Legislature(2015 - 2016)BUTROVICH 205

04/02/2015 09:00 AM Senate STATE AFFAIRS

Note: the audio and video recordings are distinct records and are obtained from different sources. As such there may be key differences between the two. The audio recordings are captured by our records offices as the official record of the meeting and will have more accurate timestamps. Use the icons to switch between them.

Download Mp3. <- Right click and save file as

* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ SB 74 MEDICAID REFORM/PFD/HSAS/ER USE/STUDIES TELECONFERENCED
<Pending Referral>
+ SB 1 REGULATION OF SMOKING TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
<Initial Presentation by Sponsor>
+ SB 58 TRANSPORT NETWORK SVES. & WORKERS COMP TELECONFERENCED
-- Public Testimony --
<Pending Referral>
*+ SB 91 CRIMINAL LAW/PROCEDURE; DRIV LIC; PUB AID TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
<Initial Presentation by Sponsor>
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
                   SB 1-REGULATION OF SMOKING                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
10:00:31 AM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR STOLTZE announced the consideration of SB 1.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
10:00:53 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR  PETER   MICCICHE,  Alaska  State   Legislature,  Juneau,                                                               
Alaska,  Sponsor for  SB 1,  stated that  his hope  is that  with                                                               
everyone's help  that some lives can  be saved and less  spent on                                                               
healthcare.  He read  the following  sponsor  statement into  the                                                               
record:                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     SB  1 seeks  to  safeguard working  Alaskans and  their                                                                    
     children from the adverse  health effects of secondhand                                                                    
     smoke  by providing  a  statewide smoke-free  workplace                                                                    
     law  for businesses  and public  places. This  is about                                                                    
     protecting workers, this is not  an anti-smoker bill at                                                                    
     all.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     As  a  conservative  Alaskan,   I  actively  support  a                                                                    
     philosophy that works  to limit and reduce  the role of                                                                    
     government  in our  daily lives.  I  work towards  that                                                                    
     every  day  in  this  building, but  I  believe  Thomas                                                                    
     Jefferson got  it right when  he said,  "The legitimate                                                                    
     powers of  government extend to  such acts only  as are                                                                    
     injurious to others."                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     This case,  I believe  that both  the right  to breathe                                                                    
     smoke-free air  and the significant,  documented public                                                                    
     health risks of secondhand  smoke exposure compel us to                                                                    
     view the  protection of Alaska's labor  force and their                                                                    
     families     as     an     appropriate     governmental                                                                    
     responsibility. With the new  issues with marijuana Mr.                                                                    
     Chairman,  I   also  believe  this  bill   reduces  the                                                                    
     potential of  folks smoking marijuana at  the workplace                                                                    
     as  well. Similar  comparisons  include the  government                                                                    
     role  in establishing  speed  limits,  seat belt  laws,                                                                    
     motor  vehicle design  safety improvements,  electrical                                                                    
     codes,    pipeline    safety     laws,    and    agency                                                                    
     responsibilities.  There  are  places  in  our  society                                                                    
     where  regulation is  the right  thing to  do and  it's                                                                    
     largely why we  are here in this  building. As judicial                                                                    
     philosopher Zechariah  Chafee said  in the  Harvard Law                                                                    
     Review  in 1919,  "Your right  to swing  your arm  ends                                                                    
     just where  the other  man's nose begins;"  that's kind                                                                    
     of what  SB 1 is  about, it doesn't  preclude Alaskans'                                                                    
     right to smoke,  but it protects the  rights of working                                                                    
     Alaskans who choose not to smoke.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     This law  is much like the  law that is in  half of the                                                                    
     states  right  now.  Over half  of  the  population  of                                                                    
     Alaska  including those  in Bethel,  Anchorage, Juneau,                                                                    
     Barrow,   Dillingham,   Haines,  Skagway,   Petersburg,                                                                    
     Klawock,  Nome,  Unalaska,  and  Palmer  are  currently                                                                    
     living under  a similar  law. You  also can't  smoke in                                                                    
     healthcare  facilities, schools,  childcare facilities,                                                                    
     and  public  meeting  rooms  in  government  buildings.                                                                    
     These  laws are  well  established and  once they  have                                                                    
     been  on  the  books  there has  been  some  effort  to                                                                    
     reverse  them   and  not   once  have   those  reversal                                                                    
     processes been successful.  Communities, once they have                                                                    
     been   successful  learn   the   value  of   smoke-free                                                                    
     workplaces, they've kept them intact.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
10:03:38 AM                                                                                                                   
     This applies a uniform  safeguard from secondhand smoke                                                                    
     for workers  in Alaska.  Why is a  conservative willing                                                                    
     to take  on this issue?  The reality  of it is  for me,                                                                    
     simply  to protect  the lives  of nonsmokers.  We think                                                                    
     about  the   staggering  health  costs   of  secondhand                                                                    
     exposure to tobacco products and  I'm not talking about                                                                    
     the  over half  million  Americans that  die from  lung                                                                    
     cancer that  do smoke, we  are talking about  the folks                                                                    
     that  choose  not to.  It's  a  critical public  health                                                                    
     issue in  my view and  when you think about  it, people                                                                    
     are now  talking about  expanding Medicaid,  people are                                                                    
     talking   about  us   taking  on   expanded  roles   of                                                                    
     healthcare in the state, this  is just an added expense                                                                    
     and it  hits the taxpayer  heavily. It kills  more than                                                                    
     41,000  adult non-smokers  from coronary  heart disease                                                                    
     and  lung cancer  each year.  For example,  it is  four                                                                    
     times the  number for DUI  fatalities each  year. While                                                                    
     our DUI laws are  rightfully stringent, our response to                                                                    
     stopping  an enormous  loss of  life due  to secondhand                                                                    
     smoke has been comparatively lax.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     I often  hold up  a photo  of my dad,  who I  lost last                                                                    
     year,  this bill  is  not about  my  father, my  father                                                                    
     chose to smoke,  that was his right. This  is about the                                                                    
     folks that are effected that  choose not to but have to                                                                    
     go  to work  every  day.  What this  bill  is about  is                                                                    
     essentially  asking smokers  to take  it outside.  More                                                                    
     than  860  Alaskan  businesses and  organizations,  and                                                                    
     many more  representing all regions  of the  state have                                                                    
     signed on to support this smoke-free workplace law.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     We have  some opposition as  well, I believe we  have a                                                                    
     few hundred  opposition letters; virtually  100 percent                                                                    
     of those letters are asking  us to exclude vaping or e-                                                                    
     cigs from the bill.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
10:05:44 AM                                                                                                                   
     There are  very many well-meaning  governmental actions                                                                    
     that are simply not good  examples of the use of common                                                                    
     sense; one of  them is Positive Train  Control. For the                                                                    
     billions of dollars  it will cost to  do Positive Train                                                                    
     Control, it  will save about  three American  lives per                                                                    
     year  in the  U.S., that's  a government  added control                                                                    
     trying to  spend a lot  of money protecting  folks that                                                                    
     are not  at risk. In this  case we have the  number, we                                                                    
     have the overwhelming  evidence that at no  cost to our                                                                    
     government, and we can protect a lot of Alaskans.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     I've  got  to say  out  of  respect  for you  and  your                                                                    
     committee that  we are listening. We  will be listening                                                                    
     to your  comments, we're open  to suggestions,  we want                                                                    
     this to  be the  best bill  it can be,  and we  want to                                                                    
     impact Alaska  businesses as little as  possible, so we                                                                    
     are open to reasonable exemptions.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     This bill  effects my core  belief in  the self-evident                                                                    
     truths  and the  Declaration  of  Independence and  its                                                                    
     desire to  conserve life and  protect liberty.  I think                                                                    
     forcing Alaskan  employees to  smoke on  the secondhand                                                                    
     aspect  is challenging  those rights.  The other  thing                                                                    
     that  I've  got  to  say  is  this  bill  is  purposely                                                                    
     designed not to  be heavy handed, it  doesn't come with                                                                    
     control,   it  comes   with  no   imposing  enforcement                                                                    
     actions, all this bill does  is it asks smokers to take                                                                    
     it outside  while they are  at work, it's  just respect                                                                    
     for their neighbor's right to breath clean air.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
     I'd like to reiterate again,  this bill is not about my                                                                    
     father, this  is not about  folks who choose  to smoke,                                                                    
     if  they choose  to  smoke, they  have  every right  to                                                                    
     continue  to do  that,  we  just ask  for  them to  not                                                                    
     affect the rights of their friends at work.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
10:07:42 AM                                                                                                                   
CHUCK KOPP,  Staff, Senator  Micciche, Alaska  State Legislature,                                                               
Juneau, Alaska,  noted that  the bill packets  contain a  copy of                                                               
the slide show  that is considered the "Take it  Outside Act." It                                                               
is from the Smoke Free Alaska website.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR. KOPP read the following statement:                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     SB 1 is  about healthier citizens and  spending less on                                                                    
     healthcare,  providing  a smoke-free  work  environment                                                                    
     for  workers in  Alaska and  a statewide  standard with                                                                    
     regard to secondhand smoke, it  puts all businesses and                                                                    
     workplaces in Alaska on a level playing field.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
     About half  of the population  in Alaska is  covered by                                                                    
     workplace law now.  In the members' packets  was a 2012                                                                    
     Dittman  Research  survey  that  shows  82  percent  of                                                                    
     Alaskans  support a  statewide,  smoke-free indoor  air                                                                    
     law  that includes  restaurants and  bars. You  see the                                                                    
     support  we  have  from across  the  state  from  every                                                                    
     members'  district, which  is consistent  with that  82                                                                    
     percent  polling. Also  in the  members'  packets is  a                                                                    
     documentation   from  the   Institute  of   Social  and                                                                    
     Economic  Research (ISER)  in  2014, and  a Journal  of                                                                    
     Cancer article in 2007 which  shows that smoke-free air                                                                    
     laws  do not  have  adverse  economic consequences  for                                                                    
     restaurants and bars subject to them.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     What does  SB 1  not do?  SB 1  does not  ban cigarette                                                                    
     smoking and it does not  ban e-cigarettes. What does SB
     1 do? SB 1 provides  a statewide smoking prohibition in                                                                    
     enclosed  public  spaces,  public  transportations  and                                                                    
     facilities, places  of employment, government  owned or                                                                    
     operated places, buildings or  residences that are used                                                                    
     to provide  paid childcare, healthcare  facilities, the                                                                    
     Pioneer  Homes and  the  Veterans  Homes, and  vehicles                                                                    
     that are places of  employment with certain exceptions.                                                                    
     Included   are  school   grounds,   public  parks   for                                                                    
     children,  outdoor  arenas  sitting, and  areas  within                                                                    
     certain  distances from  entrances,  open windows,  and                                                                    
     air intake vents where smoking  is prohibited. The bill                                                                    
     requires   the  Commissioner   of  Health   and  Social                                                                    
     Services to  adopt regulations for  filing, processing,                                                                    
     and investigating reports of  violations of the smoking                                                                    
     prohibition,  which may  include filing  complaints and                                                                    
     issuing citations.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     The  Department of  Health  and  Social Services  (HSS)                                                                    
     role   in    implementing   this    statewide   smoking                                                                    
     prohibition  is to  provide  education  and respond  to                                                                    
     complaints as  they come  forward. Under  the Anchorage                                                                    
     law, which  was enacted  in 2000  and updated  in 2007,                                                                    
     the  average number  of enforcement  actions a  year is                                                                    
     between 3 and  6. The bill allows  the HSS commissioner                                                                    
     to    delegate   to    other    agencies   any    other                                                                    
     responsibilities  to implement  the bill's  provisions.                                                                    
     The bill also  requires a person who is in  charge of a                                                                    
     place  where  smoking is  prohibited  to  post it  with                                                                    
     specific signs  saying that smoking is  not allowed and                                                                    
     it  requires the  HSS department  to  furnish signs  to                                                                    
     anyone who  had requested them. The  Division of Public                                                                    
     Health's Tobacco  Prevention and Control  Program would                                                                    
     be   responsible   for  developing   public   education                                                                    
     materials  regarding  the   new  requirements  and  for                                                                    
     educating business owners, grantees,  and the public on                                                                    
     the specifics of the law.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
10:11:01 AM                                                                                                                   
MR. KOPP addressed "2014 Surgeon General Report" and "Premature                                                                 
Deaths Caused by Smoking, 1965-2014" as follows:                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     Over  the last  50 years,  there have  been 31  Surgeon                                                                    
     General's   reports  that   have   utilized  the   best                                                                    
     available evidence  to expand our understanding  of the                                                                    
     health   consequences   of  smoking   and   involuntary                                                                    
     exposure  to  tobacco smoke.  We  have  heard of  these                                                                    
     staggering statistics  about the repercussions  of this                                                                    
     exposure and the recent data  indicates it is something                                                                    
     akin  to a  public  health emergency.  Just looking  at                                                                    
     smoking  related  incidents   all  together,  including                                                                    
     primary and secondhand exposure  for the last 50 years,                                                                    
     we  see there's  been  over 20  million American  lives                                                                    
     lost.  Looking   at  just   secondhand  smoke   in  two                                                                    
     categories: lung cancer and  heart disease, it's almost                                                                    
     3  million Americans.  Looking at  just the  numbers in                                                                    
     comparison  just  for  analysis,  there  have  been  20                                                                    
     million Americans die in that  period, 2.5 million were                                                                    
     non-smokers,   and  more   than  100,000   babies  were                                                                    
     impacted due to smoking  related issues with secondhand                                                                    
     smoke.  That's  a lot  of  people,  it's 68  times  the                                                                    
     combat deaths in  WWII and 30 times the  number of U.S.                                                                    
     deaths from the 1919 flu pandemic.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
10:12:16 AM                                                                                                                   
He addressed "What We've Learned in 50 Years" as follows:                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     With  respect to  secondhand smoke,  we  know now  that                                                                    
     smoking and  passive smoking  causes disease  in nearly                                                                    
     every organ.  Exposure to secondhand smoke  is causally                                                                    
     linked  to   cancer,  respiratory   and  cardiovascular                                                                    
     diseases, and adverse effects on  the health of infants                                                                    
     and  children.  41,000  non-smokers  a  year  die  from                                                                    
     secondhand   smoke  according   to  the   U.S.  Surgeon                                                                    
     General's  report  in  2014, and  as  Senator  Micciche                                                                    
     said, this is  4 times the number of  DUI fatalities in                                                                    
     2013,   which  according   to   the  National   Highway                                                                    
     Transportation  Safety Association  was 10,046.  In our                                                                    
     50  year history  of progression  with our  response to                                                                    
     DUI as  a country, we  started off  with no jail  and a                                                                    
     0.15 breath alcohol  limit, lowered that to  a 0.10 and                                                                    
     started bringing  on jail  time, now we  are down  to a                                                                    
     0.08  with  mandatory 3  days  in  jail as  a  national                                                                    
     standard  in  all 50  states.  The  point here  is  the                                                                    
     response to  something that kills  at 4 times  the rate                                                                    
     is we think, more measured than that.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
10:13:16 AM                                                                                                                   
MR. KOPP addressed "Health Consequences Causally Linked to                                                                      
Secondhand Smoke" as follows:                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     Stroke  is  more  recently  acknowledged  by  the  U.S.                                                                    
     Surgeon General as being  causally linked to secondhand                                                                    
     smoke with  about a  30 percent  increased risk  due to                                                                    
     secondhand smoke exposure. The  annual number of deaths                                                                    
     attributable  to  smoking  and exposure  to  secondhand                                                                    
     smoke is  now approaching 500,000 people.  The exposure                                                                    
     to secondhand smoke we now  know is more immediate than                                                                    
     thought, even  a decade  ago, as far  as its  impact to                                                                    
     the  cardiovascular system,  damage  to blood  vessels,                                                                    
     making blood  more likely to  clot, and  increasing the                                                                    
     risk  for heart  attack and  stroke. The  2006 and  the                                                                    
     2010 Surgeon General's report  both reported that there                                                                    
     is no safe level of secondhand exposure.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     Our  national cost  in 2006  was $5.6  billion in  lost                                                                    
     productivity  alone  due   to  exposure  to  secondhand                                                                    
     smoke. The  estimate from  the American  Cancer Society                                                                    
     for Alaska  is 60 deaths  and more than $1  million per                                                                    
     year.  The evidence  is sufficient  to  infer a  causal                                                                    
     relationship  between  the  implementation of  a  smoke                                                                    
     free  law  or a  policy  and  a reduction  in  coronary                                                                    
     events  among  people under  65  years  of age.  Doctor                                                                    
     Urata  with the  Juneau hospital  is here  to speak  to                                                                    
     that.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     In  conclusion,  this  is a  question  of  rights,  the                                                                    
     choice to  smoke versus  the need  to breathe.  A clean                                                                    
     indoor air  policy does not  prohibit smoking,  it only                                                                    
     requires  that those  who choose  to smoke  do so  in a                                                                    
     manner that does not threaten or harm others.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
10:15:06 AM                                                                                                                   
MR. KOPP addressed "What About E-cigarettes?" as follows:                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     There's  a lot  of discussion  about e-cigarettes.  The                                                                    
     science   is  still   maturing  with   respect  to   e-                                                                    
     cigarettes, there  are studies  that show  that because                                                                    
     of the  unregulated nature of the  market, depending on                                                                    
     the  tool that  is  being  used, that  you  can have  a                                                                    
     significant  amount   of  toxins,   ultra-fine  medical                                                                    
     particles,  volatile compounds,  and other  carcinogens                                                                    
     that become part of the  vaping or the aerosolized air.                                                                    
     The  biggest problem  is that  the U.S.  Food and  Drug                                                                    
     Administration  (FDA)  has  not assumed  regulation  of                                                                    
     them and  there are 470 different  brands. According to                                                                    
     Alaska state  law, it  is illegal to  sell or  give any                                                                    
     product containing  nicotine to  anyone under  19 years                                                                    
     old, and  because e-cigarettes retailers do  not need a                                                                    
     sales license  endorsement to sell their  products like                                                                    
     tobacco retailers,  there is  no program  of compliance                                                                    
     checks for youth sales in place for these retailers.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
10:16:06 AM                                                                                                                   
He addressed "Why Smoke-Free Workplaces?" as follows:                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
     The  implantation of  comprehensive  clean indoor  laws                                                                    
     has been  shown to significantly reduce  heart attacks.                                                                    
     We  talked about  separating smokers  from non-smokers.                                                                    
     Air  clean technologies  and ventilation  systems, it's                                                                    
     very hard to  get those to remove  carcinogens from the                                                                    
     air, you  can sometimes get down  toward the detectable                                                                    
     smoke  is  not there,  but  they  are not  reliable  to                                                                    
     protect   public  health.   In  addition,   eliminating                                                                    
     exposure  of  secondhand  smokers to  secondhand  smoke                                                                    
     helps  reduce tobacco  use among  smokers. The  Surgeon                                                                    
     General's quote  is probably the  most relevant  on the                                                                    
     page, "The right  of smokers to smoke  ends where their                                                                    
     behavior effects the health and wellbeing of others."                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
10:16:51 AM                                                                                                                   
He addressed "Smoke-free Laws in Alaska" as follows:                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
     Half  of Alaska's  population is  protected by  a local                                                                    
     law  from secondhand  smoke at  work and  the remaining                                                                    
     part, largely  in the unorganized boroughs  or boroughs                                                                    
     that do not have healthcare  laws, are not affected. We                                                                    
     also  recently have  support from  the Kodiak  Borough,                                                                    
     and Bristol Bay Native  Corporation just signed on with                                                                    
     this bill, not the  smoke-free Alaska act, but actually                                                                    
     this bill.  82 percent of Alaskans  agree, according to                                                                    
     the Dittman 2012 survey, that  Alaska workers should be                                                                    
     protected  from  secondhand  smoke  in  the  workplace.                                                                    
     Support even  among smokers is strong  for a smoke-free                                                                    
     indoor  workplace laws  according to  Dittman. Alaska's                                                                    
     support  for  smoke-free   indoor  workplaces  is  high                                                                    
     throughout all regions of the state.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STOLTZE  commented that  the bill's  concept is  simple and                                                               
there is  no reason to go  through a sectional analysis.  He said                                                               
he believes that  the committee understands the  politics and the                                                               
public  opinion. He  related that  C. Everett  Koop was  vilified                                                               
when he  was a nominee  for Surgeon  General because he  was pro-                                                               
life and deified when he was anti-tobacco.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
10:18:40 AM                                                                                                                   
DR. JAY  BUTLER, MD,  Chief Medical  Officer/Director, Department                                                               
of Health and Social Services,  Anchorage, Alaska, stated that he                                                               
wants to provide  perspective of a physician as well  as a bit of                                                               
a baseline  skeptic and  touch briefly on  the health  effects of                                                               
secondhand  smoke, but  really focus  on the  health benefits  of                                                               
avoiding smoking environments.  He stated that he  would focus on                                                               
one outcome which is heart attacks, an outcome that is not junk-                                                                
science and not  an idea that is  based on a single  study in the                                                               
journal of irreproducible results.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
DR. BUTLER detailed the link  between heart attacks and cigarette                                                               
smoke as follows:                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     There are  three lines of  evidence, two of  which have                                                                    
     already    been    touched   on.    There's    multiple                                                                    
     epidemiological studies  linking smoke exposure  to the                                                                    
     risk  of  heart attack;  we  also  understand how  this                                                                    
     works, the path  of physiology if you  will, this isn't                                                                    
     magic,  the platelets  become stickier,  the lining  of                                                                    
     the  vessels  in  the   heart  change  function  within                                                                    
     minutes  after tobacco  smoke exposure  for people  who                                                                    
     are non-smokers,  increasing the risk of  a clot, which                                                                    
     is what causes a heart attack.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
     Finally,  I wanted  to really  emphasize the  fact that                                                                    
     taking  cigarette  smoke  outdoors has  been  found  in                                                                    
     numerous places  to reduce the  overall hospitalization                                                                    
     rates for  heart attacks  and in  places as  diverse as                                                                    
     Helena,  Montana; Saskatoon;  to the  entire nation  of                                                                    
     Scotland.  I also  wanted  to stress  that  in most  of                                                                    
     these places,  the enforcement is passive,  there's not                                                                    
     storm  troopers   sweeping  in  with  squirt   guns  to                                                                    
     extinguish  the stogies  the cigar  bars.  It is  worth                                                                    
     pointing  out though  that some  of  the very  earliest                                                                    
     evidence of the very  short term benefits of smoke-free                                                                    
     laws were observed among  barkeepers and tavern owners.                                                                    
     It's also worth noting that  in places where these laws                                                                    
     have  been  in  place  for a  number  of  years,  these                                                                    
     benefits have been sustained  and actually increased as                                                                    
     time passes.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
10:20:56 AM                                                                                                                   
DR. BUTLER explained the impact of cigarette smoke on children                                                                  
as follows:                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     Secondhand smoke exposure has  been associated with the                                                                    
     sudden infant  death syndrome,  respiratory infections,                                                                    
     middle ear  infections, and asthma attacks  in kids; in                                                                    
     fact,  in  Scotland they  found  that  their trends  in                                                                    
     asthma  or hospitalizations  among  children which  had                                                                    
     been  increasing,  part  of a  global  trend,  actually                                                                    
     began to turn after  they passed their smoke-free laws.                                                                    
     It's also worth pointing  out that concerns that smoke-                                                                    
     free laws force  people to smoking indoors  at home has                                                                    
     not been  borne out,  in fact the  data has  shown that                                                                    
     using  Cotinine  in  urine as  a  marker  of  cigarette                                                                    
     exposure,  this marker  has  actually  gone down  among                                                                    
     children in areas where these laws have been enacted.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     We   are  all   concerned  about   the  high   cost  of                                                                    
     healthcare. Avoiding  secondhand smoke helps  avoid the                                                                    
     cost of  illness associated with secondhand  smoke that                                                                    
     employers, government,  and all of the  "average Joes,"                                                                    
     with the exception of Joe Camel, have to bear.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
10:22:15 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR MCGUIRE  asked Dr. Butler to  comment about e-cigarettes.                                                               
She noted that  the bulk of complaints she  has received pertains                                                               
to the bill defining smoking  to include the use of e-cigarettes.                                                               
She revealed  that there have  been some pretty  personal e-mails                                                               
from folks in  her community where individuals at  one point were                                                               
addicted to smoking  nicotine through tobacco use  and have found                                                               
reprieve smoking e-cigarettes as a perceived health benefit.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DR.  BUTLER replied  that  the  role of  e-cigarettes  as a  harm                                                               
reduction tool or even as a  tobacco cessation tool is an ongoing                                                               
debate.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
He pointed out his concerns with e-cigarettes as follows:                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
   · Aerosol exhaled from an e-cigarette is not always easy to                                                                  
     detect unless a person is very close.                                                                                      
   · E-cigarettes normalize smoking behaviors.                                                                                  
   · Using marijuana in an e-cigarette is virtually impossible                                                                  
     to differentiate.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
He reiterated that e-cigarettes are  not regulated by the FDA and                                                               
not  approved as  tobacco cessation  instruments.  He noted  that                                                               
nicotine replacement products already  exist. He revealed that he                                                               
has received  more than  a dozen  emails that  all cite  the same                                                               
study that  addresses contaminants and not  what is intentionally                                                               
in  the liquids.  He  said he  questions  the renormalization  of                                                               
smoking  where e-cigarettes  target  the junior  high school  age                                                               
group  with  flavors like  Candy  Crush,  Vanilla Dream,  Captain                                                               
Crunch, and  Mountain Dew.  He stated  that he  remains skeptical                                                               
and asserted  that e-cigarettes  should be  included in  the bill                                                               
for ease of enforcement.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
10:25:12 AM                                                                                                                   
JOE DARNELL, Investigator, Tobacco  Youth Education & Enforcement                                                               
Program,  Division of  Behavioral  Health,  Alaska Department  of                                                               
Health  and Social  Services, Anchorage,  Alaska, stated  that he                                                               
works on under  aged tobacco enforcement and  compliance. He said                                                               
enforcement  of  SB 1  will  be  done statewide  through  passive                                                               
enforcement with the use of a toll-free number and website.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. DARNELL specified that an  initial complaint will result in a                                                               
letter to let  a business know that a complaint  was received. He                                                               
added that  educational information  about the bill  with details                                                               
on  health  effects will  be  sent  as  well.  He said  a  second                                                               
complaint will  result in a  more strongly worded letter  as well                                                               
as  a follow  up by  a local  coalition or  one of  the statewide                                                               
grantees. He stated that a third  complaint will lead to a follow                                                               
up  in-person. He  opined that  he  does not  anticipate a  third                                                               
complaint  situation. He  noted that  Anchorage has  never had  a                                                               
third complaint  and added that  a second letter has  rarely been                                                               
sent out.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
10:26:52 AM                                                                                                                   
DR.  ROBERT URATA,  MD,  volunteer,  American Heart  Association,                                                               
Juneau, Alaska, revealed that he  was born and raised in Wrangle,                                                               
Alaska and that  he has practiced medicine in  Juneau since 1984.                                                               
He  noted  that  he  has   been  an  American  Heart  Association                                                               
volunteer for the past 15 years.  He stated that he supports SB 1                                                               
with the inclusion of e-cigarettes.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
DR. URATA read the following statement:                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     Every 34  seconds an American  dies of a  heart attack,                                                                    
     every 40 seconds  an American dies of  a stroke. Cancer                                                                    
     and cardiovascular  disease are the number  one and two                                                                    
     causes of death in  Alaska. Secondhand smoke kills over                                                                    
     100,000 Americans  every year and  it also costs  a lot                                                                    
     of money. This state may save  up to $5 million if this                                                                    
     law goes through. Smoke-free  working places are really                                                                    
     important  for  the health  of  this  country and  this                                                                    
     state. In Pueblo,  Colorado, smoke-free ordinance found                                                                    
     a 20 percent gain in  their combined bar and restaurant                                                                    
     sales tax  and a 27  percent decrease in  heart attacks                                                                    
     when they  compared a  year and a  half before  the law                                                                    
     and a  year and a  half after  the law; I  believe this                                                                    
     was  also  reproduced  in  Helena,  Montana  when  they                                                                    
     passed  their  clean air  law.  I  would also  wish  to                                                                    
     include   e-cigarettes   because  there   are   serious                                                                    
     questions  to their  safety. The  FDA  has found  known                                                                    
     toxins in  nicotine, but currently  there are  over 240                                                                    
     products and they are not all  tested, so it is hard to                                                                    
     know what's going  on there. The FDA  is still studying                                                                    
     this and my feeling is  this should be included because                                                                    
     what we do in medicine is  first, "do no harm;" I think                                                                    
     this  should be  included in  this bill  until we  have                                                                    
     more knowledge because harm could  be done. Imagine the                                                                    
     many  lives  saved  if   cigarettes  had  been  studied                                                                    
     properly before putting it on the market. On behalf of                                                                     
      the American Heart Association I urge you to support                                                                      
     this bill and thank you for your time.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
10:29:58 AM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR STOLTZE announced that SB 1 will be held in committee.                                                                    

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
SB1 Sponsor Statement (HSS version).pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 Sectional Analysis (HSS Version) provided by Sponsor.pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 Explanation of Changes from Initial to HSS version.pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 ver I - CS(HSS).pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 ver E - Initial Sponsor Substitute.pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 Fiscal Note #1 - DOT-MVO 2-6-15.pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 Fiscal Note #2 - DOT-IASO 2-6-15.PDF SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 Fiscal Note #3 - DOT-SEF 2-6-15.pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 Fiscal Note #4 - DOT-TMS 2-6-15.pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 Fiscal Note #5 - DCCED-ABC 2-6-15.pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 Fiscal Note #6 - ACS-TRC 2-6-15.pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 Fiscal Note #7 - DHSS-CDPHP 2-6-15.pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 Fiscal Note #8 - DEC-FSS 3-6-15.pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 Sponsor Presentation for SSTA 4-2-15.pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 Supporting Documents - Research Source Docs - Sponsor.pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 Supporting Documents - E-Cigarettes - Sponsor.pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 Supporting Documents - Legal Opinions - Provided by Sponsor.pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 AS 44.29.020 Lethal Effects of Second Hand Smoke.pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 Supporting Documents - SoA Impacts.pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 Supporting Document - AK Public Opinion Poll by Dittman Research 2012.pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 Supporting Documents - News Coverage - Provided by Sponsor.pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 Supporting Documents - News Articles Secondhand Smoke and E-Cigs - Sponsor Provided.pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 Support Documents - Letters to the Editor (Jan-Mar) provided by Sponsor - 3-31-15.pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 Supporting Document - 2014 Surgeon General Report on Smoking Executive Summary.pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 Unique Letters of Support since referral to SSTA (3-13-15 to 3-31-15).pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 Form-Letters of Support since referral to SSTA (3-13-15 to 3-31-15).pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 Unique Letters of Opposition since referral to SSTA (3-13-15 to 3-31-15).pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
SB1 Form-Letters of Opposition since referral to SSTA (3-13-15 to 3-31-15).pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
BINDER #1 (SHSS) - SB 1 Letters of Support - Complete (LARGE FILE).pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
BINDER #2 (SHSS) - SB 1 Resolutions of Support - Complete (LARGE FILE).pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
BINDER #3 (SHSS) - SB 1 Letters of Opposition - Complete (LARGE FILE).pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1
OUTDATED - SB 91 Sectional Analysis - Version H (Initial Version - WITHDRAWN) .pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 91
OUTDATED SB 91 Fiscal Note - DOA-DMV 3-27-15 (Version H).pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 91
OUTDATED SB 91 Fiscal Note - DOA-OPA 3-27-15 (Version H).pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 91
OUTDATED SB 91 Fiscal Note - DOA-PDA 3-27-15 (Version H).pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 91
OUTDATED SB 91 Fiscal Note - DOC-OC 3-31-15 (Version H).pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 91
OUTDATED SB 91 Fiscal Note - LAW-CRIM 3-27-15 (Version H).pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 91
OUTDATED SB 91 Presentation by Sponsor to SSTA 4-2-15 (Version H).pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 91
OUTDATED SB 91 Sponsor Statement - (Version H).pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 91
SB1 Memo Sumary of Public Opinion - Sponsor to HSS - 2-10-15.pdf SSTA 4/2/2015 9:00:00 AM
SB 1