Legislature(2021 - 2022)BARNES 124

02/16/2022 01:00 PM House RESOURCES

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* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
*+ HB 209 EMERGENCY FIREFIGHTERS TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Invited & Public Testimony --
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
+= HB 52 TUTKA BAY HATCHERY TELECONFERENCED
Moved CSHB 52(RES) Out of Committee
+= HB 287 A: OIL & GAS TAX CREDIT FUND APPROP. TELECONFERENCED
Moved HB 287 Out of Committee
                    HB 52-TUTKA BAY HATCHERY                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
1:47:56 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PATKOTAK  announced that the  next order of  business would                                                               
be HOUSE  BILL NO. 52,  "An Act  providing that operation  of the                                                               
Tutka Bay Lagoon Hatchery in  Kachemak Bay is compatible with the                                                               
functions  of  Kachemak Bay  State  Park;  and providing  for  an                                                               
effective  date."    [Before  the   committee  was  the  proposed                                                               
committee  substitute  (CS)  for   HB  52,  Version  32-LS0327\D,                                                               
Bullard, 2/4/22, ("Version  D"), adopted as the  working draft on                                                               
2/7/22.]                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
1:48:21 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SCHRAGE moved  to  adopt Amendment  1  to HB  52,                                                               
labeled 32-LS0327\D.1, Bullard, 2/12/22, which read:                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
     Page 1, lines 1 - 2:                                                                                                       
          Delete "Tutka Bay Lagoon and"                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     Page 4, line 20, through page 6, line 3:                                                                                   
          Delete all material and insert:                                                                                       
        "*  Sec.  2. The  uncodified  law  of the  State  of                                                                
     Alaska is amended by adding a new section to read:                                                                         
          REPORT TO LEGISLATURE; DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND                                                                         
     GAME   AND  DEPARTMENT   OF   NATURAL  RESOURCES.   The                                                                    
     Department of  Fish and Game,  in cooperation  with the                                                                    
     Department  of  Natural   Resources,  shall  provide  a                                                                    
     written  report to  the legislature  on the  effects of                                                                    
     the Tutka Bay  Lagoon Hatchery on the  state's fish and                                                                    
     game, fish  and game habitat, and  land. The Department                                                                    
     of  Fish  and  Game   and  the  Department  of  Natural                                                                    
     Resources  shall  deliver  the  report  to  the  senate                                                                    
     secretary  and   the  chief  clerk  of   the  house  of                                                                    
     representatives  not later  than  January 1, 2026,  and                                                                    
     shall  notify  the  legislature   that  the  report  is                                                                    
     available.                                                                                                                 
        * Sec. 3. The uncodified  law of the State of Alaska                                                                  
     is amended by adding a new section to read:                                                                                
          REPORT TO LEGISLATURE; DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE,                                                                        
     COMMUNITY, AND ECONOMIC  DEVELOPMENT. The Department of                                                                    
     Commerce,  Community,  and Economic  Development  shall                                                                    
     provide  a written  report to  the  legislature on  the                                                                    
     economic viability  of the  Tutka Bay  Lagoon Hatchery.                                                                    
     The  Department of  Commerce,  Community, and  Economic                                                                    
     Development  shall deliver  the  report  to the  senate                                                                    
     secretary  and   the  chief  clerk  of   the  house  of                                                                    
     representatives  not later  than  January 1, 2026,  and                                                                    
     shall  notify  the  legislature   that  the  report  is                                                                    
     available."                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     Renumber the following bill section accordingly.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
     Page 6, line 4:                                                                                                            
          Delete "Except as provided in sec. 5 of this Act,                                                                     
     this "                                                                                                                     
     Insert "This"                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
1:48:23 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PATKOTAK objected for the purpose of discussion.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
1:48:28 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SCHRAGE explained  Amendment 1.   He  stated that                                                               
after  public testimony  and the  bill presentation  he has  some                                                               
concern  over acting  on the  Tutka Bay  Lagoon Hatchery  at this                                                               
time since there  are 10 years to resolve this  issue.  Amendment                                                               
1 strikes the  language exempting the hatchery from  the park and                                                               
requests that  the Alaska  Department of  Fish and  Game (ADF&G),                                                               
along with the  Department of Natural Resources  (DNR), conduct a                                                               
study on  the issues  around the hatchery  that were  outlined in                                                               
the bill presentation  and in testimony, such as  the disposal of                                                               
fish  and  the potential  impact  on  the lagoon,  the  predatory                                                               
creatures coming in to eat  the carcasses and other wildlife, and                                                               
the concerns about pink salmon and  their influx on that area and                                                               
on king  runs.  Amendment  1 also includes having  the Department                                                               
of Commerce, Community, and Economic  Development (DCCED) look at                                                               
the economic feasibility  of the Tutka Bay  Lagoon Hatchery given                                                               
the strong concerns  that were outlined by so much  of the public                                                               
testimony.   The amendment asks  for some more  information given                                                               
that there are 10 years before  this issue must be resolved.  The                                                               
amendment does adopt the [three]  parcels [of land] into the park                                                               
given they are already being managed  as such and there is such a                                                               
large degree of public support for that.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
1:50:33 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SARAH  VANCE,  Alaska  State  Legislature,  prime                                                               
sponsor of HB 52, stated she  opposes Amendment 1 because it guts                                                               
the  purpose of  the  bill,  which is  to  solve  the legal  land                                                               
disposal issue.   She expressed concern that  the amendment would                                                               
cause  either  unfunded  mandates  or   a  fiscal  note  for  the                                                               
research.   She  said she  supports looking  into the  future for                                                               
research in  Kachemak Tutka  bays for the  effects of  the entire                                                               
system because the effects of the salmon are not the only issue.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
1:52:08 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHRISTOPHER ORMAN, Assistant  Attorney General, Natural Resources                                                               
Section,  Civil  Division  (Juneau),  Department  of  Law  (DOL),                                                               
stated that legally,  Amendment 1 would remove  the carve-out for                                                               
the  hatchery.   As a  result, the  hatchery would  remain within                                                               
legislatively withdrawn lands and  therefore the disposal problem                                                               
would remain.   While there  would be reports, there  would still                                                               
be  a disposal  problem, and  pursuant to  the disposal  problem,                                                               
there  would  be a  legal  exposure  to  the state,  meaning  the                                                               
possibility of  lawsuits and challenges pursuant  to the hatchery                                                               
and  hatchery  operations as  far  as  being an  unconstitutional                                                               
disposal.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
1:53:21 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MONICA  ALVAREZ,  Resource  Assessment  and  Development  Section                                                               
Chief,  Central  Office,  Division  of Mining,  Land,  and  Water                                                               
(DMLW),  Department of  Natural Resources  (DNR), concurred  with                                                               
Mr. Orman that  the disposal problem would still exist  and be an                                                               
exposure  for  the department.    She  said  DNR supports  HB  52                                                               
because  the department  sees it  as the  necessary mechanism  to                                                               
drive  the  two significant  legal  problems:   the  disposal  of                                                               
legislatively  withdrawn  lands  and the  1978  Interagency  Land                                                               
Management Assignment (ILMA) between DNR and ADF&G.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MS.  ALVAREZ addressed  the disposal  of legislatively  withdrawn                                                               
lands.   She  pointed out  that land  disposal law  has developed                                                               
over the  last 20  years and activities  that [DNR]  once thought                                                               
permissible  are  now  being analyzed  under  a  different  lens.                                                               
Accepting conditions as  they have always been  with the hatchery                                                               
is no longer an option  given the legal challenges the department                                                               
now  faces.   The Alaska  Supreme Court  has made  it clear  that                                                               
functionally irrevocable  agreements are  a disposal  of interest                                                               
and  the functionally  irrevocable test  set up  under the  court                                                               
focuses on the  likelihood of revocation instead  of a contract's                                                               
actual language.  An example in  this instance is that in January                                                               
2021, DNR was  informed by DCCED that the  Cook Inlet Aquaculture                                                               
Association (CIAA)  had to  continue to  operate the  hatchery to                                                               
secure  a return  on its  loan.   This is  the type  of financial                                                               
interest  that makes  ADF&G's revocation  of this  agreement with                                                               
CIAA unlikely.   The 2016  deed of trust and  security assignment                                                               
of the lease, where these  legislatively withdrawn lands are used                                                               
as  collateral  for  a $922,000  loan,  further  establishes  the                                                               
unlikelihood of revocation  here as ADF&G has  assured DCCED that                                                               
the hatchery operations will continue for that return on a loan.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MS.  ALVAREZ addressed  the ILMA.   She  specified that  when the                                                               
legislature withdrew  these lands  in 1970  it mandated  that the                                                               
lands  be managed  solely  by  DNR, it  did  not authorize  other                                                               
agencies to manage  Kachemak Bay State Park lands.   In 1978 when                                                               
DNR  issued the  ILMA to  ADF&G,  it did  so without  legislative                                                               
authorization.    Additionally,   when  the  legislature  adopted                                                               
various hatchery  statutes in 1976  and 1988 under AS  16.10, the                                                               
legislature did not include amendment  to Kachemak Bay State Park                                                               
enabling legislation  the land and  waters being managed  by DNR.                                                               
So,  returning these  lands  to the  public  domain, making  them                                                               
general state  lands, provides ADF&G  and DNR the  flexibility to                                                               
resolve these issues.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS. ALVAREZ reminded  the committee that DNR  and ADF&G submitted                                                               
a letter  in support of  HB 52, and  both agencies agree  that it                                                               
provides a means  for curing these legal issues.   If these lands                                                               
remain legislatively  withdrawn, the  tools are way  more limited                                                               
to resolve the issues.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
1:57:37 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PATKOTAK drew attention to  an email from DCCED that states                                                               
DCCED anticipates a zero fiscal note from Amendment 1.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
1:57:47 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SAM RABUNG,  Director, Division  of Commercial  Fisheries, Alaska                                                               
Department of  Fish &  Game (ADF&G), stated  that ADF&G  owns the                                                               
hatchery  in question  and operates  the hatchery  on state  park                                                               
lands through an  ILMA that was thought to be  proper at the time                                                               
it was  issued.  Also  at the time, the  state voted on  bonds to                                                               
build and invest  in this hatchery.  He said  ADF&G [operated the                                                               
hatchery] until the  point where it contracted  out the operation                                                               
to a private  contractor to operate it on behalf  of the state at                                                               
no cost  to the  state, which  is where it  is at  now.   He said                                                               
ADF&G agrees  with Ms. Alvarez  that Amendment 1 does  nothing to                                                               
cure the paperwork  issue with land use.  As  well, he added, the                                                               
ADF&G  and DNR  commissioners have  submitted a  joint letter  in                                                               
support of HB 52 as written.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
1:59:04 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  FIELDS  said he  questions  the  validity of  the                                                               
legal  arguments just  heard.   Regarding Ms.  Alvarez's argument                                                               
that the  hatchery must  be left  in place to  earn money  to pay                                                               
back a loan, he contended that  the hatchery is not making money,                                                               
so the loan isn't going to  be repaid when [the state] is loaning                                                               
more  money  to  this  hatchery  and  taking  on  more  financial                                                               
liability.   That  the land  disposal problem  is solved  here by                                                               
carving out this  land from the state park is  also illogical, he                                                               
submitted.   This is a hatchery  in state park land  and the park                                                               
plan says  it is incompatible with  the state park.   Carving out                                                               
the land  is not solving a  problem so much as  just changing the                                                               
use of  the land that  is inconsistent with what  the legislature                                                               
did when the park was created.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. RABUNG responded that nobody  has said this hatchery does not                                                               
pay its  bills; it is viable,  pays its bills, and  is current on                                                               
all its  loan payments.  He  said the contract between  ADF&G and                                                               
the  operator states  explicitly that  either party  can end  the                                                               
contract with 180  days' notice.  The contractor  will be allowed                                                               
to  continue to  harvest cost  recovery fish  until any  fish the                                                               
contractor produces stop  returning, which is two  years for pink                                                               
salmon and  three or four  years for sockeye.   That is  the only                                                               
commitment.    Regarding the  lease  agreement  mentioned by  Ms.                                                               
Alvarez, he  said there is no  lease agreement but there  is from                                                               
DCCED  an assurance  that, were  the operator  to default  on its                                                               
loans, DCCED  would be allowed  to enter the property  to recover                                                               
any collateral assets.   He stated he thinks it  is called a deed                                                               
of  trust  and it  is  an  assurance  that  DCCED has  the  legal                                                               
authority to  enter the property  to recover any assets  that are                                                               
securing the loan.   The facility itself and the  land it sits on                                                               
do not secure the loans and  cannot secure the loans.  He pointed                                                               
out that the legislature created both the park and the hatchery.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:00:17 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. ORMAN addressed Representative  Fields's comments.  He stated                                                               
that the  financial success, and  whatever that may mean  for the                                                               
hatchery, is a separate issue.   The question of whether there is                                                               
a disposal here  and whether there is  a functionally irrevocable                                                               
agreement between CIAA  and ADF&G is relatively clear.   The 2016                                                               
documents,  the  deed  of trust,  and  the  security  assignment,                                                               
established that  there is an  agreement that is now  sitting out                                                               
there for  a loan of  $922,500 by CIAA  that is using  state land                                                               
because  it is  a deed  of trust,  meaning an  interest in  state                                                               
land, in  legislatively withdrawn  land, to  allow CIAA  to build                                                               
capital  improvements.   So,  DCCED  is  holding an  interest  in                                                               
legislatively withdrawn lands,  and those legislatively withdrawn                                                               
lands  that  cannot   be  disposed  of  are   now  providing  the                                                               
collateral for that loan.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR. ORMAN,  regarding the functionally irrevocable  test, pointed                                                               
out that  functionally irrevocable is  not about the  language in                                                               
the contract  and not  even necessarily  about the  intentions of                                                               
all the parties or what the  parties had hoped for.  The question                                                               
is whether the  agreement between CIAA and ADF&G  will be revoked                                                               
tomorrow.   Is it truly what  one would call a  revocable at-will                                                               
agreement,  like a  permit?   The  answer is  no  because of  the                                                               
interest that  DCCED holds here.   The deed of trust  adds to the                                                               
investment  and  DCCED's interest  to  ensure  that the  hatchery                                                               
continues to operate.   One can also turn to  the language within                                                               
the agreement between CIAA and  ADF&G that allows CIAA to receive                                                               
180  days'  notice  before  termination   of  the  agreement  and                                                               
provides  a mechanism  for  CIAA  to be  repaid  for the  capital                                                               
improvements that CIAA paid for.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:05:01 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  ORMAN  added  that functionally  irrevocable  seems  foreign                                                               
because  it  is  not  necessarily  about the  contract.    It  is                                                               
suddenly  about  what  the  investment  interests  are  and  what                                                               
happens with those  interests and since that  prevents, then, the                                                               
revocation of  the agreement.   He  said ADF&G  clearly disagrees                                                               
with that  analysis; ADF&G disagrees  with DNR who  manages these                                                               
lands  and the  view that  there is  clearly a  revocable problem                                                               
here with the  agreement with CIAA.  In  completing the analysis,                                                               
Mr.  Orman explained,  his job  as a  lawyer is  to determine  if                                                               
exposure exists for  the state and if the  possibility exists for                                                               
that exposure to  lead to lawsuit, and that is  what has happened                                                               
here.   In  reviewing these  issues, the  determination has  been                                                               
made that  there is  a disposal  problem for  these legislatively                                                               
designated lands.   How this body or anyone chooses  to cure that                                                               
disposal  problem is  clearly a  policy  question.   The deed  of                                                               
trust  allows DCCED  to come  onto  the property  to operate  the                                                               
hatchery if necessary for return  of that investment.  Also based                                                               
on  the  language   in  that  agreement,  DCCED   is  allowed  to                                                               
potentially  sub-lease  and  sell  those lands  if  necessary  to                                                               
receive a  return on that.   That  is illegal, he  continued, and                                                               
maybe that doesn't  happen, but the language is there,  and it is                                                               
in a recorded document; there is  a deed of trust that clouds the                                                               
title on these lands.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
2:07:11 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. ALVAREZ stated that the  [Kachemak Bay State Park management]                                                               
plan  listed  the  hatchery  as  incompatible  for  two  reasons.                                                               
First,  the hatchery  is  viewed as  incompatible  with the  park                                                               
purposes  listed in  the  statute.   Second,  DNR recognizes  the                                                               
disposal  of  interest  issue,  and the  hatchery  is  listed  as                                                               
incompatible  in the  portion of  the plan  that park  staff uses                                                               
when  permitting activity.    So, DNR  would  certainly not  want                                                               
another  hatchery permitted  in  the future  and recognizes  that                                                               
there are  issues with  this hatchery.   Listing the  hatchery as                                                               
incompatible was  a recognition  of the  state disposal  case law                                                               
development over the  years and what DNR has come  to know now as                                                               
compared to in the past with the original state park plan.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:08:31 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  FIELDS spoke  to the  issue of  DCCED's exposure.                                                               
The right  way to remedy that,  he asserted, is not  to liquidate                                                               
state park  land but to  protect the state from  further exposure                                                               
from a financially risky investment.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. ORMAN  reiterated that there  is a disposal problem  here and                                                               
solving the disposal  issue is ultimately a policy  decision.  He                                                               
specified that  there are legislatively  withdrawn lands  where a                                                               
hatchery  is being  operated, and  that is  inconsistent with  AS                                                               
41.21.131, the  enabling statute that  establishes the park.   It                                                               
is  inconsistent with  the case  law  that started  in 2000  with                                                               
Northern Alaska  Environmental Center  (NAEC) and  continued most                                                               
recently in  August 2020 with  the Southeast  Alaska Conservation                                                               
Council  (SEACC)  decision.   Many  decisions  were made  in  the                                                               
1970s,  whether about  university  lands or  mental health  trust                                                               
lands.   It has now  been realized  that maybe those  weren't the                                                               
best decisions  and that  there are legal  problems.   Once these                                                               
things are discovered, they must be figured out.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR.  ORMAN continued  his response  and spoke  to the  ILMA.   He                                                               
pointed  out that  when creating  Kachemak  Bay State  Wilderness                                                               
Park, the  legislature included a  provision allowing  for stream                                                               
rehabilitation.  He said this  shows that when the legislature is                                                               
setting  aside  and  creating  these  kinds  of  lands,  in  this                                                               
circumstance  creating a  scenic  park, it  can  mandate how  the                                                               
lands are  going to  be maintained, who  will maintain  them, and                                                               
the purposes  for which they can  be used.  In  summary, he said,                                                               
he agrees with ADF&G that the  core problem starts with the ILMA,                                                               
because there was  no authority allowing the ILMA and  DNR to let                                                               
another state  agency to manage  these lands.  Once  the hatchery                                                               
was in place, all these other problems snowballed from there.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:12:19 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  PATKOTAK requested  Mr. Orman  to qualify  from the  legal                                                               
point  of view  that HB  52,  as written  without the  amendment,                                                               
mitigates the liability for a lawsuit.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR. ORMAN answered that HB  52, as written without the amendment,                                                               
would return  these hatchery lands  to public domain land.   This                                                               
would cure the  disposal problem, he explained,  because with the                                                               
lands  now being  public domain  land the  only issue  as far  as                                                               
disposal in this  context would be public notice.   All the cases                                                               
that were cited  talked about disposal of general  state land and                                                               
that state  sales provide sufficient  public notice prior  to the                                                               
disposal.  If  these lands that are removed from  the park become                                                               
general public  domain lands,  then at that  point the  only real                                                               
issue that  remains would  be the  opportunity to  provide public                                                               
notice.  All  of which is to  say that if these  are removed from                                                               
the park  it allows for  the agencies  to manage these  lands how                                                               
they  ostensibly  would  want  to manage  them  and  removes  the                                                               
exposure  that currently  exists because  legislatively withdrawn                                                               
lands cannot be disposed of by the executive branch.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
2:14:00 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE   FIELDS  stated   he   understands  that   narrow                                                               
perspective  on legal  issues.   But, he  contended, the  broader                                                               
legal issue is  that the purpose of this bill  is to perpetuate a                                                               
hatchery  that has  financial exposure  questions  for the  state                                                               
itself and is  sustained by salmon enhancement tax  paid by about                                                               
1,100  Cook  Inlet  fishermen,  where pinks  in  Cook  Inlet  are                                                               
between 1.4  percent of ex-vessel  value for the drift  fleet and                                                               
2.1 percent  for the setnet  fleet.   There are about  17 seiners                                                               
for  whom these  pinks are  some 45  percent of  ex-vessel value.                                                               
Over 1,100 people  paying taxes to sustain this  hatchery where a                                                               
very small number of people  get a significant share of plurality                                                               
of their  ex-vessel value from  the pink fishery.   Testimony was                                                               
heard from tourism  operators about the value of  Kachemak Bay in                                                               
terms of the tourism resource.   Tutka Bay is the least developed                                                               
of the bays; it  has tourism value in that sense.   It is hard to                                                               
show, Representative Fields  argued, that HB 52  provides for the                                                               
maximum benefit as per the  constitution, and that is the broader                                                               
legal  problem had  with  the  bill.   The  bill  is designed  to                                                               
perpetuate  a financially  risky  hatchery that  benefits a  tiny                                                               
number of  purse seiners at the  expense of over 1,000  drift and                                                               
gill  netters, tourism  operators  in Homer,  and  the public  at                                                               
large with an interest in the state park.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:16:01 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. RABUNG  pointed out  that the pink  salmon produced  at Tutka                                                               
Bay Lagoon  Hatchery are  also the  cost recovery  mechanism that                                                               
supports the  Lower Cook Inlet  lakes sockeye program.   Leisure,                                                               
Hazel, and Kirschner Lakes, and  Tutka Bay Lagoon are all release                                                               
sites   for   those   sockeye   salmon   where   commercial   and                                                               
noncommercial  common  fisheries  occur.    Without  those  pinks                                                               
paying the bill,  that program goes away; that is  a piece of the                                                               
equation that needs to be on  the table.  Further, CIAA's program                                                               
is an  integrated program, so  cost recovery that comes  from one                                                               
location funds projects in other  locations.  Hidden Lake sockeye                                                               
on the Kenai River system is  one of those projects that produces                                                               
between 40,000 and 80,000 sockeye  a year for the common property                                                               
fishery.  Pike  control, Elodia control, and  beaver dam notching                                                               
are  CIAA  projects  done  on  the  Matanuska-Susitna  and  these                                                               
projects funded with those pink salmon.   So, it is not as simple                                                               
as saying 17  seiners are the only beneficiaries; it's  part of a                                                               
portfolio.   Investigation of  CIAA can be  done by  talking with                                                               
the association  and looking  at its  paperwork, which  is posted                                                               
online.  However,  Mr. Rabung stated, that is not  at issue here;                                                               
what is at  issue is ADF&G's hatchery.  The  department can get a                                                               
different operator, but  it is still the disposal  of land issue.                                                               
The one thing that  DNR and ADF&G agree on is  that the state has                                                               
invested in  this hatchery;  it has been  operated by  both ADF&G                                                               
and  the private  sector since  the late  1970s, and  state bonds                                                               
built it.  It has only  recently come to light that the agreement                                                               
for  the land  use is  in question,  and that  is what  this bill                                                               
remedies.   It  is not  about the  hatchery itself;  it is  about                                                               
remedying  the  land  use,  curing   that  obligation  and  legal                                                               
jeopardy  for the  state, and  the  provision within  HB 52  that                                                               
allows  the land  to  revert  to park  land  if  ADF&G ceases  to                                                               
operate  the hatchery  and  remediates the  site.   From  ADF&G's                                                               
perspective, it seems like a win-win.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
2:19:08 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE FIELDS  argued that  differentiation must  be made                                                               
between the  function of  the pink hatchery  and the  function of                                                               
collecting sockeye  eggs which  are then  reared at  Trail Lakes.                                                               
The  collection   of  those  eggs  is   a  less  facility-intense                                                               
operation.  This is  not the only hatchery and most  of them do a                                                               
lot  better at  cost recovery.    If collecting  sockeye eggs  is                                                               
going to  continue at Tutka  Bay, the  real question is,  What is                                                               
the most efficient,  lowest risk way to the state  to do that and                                                               
is there a pink  hatchery to support it?  He  said he thinks that                                                               
that is a  very dubious argument financially.   He continued with                                                               
a second part  to his question and asked whether  the other array                                                               
of  hatcheries should  be used  as part  of that  ecosystem.   He                                                               
maintained  that sockeye  eggs could  be collected  at Tutka  Bay                                                               
Lagoon without a pink hatchery.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:20:17 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE VANCE  stated that Mr.  Rabung addressed a  lot of                                                               
the  issues.   She pointed  out  that the  2.8 percent  fisheries                                                               
enhancement tax is self-imposed by  the fishermen who have a vote                                                               
on that  and can make changes  at their discretion, so  it is not                                                               
being imposed  upon them.  The  fishermen find that this  tax and                                                               
the  hatcheries  in  the  portfolio are  beneficial  to  them  as                                                               
commercial fishermen  as well as  to the community.   She related                                                               
that  she has  had commercial  fishermen tell  her that  they are                                                               
glad they support personal use  fisheries for the community to be                                                               
able to harvest food for their  families.  This is not just about                                                               
the hatchery,  she continued.   This is  about the  entire region                                                               
being  able to  meet everyone  in the  middle, and  she said  she                                                               
believes  HB  52  does  that  specifically  with  the  "reverter"                                                               
language, which provides that if  the hatchery does not continue,                                                               
the  lands carved  out from  the lagoon  would go  back into  the                                                               
state park.  Legislators  have a duty to do what  is best for the                                                               
people but also a fiscal  responsibility for the state, she said,                                                               
and HB 52 does that.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
2:21:48 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  HANNAN inquired  whether there  are fiscal  notes                                                               
from the agencies to comply with Amendment 1's report request.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. RABUNG  replied that  ADF&G has  not done  the analysis.   He                                                               
said the  amendment's language  is vague and  it would  depend on                                                               
how  detailed  a  study  was  done.   A  ballpark  figure  for  a                                                               
fisheries biologist,  travel, and support  would be in  the range                                                               
of $100,000-$130,000 a year.   He advised that ADF&G's budget has                                                               
been cut  to the bone  and is at  the point where  any additional                                                               
cuts will  mean reductions in  fishery opportunity.   Definitely,                                                               
funding would be needed to take on this work.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MS. ALVAREZ replied that DNR also  has not had the opportunity to                                                               
do the  analysis.   She said  she thinks there  will be  a fiscal                                                               
note but cannot put a figure on it at this time.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:23:45 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HANNAN asked if any  nearby properties outside the                                                               
existing state  park boundaries have  been identified by  DNR and                                                               
ADF&G as  being adequate for a  hatchery, or if the  carve-out is                                                               
the only land resolution that has been pursued.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MS. ALVAREZ answered that there  were discussions with ADF&G, but                                                               
it is  not something that DNR  looked to in terms  of the options                                                               
available to the department.   She said CIAA has another hatchery                                                               
facility in Port  Graham that was started up during  the time the                                                               
plan was being developed, and  it is her understanding that there                                                               
are  issues with  that facility.    But, she  continued, that  is                                                               
beyond the  scope of what  DNR was  trying to address  during the                                                               
plan process.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. RABUNG  replied that by  statute and ADF&G guidance  there is                                                               
very strict  guidance on where a  hatchery is allowed to  be put,                                                               
and there are no available  locations in the vicinity where ADF&G                                                               
could permit  a new facility.   He  advised that the  Port Graham                                                               
facility was built by the  Port Graham Corporation on Port Graham                                                               
land; it was  repossessed by DCCED, and CIAA  bought the facility                                                               
from DCCED.   It is very limited  on water and could  not take up                                                               
the program.   So, no, there  are no other locations,  he stated,                                                               
this is  it.   If the  land use agreement  between DNR  and ADF&G                                                               
goes  away,  then  this  hatchery  goes  away,  and  the  sockeye                                                               
production in Lower Cook Inlet lakes ends.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:26:44 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SCHRAGE  recalled it  being mentioned  that [CIAA]                                                               
is current  on its payments but  observed from a CIAA  profit and                                                               
loss statement that  a profit was turned in only  two of the last                                                               
10  years.   He further  observed that  those profits  are vastly                                                               
overwhelmed by  the losses in  the other  eight of the  10 years.                                                               
He  inquired about  the viability  of the  hatchery and  how that                                                               
would be used for cost recovery.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. RABUNG responded that it  comes back to the portfolio effect;                                                               
CIAA operates many  projects and has several  sources of revenue.                                                               
The cost  recovery from the pinks  and sockeye is one  piece.  It                                                               
is also  important to note that  by law these are  nonprofits and                                                               
not supposed to  turn a profit; their mission is  to provide fish                                                               
for the common property  and pay their own way.   He said CIAA is                                                               
in good standing with  DCCED as far as its debt.   He offered his                                                               
belief that  CIAA's total combined  corporate debt is  around $14                                                               
million and  said CIAA  makes its annual  loan payments  from all                                                               
its revenue sources combined.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. RABUNG  related that he  has spent his career  managing these                                                               
programs and understands  how they work.  His  prior position was                                                               
as Aquaculture Section chief and  before that, he was the Private                                                               
Nonprofit (PNP)  Hatchery Program  coordinator for ADF&G.   Every                                                               
one of  the 26 hatcheries  operating in Alaska uses  pinks and/or                                                               
chums as  their cost  recovery fish  to pay  for all  their other                                                               
programs.  Sockeye, coho, and  chinook do not pay for themselves;                                                               
they  all are  paid for  by  the pinks  and chums  which are  the                                                               
bread-and-butter  fish that  pay the  bills.   It's an  intricate                                                               
portfolio and  each organization is  a little bit  different, but                                                               
they are  all nonprofits run  by boards  of directors made  up of                                                               
the permit holders who voted  to tax themselves to operate these.                                                               
Their operations  and finances are  available for anyone  to look                                                               
at.   Regarding HB  52, Mr.  Rabung said  ADF&G is  interested in                                                               
continuing to  operate this  hatchery either by  itself or  at no                                                               
cost  to the  state  through a  PNP contractor.    Twelve of  the                                                               
department's hatcheries are contracted  to the private sector and                                                               
this hatchery is one of them.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:30:10 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SCHRAGE  stated  that  in  having  an  accounting                                                               
background he  can appreciate a  portfolio and one  company under                                                               
an umbrella  organization subsidizing the efforts  and activities                                                               
of another  sub-corporation.   He asked whether  it would  not be                                                               
expected  for a  hatchery to  turn a  profit if  it predominantly                                                               
rears pink  salmon as its cost  recovery fish.  He  further asked                                                               
whether any  other hatcheries  are turning  a profit  under their                                                               
umbrella or whether all are producing a loss.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. RABUNG  reiterated that nonprofits  cannot produce  a profit.                                                               
They can  be viable and can  build reserves but cannot  produce a                                                               
profit.  The boards of directors  of these hatcheries are made up                                                               
primarily of commercial  fishermen.  The feedback  mechanism if a                                                               
hatchery starts  generating more cost  recovery than it  needs is                                                               
that the  fishermen on  its board would  rather catch  those fish                                                               
themselves.   So  that  is  the mechanism  to  ensure the  common                                                               
property  fishery  maximizes.   On  average  statewide, the  PNPs                                                               
contribute  roughly 80  percent of  their returns  to the  common                                                               
property harvest and  the other 20 percent goes  to cost recovery                                                               
and  brood stock.    That  is a  good  return  on investment  and                                                               
certainly better than  when ADF&G operated it  and didn't conduct                                                               
cost  recovery; it  was funded  by  general funds  up until  that                                                               
point.   The  department has  contracted out  hatchery operations                                                               
since the  late 1980s/early  1990s when  the statute  was passed,                                                               
allowing ADF&G to  do so.  Each of those  facilities has paid its                                                               
own way;  they are not  supported by  general funds or  any other                                                               
funds from  the state.  There  is a revolving loan  fund that the                                                               
hatcheries can  access to  get through lean  times, and  CIAA has                                                               
gone through some lean times but  is in good standing on its loan                                                               
payments.   Mr.  Rabung said  he understands  the revolving  loan                                                               
fund  has generated  significant revenue  from the  interest rate                                                               
that is applied,  so it has been a good  return on investment for                                                               
the state.   Pieces of the  revolving loan fund have  been carved                                                               
out and used  for other projects.  The CIAA's  board of directors                                                               
comprises permit  holders who pay  the salmon enhancement  tax, a                                                               
voluntary tax that they voted to  impose on themselves.  The CIAA                                                               
board has chosen to continue to  operate this program and keep it                                                               
as a  piece of  CIAA's portfolio, but  [CIAA's finances]  are not                                                               
the topic of this bill.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:34:08 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SCHRAGE  remarked that  he and  Mr. Rabung  have a                                                               
different  understanding of  how  nonprofits function.   With  10                                                               
years before this comes to a  head, he said he doesn't understand                                                               
why  not take  the time  to better  understand this  fishery, its                                                               
function within the  Kachemak Bay area, as well as  the impact on                                                               
it to the  local wildlife and others that have  been expressed by                                                               
citizens of the area.  Public  testimony has been very divided on                                                               
this  issue, and  he  is trying  to understand  why  not hit  the                                                               
brakes and  take the time  to understand  this issue better.   He                                                               
inquired about  the exposure  to the state  because of  this ILMA                                                               
and   the   justification   for  taking   this   seemingly   very                                                               
controversial position during this legislature.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. ORMAN answered that he does  not have the number for a dollar                                                               
amount.   To  the best  of his  knowledge, this  concern about  a                                                               
disposal here, came  to being around 2016-2017  and was mentioned                                                               
in part  of the plan  and the plan  process for DNR,  Division of                                                               
Mining, Land  and Water.   Regarding the  disposal issue  and the                                                               
legal exposure,  he would  foresee that  someone would  sue about                                                               
the  hatchery  based  on  comments  that  DNR  has  received  and                                                               
comments  that  he  has heard,  including  during  the  testimony                                                               
pursuant  to this  bill, he  thinks the  public is  aware of  the                                                               
legal problems here and the exposure.   With all that he has said                                                               
to the  committee today, he has  arguably provided a road  map in                                                               
some ways  for a potential  complaint if somebody wanted  to file                                                               
that.  The legal problems are  clear.  So, when talking about the                                                               
exposure, if someone  filed a lawsuit, he  questioned whether the                                                               
lawsuit would be successful.   It is his job to  look at this and                                                               
determine  whether that  possibility exists,  and he  believes it                                                               
exists  here.   Mr. Orman  said he  believes it  is a  kind of  a                                                               
disposal problem  pursuant to this  hatchery, and the  problem is                                                               
two-fold.   One, the ILMA  is separate  and the problem  with the                                                               
ILMA pertains  to a potential  violation of AS 41.21.131  and the                                                               
legislative  mandate for  who is  supposed to  be managing  these                                                               
lands.   Two, the disposal is  more specific and pertains  to the                                                               
agreements that exist  here, the debts, the  loans, the financial                                                               
interests, and  the desire for  CIAA to continue to  operate this                                                               
hatchery to  secure a  return on  those loans on  that debt.   He                                                               
noted  that the  security assignment  by  ADF&G and  the deed  of                                                               
trust that was filed by DCCED  were recently put into BASIS.  The                                                               
deed of trust  is until 2066, so the understanding  would be that                                                               
CIAA would ostensibly  continue to operate this  hatchery in some                                                               
way to allow for  the full return of the $922,500  loan.  He does                                                               
see strong  exposure for  the state.   [Part  of the  urgency] is                                                               
that this is a strong legal  problem and therefore trying to find                                                               
a solution to resolve that would be best.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:39:05 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  PATKOTAK inquired  about the  probability of  the hatchery                                                               
having to shut down with the success of a lawsuit.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. ORMAN  replied that  if someone  filed a  lawsuit challenging                                                               
the ILMA  and asserting that there  is a disposal of  lands here,                                                               
he thinks the necessary result  of that potential disposal and of                                                               
that litigation would  be ending hatchery operation.   He said he                                                               
cannot see  that if  somebody was successful  in suing  the state                                                               
here and  presented the argument  the way  he thinks it  would be                                                               
presented,  they  would  lead anywhere  but  hatchery  operations                                                               
ending in this location.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:40:05 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PATKOTAK  requested Ms. Alvarez to  provide initial capital                                                               
costs from the state to open  the hatchery, and the overall worth                                                               
of  the  fish  produced,  to  provide  an  understanding  of  the                                                               
financial fallout from closing the  hatchery if a lawsuit were to                                                               
be successful.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS. ALVAREZ  concurred with Mr.  Orman's statements and  said she                                                               
doesn't  know the  financial  impacts because  DNR  isn't in  the                                                               
business of  managing hatcheries.   She said  DNR supports  HB 52                                                               
because  it provides  a legislative  solution  to these  disposal                                                               
problems and  an alternative  to having  the hatchery  shut down.                                                               
She  deferred  to  ADF&G  to   answer  questions  about  hatchery                                                               
operations and their costs.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:41:39 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SCHRAGE  noted that the discussion  has been about                                                               
the legal  exposure to not curing  this land disposal issue.   He                                                               
asked whether there is any  legal risk that the legislature would                                                               
be sued for passing HB 52.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. ORMAN answered  that, as he reads the  legislation as drafted                                                               
without Amendment 1, the purpose  would be to remove the hatchery                                                               
from Kachemak Bay  State Park and as a result,  those lands would                                                               
be public domain lands.  He  said he believes that this cures the                                                               
disposal problem.  He further said  he believes it is well within                                                               
the  legislature's  authority  to  adjust  the  boundaries  under                                                               
Article  8,  Section  7,  which   provides  the  legislature  the                                                               
authority to  set aside lands  and special purpose sites.   Also,                                                               
he continued, the  legislature has the authority  to adjust those                                                               
boundaries  and to  determine  what the  boundaries  of the  park                                                               
should look like.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SCHRAGE  offered his  understanding that  eggs can                                                               
be collected  with a very  limited footprint and rearing  done at                                                               
Trail  Lakes,  then continuing  to  stock  the other  surrounding                                                               
areas.    He asked  whether  it  can  be said  definitively  that                                                               
sockeye  production would  cease  and inquired  about what  would                                                               
prohibit the continuation of sockeye production.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. RABUNG  replied that there are  two things.  One  is that the                                                               
land would  still be occupied.   A pipeline comes from  the creek                                                               
to  feed the  lensing  bags, and  somebody must  be  on site  for                                                               
collecting the  fish and  then holding them  in the  lensing bags                                                               
for several  months until  the egg-take  occurs.   The facilities                                                               
would  have to  either  be brought  in and  out  or the  existing                                                               
facility  utilized, which  is on  the land  that is  part of  the                                                               
ILMA, so  that issue remains.   The second part is  a question of                                                               
financial support.  The only entity  permitted to do this work is                                                               
CIAA, and  CIAA funds the  work itself.   He questioned  how CIAA                                                               
would continue to do the work if it loses its funding mechanism.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  PATKOTAK commented  that it  would  be safe  to say  that,                                                               
regardless  of  what  fish  are   being  hatched,  operating  the                                                               
hatchery is still  incompatible with the park land,  which is the                                                               
whole purpose of the bill.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:46:11 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  PATKOTAK   removed  his  objection  to   the  adoption  of                                                               
Amendment 1  to Version D.   He  asked whether there  was further                                                               
objection.   He noted that  someone [unidentified  and inaudible]                                                               
had objected.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:46:30 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
A roll  call vote  was taken.   Representatives  Fields, Hopkins,                                                               
Hannan,   and   Schrage   voted   in  favor   of   Amendment   1.                                                               
Representatives  McKay, Cronk,  Rauscher,  Gillham, and  Patkotak                                                               
voted against  it.  Therefore, Amendment  1 to HB 52,  Version D,                                                               
failed by a vote of 4-5.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:47:11 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  HOPKINS  moved to  report  CSHB  52, Version  32-                                                               
LS0327\D,  Bullard,  2/4/22,  out of  committee  with  individual                                                               
recommendations and the accompanying fiscal notes.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:47:25 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE FIELDS  objected.   Taking land  out of  the state                                                               
park, he opined,  needs to be done  as a last resort  if there is                                                               
no other  option, and only if  it is clearly compatible  with the                                                               
overwhelming  will of  the  public.   In this  case,  it was  the                                                               
public process on  the park plan that  determined this particular                                                               
use was  incompatible.  To  second guess  that, he would  have to                                                               
see overwhelming public  opinion from the region,  but very mixed                                                               
opinion was  heard before  the committee.   Additionally,  he has                                                               
not seen  the case made that  red salmon cannot be  reared, which                                                               
is the  use that most  people in  the region support,  namely the                                                               
China  Poot  fishery.    He  maintained  that  it  has  not  been                                                               
demonstrated  that reds  cannot  be reared  here without  rearing                                                               
pinks here.   He said  an important  question is whether  the egg                                                               
collection of those reds would  be more compatible with the state                                                               
park plan compared  to eggs plus a  pink hatchery.  It  is a high                                                               
bar  to withdraw  those lands,  Representative Fields  continued.                                                               
It  is  important  to  consider  all uses  when  looking  at  the                                                               
resource of  the park in the  bay, not just each  type of fishery                                                               
but  also  the other  economic  benefits  in  the area.    Public                                                               
comment included a lot of  local tourism businesses in opposition                                                               
to  the  bill  because  of  the economic  impacts,  which  is  an                                                               
important thing to take into  consideration.  Given the [10-year]                                                               
time horizon, he does not see a  reason to rush to pick one thing                                                               
that  seems  incompatible  with  the  public  will  as  expressed                                                               
through  a state  park plan  and  incompatible with  most of  the                                                               
public testimony  seen by the  committee.  For these  reasons, he                                                               
said, he will be voting no.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:49:49 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  HANNAN stated  she has  grave concern  about [the                                                               
legislature] changing the boundaries  of this long-standing state                                                               
park at  this juncture.   The only  precedent for  removing lands                                                               
from  a prior  created  state  park was  for  a gasline  easement                                                               
anticipating a  major economic  infusion to  Alaska.   Since that                                                               
easement has  never had to  be exercised,  the public has  had no                                                               
loss of  use of  that land  as if  it were  still part  of Denali                                                               
State  Park.    This  circumstance  is  entirely  different,  she                                                               
continued,  and some  of the  committee's discussions  are shaded                                                               
with fish  politics, which  she wants to  separate from  the land                                                               
use.  The  problem as presented is that there  is an exposure and                                                               
liability.   But, she  opined, she  doesn't know  that this  is a                                                               
solution  that gets  to  a  place that  she  is comfortable  with                                                               
regarding  Kachemak  Bay  State Park.    However,  Representative                                                               
Hannan  continued,  having  hatcheries  in Lower  Cook  Inlet  is                                                               
clearly a significant economic driver.   She would like to pursue                                                               
looking at another  hatchery in another location,  which she does                                                               
not believe  has been fully explored.   She said she  is going to                                                               
vote no on the bill because  the carve-out from the state park is                                                               
a significant precedent and is separate from the fish politics.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:51:42 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SCHRAGE said  he doesn't  necessarily oppose  the                                                               
carve-out and the hatchery very well  may be viable and serve the                                                               
best  interest of  the state.   However,  from the  testimony and                                                               
listening to DNR  and ADF&G, he opined, he doesn't  know that the                                                               
case  has  been  made  that this  meets  Alaska's  constitutional                                                               
requirement that the state's lands  and waters be managed for the                                                               
best interest  of the people.   There are  10 more years  to find                                                               
more information; there  are lists of studies  that are currently                                                               
ongoing.  If  ADF&G and DNR thought the cost  was the prohibitive                                                               
factor here,  he doesn't  know that that  means action  should be                                                               
taken blindly because the cost cannot  be afforded.  Over the 10-                                                               
year  horizon, more  can  be  learned about  the  impact of  this                                                               
hatchery,  the  financial  viability  of it,  and  the  interplay                                                               
between  the pink  salmon, the  cost recovery,  and CIAA's  other                                                               
operations.   Representative  Schrage further  stated he  doesn't                                                               
know that  a proper  case has  been made  that due  diligence has                                                               
been done  for ensuring that this  is truly in the  best interest                                                               
of  the  people,  which public  testimony  before  the  committee                                                               
highlights.   There are  pages and  pages of  legitimate concerns                                                               
over  the impact  on other  wildlife and  how this  impacts state                                                               
policy.    He stressed  that  he  doesn't  want  his vote  to  be                                                               
interpreted  as being  against this  bill  or against  continuing                                                               
hatchery operation  or against  carving out  this portion  of the                                                               
park for  the use of  the hatchery.   However, he thinks  this is                                                               
rushed and  action should  not be  taken at this  time, so  he is                                                               
going to vote no on the bill.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:53:27 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE FIELDS maintained his objection to the bill.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:53:34 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
A roll call  vote was taken.   Representatives Gillham, Rauscher,                                                               
Cronk,  McKay, and  Patkotak voted  in favor  of moving  CSHB 52,                                                               
Version  32-LS0327\D,  Bullard,  2/4/22, out  of  committee  with                                                               
individual  recommendations and  the  accompanying fiscal  notes.                                                               
Representatives  Schrage,  Hannan,   Hopkins,  and  Fields  voted                                                               
against  it.   Therefore, CSHB  52(RES) was  reported out  of the                                                               
House Resources Standing Committee by a vote of 5-4.                                                                            

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
HB 209 Sponsor Statement 2.16.2022.pdf HRES 2/16/2022 1:00:00 PM
HRES 2/23/2022 1:00:00 PM
HB 209
HB 209 Supporting Document DNR Letter of Support 2.16.2022.pdf HRES 2/16/2022 1:00:00 PM
HRES 2/23/2022 1:00:00 PM
HB 209
HB 52 Supporting Document Deed of Trust and Security Assignment Lease with DCCED 2.14.2022.pdf HRES 2/14/2022 1:00:00 PM
HRES 2/16/2022 1:00:00 PM
HB 52
HB 52 Amendment Schrage D.1 2.14.2022.pdf HRES 2/14/2022 1:00:00 PM
HRES 2/16/2022 1:00:00 PM
HB 52
HB 52 Testimony Received as of 2.16.2022.pdf HRES 2/16/2022 1:00:00 PM
HB 52
HB 52 DCCED Amendment D.1 Response 2.14.2022.pdf HRES 2/16/2022 1:00:00 PM
HB 52