Legislature(2009 - 2010)BELTZ 105 (TSBldg)

02/10/2010 08:00 AM Senate EDUCATION


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* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
*+ SB 56 APPROP: LIFE SCIENCES FACILITY AT UAF TELECONFERENCED
Moved SSSB 56 Out of Committee
*+ SB 206 APPROP UNIV ENGINEERING BUILDINGS TELECONFERENCED
Moved SB 206 Out of Committee
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
            SB 206-APPROP UNIV ENGINEERING BUILDINGS                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
8:24:03 AM                                                                                                                    
CO-CHAIR THOMAS announced consideration of SB 206.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
8:24:34 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  ELLIS introduced  SB 206.  He  said he  worked with  his                                                               
constituent Grant  Baker, Chair of the  mechanical and electrical                                                               
engineering programs at University  of Alaska Anchorage (UAA), to                                                               
understand the shortage  of engineers in Alaska and  the scale of                                                               
industry  demand  for  Alaska-grown  engineers, as  well  as  the                                                               
important resources required by  University of Alaska engineering                                                               
programs to meet this demand.  The University of Alaska Anchorage                                                               
and  Fairbanks  campuses are  working  together  to increase  the                                                               
supply of Alaska engineers. He  ventured that many of the members                                                               
have heard  stories about  construction and  development projects                                                               
being  staffed by  out-of-state workers;  what has  received less                                                               
attention  is  that  Alaska  is   facing  a  severe  shortage  of                                                               
engineers at this  time. Some companies are  resorting to sending                                                               
Alaska's  engineering  design  work  outside,  which  is  a  very                                                               
troubling trend. Outside engineering  firms don't always have the                                                               
technical  knowledge   or  foundation   in  arctic   or  northern                                                               
engineering that is  so critical to the work the  state is hoping                                                               
to have done in Alaska.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR ELLIS continued;  Alaska is second to last  in the number                                                               
of engineering graduates  it produces per year,  per capita. Only                                                               
18  percent of  the engineers  in  Alaska have  degrees from  the                                                               
University  of  Alaska  system,  and  up to  35  percent  of  the                                                               
engineers working in  Alaska are not residents.  According to the                                                               
Department  of  Labor  and  Workforce  Development  (DOLWD),  the                                                               
shortage of engineers is expected  to grow, exacerbated by annual                                                               
turnover and  retirements. Many new outside  engineering recruits                                                               
to  Alaska will  move  here  just long  enough  to gain  valuable                                                               
professional  experience  before  eventually moving  away  to  be                                                               
closer  to their  homes  and  families in  the  Lower 48.  Alaska                                                               
industry and recruiters prefer to  hire Alaska graduates, as they                                                               
are more  likely to stay in  Alaska over time, and  the amount of                                                               
trouble   and   expense   in   recruiting   people   outside   or                                                               
internationally to come help us  with our development projects is                                                               
something we should take note of and try to reverse.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
To  respond to  the  state's  need, he  said,  in 2006  President                                                               
Hamilton  and the  Alaska  Board  of Regents  set  a priority  to                                                               
double the  number of annual  engineering graduates by  2014. The                                                               
legislature  needs to  take  the steps  necessary  to reach  that                                                               
worthy goal, and that is what  the bill is all about. Since 2006,                                                               
the number of students in  UAF's engineering program has doubled;                                                               
since 2000,  enrollment in UAA's  School of Engineering  has more                                                               
than  tripled.  While the  University  of  Alaska's programs  are                                                               
ready, willing, and  able to train the next  generation of Alaska                                                               
engineers,  they require  investment to  complete their  mission.                                                               
Current  facilities cannot  even accommodate  current enrollment;                                                               
enrollment growth  has resulted in significant  space challenges,                                                               
leading  to   overflowing  classrooms   and  crowded   labs.  The                                                               
engineering  programs   must  have  adequate   instructional  and                                                               
specialized  lab  space  to  double  the  number  of  engineering                                                               
graduates.  The  University  of   Alaska  has  completed  concept                                                               
planning for facilities  at both UAA and  UAF. The appropriations                                                               
included  in this  bill  are intended  to  facilitate design  and                                                               
construction  of  the  facilities  to  meet  current  engineering                                                               
demand and  to provide the  foundation and resources to  grow our                                                               
own Alaska engineers.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
8:28:38 AM                                                                                                                    
In  conclusion, Senator  Ellis said  engineers  are an  essential                                                               
economic resource,  and growing  our own Alaska  engineers offers                                                               
the state an  opportunity to invest in  Alaska's development. The                                                               
University of  Alaska's engineering programs are  doing what they                                                               
need to do, but need the legislature's assistance.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
8:29:13 AM                                                                                                                    
JACK WILBUR,  President, Design  Alaska, Fairbanks,  Alaska, said                                                               
Design Alaska  is a  professional services  firm that  employs 65                                                               
architects, engineers,  and surveyors  in Fairbanks.  They prefer                                                               
to  hire  entry-level engineers  from  the  University of  Alaska                                                               
Fairbanks, because they  graduate with the skills  they need, and                                                               
have already adjusted  to the climate and community,  so they are                                                               
more  likely to  stay with  the company.  In the  last 25  years,                                                               
Design Alaska  has tripled in  size and needs  an ever-increasing                                                               
pool of  entry-level engineers to  accommodate that  growth. They                                                               
support continued  investment in  the UAF engineering  program in                                                               
order  to ensure  that UAF  will  continue to  meet their  needs.                                                               
Another  important benefit  of  investment  in UAF's  engineering                                                               
program through expansion of their  facilities is the increase in                                                               
research grant dollars  that will be attracted  to the community.                                                               
This is true economic development,  resulting in high-paying jobs                                                               
for  Alaska  residents.  He  urged  the  legislature  to  support                                                               
funding and expansion of UAF's  engineering training and research                                                               
facilities.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
8:31:06 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR STEVENS  said he appreciates  Mr. Wilbur's  preference to                                                               
hire Alaskans who are adjusted to  Alaska and have the skills. He                                                               
asked   if  Design   Alaska  ever   brings  in   students  before                                                               
graduation.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. WILBUR said they traditionally  have four to five engineering                                                               
interns  working  for  them;  they are  almost  always  from  the                                                               
University of Alaska Fairbanks.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
8:31:41 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR OLSON asked what kind of engineers he employs.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR.  WILBUR  answered   that  they  employ  the   full  range  of                                                               
engineers:   civil,   structural,  mechanical,   electrical   and                                                               
environmental.  The University  of  Alaska Fairbanks  is able  to                                                               
provide  them  with  entry-level   engineers  for  all  of  those                                                               
disciplines.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
8:32:22 AM                                                                                                                    
ANN BROOKS  P.E., Brooks and Associates,  Anchorage, Alaska, said                                                               
she graduated from the UAA  civil engineering program in 1988 and                                                               
currently  serves  on  the UAA  School  of  Engineering  Advisory                                                               
Board. She urged support for both  SB 56 and SB 206. Life science                                                               
is  part of  the engineering  education,  so she  cannot fail  to                                                               
support SB 56  as well. She said Mr. Wilbur  brought up some very                                                               
important points, but  one thing she wants to hammer  home is the                                                               
cost of recruiting  and bringing in engineers from  out of state.                                                               
Her colleagues  at the Corps  of Engineers, who employ  about 700                                                               
engineers,  say  it costs  them  about  $70,000 per  engineer  to                                                               
recruit and  move them  to Alaska. Typically,  they get  a three-                                                               
year commitment from  them, but because they may  not be familiar                                                               
with the  climate here,  they often don't  stay much  longer than                                                               
that.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS. BROOKS said  she believes the facilities  that the University                                                               
of  Alaska is  using today  are the  same as  those she  attended                                                               
classes in before  graduating in 1988. With the  exception of the                                                               
Alaska Native Science and  Engineering Program (ANSEP™) building,                                                               
the  laboratories are  the  same.  She said  she  can't urge  the                                                               
legislature   strongly  enough   to   consider  improving   these                                                               
facilities.  Industry needs  those  graduates,  and the  students                                                               
deserve  it.  Everything Alaskans  do  every  day is  touched  by                                                               
engineering. As  Alaska's infrastructure  ages, as  the workforce                                                               
retires,  Alaska needs  engineers to  replace them;  frankly, she                                                               
said, she does not think they  can afford to bring engineers from                                                               
the Lower  48 to  fill those  positions. If we  grow our  own, we                                                               
will  have a  committed, consistent  and stable  workforce. Given                                                               
some of  the challenges  facing the  state as  the infrastructure                                                               
ages, and the  state's desire to get the  pipeline project going,                                                               
she said she does not believe that waiting is an option.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
8:35:28 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR STEVENS  said she  hit on an  interesting point;  most of                                                               
the engineers he knows are about  his age. He asked if she thinks                                                               
the issue of  an aging workforce is going to  really be a problem                                                               
if the state does not move ahead.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MS.  BROOKS said she spoke with  Commissioner von Sheben from the                                                               
Department of  Transportation and Public Facilities  (DOTPF), who                                                               
said that one  third of his workforce is at  retirement age. Some                                                               
of those  people will  continue to work  because of  the economy,                                                               
but when they retire, the state will be in a world of hurt.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
8:36:25 AM                                                                                                                    
GRANT   BAKER,  Chair,   Mechanical,   Electrical  and   Computer                                                               
Engineering Program,  University of Alaska  Anchorage, Anchorage,                                                               
Alaska, said he  has lived in Alaska for 30  years and has taught                                                               
for about  22 of those  years. He is here  to support SB  206. If                                                               
there is  a theme to  go with this, he  said, it is  indeed "Grow                                                               
Our Own."  A new building  in Anchorage  is a great  project that                                                               
will be applauded by industry  and the community because there is                                                               
a severe  lack of  facilities in  Anchorage. Anchorage  has about                                                               
one third the space per student  that the rest of the states have                                                               
for  engineering  programs. It  isn't  just  about crowded  class                                                               
rooms;   it  is   about  labs   that   are  completely   missing,                                                               
laboratories that  are fundamental  to most  engineering programs                                                               
such  as heat-transfer  labs,  electrical  engineering labs,  and                                                               
material science labs. Those don't exist.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR. BAKER  said over 300  engineering students signed  a petition                                                               
in  March,  asking the  legislature  to  support the  engineering                                                               
program and the new building  in Anchorage. Industry supports the                                                               
programs at  UA because  it is  in their  best interests  to hire                                                               
engineers  trained in  Alaska;  they stay  in  Alaska. There  are                                                               
about 100 companies that hire  engineers within four miles of the                                                               
Anchorage campus.  This is a  situation unique within  the United                                                               
States, and  it is  important because  UAA's students  can intern                                                               
with  the  companies all  year  around,  and  they do.  They  get                                                               
experience  with  the  companies  and  build  relationships;  the                                                               
companies like  that because  they can get  to know  the students                                                               
before  hiring them  full-time. The  students match  up with  the                                                               
companies they  like, and  the companies  get the  employees they                                                               
want. The strong  support of the industry is one  reason that the                                                               
University of Alaska School of  Engineering Advisory Board, which                                                               
is made up of CEOs and  presidents of engineering firms and those                                                               
that hire engineers, wrote a  unanimous resolution in August 2008                                                               
supporting a new engineering building in Anchorage.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
8:40:10 AM                                                                                                                    
He said the  community also supports new  facilities. Recently, a                                                               
Memorandum  of Understanding  was  written between  the state  of                                                               
Alaska through the Department of  Education and Early Development                                                               
(DEED) and  was signed by  the Department of Labor  and Workforce                                                               
Development, the  chancellors of  all three University  of Alaska                                                               
campuses, and  Alaska Process Industry Career  Consortium (APIC);                                                               
it supports  establishing engineering  academies inside  the K-12                                                               
schools. The  reason this  is so  popular is  that it  works, not                                                               
just for  increasing the number  of engineers, but  by attracting                                                               
students   into  other   areas   of   science,  technology,   and                                                               
mathematics.  A  prototype  engineering  academy  started  up  in                                                               
Diamond  High  School  in  Anchorage last  year  with  about  115                                                               
students; it  is at 220 students  this year and still  growing. A                                                               
Memorandum  of Understanding  has  also been  signed between  the                                                               
University of  Alaska School  of Engineering  and the  College of                                                               
Education in Anchorage. The idea  is that the facilities that are                                                               
used for  teaching and  outreach to  K-12 are  the same  as those                                                               
needed for  university classes and  can also be used  for teacher                                                               
professional  development in  stem areas.  The University  sees a                                                               
strong  and  beneficial  collaboration   between  the  School  of                                                               
Engineering and  the College  of Education,  to help  provide the                                                               
preparation  teachers  need.  He  has  heard  from  Bethel,  that                                                               
teachers come  for a day  to do  a demonstration and  leave; that                                                               
doesn't really help. They need teachers  to come in from the bush                                                               
and get trained to go back and teach there.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
8:44:20 AM                                                                                                                    
CO-CHAIR  MEYER  commented that  they  seem  to be  having  great                                                               
success with  the Alaska Native  Students; he believes  that over                                                               
100  have graduated  from the  program so  far. He  asked if  the                                                               
demand now is such that UAA has to turn students away.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR. BAKER  said that,  because it  is an  open-enrollment campus,                                                               
there is  no way to  restrict enrollment, and they  wouldn't want                                                               
to.  They aren't  turning students  away,  but that  adds to  the                                                               
overcrowding.  He repeated  that the  lack of  labs is  a serious                                                               
deficiency. It  is not about what  other schools are able  to do;                                                               
it is  about what industry  needs. It  is very difficult  to turn                                                               
out students with the skills  industry needs when they don't have                                                               
the labs to do it.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
8:46:23 AM                                                                                                                    
CO-CHAIR  MEYER  asked  him  to  comment  on  the  Alaska  Native                                                               
engineering  program  and  the  figures  Senator  Ellis  provided                                                               
regarding square  feet of  space per student.  He also  asked if,                                                               
between  the  Fairbanks  and  Anchorage   campuses,  all  of  the                                                               
engineering disciplines are covered.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BAKER said  that there  are a  few that  are not  completely                                                               
covered,  like  chemical  and  biomedical  engineering,  but  the                                                               
University  of  Alaska Anchorage  does  offer  all of  the  major                                                               
disciplines  needed   in  Alaska  including   civil,  mechanical,                                                               
electrical, computer, and geomatics  or surveying. Anchorage does                                                               
not  have   petroleum  engineering,   but  that  is   offered  in                                                               
Fairbanks.  The  ANSEP and  outreach  programs  have been  wildly                                                               
successful  in  getting  out   to  the  difficult-to-reach  areas                                                               
surrounding Anchorage.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
8:48:50 AM                                                                                                                    
CO-CHAIR   MEYER  said   one  requirements   of  the   governor's                                                               
scholarship program is for four  years of math, which some people                                                               
feel  may  be too  much  for  students  who  are not  going  into                                                               
engineering  or the  sciences. He  asked  Dr. Baker  if he  finds                                                               
students  from  Alaska high  schools  are  ready for  engineering                                                               
courses when they reach college.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. BAKER  said many are prepared,  but there are a  large number                                                               
of  students who  still  require remedial  math  before they  can                                                               
start an  engineering program.  The first level  of math  that is                                                               
counted toward  an engineering  degree is  calculus; requirements                                                               
before that  are college algebra and  trigonometry. Many students                                                               
haven't   had  the   opportunity   to  take   the  calculus   and                                                               
trigonometry that  are required prior to  starting an engineering                                                               
degree. Even  in Anchorage  and the  Mat-Su, many  students don't                                                               
get to  trigonometry, but the  engineering academies  are already                                                               
helping with that.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
8:50:54 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  HUGGINS asked  Dr. Baker  how many  of his  students are                                                               
from the Alaska Scholars program.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BAKER said  he  can  give an  estimate.  He  has about  1000                                                               
students, with  about 60 new  scholars coming in this  year. They                                                               
expect many more, but haven't had  the opportunity to do any real                                                               
recruitment due to the space shortages.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR HUGGINS  asked Dr. Baker  what the difference  is between                                                               
industry  demand and  the University's  ability  to graduate  new                                                               
engineers.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. BAKER said  the entire University system  is graduating about                                                               
94 engineers per year  right now, and the need is  for 200 to 400                                                               
per year according  to industry sources. Some  companies are even                                                               
hiring interns out of Russia.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
8:52:51 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR HUGGINS  said the legislature  is working  on legislation                                                               
that   offers  tax   credits  to   donors  and   contributors  to                                                               
educational institutions. He asked if  Dr. Baker thinks that will                                                               
help.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR. BAKER  answered that  they have  strong industry  support and                                                               
there would be many donors, but  not enough of the magnitude that                                                               
could actually construct a new  building. He observed that if the                                                               
industry  knew a  building was  being built,  they would  be more                                                               
likely  to   contribute  than   they  would   if  it   were  just                                                               
speculative.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
8:54:08 AM                                                                                                                    
DAN   WHITE,  Director,   Institute   of  Northern   Engineering,                                                               
University  of Alaska  Fairbanks, Fairbanks,  Alaska, said  he is                                                               
testifying on  behalf of himself and  the Dean of the  College of                                                               
Engineering  and  Mines,  Dr. Doug  Goering.  The  University  of                                                               
Alaska has  been graduating engineers  since 1926.  Engineers are                                                               
instrumental  to  the  development   of  the  state's  resources,                                                               
creating jobs,  and increasing Alaska's  quality of life.  UAF is                                                               
one of  the only universities  in the country that  offers mining                                                               
and  geological engineering  as  well  as petroleum  engineering,                                                               
engineering   areas  that   are   extremely   important  to   the                                                               
development of this state.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
In 2004, he  said, the three engineering units  at the University                                                               
of  Alaska Fairbanks,  the College  of Science,  Engineering, and                                                               
Math; the  Institute of Northern  Engineering; and the  School of                                                               
Mineral  Engineering were  combined.  These  three programs  were                                                               
consolidated  from   four  buildings  into  one,   the  Duckering                                                               
Building, which  was built in  1964. It  was already the  home of                                                               
roughly half of the engineering on  campus and was at capacity at                                                               
the  time.  Since  the  merger  in  2004,  applied  research  and                                                               
technology development have grown 300 percent.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR.  WHITE   said  that  applied  research   and  development  in                                                               
engineering  has a  direct  impact on  Alaska's  economy; it  has                                                               
developed more efficient ways of  doing such things as extracting                                                               
gold  from  ore,  building  roads,  building  buildings,  running                                                               
vehicles, and  finding and  developing energy  resources. Applied                                                               
engineering  research  and   technology  development  is  growing                                                               
Alaska's economy. A recent McDowell  Group report found that, for                                                               
every  $1  million  in  investment by  the  state  in  university                                                               
research, 149  jobs were created  with an estimated  $4.8 million                                                               
in  payroll, and  another $1.5  to $2  million in  purchases. The                                                               
University  needs  space   to  do  the  research,   to  grow  the                                                               
opportunity,  and to  contribute  to  building Alaska's  economy.                                                               
Since  2006   the  College  of  Engineering   and  Mines  student                                                               
enrollment   has  increased   40  percent.   First-time  freshman                                                               
enrollment has  increased by almost  twice that, and they  are on                                                               
track to meet the president's  commitment to double the number of                                                               
engineering graduates by  2012. UAF operates with  80 square feet                                                               
of  space per  student,  which a  recent  comparison revealed  is                                                               
lower  than almost  all of  UAF's peer  institutions. The  Oregon                                                               
system  operates  with  about 170  square  feet  per  engineering                                                               
student.  There is  presently  only  one class  room  in the  UAF                                                               
engineering  building  that can  even  accommodate  more than  40                                                               
students, and that is creating problems as the classes grow.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  WHITE concluded  that  they strongly  support  the Board  of                                                               
Regents' budget request and the  priorities laid out therein, and                                                               
hope that the budget, as well  as the efforts of legislation like                                                               
SB 206, can  contribute to the specialized  engineering needs for                                                               
engineering programs at UAF and UAA.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
8:58:13 AM                                                                                                                    
ROB  LANG,  Dean,  University  of  Alaska  Anchorage,  Anchorage,                                                               
Alaska,  said he  has  only a  couple  of things  to  add to  the                                                               
previous  testimony.  The facilities  at  UAA,  when compared  to                                                               
facilities at  other universities  around the country  and around                                                               
the world, are really in bad  shape. He stressed that he has been                                                               
at  facilities in  third-world countries  that are  significantly                                                               
better  than the  ones the  University has.  Nevertheless, he  is                                                               
extremely proud of what the faculty  and students are able to do.                                                               
UAA's programs  are all accredited,  which is wonderful,  and the                                                               
students and  faculty make do  with what  they have. In  terms of                                                               
nationally-normed  exams  like  the Fundamentals  of  Engineering                                                               
exam,  UAA  students  consistently  perform  above  the  national                                                               
average, even with the lack of facilities.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
8:59:45 AM                                                                                                                    
FRAN   ULMER,  Chancellor,   University   of  Alaska   Anchorage,                                                               
Anchorage, Alaska,  said she agrees  with Chancellor  Rogers that                                                               
they  are desperate  for  space. Alaska  is  a natural  resources                                                               
state, and  if it is  to develop the oil  and gas and  mining and                                                               
all  of  the   other  resources  it  has,   it  needs  home-grown                                                               
engineers.  That  is an  essential  building  block for  Alaska's                                                               
economy  and   its  future.  The   number  of  square   feet  per                                                               
engineering student  was expanded from  44 to a whopping  58 when                                                               
they added trailers  and a portable warehouse for  lab space, but                                                               
that is not enough. The University needs the legislature's help.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
9:01:12 AM                                                                                                                    
BRIAN  ROGERS,   Chancellor,  University  of   Alaska  Fairbanks,                                                               
Fairbanks, Alaska,  wanted to answer  a couple of  questions that                                                               
were asked earlier in the  meeting. The number of Alaska Scholars                                                               
in engineering as of Fall 2008 was  103 at UAA and 125 at UAF. On                                                               
the GPS,  national statistics  show that one  sixth of  U.S. high                                                               
school  students  graduate  with  enough math  to  even  consider                                                               
engineering  as  a  discipline.  Anything the  state  can  do  to                                                               
improve that pathway  will make a difference in  their ability to                                                               
meet their  goals in  engineering. He  said they  are competitive                                                               
nationally; BP  says that the  University of Alaska is  its first                                                               
choice in the  nation for hiring engineers.  University of Alaska                                                               
students   regularly  win   competitions  such   as  the   bridge                                                               
competition and the electric  snow machine endurance competition.                                                               
The  University   has  excellence  in  both   the  Anchorage  and                                                               
Fairbanks programs  and needs the legislature's  help to continue                                                               
to provide that excellence.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
9:02:37 AM                                                                                                                    
CO-CHAIR THOMAS  closed public testimony  and said he  would take                                                               
motions on both SB 56 and SB 206.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
            SB 206-APPROP UNIV ENGINEERING BUILDINGS                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
9:03:46 AM                                                                                                                    
CO-CHAIR MEYER moved  to report SB 206,  labeled 26-LS1184\R, out                                                               
of committee with individual  recommendations and attached fiscal                                                               
note(s). There being  no objection the motion carried  and SB 206                                                               
was moved from committee.                                                                                                       

Document Name Date/Time Subjects