                               
way,  it brings  in  roughly  $7 million  and  it  is roughly  $4                                                               
million to  operate.  [Fishermen]  get really nervous  when there                                                               
are elements  about that  put into danger  $1.2 billion  worth of                                                               
permit values and  limited entry itself.   Commercial fishing men                                                               
and women  in Alaska have  invested heavily in permits  and their                                                               
boats; these  are small businesses.   Streamlining  government is                                                               
always a good thing, but  [fishermen] get really nervous when too                                                               
much  is taken  away from  something  that they  are paying  for.                                                               
[His association]  likes the  idea of  having competent  folks at                                                               
the CFEC full time and ready  to address the issues that come up.                                                               
It is like firemen - they are paid  to be there just in case even                                                               
though they are  not always out there fighting fires.   There are                                                               
always waves of heavier business  times and there are times where                                                               
there  is  going  to  be some  potential  buybacks  in  different                                                               
fisheries throughout  the state and times  in the not-too-distant                                                               
future  of limiting  some  fisheries  out west.    Those are  the                                                               
things for  which the  association would like  to have  a strong,                                                               
capable Commercial  Fisheries Entry  Commission and  having three                                                               
commissioners there to do the job.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:38:19 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  JOSEPHSON understood  the  audit recommended  the                                                               
CFEC not  be subsumed into  ADF&G.   He posited that  there would                                                               
still, under the bill, be a CFEC.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MR. LUNDE agreed.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  JOSEPHSON  inquired  whether the  fees  that  Mr.                                                               
Lunde  talked about  would still  be collected  and, if  so, what                                                               
would be done with them.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR. LUNDE  answered he  is not  entirely sure  what is  going on.                                                               
His organization has  asked many questions of ADF&G,  but has had                                                               
a difficult time getting any answers.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE JOSEPHSON asked what  the difference is between an                                                               
administrative order  versus an executive  order, as seen  by Mr.                                                               
Lunde's organization.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR. LUNDE replied  that his organization did not want  to see any                                                               
of this  done in the first  place.  However, there  are steps the                                                               
legislature can take to reject  an executive order and that would                                                               
be through  a simple majority vote  in a joint session,  which is                                                               
why an administrative  order was probably done.   Also, according                                                               
to Legislative Legal and  Research Services, Administrative Order                                                               
279 goes beyond the parameters of an administrative order.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:41:23 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  TARR understood  the preference  is that  none of                                                               
this would be happening.   But, given the administrative order is                                                               
now in place, she inquired  whether some of the bill's provisions                                                               
would help improve the circumstances  relative to what was put in                                                               
place with the administrative order.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR.  LUNDE  responded  that  he   does  not  honestly  think  so,                                                               
especially in  light of where things  may go with an  hourly rate                                                               
for the commissioners.   The bill is really looking  to just trim                                                               
in the commissioners  and that is not  something his organization                                                               
would  like.   His organization  wants a  strong, capable,  fully                                                               
staffed Commercial  Fisheries Entry  Commission as it  exists now                                                               
with all three commissioners.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:43:04 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ROBERT  THORSTENSON, Executive  Director and  Lobbyist, Southeast                                                               
Alaska  Seiners Association,  and  lobbyist  for Kenai  Peninsula                                                               
Fishermen's Association,  Alaska Bering Sea  Crabbers, Armstrong-                                                               
Keta,  Inc.,  and  Alaska Pacific  Environmental  Services,  LLC,                                                               
stated he  has talked  to everyone  he works  for in  the fishing                                                               
industry.  He related that he  has told the commissioner that "we                                                               
would  back off  on our  position opposing  this CFEC  orders and                                                               
these bills that have come flying  at us the last couple years if                                                               
they  could come  up with  one permit  holder, one  single permit                                                               
holder, and I have  yet to find anybody ... of  one of the 11,000                                                               
permit holders who hold $1.2 billion  worth of permits."  This is                                                               
a special  agency, it  is not  just some  agency that  is holding                                                               
some general  funds (GF), and it  is an agency that  is funded by                                                               
his members.  His members pay $700,000  a year in fees and do not                                                               
mind paying  larger fees because  they know the general  fund has                                                               
been  short on  overall  fish  and game  management.   While  his                                                               
members love  ADF&G, ADF&G houses  personal use,  sport, wildlife                                                               
viewing, charter,  commercial, and  hunting, so it  has a  lot of                                                               
different functions.   He reported  that former  state legislator                                                               
Clem Tillion  has urged that the  CFEC not be merged  into ADF&G,                                                               
because the  CFEC needs  to be  separate.  There  may still  be a                                                               
couple  of  commissioners  and one  secretary  remaining  and  no                                                               
research or other functions.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. THORSTENSON  pointed out that  recently the harvest  in state                                                               
waters in the Bering Sea went from  0 to 36 million pounds of cod                                                               
and the  fishery is going  to get  closed three weeks  early this                                                               
year.   It will probably be  at a level of  50-100 million pounds                                                               
within  the next  couple years  of  a new  state waters  fishery.                                                               
Fishing will be expanding into areas  that are going to be really                                                               
hard to deal with.   The weakening of CFEC by  sliding it over to                                                               
ADF&G "is going to  hamper us in all of our  abilities for all of                                                               
our new  state waters fisheries;  we've got hundreds of  boats in                                                               
state water fisheries in the gulf  that have not been put under a                                                               
system yet."   This system is  a special system, it  is a special                                                               
agency.  There  is not another one  like it in the  world.  Every                                                               
other state  that has limited  entry, every other state  that has                                                               
some type  of a management plan,  does not have the  same type of                                                               
constitution  that Alaska  has.   That fragile,  constitutionally                                                               
protected privilege  of Alaskans  to commercially  harvest salmon                                                               
is threatened by AO 279 and  goes far, far deeper and further and                                                               
far more destructive than the audit itself was.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR.   THORSTENSON   charged   that   to  add   credence   to   an                                                               
administrative order  that literally plucked  a bill out  of this                                                               
body  and moved  it over  to  the governor's  office without  any                                                               
public discourse  when the  entire board  of United  Fishermen of                                                               
Alaska was in town, if that is  the way that this body decides to                                                               
conduct business  with the rest  of the industries in  the state,                                                               
bar the doors.   This is a huge mistake, this  bill was a mistake                                                               
in the first  place.  While he appreciates the  intent of cutting                                                               
the budget, there  are some places where the cutting  is too deep                                                               
and is  putting at risk  a huge  system with the  state's largest                                                               
employer.  Currently the fishing  industry is putting in about as                                                               
much tax as any other industry in the state.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:47:18 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  TARR addressed  Mr. Thorstenson's  statement that                                                               
ADF&G  has many  other duties  besides commercial  fishing.   She                                                               
asked if  Mr. Thorstenson's  concern is  that once  the positions                                                               
are transferred  to ADF&G they may  then be diluted by  having to                                                               
do  other work  or would  somehow  be influenced  by the  overall                                                               
department direction  that could be  in conflict with  what would                                                               
otherwise have happened.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR.  THORSTENSON  answered  that  maybe the  intent  here  is  to                                                               
unionize more state employees.  What  has made the CFEC a special                                                               
commission, a stand-apart commission, is  that it is sitting on a                                                               
$1.2 billion  existing permit bank.   The members that he  has in                                                               
Southeast Alaska  are 30 percent  Sealaska shareholders  and they                                                               
own permits that fluctuate between  $200,000 and $300,000 apiece.                                                               
Many Native  Alaskans need an  attorney just to look  after their                                                               
own business, their own permit, and  their own boat because it is                                                               
worth more than  any other asset they have.   They see their fees                                                               
paying  two  or  three  commissioners, who  are  extremely  sharp                                                               
attorneys, to  make sure this  system stays afloat,  because this                                                               
is  the most  tenuous, very  carefully constitutionally  balanced                                                               
system of  its kind  in the  world.   United Fishermen  of Alaska                                                               
voted against  this 33-0.   Out of 11,000 Alaskan  permit holders                                                               
he has yet  to find one single permit holder  who supports AO 279                                                               
or any version of any of these CFEC bills.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:49:45 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
BEN  BROWN, Commissioner,  Commercial Fisheries  Entry Commission                                                               
(CFEC), said Version N of HB  112 is vastly simpler than the bill                                                               
as introduced.   The debate that  has started to happen  does not                                                               
really  address the  four corners  of this  version of  the bill.                                                               
The larger picture  is that last year "we  were gravely concerned                                                               
with what HB  112 would have done in its  original form."  During                                                               
the interim the audit results  were released and the big takeaway                                                               
from the  audit was that  CFEC should  continue to operate  as an                                                               
independent  regulatory quasi-judicial  agency.   The audit  also                                                               
said that  several of the  CFEC's administrative  functions could                                                               
be transferred over  to ADF&G and the CFEC did  not contest that,                                                               
but one  point made on page  13 of the audit  is that maintaining                                                               
CFEC's organizational  structure allows  the agency to  expand as                                                               
necessary without  changing statutes  or regulations.   The audit                                                               
also recommends that  [the commissioners] be reduced  to 15 hours                                                               
a week.  While he respects the  good and thorough job done by the                                                               
legislative  audit, he  sees an  internal inconsistency  in those                                                               
two recommendations.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BROWN thanked  Representative Stutes,  noting that  it is  a                                                               
conundrum on  how to  proceed, but  Version N  of HB  112 threads                                                               
that needle quite well.  Version  N takes the commissioners to an                                                               
hourly  rate of  compensation, which  is by  definition scalable;                                                               
when  the work  is there  the work  can be  done.   Regarding Mr.                                                               
Lunde's  reference to  upcoming buybacks  and certainly  a future                                                               
limitation, he said that if a hard  cap of two days a week at 7.5                                                               
hours is put  into statute and then a limitation  goes forward, a                                                               
backlog  of  work  for the  commissioners  would  immediately  be                                                               
created.   One  of the  three  seats is  vacant and  there is  no                                                               
indication from  the governor's office  at what point  that third                                                               
commissioner's  seat  will  be  filled.   He  said  he  and  CFEC                                                               
commissioner Bruce Twomley can support  Version N because it just                                                               
deals with  a very specific  thing, which  is the amount  of work                                                               
the commissioners are  able to do in a manner  that is consistent                                                               
with the audit's recommendations.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MR. BROWN  addressed Section 2 of  Version N, saying he  does not                                                               
know what the practical end result of  AO 279 is going to be.  He                                                               
said communication  has been attempted with  the commissioner and                                                               
deputy  commissioner  of  ADF&G  and   also  some  folks  at  the                                                               
Department of  Law to  give [the  CFEC] clarification  about what                                                               
the practical effects  of the administrative order will  be.  The                                                               
clutch of  documents that Mr.  Harris gave to the  committee will                                                               
provide  some  more information  but  will  probably create  more                                                               
questions  than provide  answers.   Therefore, he  does not  know                                                               
that  it is  practical  if Representative  Stutes  wants to  move                                                               
forward  with her  bill  trying to  solve  one specific  targeted                                                               
element of  the problem to  try to find  an answer to  the larger                                                               
debate, because he  does not think that is going  to happen today                                                               
or this week.   So, the CFEC commissioners can  support Version N                                                               
and  can talk  about the  audit  and AO  279 or  the larger  more                                                               
complicated things, but  he does not know that  that is necessary                                                               
for the committee to decide to move forward with Version N.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:53:28 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  TARR observed  that Version  N would  provide for                                                               
Range 27 and  surmised the idea is a daily  rate similar to other                                                               
boards, which, she  calculated, could be a pay cut  of 50 percent                                                               
or more for an individual  commissioner.  She inquired whether [a                                                               
commissioner]  would  have  to  find  other  work  to  supplement                                                               
his/her income  and asked  how would  a commissioner  shuffle the                                                               
deck  to become  available  on  a full-time  basis  when work  is                                                               
available or when there is an emergency situation.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. BROWN first pointed to what he  thinks is an error on page 1,                                                               
line 8,  of Version N, stating  he thinks "[A]" should  be "[a]".                                                               
He then replied to Representative  Tarr's question about how this                                                               
would work, saying that there are  other examples of this such as                                                               
the Board of  Fisheries and the Alaska  Public Offices Commission                                                               
(APOC).  He related the experience  of a friend who was appointed                                                               
to  APOC and  discovered  the  great deal  of  work involved  and                                                               
juggling that  with her other  affairs as  an attorney.   He said                                                               
APOC is  a good example  of a feast  or famine kind  of workload.                                                               
Going forward the governor would have  to have to have his boards                                                               
and commissions people carefully look  at whom they were going to                                                               
appoint  to these  seats  knowing that  an  appointee could  find                                                               
himself/herself having to work a  full-time-plus job in the event                                                               
of a really thorny limitation  that just produced an onslaught of                                                               
applications for  permits.  It  could not be promised  to someone                                                               
that there was  going to be stability over the  course of a four-                                                               
year  term.   That said,  there are  going to  be people  who are                                                               
interested in this work and who  do not have a vested interest in                                                               
any commercial business, given that  prohibition still remains in                                                               
the  statute.   It would  become  a personnel  matter for  future                                                               
governors to determine  who had the right skill set  and also the                                                               
right availability  of time  to be  able to  function for  a full                                                               
four-year term  in this newly configured  model.  He said  he met                                                               
with several  of the  committee's members last  year, as  well as                                                               
members  of the  other body,  in anticipation  of the  hearing on                                                               
this bill when it was doing a great  deal more.  In many of those                                                               
conversations  he  suggested  going  to some  sort  of  part-time                                                               
model.  So, that is one reason he  is in a position to be able to                                                               
support this, but it is not going to be one size fits all.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:57:10 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
JERRY  MCCUNE,  President,  United  Fishermen  of  Alaska  (UFA),                                                               
offered  his understanding  that an  administrative order  cannot                                                               
contain statute, while licensing is in  statute.  So, it is being                                                               
ordered  to move  the statute  people  over to  ADF&G, which,  he                                                               
understood,  cannot be  done under  an  administrative order,  it                                                               
must be an executive  order.  Also of concern to  UFA is that the                                                               
ADF&G  commissioner   sits  on   the  [North   Pacific  Fisheries                                                               
Management Council].  Other fisheries  are being developed in the                                                               
Bering Sea and part of these  fisheries will be under the council                                                               
because of  the quotas.  Thus,  there will be a  big conflict for                                                               
the commissioner of  ADF&G to make that decision and  also do the                                                               
licensing  and  everything  else  under CFEC,  especially  if  it                                                               
becomes limited.   Right  now a  transfer of a  permit, if  it is                                                               
objected to,  would have to go  from ADF&G over to  CFEC and then                                                               
back.   So, there are  two agencies,  with one that  is specialty                                                               
law, which  will have  to be  relied upon to  make some  of these                                                               
decisions.   The same  thing can be  accomplished by  leaving the                                                               
CFEC where it is and still  result in the savings talked about by                                                               
the audit.  The CFEC has  already been cut $650,000 and six staff                                                               
people and that will provide more  profit to the state, plus $1.3                                                               
million  is  generally  given  to   ADF&G.    Everything  can  be                                                               
accomplished that was  said by the audit and still  keep the CFEC                                                               
a  separate  agency  to  run  the limited  entry  law  under  the                                                               
constitution and  also keep  the CFEC  separate out  of politics.                                                               
Throwing the CFEC into the arena  of ADF&G will be a big conflict                                                               
if there  is a limited  entry fishery, such  as a Bering  Sea cod                                                               
fishery that will involve quotas.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
2:59:45 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  TARR remarked  that there  seems to  be a  lot of                                                               
confusion  about  AO  279  and  it is  unclear  how  it  will  be                                                               
implemented.    She  asked  whether  the  specific  provision  in                                                               
Section 1 of Version N to  move the CFEC commissioners to a part-                                                               
time position is acceptable to UFA.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MCCUNE replied  that UFA  is  amenable to  making CFEC  stay                                                               
where it  is at and be  more efficient, whether that  is with one                                                               
part-time  and  one  full-time commissioner  or  three  part-time                                                               
commissioners, whatever works for CFEC's workload in the future.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
3:00:50 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR TALERICO closed public testimony.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SEATON  said  he  is  that  first  permit  holder                                                               
[mentioned in Mr. Thorstenson's  testimony] because he introduced                                                               
a bill to  change CFEC in the previous legislature  and there are                                                               
other permit  holders he has talked  to that knew the  CFEC was a                                                               
very inefficient  agency.   As he  sees it,  the bill  before the                                                               
committee would ensure  that there is a transfer  of personnel in                                                               
a way in which they can  reasonably work on their daily schedules                                                               
instead of  having full-time commissioners with  not having full-                                                               
time  duties  to  do.    The committee  heard  from  one  of  the                                                               
commissioners that  this is a  reasonable way because  when there                                                               
is  more work  the commissioners  can flex  up for  the workload.                                                               
Also,  the   bill  provides   some  protection   for  individuals                                                               
transferring  from one  place to  another.   If  there are  legal                                                               
questions  on what  an administrative  order can  do, he  is sure                                                               
those will  get solved as  they cannot be  solved here.   He does                                                               
not see  it as  a constitutional  problem.   He said  he supports                                                               
this bill as  a reasonable way of adjusting the  work load to the                                                               
timeframe of  what the  CFEC commissioners will  be doing  and it                                                               
follows the recommendations of the legislative audit.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
3:03:12 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR TALERICO re-opened public testimony.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
STEVEN SAMUELSON  stated he  fully agrees  with the  testimony he                                                               
has heard  today.   In his  opinion, what  is happening  with the                                                               
CFEC has  been in  the works  since his  grandfather and  so many                                                               
people have  paid into the  system and  worked to have  that CFEC                                                               
work on their behalf.  He  is concerned that mixing the CFEC with                                                               
ADF&G goes  against what so  many have  worked for.   His largest                                                               
concern is  that the  CFEC will  get lost  in the  transition and                                                               
will  become absorbed  somehow within  ADF&G  so that  it is  not                                                               
seen.   He therefore feels  that HB 112  is premature.   There is                                                               
also  much concern  with  some of  the  other legislation  coming                                                               
through and those  will affect this directly and he  wants to see                                                               
what will  happen with that before  changing the CFEC.   The CFEC                                                               
knows   the  fishermen,   their  names,   families,  and   boats.                                                               
Regarding the $1.3 billion in the  industry, he said this is very                                                               
true under  the permits, but  it is not  a huge group  of people.                                                               
Many fishermen are just  that - they own a permit  and a boat and                                                               
they  are floating  around on  their retirement.   They  need the                                                               
organizations   to   represent   them,  although   he   is   here                                                               
representing  himself as  someone working  in the  industry.   He                                                               
reiterated that HB 112 is premature.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR TALERICO  closed public testimony after  ascertaining no                                                               
one else wished to testify.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:06:34 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR TALERICO offered his appreciation  to the testifiers who                                                               
mentioned Administrative Order 279.   He said he had no knowledge                                                               
that the  administrative order  was coming  forward and  that for                                                               
all intents  and purposes it  removed the original bill  that was                                                               
before the committee.   He posited that  Representative Stutes is                                                               
trying to address policy and, while  the end result is not known,                                                               
if something  changes with the  administrative order  there would                                                               
at least  be some  type of  policy in place  if the  AO continues                                                               
forward, regardless  of the committee's support  or opposition to                                                               
that particular administrative order.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR TALERICO,  in response to Representative  Olson, said he                                                               
will be holding over HB 112.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  JOHNSON  said he  would  like  to understand  the                                                               
relationship  between HB  112 and  Administrative  Order 279  and                                                               
what would happen if the  bill becomes law and the administrative                                                               
order is overturned.  He  requested that someone from Legislative                                                               
Legal and  Research Services  address the  committee at  its next                                                               
meeting on the bill in this regard.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR TALERICO  noted he sees the  sponsor giving confirmation                                                               
to the request.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE OLSON  also requested  the committee  be addressed                                                               
by someone from the governor's office regarding the rationale.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
3:09:28 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR TALERICO held over HB 112.                                                                                             

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
HCS CS SB 32 Ver N.pdf HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
SB 32
CS SB 32 Support Letter.pdf HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
SB 32
CS SB 32 Briefing Paper.pdf HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
SB 32
CS SB 32 Letter of Support 1.pdf HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
SB 32
CS SB 32 Letter of Support 2.pdf HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
SB 32
CS SB 32 Letter of Support 3.pdf HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
SB 32
CS SB 32 Letter of Support 4.pdf HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
SB 32
CS SB 32 Letter of Support 5.pdf HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
SB 32
CS SB 32 Letter of Support 6.pdf HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
SB 32
CS SB 32 Letter of Support 7.pdf HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
SB 32
CS SB 32 Resolution.pdf HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
SB 32
CS SB 32 Sectional Analysis.pdf HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
SB 32
SB0032B(1).PDF HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
SB 32
SB32CS Fiscal Note.pdf HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
SB 32
HB 112 ver P (RES draft CS).pdf HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
HB 112
HB 112 Sponsor Statement Ver P.pdf HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
HB 112
HB 112 Sectional P.pdf HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
HB 112
HB 112 Explanation of Changes W to P.pdf HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
HB 112
CSHB 266N 4-1-16.pdf HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
HB 266
CSHB 266 explanation of changes.pdf HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
HB 266
HB 266 Supporting Document - Letter of Support Resident Hunters of Alaska.pdf HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
HB 266
CSHB112 ver P 4.3.16 CFEC opposing letter.pdf HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
HB 112
SB 32 LOS Denali Log.pdf HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
SB 32
HB 112 Oppose -UFA Hse Resources 040416.pdf HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
HB 112
HB 112 Support LB&A CFEC Audit.pdf HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
HB 112
CSSB 32-RDC Support.pdf HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
SB 32
HB 266 Opposing Written Testimony.pdf HRES 4/4/2016 1:00:00 PM
HB 266