Legislature(2017 - 2018)BUTROVICH 205

03/02/2017 03:30 PM Senate STATE AFFAIRS

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* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+= SJR 2 CONST AM: APPROPRIATION LIMIT TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Testimony <Invitation Only> --
+= SB 48 INS. FOR DEPENDS. OF DECEASED FIRE/POLICE TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Public Testimony --
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled: TELECONFERENCED
+= SB 26 PERM. FUND:DEPOSITS;DIVIDEND;EARNINGS TELECONFERENCED
Moved SB 26 Out of Committee
              SJR 2-CONST AM: APPROPRIATION LIMIT                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
3:37:42 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR DUNLEAVY called  the committee back to  order. He announced                                                               
the consideration of SJR 2.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
He  welcomed  invited  testimony  and  announced  that  Mr.  Penn                                                               
Pfiffner from the  TABOR Foundation will be the  first to address                                                               
the  committee.  He  detailed  that   Mr.  Pfiffner  is  a  state                                                               
representative  from Colorado's  legislature and  has served  for                                                               
eight years. He detailed that  Mr. Piffner's major bills included                                                               
the  enhanced sentences  for  dangerous  pedophiles, the  state's                                                               
full  restitution   policy,  repealed   the  capital   gains  tax                                                               
revision, created performance-based pay  for state employees, and                                                               
wrote major  deregulation bills. He  added that Mr.  Pfiffner has                                                               
taught  college  economics  part-time  for  13  years,  earned  a                                                               
master's degree in  finance from the University  of Colorado, and                                                               
currently serves as  the chairman of the TABOR  Committee and its                                                               
sister organization the TABOR Foundation.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:38:49 PM                                                                                                                    
PENN  R. PFIFFNER,  Chairman, Taxpayer's  Bill of  Rights (TABOR)                                                               
Committee, Lakewood, Colorado, testified in  support of SJR 2. He                                                               
opined that SJR  2 will receive pushback from people  who want to                                                               
see  bigger   and  bigger  government  without   restriction.  He                                                               
suggested  that SJR  2  be recognized  as  a spending  limitation                                                               
rather than  a repeat  of Colorado's TABOR.  He pointed  out that                                                               
Colorado's TABOR is more ambitious  with a larger reach. He noted                                                               
the differences between TABOR and SJR 2 as follows:                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
   · SJR 2 is state-only where Colorado's TABOR has a                                                                           
     restriction on every level of government.                                                                                  
   · SJR 2 has no restriction of debt.                                                                                          
   · SJR 2 has 14 exceptions.                                                                                                   
   · SJR 2 is silent on the rebate of taxes that are collected                                                                  
     above the cap.                                                                                                             
   · SJR 2 does not have election provisions.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
He remarked  that resetting  a spending  cap with  SJR 2  makes a                                                               
great deal of  sense because there is not much  point of having a                                                               
cap that is ineffective.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
3:41:13 PM                                                                                                                    
He  contended that  Alaska's  effective  appropriations cap  will                                                               
mirror  that  of Colorado's  positive  experiences.  He said  the                                                               
overarching  concept  is  to strike  a  healthy  balance  between                                                               
family budgets  and public  goods which  results in  citizens and                                                               
elected  officials asking  the right  questions.  He opined  that                                                               
having a good spending limitation  forces people to ask questions                                                               
that are  related to  prioritizing within  a given  budget rather                                                               
than trying to  fund wild dreams. He set forth  that the value of                                                               
everyone living within a budget  extends to government with smart                                                               
and fair measures that limits  taxes and expenditures limitations                                                               
such as SJR 2.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
He said  Colorado has  seen a very  successful economy  and noted                                                               
that the state did not have  a successful economy before 1992. He                                                               
stressed  that  he  was  not  suggesting  causation  as  much  as                                                               
recognizing  that  some of  TABOR's  opposition  claimed that  it                                                               
would damage  the state's economy.  He pointed out  that Colorado                                                               
has a roaring economy.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR.  PFIFFNER  noted  that  Colorado  has  program  stability  by                                                               
recognizing the  natural inclination  for government to  grow too                                                               
fast in good times  and to over promise and set  up the base that                                                               
is far  too high  when fiscal challenges  come. He  said Colorado                                                               
has seen its  fiscal crises limited, especially  when compared to                                                               
states such  as California and  Illinois, states that  have grown                                                               
their  budgets  immensely  and  then  had  to  adjust  to  fiscal                                                               
challenges.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:44:21 PM                                                                                                                    
He addressed  typical challenges  to government  limitation where                                                               
budgets  and K-12  spending will  be damaged.  He disclosed  that                                                               
Colorado's fiscal  and spending policies have  compared favorably                                                               
to  its neighboring  states. He  added that  naysayers have  said                                                               
Colorado does not  have enough money, but noted  that Colorado is                                                               
one of four  states that spends more  on a local basis  than on a                                                               
state basis.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
3:47:43 PM                                                                                                                    
He addressed  SJR 2 and  opined that  some things have  been done                                                               
that he  thought would  help gain support  and allow  citizens to                                                               
understand the measure better. He  opined that there really is no                                                               
issue  about  rebasing  to  a  lower  level.  He  disclosed  that                                                               
Colorado has dealt with a  troubling aspect through the courts to                                                               
its voter  approval requirement  for new  taxes where  "fees" are                                                               
used.  He said  SJR 2  avoids the  "fee" problem.  He added  that                                                               
states  with successful  expenditure  limitations  place them  in                                                               
their constitution and SJR 2 does  that. He summarized that SJR 2                                                               
takes the right step as a good and effective measure.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR DUNLEAVY  stated that he  wanted to contrast  what Colorado                                                               
has  done  and what  SJR  2  tries  to  accomplish. He  asked  if                                                               
Colorado's TABOR exists on both state and local levels.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR.  PFIFFNER answered  correct. He  pointed out  that Colorado's                                                               
TABOR pertains  beyond what Chair  Dunleavy queried.  He detailed                                                               
that Colorado has  more than 3,400 special  districts, mostly for                                                               
road,  water  and sewer,  in  addition  to library  and  cemetery                                                               
districts.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
3:51:42 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  DUNLEAVY  noted that  SJR  2  strictly pertains  to  state                                                               
spending. He  asked if in  Colorado, any type of  revenue measure                                                               
must be voted on by the people.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR.   PFIFFNER   described   Chair   Dunleavy's   query   as   an                                                               
overstatement. He explained that  new taxes, sunsetting taxes and                                                               
an increase in  tax rates must be approved by  voters, but fiscal                                                               
policy  modifications  that  do  not result  in  an  increase  in                                                               
revenues  are exempt.  He  added that  pension  plan funding  and                                                               
items that deal with fees are also exempt.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR DUNLEAVY  asked if the  same guidelines apply to  local and                                                               
district levels as well.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR. PFIFFNER  answered correct. He detailed  that local districts                                                               
specify their  need for  more debt or  raising taxes  and pointed                                                               
out that local  measures have passed more than 80  percent of the                                                               
time.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
3:54:24 PM                                                                                                                    
BARRY  POULSON, Emeritus  Professor of  Economics, University  of                                                               
Colorado, Boulder, Colorado,  testified in support of  SJR 2 with                                                               
added provisions. He  detailed that he is also an  advisor to the                                                               
American Legislative  Exchange Council (ALEC). He  disclosed that                                                               
Chair Dunleavy asked him to  address Colorado's "Taxpayer Bill of                                                               
Rights" (TABOR) and experience with  "Tax and Expenditure Limits"                                                               
(TEL) in other states.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
He explained the Colorado's history with TELs as follows:                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
   · Colorado was one of the first states to introduce a TEL in                                                                 
     the 1970s.                                                                                                                 
   · Colorado's TEL in the 1970s was not effective because state                                                                
     legislators chose to exempt major parts of the budget from                                                                 
     a limit.                                                                                                                   
   · Colorado's spending was not constrained in the 1980s and                                                                   
     the state was a lot like California where government                                                                       
     spending grew more rapidly than the private economy.                                                                       
   · Colorado's TABOR constitutional amendment initiative was                                                                   
     enacted in 1992.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
He said  TABORs turned out  to be one  of the most  effective tax                                                               
and   spending  limits   in  the   country  through   substantive                                                               
constraints   and  procedural   constraints.  He   detailed  that                                                               
substantive  constraints  limit the  growth  of  spending by  any                                                               
jurisdiction to the  sum of inflation plus  population growth. He                                                               
added  that  any revenue  above  the  limit  must be  rebated  to                                                               
taxpayers.  He  specified  that  procedural  constraints  require                                                               
voter approval for  any increase in taxes,  tax-base, or increase                                                               
in debt.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
He disclosed  that Colorado's TABOR  resulted in  surplus revenue                                                               
in  the  late  1990s  where   over  $3  billion  was  rebated  to                                                               
taxpayers. He added that the  TABOR set the stage for significant                                                               
tax reductions at  all levels of government  where Colorado ended                                                               
up with  one of the best  business tax climates that  resulted in                                                               
the  state  experiencing  the second  highest  rate  of  economic                                                               
growth of any state in the country.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
3:58:27 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. POULSON detailed  that Colorado ran into  problems with TABOR                                                               
in 2001 when  the state experienced a sharp recession  with an 18                                                               
percent fall  in revenue  that resulted  in the  "ratchet effect"                                                               
where  surplus revenue  was  rebated to  taxpayers  prior to  the                                                               
state fully  recovering from the  recession. He disclosed  that a                                                               
referendum  in 2005  resulted in  a timeout  for TABOR  from 2005                                                               
through 2009 and TABOR was applied  again in 2010. He pointed out                                                               
that  Colorado's economy  recovered well  from its  recession and                                                               
the state is now growing more  rapidly than most other states. He                                                               
opined  that   Colorado's  positive   tax  climate  has   been  a                                                               
significant  factor in  the state's  rapid recovery  and economic                                                               
growth.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
He addressed procedural limits in  TABOR regarding voter approval                                                               
for  increased  taxes,  tax-base,  and   debt  at  all  level  of                                                               
government. He said for two  decades, Colorado citizens have been                                                               
voting  on hundreds  of measures  proposing  increased taxes  and                                                               
increased  debt.  Measures at  the  municipal  level have  passed                                                               
about 50  percent of the time,  but at the state  level taxpayers                                                               
have been  more stringent. He  disclosed that only  two minor-tax                                                               
increases and  a debt increase  have been approved over  the past                                                               
two  decades.  He set  forth  that  citizens  have been  able  to                                                               
constrain the  growth of government  significantly at  all levels                                                               
and especially at the state  level because of both the procedural                                                               
limits and the substantive limits in TABOR.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
He reiterated  that he  serves as advisor  to ALEC  and disclosed                                                               
that model  legislation for tax  and spending limits  was drafted                                                               
by  ALEC using  Colorado's TABOR  as  a model.  He detailed  that                                                               
refinements  were made  in ALEC's  model  legislation to  include                                                               
providing for  an emergency fund  and a capital fund  via surplus                                                               
revenue. He added  that additional surplus revenue  is rebated or                                                               
offset by tax cuts.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
4:02:39 PM                                                                                                                    
He opined  that Alaska's TEL is  poorly designed and as  a result                                                               
the limit  has increased more  rapidly than state revenue  so the                                                               
TEL never  constrains anything. He  said a TEL must  be carefully                                                               
designed  to achieve  a  desired result.  He  concurred with  Mr.                                                               
Pfiffner  that  SJR 2  appears  to  be  a well-designed  tax  and                                                               
spending  limit that  will be  much more  effective than  the TEL                                                               
that Alaska currently  has in place. He opined  that imposing the                                                               
limit on  appropriation based on population  growth and inflation                                                               
will constrain the  growth of state spending  very effectively in                                                               
addition to  providing a  much more  stable spending  growth over                                                               
the business cycle. He said  Alaska, like many energy states, has                                                               
revenue volatility  that results in spending  volatility. He said                                                               
SJR  2 is  an important  step in  the right  direction. He  added                                                               
Alaska's  emergency fund  and  capital  construction fund  should                                                               
also assist in what the state is attempting to achieve.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
4:04:27 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. POULSON addressed problems that  Alaska might expect with SJR
2 as follows:                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
   · TELs often put pressure on the state to fund programs with                                                                 
     fees.                                                                                                                      
   · SJR 2 only constrains spending at the state level.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
He  suggested that  the state  address  "fees" by  having a  very                                                               
strict definition  of user  fees and  distinguish user  fees from                                                               
taxes so  that the state  is sure  to only restrict  tax revenues                                                               
and  expenditures.  He added  that  unfunded  mandates should  be                                                               
limited by the state on  local governments and suggested that the                                                               
restriction be included in SJR 2.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
He  recounted that  he  has  suggested in  the  past that  Alaska                                                               
legislators  consider requiring  a  procedural  limit that  would                                                               
require voter  approval for  increased taxes  and debt.  He noted                                                               
that he has been told that his  suggestion was a step too far. He                                                               
said legislators should  reconsider his voter-approval suggestion                                                               
as either part  of SJR 2 or as separate  legislation. He asserted                                                               
that  the  procedural  limits that  require  voter  approval  for                                                               
increased  taxes and  debt have  proven to  be very  important in                                                               
Colorado and other  states. He opined that  the procedural limits                                                               
really do  allow citizens to  determine how much  government they                                                               
want  and how  much  they  are willing  to  finance  in terms  of                                                               
government spending.  He pointed  out that  outside of  the U.S.,                                                               
citizens of Switzerland  have been voting on  increased taxes and                                                               
debt for  more than a  century and they  have created one  of the                                                               
strongest fiscal systems in the world.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
4:07:50 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  DUNLEAVY asked  that  Mr. Poulson  explain  how TABOR  has                                                               
either  negatively  or  positively  impacted  Colorado's  private                                                               
economy.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR.  POULSON  replied  that he  often  answers  Chair  Dunleavy's                                                               
question  by contrasting  Colorado and  California. He  explained                                                               
that  Colorado   and  California  had  very   similar  government                                                               
spending  patterns in  the 1980s  where government  spending grew                                                               
much more  rapidly than the  state economy; in fact,  both states                                                               
introduced tax and spending limits.  He disclosed that California                                                               
gutted  their tax  and  spending limits  by  shifting many  state                                                               
programs and  expenditures off budget  to avoid tax  and spending                                                               
limits.  California  ultimately  experienced  a  continued  rapid                                                               
growth of government spending where  the state ended up with high                                                               
deficit and  debt levels where  their economy  has underperformed                                                               
over  the last  two decades  comparted to  Colorado. He  said his                                                               
experience is  that with an  effective tax and spending  limit in                                                               
place, Alaska can  create a better business-tax  climate with the                                                               
right incentives  created for business  investment and  growth, a                                                               
scenario  that Colorado  continues to  do due  to the  success of                                                               
constraining government growth.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
4:09:57 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR DUNLEAVY  asked if Colorado's improved  business climate is                                                               
due  to businesses  not having  to  worry about  a predatory  tax                                                               
regime.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR.  POULSON  answered  yes. He  disclosed  that  Colorado's  tax                                                               
climate  rates among  the  top-ten states  in  terms of  business                                                               
climate. He opined that TABOR  allows citizens to decide how much                                                               
taxes  they  are willing  to  pay,  how  much spending  they  are                                                               
willing  to incur,  and how  much  government they  want and  are                                                               
willing to pay for.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR DUNLEAVY asked  Mr. Poulson to address  Colorado's debt and                                                               
how it relates to having TABOR in place.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
4:12:33 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. POULSON admitted that the state  has figured out a way around                                                               
debt limits.  He explained that Colorado's  original constitution                                                               
prohibited  any new  debt without  citizen approval.  He detailed                                                               
that   state  and   local  governments   have  used   non-general                                                               
obligation  debt;  for  example,  certificates  of  participation                                                               
designate  a specific  revenue stream  to  pay off  debt and  the                                                               
courts have ruled that the debt  is not a general obligation debt                                                               
and therefore not  subject to the TABOR limit or  to the original                                                               
constitutional  limit.  He  said  Colorado  has  not  necessarily                                                               
constrained debt in  the way that many might  anticipate, but the                                                               
state  has limited  debt  compared to  what  would have  occurred                                                               
without  TABOR.  He  revealed that  Colorado  has  proposed  five                                                               
different measures  over the  last two  decades to  increase debt                                                               
and only one measure has passed.  He remarked that TABOR has been                                                               
important,   but  has   not   been   100-percent  successful   in                                                               
constraining debt.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
4:14:06 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  DUNLEAVY  asked  Mr.  Poulson   if  TABOR's  restraint  on                                                               
Colorado's  growth  of  government   has  placed  more  money  in                                                               
citizen's pockets and encouraged new business development.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. POULSON answered yes.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR DUNLEAVY  pointed out  that SJR  2 is  not based  on ALEC's                                                               
model  legislation, but  rather  a modification  of the  existing                                                               
constitutional amendment that  has been in place  in Alaska since                                                               
1982 and  reaffirmed in  1986. He  reiterated that  the amendment                                                               
was  a result  of increased  government spending  when the  state                                                               
started  to receive  large  sums  of oil  revenue  in the  1970s;                                                               
however, the  formula would require  $10 billion  in unrestricted                                                               
general funds  to hit the limit.  He said the idea  is to revisit                                                               
the constitutional amendment to  reflect today's new realities to                                                               
restrain government's growth and  encourage investment from other                                                               
industries.  He emphasized  that  the discussion  on  SJR 2  will                                                               
continue.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
4:16:22 PM                                                                                                                    
MATTHEW  MITCHELL, Senior  Research  Fellow,  Mercatus Center  at                                                               
George  Mason  University,   Arlington,  Virginia,  testified  in                                                               
support of SJR 2 and  provided suggestions on fiscal policies. He                                                               
disclosed  that  the Mercatus  Center  has  been studying  fiscal                                                               
policies and institutions that govern  them for several years. He                                                               
detailed that the Mercatus Center  has consulted decades of peer-                                                               
reviewed  academic research  in  addition to  their own  analysis                                                               
using comprehensive  data sets and the  best empirical techniques                                                               
that are available.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
He set forth that there are three lessons to concentrate on:                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
   1. Rules matter and rules are often a better alternative to                                                                  
     everyday politics:                                                                                                         
        · Sustainable solutions to budget problems require                                                                      
          institutional change versus short term remedies.                                                                      
        · Institutional change:                                                                                                 
             ¾Changes  to the  rules  that  shape the  political                                                               
               legislative and budgeting process.                                                                               
             ¾States with  good institutions  or good  rules are                                                               
               more likely to make good budgetary decisions.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
   2. Rule details make a big difference and small changes can                                                                  
     set states on very different paths:                                                                                        
        · Characteristics that make for a good tax and                                                                          
          expenditure limit (TEL):                                                                                              
             ¾Effective  TELs have  a statistically  significant                                                               
               effect  on  state  spending  as  measured  by  per                                                               
               capita spending.                                                                                                 
             ¾Effective   TELs  target   spending  rather   than                                                               
               revenue. Alaska's TEL targets spending.                                                                          
             ¾Effective  TELs limit  budget  growth via  formula                                                               
               that looks at the  sum of inflation and population                                                               
               growth. Alaska's  TEL is focused on  inflation and                                                               
               population growth.                                                                                               
             ¾Effective    TELs    are   codified    into    the                                                               
               constitution, as is Alaska's.                                                                                    
             ¾Effective TELs require a  super majority or public                                                               
               vote to be  overwritten, as is Alaska's.  A lot of                                                               
               states have  tax and  expenditure limits  that can                                                               
               simply be overwritten with simple majority vote.                                                                 
             ¾Effective  TELs  prohibit   unfunded  mandates  to                                                               
               lower governments, Alaska's does not.                                                                            
             ¾Effective  TELs  immediately  refund  any  revenue                                                               
               collected  more than  taxpayers' limits,  Alaska's                                                               
               does  not. Returning  money does  not provide  the                                                               
               state with  a chance  to spend  as well  as giving                                                               
               people some  "skin in  the game"  in terms  of tax                                                               
               and expenditure limits.                                                                                          
        · Use an appropriate base by picking a year that is                                                                     
          neither     extraordinarily     high    in     revenue,                                                               
          extraordinarily tight,  or a  recession year.  The base                                                               
          should be founded  on a year where  spending was deemed                                                               
          prudent.  The base  should not  be  "just the  previous                                                               
          year"  in  order  to  avoid  the  "ratcheting  effect."                                                               
          Alaska's  TEL  is based  on  1981  and the  Legislature                                                               
          should make sure the year is appropriate.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
   3. Alternative rules for fiscal budgeting other than tax and                                                                 
     expenditure limits:                                                                                                        
        · Item reduction vetoes are effective. States that have                                                                 
          item  reduction  vetoes  spend less.  Alaska  has  item                                                               
          reduction vetoes.                                                                                                     
        · Separate spending and taxing functions into two                                                                       
          separate  committees  in   each  chamber.  States  with                                                               
          separate taxing  and spending committees  spend between                                                               
          $300 and  $400 less per  person and tend to  spend more                                                               
          prudently.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
4:26:48 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. MITCHELL noted  that there are some rules that  do not always                                                               
work the way  people think they will. He pointed  out that states                                                               
that have  biannual budgets spend significantly  more than states                                                               
that have annual  budget cycles. He detailed that  states with an                                                               
annual budget cycle spend $120 less person per year.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR DUNLEAVY  asked Mr.  Mitchell to  identify a  "model state"                                                               
that have  separate taxing and expenditure  committees that seems                                                               
to work well.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MITCHELL replied  that Arizona,  Colorado, Utah,  and Nevada                                                               
have separate taxing and spending committees.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
4:29:06 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR DUNLEAVY held SJR 2 in committee.                                                                                         

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
SB 48 - DOA Fiscal Note.pdf SSTA 3/2/2017 3:30:00 PM
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SB 48 - DPS Updated Fiscal Note.pdf SSTA 3/2/2017 3:30:00 PM
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SB 48 - Letter of Support Teamsters Local 959.pdf SSTA 3/2/2017 3:30:00 PM
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SB 48 - Brandy Johnson Testimony.pdf SSTA 3/2/2017 3:30:00 PM
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SJR 2 -Mitchell, Mercatus Testimony.pdf SSTA 3/2/2017 3:30:00 PM
SJR 2
SB 48 - Mayor Matherly Letter of Support.pdf SSTA 3/2/2017 3:30:00 PM
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CS SB 48, Version O.pdf SSTA 3/2/2017 3:30:00 PM
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SB 48 - STA CS Summary of Changes.pdf SSTA 3/2/2017 3:30:00 PM
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