Legislature(2021 - 2022)BUTROVICH 205

05/06/2021 03:30 PM Senate STATE AFFAIRS

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* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+= HB 3 DEFINITION OF "DISASTER": CYBERSECURITY TELECONFERENCED
Moved CSHB 3(JUD) Out of Committee
+= SB 83 ELECTIONS; VOTING; BALLOT REQS TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Invited & Public Testimony --
+ SB 82 ELECTIONS; ELECTION INVESTIGATIONS TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Invited & Public Testimony --
*+ SB 115 ADDRESS CONFIDENTIALITY PROGRAM TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Invited & Public Testimony --
*+ SB 1 CHOKEHOLD BAN TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Invited & Public Testimony --
*+ SB 4 PROHIBIT PEACE OFF. SHOOT MOVING VEHICLE TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Invited & Public Testimony --
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
**Streamed live on AKL.tv**
+= SB 108 STATE RECOGNITION OF TRIBES TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
+= SB 109 COUNCIL FOR ALASKA NATIVE LANGUAGES TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
+= SJR 12 SOCIAL SECURITY BENEFIT REDUCTION REPEAL TELECONFERENCED
Moved SJR 12 Out of Committee
+= SB 91 DETENTION OF MINORS TELECONFERENCED
Moved CSSB 91(STA) Out of Committee
+= SB 117 PROCUREMENT; CONSTRUCTION; CONTRACTS TELECONFERENCED
Moved SB 117 Out of Committee
               SB 108-STATE RECOGNITION OF TRIBES                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
3:36:14 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR SHOWER announced  the consideration of SENATE  BILL NO. 108                                                               
"An Act  providing for state recognition  of federally recognized                                                               
tribes; and providing for an effective date."                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
3:36:37 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR DONNY  OLSON, Alaska  State Legislature,  Juneau, Alaska,                                                               
sponsor  of SB  108,  stated that  this  legislation proposes  to                                                               
formally  recognize  the  tribes  in Alaska,  which  are  already                                                               
recognized by the federal government  and listed in the Federally                                                               
Recognized  Tribal List  Act  of 1994.  He  highlighted that  the                                                               
Alaska  Supreme  Court  and the  executive  branch  already  have                                                               
recognized tribes in Alaska. In the  1999 Baker v. John case, the                                                               
Alaska Supreme Court  made this the law of the  state and in 2017                                                               
the  Alaska  attorney  general issued  a  memo  outlining  tribal                                                               
recognition.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR OLSON  stated that the intent  of SB 108 is  to reconcile                                                               
the government  of Alaska  with its  First Peoples  and declaring                                                               
this formal state  policy is the first step into  the future with                                                               
tribes as partners rather than adversaries.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  OLSON stated  that SB  108 does  not expand  the current                                                               
rights  of established  tribes,  it does  not  obligate any  more                                                               
state resources to  tribes, and it does not  diminish the state's                                                               
ability to manage  its public resources. SB  108 simply dignifies                                                               
the  tribal citizens  of  Alaska by  recognizing  them as  tribal                                                               
people.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
3:39:04 PM                                                                                                                    
At ease                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
3:40:10 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR SHOWER reconvened the meeting.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
3:40:31 PM                                                                                                                    
KEN   TRUITT,   Staff,   Senator  Donny   Olson,   Alaska   State                                                               
Legislature, Juneau, Alaska,  advised that while SB  108 has just                                                               
three  operative  sentences,  it   has  some  large  concepts  to                                                               
consider.  He  reviewed  the  supporting  materials  in  members'                                                               
packets starting  with President Nixon's 1970  special address on                                                               
Indian  affairs, which  he said  is still  the most  succinct and                                                               
insightful  statement  of  the federal  Indian  policy  of  self-                                                               
determination.  The   Baker  v.   John  case  that   the  sponsor                                                               
referenced, was a  landmark moment when the  Alaska Supreme Court                                                               
determined the existence and  recognition of federally recognized                                                               
tribes in the state. He  noted that former Attorney General Jahna                                                               
Lindemuth's  exposition  of tribes  in  Alaska  was also  in  the                                                               
packets.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. TRUITT  spoke to the sponsor  statement for SB 108  that read                                                               
as follows:                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     Senate  Bill 108  proposes  to  formally recognize  the                                                                    
     tribes  in  this state  and  the  peoples who  governed                                                                    
     themselves  for  multiple millennia  before  statehood.                                                                    
     The  federal  government  has   a  special  and  unique                                                                    
     relationship  with tribes  that through  this bill  the                                                                    
     state would acknowledge.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     Alaska  obtained statehood  during the  era of  federal                                                                    
     Indian policy  where the  federal government  sought to                                                                    
     terminate  its  trust   relationship  with  its  tribal                                                                    
     people  and   force  them   to  abandon   their  tribal                                                                    
     identity, cultures, languages, and  ways of life. While                                                                    
     the federal government embraced  needed change and went                                                                    
     on  to  pass  the   Self  Determination  and  Education                                                                    
     Assistance  Act in  1975, Alaska's  state constitution,                                                                    
     and  state  policy, are  still  relics  of the  painful                                                                    
     past. We  have clung to  this policy to  our collective                                                                    
     peril as  all the peoples  of this state  have suffered                                                                    
     because of it.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
     Many  of the  struggles facing  Alaska today,  from the                                                                    
     public safety  crisis, suicide, the epidemic  of sexual                                                                    
     assault   and   domestic   violence  have   only   been                                                                    
     reinforced by the state's policy  of telling its tribal                                                                    
     peoples   that  their   form  of   government  has   no                                                                    
     existence, no standing, and no recognition.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     It is time to stop this  policy and break from the past                                                                    
     and usher in a new era  that seeks to reconcile all the                                                                    
     state's peoples one to another.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
     Senate Bill  108 serves as  a first step, by  making it                                                                    
     the  formal state  policy that  the state's  indigenous                                                                    
     peoples  have  their  own   governments  and  that  the                                                                    
     government of the  state of Alaska will  no longer deny                                                                    
     their  existence. This  provides  for  not only  formal                                                                    
     recognition  in   our  statutes,  but  a   roadmap  for                                                                    
     healing,  wholeness, and  restoration  of all  Alaska's                                                                    
     people and communities.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
3:43:22 PM                                                                                                                    
R.  TRUITT  emphasized that  this  legislation  is still  needed,                                                               
despite the Supreme Court's declaration  of the law in the state,                                                               
because it  is the  legislature's role  to establish  and declare                                                               
the official policy  of the state. It is not  the governor's role                                                               
to  declare  state  policy,   despite  former  Governor  Hickel's                                                               
statement that  Alaska was  one people and  did not  have tribes.                                                               
While that  might have  been what the  governor felt,  Mr. Truitt                                                               
said  it was  not the  governor's role  to declare  state policy.                                                               
Making state  policy is the  legislature's role and that  is part                                                               
of  the reasoning  behind  the formal  recognition  of tribes  in                                                               
statute.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
3:45:55 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. TRUITT explained that SB  108 declares the end of termination                                                               
era  thinking as  the  official  state policy,  which  is a  step                                                               
toward  aligning   with  the  federal   Indian  policy   of  self                                                               
determination. What  self determination  looks like on  the state                                                               
level  will take  some conversation,  he  said, but  it needs  to                                                               
start by acknowledging that tribes  not only exist in Alaska, but                                                               
they  are  also  properly  here. He  posited  that  this  session                                                               
underscores that  point given that  the legislature  received its                                                               
vaccinations from the tribal health provider for this region.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
3:47:35 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  TRUITT presented  the following  sectional  analysis for  SB
108:                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Section 1 contains  legislative findings and intent  that will be                                                             
uncodified. This  was added  to the bill  that was  introduced in                                                               
the previous legislature.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     Section 2.  This  is a technical change and  could have                                                                  
     been  included   in  a  revisor's   bill.    In   2016,                                                                    
     provisions from  chapter 14 of title  25 of the  United                                                                    
     States  Code  were  reorganized.    As  a  result,  the                                                                    
     Federally  Recognized Indian  Tribe  List Act  of  1994                                                                    
     received a different  section number in the U.S.  Code.                                                                    
     The operative  provision of this bill  in Section 4  of                                                                    
     the  bill  references  this  act.    The  proposed  new                                                                    
     statute in Section 4 cross references  AS 23.20.520 and                                                                    
     so  Legislative  Legal  is  suggesting  that   the  new                                                                    
     section number  in  the U.S.  Code be  updated in  this                                                                    
     statute.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     Sections  3 and  4.   Sections 3  and  4 are  technical                                                                  
     changes.   The proposed  new statute of  this bill  was                                                                    
     deemed  to  be codified  in  AS  44.03  by  Legislative                                                                    
     Legal.   This chapter  of title 44  contains only  four                                                                    
     statutes   that   deal   with   state   ownership   and                                                                    
     jurisdiction of offshore water and submerged  lands and                                                                    
     rules  of  statutory  construction  for   the  chapter.                                                                    
     Because the  proposed  new statute  of this  bill is  a                                                                    
     completely   different  concept   than   the   existing                                                                    
     statutes  within  AS  44.03,  clarifying  language  was                                                                    
     inserted  to  accommodate  the  proposed   new  statute                                                                    
     within this chapter.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     Section  5.   This section  contains  the proposed  new                                                                  
     statute  which acknowledges  the unique  status  tribes                                                                    
     have  with the  federal  government  and makes  it  the                                                                    
     states official  policy that  the state recognizes  the                                                                    
     federally  recognized   tribes  within  the  state   of                                                                    
     Alaska.   The list  of federally  recognized tribes  is                                                                    
     codified in the  U.S. Code and this statute  references                                                                    
     that  act.     This  section  makes  clear  that   this                                                                    
     recognition  is  in  no  way  intended  to  affect  the                                                                    
     federal  trust   responsibility  the  U.S.   Government                                                                    
     extends to  tribes nor  is it  an attempt  to create  a                                                                    
     state trust responsibility to tribes.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Section 6 is the effective date.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
3:51:17 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR SHOWER asked the sponsor how  he would respond to those who                                                               
feel this legislation would infringe on state rights.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
3:52:53 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  OLSON  replied  the  intent is  not  to  cause  conflict                                                               
between  state  rights and  tribal  rights.  He deferred  further                                                               
comment to Mr. Truitt                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR. TRUITT  offered an historical perspective.  He explained that                                                               
one  reason the  framers of  the U.S.  Constitution replaced  the                                                               
Articles of  Confederation was because it  granted supreme rights                                                               
to each of  the colonies, including the issue  of Indian affairs.                                                               
Because there was  no uniformity among the 13 colonies  as to how                                                               
to work  with the tribes,  the framers of the  constitution wrote                                                               
the  Indian  Commerce  Clause. The  colonies  relinquished  their                                                               
exclusive  control over  Indian  affairs and  made  it a  federal                                                               
question, which it has been to this day.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
He confirmed the sponsor's statement  that SB 108 does not expand                                                               
any rights  that tribes  have now by  virtue of  their recognized                                                               
status.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR SHOWER commented that this  will be well debated because of                                                               
the strong  feelings on  the issue.  He opined  that it  was past                                                               
time for the discussion.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
3:56:03 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR KAWASAKI  thanked the sponsor and  expressed appreciation                                                               
for the history lesson from Mr. Truitt.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
3:56:54 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR REINBOLD  asked the sponsor  if Alaska Native  history is                                                               
required in public schools.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:57:31 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR OLSON  replied he was  not aware of that  requirement and                                                               
the bill  has nothing  to do  with any  curriculum the  state may                                                               
require.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR REINBOLD  said she  just wondered  if tribal  issues were                                                               
discussed in the curriculum at any time.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR OLSON  restated his previous  answer and said he  was not                                                               
aware of any discussion about curriculum.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:59:51 PM                                                                                                                    
NATASHA SINGH, General Counsel,  Tanana Chiefs Conference (Tanana                                                               
Chiefs),  Fairbanks, Alaska,  co-delivered a  presentation titled                                                               
Recognition  of  Alaska Tribes.  She  stated  that Tanana  Chiefs                                                               
represents  37  federally  recognized  tribes, and  she  was  co-                                                               
presenting   with  Joy   Anderson,   general   counsel  for   the                                                               
Association  of Village  Council  Presidents  that represents  56                                                               
federally  recognized  tribes.  She  began  the  presentation  by                                                               
paraphrasing the text on slide 2 that read as follows:                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     Native peoples and Tribes have existed in the Americas                                                                     
     from time immemorial.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
      "Before the coming of the Europeans, the tribes were                                                                      
     self-governing sovereign political communities."                                                                           
     -John v. Baker, Alaska Supreme Court                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
4:01:55 PM                                                                                                                    
JOY  ANDERSON, General  Counsel, Association  of Village  Council                                                               
Presidents, Bethel, Alaska,  co-delivered the presentation titled                                                               
Recognition  of  Alaska Tribes.  She  explained  that tribes  are                                                               
domestic  dependent nations,  which  is the  legal  term for  all                                                               
federally recognized tribes, including  those in Alaska. They are                                                               
sovereign governments that  are subject only to  the authority of                                                               
the United  States. She  suggested the members  read the  list on                                                               
slide 3 that  describes the characteristics of  tribes. The slide                                                               
read as follows:                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
        xrhombus Inherent powers and authorities with self-governance                                                           
          of internal affairs e.g. type of government; tribal                                                                   
          membership                                                                                                            
        xrhombus Tribes exercise all powers, unless those powers have                                                           
          been expressly limited by Congress                                                                                    
        xrhombus Regulate matters pertaining to tribal members, e.g.                                                            
          taxes, property, members' conduct                                                                                     
        xrhombus Immune from lawsuits                                                                                           
        xrhombus Tribes are not state or local governments; political                                                           
          subdivisions or agencies or instrumentalities of the                                                                  
          federal or state governments; tax exempt organizations                                                                
                                                                                                                                
4:02:54 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. ANDERSON said the name of  the bill is very important because                                                               
it  recognizes that  tribes are  already in  Alaska. It  does not                                                               
create tribes or expand any powers.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
4:03:10 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. SINGH briefly  reviewed the history of  tribes since Columbus                                                               
arrived  in the  Americas and  emphasized the  point that  tribes                                                               
have rights and  a relationship with the  federal government with                                                               
or  without  SB  108  and recognition  by  the  legislature.  She                                                               
directed attention  to the  timeline on  slide 5  that identifies                                                               
the progression  of the federal  Indian policy  periods, starting                                                               
with the  1492-1820 Colonial Era  where tribes  were specifically                                                               
referenced  in the  constitution. The  subsequent federal  Indian                                                               
policy periods  were the  removal/relocation era  from 1820-1850;                                                               
the reservation/treaty  making era from 1850-1887;  the allotment                                                               
&  assimilation era  from 1887-1934;  the Indian  self-government                                                               
era from 1934-1953;  the termination era from  1953-1960s and the                                                               
self  determination   era  from  1960s-present.  She   noted  the                                                               
committee's time constraints  and said she would  not detail each                                                               
policy period                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MS. SINGH  related that the  Alaska Native Claims  Settlement Act                                                               
was negotiated  and signed at  the end of the  termination policy                                                               
period, which was followed by  the self determination policy that                                                               
was championed  by President  Nixon. She said  the point  is that                                                               
the current policy  is the only successful  federal Indian policy                                                               
in  the  history  of  the relationship  between  tribes  and  the                                                               
federal government.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
4:04:47 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. ANDERSON  reviewed slides 6-8.  She stated that in  1831, the                                                               
Marshall  court issued  a trilogy  of decisions  that established                                                               
the  principles  that are  the  foundation  for the  relationship                                                               
between tribes and the federal  government. She noted that one of                                                               
the decisions  established the definition of  "Domestic Dependent                                                               
Nation." She directed attention to  slide 7 that encapsulates the                                                               
three  cases: Johnson  v. M'Intosh,  Cherokee Nation  v. Georgia,                                                               
and Worcester v. Georgia. The slide read as follow:                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
4:05:33 PM                                                                                                                    
        xrhombus Aboriginal land claims: Aboriginal people retain                                                             
          the  rights of  use and  occupancy, that  only the                                                                    
          United  States  government can  settle  aboriginal                                                                    
          land claims,  and that the  U.S. has a  legal duty                                                                    
          to protect aboriginal title  until land claims are                                                                    
          officially settled.                                                                                                   
        xrhombus Tribal Authority: Tribes are nations with the                                                                
          authority  to  govern  themselves. The  source  of                                                                    
          their authority  to govern is  "inherent," meaning                                                                    
          that  it comes  from  tribes being  self-governing                                                                    
          long  before explorers  and settlers  came to  the                                                                    
          Americas.                                                                                                             
        xrhombus Federal Trust Responsibility: The   federal                                                                  
          government has a  responsibility to protect Indian                                                                    
          lands  and  resources,  and to  provide  essential                                                                    
          services  to Indian  people. This  comes from  the                                                                    
          fact  that the  federal government  took away  the                                                                    
          vast  majority  of  Indian lands,  and  in  return                                                                    
          promised to provide these things.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
4:06:13 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. ANDERSON  stated that in  1867 Russia sold the  United States                                                               
its  claim  to  Alaska  through  the  Treaty  of  Cession,  which                                                               
included the following statement:                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     The uncivilized tribes will be subject to such laws and                                                                    
     regulations as the United States may, from time to time,                                                                   
     adopt in regard to aboriginal tribes of that country.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
It is an  example of the way that  colonialism treated indigenous                                                               
people as  inferior, but  it is also  clear evidence  that tribes                                                               
existed  in  Alaska.  The  treaty   recognized  that  Russia  had                                                               
exercised power over tribes in Alaska  and it ceded that power to                                                               
the United States.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
4:07:08 PM                                                                                                                    
MS.  SINGH emphasized  that the  United States  recognizes tribes                                                               
because it is  in the constitution. She described  that point and                                                               
the  success   of  the   current  self-determination   policy  as                                                               
important takeaways.  That policy has had  bipartisan support for                                                               
four decades  and it  has worked  to improve  Native communities.                                                               
The Indian  Self-Determination Act of  1975 was a major  piece of                                                               
legislation  that   allows  tribes   to  identify   services  the                                                               
government  is  obligated  to  provide  and  contract  for  those                                                               
services  through either  the  Bureau of  Indian  Affairs or  the                                                               
Indian Health Service.  Tribes are doing that in  Alaska and that                                                               
is why the  rollout of the COVID-19 vaccine was  so successful in                                                               
Alaska's tribal communities.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
4:08:41 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. SINGH directed attention to  the bulleted points of Executive                                                               
Order 13175 of 2000. It read as follows:                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
        xrhombus Established regular and meaningful consultation                                                                
          and collaboration  with tribes in  the development                                                                    
          of    federal    policies   that    have    tribal                                                                    
          implications.                                                                                                         
        xrhombus Recognizes that the United States has a unique                                                                 
          legal relationship with  Indian tribal governments                                                                    
          as set  forth in the U.S.  Constitution, treaties,                                                                    
          statutes,  Executive  Orders,   and  U.S.  Supreme                                                                    
          Court decisions.                                                                                                      
        xrhombus Confirms that the U.S. recognizes Indian tribes                                                                
          as   "domestic   dependent   nations   under   its                                                                    
          protection."                                                                                                          
        xrhombus Recognizes a trust relationship with Indian                                                                    
          tribes.                                                                                                               
        xrhombus Recognizes the right of Indian tribes to self-                                                                 
          government,    tribal    authority    and    self-                                                                    
          determination.                                                                                                        
        xrhombus All federal agencies are to respect Indian tribal                                                              
          self-government and authority.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MS  SINGH restated  that Alaska  tribes have  had a  relationship                                                               
with  the  federal  government  and   will  continue  to  have  a                                                               
relationship with or without passage of SB 108.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
4:09:40 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. SINGH credited Mr. Truitt with  giving a brief history of the                                                               
earlier position  of the  executive branch  in Alaska,  which was                                                               
that tribes did  not exist. She said the cases  cited on slide 14                                                               
demonstrate that  part of  the termination  era was  an effective                                                               
shift   to  eliminate   tribes   in   Alaska.  However,   history                                                               
demonstrates  that only  Congress has  that power;  the State  of                                                               
Alaska is unable to do that. Slide 14 cited the following cases:                                                                
                                                                                                                                
        xrhombus  Native Village of Stevens v. Alaska Management &                                                              
          Planning  (Alaska  1988)-"There  are not  now  and                                                                    
          never have been tribes of Indians in Alaska as                                                                        
          that term is used in federal Indian Law."                                                                             
        xrhombus Alaska Administrative Order No. 125 (1991)-"State                                                              
          of    Alaska   opposes    expansion   of    tribal                                                                    
          governmental powers and the creation of 'Indian                                                                       
          Country' in Alaska."                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
She highlighted that these cases  were overturned and reversed as                                                               
lawmakers became educated about federal Indian law.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
4:10:54 PM                                                                                                                    
MS.  ANDERSON reviewed  the federal  government responses  to the                                                               
cases cited on slide 14, starting  in 1993 with the Department of                                                               
Interior  (DOI) Sansonetti  Opinion. It  controverted the  Alaska                                                               
Supreme  Court analyses,  observing that  the federal  government                                                               
had recognized tribes  in Alaska for many years  and treated them                                                               
as  such.  She reported  that  DOI  issued  a list  of  federally                                                               
recognized  tribes in  Alaska nine  months later.  Then in  1994,                                                               
Congress  required  the  lists of  recognized  tribes,  including                                                               
those in Alaska, to be published  annually. That was the List Act                                                               
and  all   versions  since  1994  have   included  the  federally                                                               
recognized tribes in Alaska.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
4:11:54 PM                                                                                                                    
MS.  ANDERSON  reviewed the  current  position  of the  State  of                                                               
Alaska as to the recognition of  tribes that is outlined on slide                                                               
16.  She said  the state's  position  has shifted  over the  last                                                               
several  decades. Baker  v. John  was a  landmark case  where the                                                               
Alaska Supreme Court reversed itself  on the Stevens decision and                                                               
recognized the  existence and sovereignty  of tribes and  some of                                                               
the  powers  they exercise.  In  2018,  an Alaska  Administrative                                                               
Order by Governor Walker recognized  tribes by stating that there                                                               
was a  need to  improve government  to government  relations with                                                               
Alaska tribes. She said that  was preceded by the 2017 Department                                                               
of Law opinion  that, "[T]here are no  unresolved legal questions                                                               
regarding  the  legal  status  of   Alaska  Tribes  as  federally                                                               
recognized tribal governments."                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MS. ANDERSON  read the  important points about  SB 108  that were                                                               
bulleted on slide 17, which read as follows:                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
        xrhombus Will bring the Alaska State Legislature in line                                                                
          with the other two branches of state government                                                                       
          regarding the status of Alaska tribes.                                                                                
        xrhombus Will modernize the policy towards Alaska Native                                                                
          tribes by officially moving the state legislature                                                                     
          out of the Termination Era and into the Self-                                                                         
          Determination Era.                                                                                                    
        xrhombus Create the potential for the State of Alaska to                                                                
          lead the country in creation of state-tribal                                                                          
          relations.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
4:13:40 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. SINGH concluded  the presentation stating that  should SB 108                                                               
pass,  it   will  be  a   first  step  in  developing   a  formal                                                               
relationship between the State of  Alaska and its 230 tribes. "We                                                               
can determine  together what that relationship  should become and                                                               
how we should learn from  the federal self-determination policy."                                                               
SB 108 presents a great opportunity, she said.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
4:14:38 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR SHOWER  thanked the presenters  and apologized  for rushing                                                               
the  presentation  due  to  the eight  additional  bills  on  the                                                               
schedule.  He said  he looked  forward  to debating  some of  the                                                               
questions.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR SHOWER held SB 108 in committee.                                                                                          

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
SB 82 Change Record.pdf SSTA 5/6/2021 3:30:00 PM
SB 82
SB 82 Law Fiscal Note.pdf SSTA 5/6/2021 3:30:00 PM
SB 82
SB 82 Sectional Analysis Version B, as am..pdf SSTA 5/6/2021 3:30:00 PM
SB 82
SB 82 Sponsor Statement version A.pdf SSTA 5/6/2021 3:30:00 PM
SB 82
SB 82 Version B.pdf SSTA 5/6/2021 3:30:00 PM
SB 82
SB115 Sectional Analysis 04.07.21.pdf SEDC 3/14/2022 1:30:00 PM
SJUD 3/14/2022 1:30:00 PM
SSTA 5/6/2021 3:30:00 PM
SB 115
SB115 Sponsor Statement 04.07.21.pdf SEDC 3/14/2022 1:30:00 PM
SSTA 5/6/2021 3:30:00 PM
SB 115
SB 4 Sectional Analysis-DTD 2-2-21.pdf SSTA 5/6/2021 3:30:00 PM
SB 4
SB 4 Sponsor Statement-DTD 2-2-21.pdf SSTA 5/6/2021 3:30:00 PM
SB 4
SB 4 Suporting Documentation (additional).pdf SSTA 5/6/2021 3:30:00 PM
SB 4
SB 4 Supporting Documentation.pdf SSTA 5/6/2021 3:30:00 PM
SB 4
SB 4 Version B.PDF SSTA 5/6/2021 3:30:00 PM
SB 4
SB 1 ver B.PDF SSTA 5/6/2021 3:30:00 PM
SB 1
SB 1 ver B Supporting Document Police Guidelines Permit 1.22.2021.pdf SSTA 5/6/2021 3:30:00 PM
SB 1
SB 1 ver B Supporting Document Largest Police Departments Ban Neck Restraints 1.22.2021.pdf SSTA 5/6/2021 3:30:00 PM
SB 1
SB 1 ver B Sponsor Statement 1.25.2021.pdf SSTA 5/6/2021 3:30:00 PM
SB 1
SB 1 ver B Sectional Analysis 1.22.2021.pdf SSTA 5/6/2021 3:30:00 PM
SB 1
SB 1 ver B PowerPoint Presentation 1.19.21.pdf SSTA 5/6/2021 3:30:00 PM
SB 1