Legislature(2001 - 2002)

03/13/2001 01:33 PM Senate TRA

Audio Topic
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
           SB 119-WILLIAM R. WOOD FAIRBANKS INTL AIRPORT                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR GARY WILKEN,  sponsor of SB 119, explained  that the purpose                                                            
of SB 119 is to  acknowledge the Legislature's gratitude  to William                                                            
R. Wood by  naming the Fairbanks airport  after him.  Mr.  Wood died                                                            
about  two weeks  ago  at the  age of  94, after  over  41 years  of                                                            
service to  Alaska.  Mr. Wood's accomplishments  were many.   He was                                                            
the president of the University  of Alaska from 1960 to 1973, during                                                            
a period of expansion.   He retired and became President Emeritus in                                                            
1975.  He  was elected mayor  of the City  of Fairbanks in  1978 and                                                            
founded the Fairbanks  Industrial Development Corporation,  which is                                                            
a mechanism  to promote  the development  of Fairbanks and  Interior                                                            
Alaska.  He was  the first chairman of the Fairbanks  Area Community                                                            
Hospital Foundation, the  founder and executive director of Festival                                                            
Fairbanks for  20 years, a creator  of and visionary for  the Golden                                                            
Heart Plaza, and a columnist  for the Fairbanks Daily News Miner for                                                            
20 years.  In 1985, Mr. Wood  was elected  Alaskan of the Year.   In                                                            
1985-86,  he was Rotary  District 5010  Governor, which encompasses                                                             
all  of Alaska,  the Yukon,  and  the eastern  half  of the  country                                                            
formerly known  as Russia.  He established  the Wood-Nanook  Varsity                                                            
Talent Search  and Grant  Endowment at the  University. In  the year                                                            
2000,  he was  awarded  the Service  Above  Self Award,  the  Rotary                                                            
International's  highest award for an individual.   He also authored                                                            
three books of poetry.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  WILKEN read  the  following  paragraphs from  an  editorial                                                            
dated March  4, 2001  in the Fairbanks  Daily  News Miner about  Mr.                                                            
Wood.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
     In a 1983  Daily News Miner article,  Dr. Wood was quoted                                                                  
     as  saying   he  would  want  to  be  remembered   'as  an                                                                 
     individual  who left  the place  a little  better than  he                                                                 
     found it.'                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     Add to that philosophy his  penchant for progressive ideas                                                                 
     and you have a remarkable  man of vision.  He forwarded so                                                                 
     many ideas  that sometimes those  around him - people  one                                                                 
     would suppose  have had younger and fresher minds  - had a                                                                 
     hard time keeping up.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     Predictably, such a man  could not accomplish so much with                                                                 
     everyone  liking every  idea.  He was  criticized for  his                                                                 
     support of Project Chariot,  a government plan born in the                                                                 
     late 1950s  in search of the  `peaceful use of the atom.'                                                                  
     This  idea would  have used an  atomic blast  to create  a                                                                 
     port  off Alaska's northwest  coast.   The thought sounds                                                                  
     ludicrous  in this new millennium,  but in its day it  was                                                                 
     an  example   of  the  vision  exercised  by  progressive                                                                  
     thinkers.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
     Some   still  exercise  their   powers  of  hindsight   to                                                                 
     criticize.   Our newspaper  says thank  God that Dr.  Wood                                                                 
     exercised his considerable  powers of forethought to touch                                                                 
     this earth far beyond the scope of immortality.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
     His community  service mirrored  his university career  in                                                                 
     many ways.  He came along  to build and to keep us looking                                                                 
     forward.     What  is  even  more  remarkable  about   his                                                                 
     community  work is his inestimable  hours spent day  after                                                                 
     day,  year after year,  for no recompense  but to satisfy                                                                  
     his want to make things 'a little better.'                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     For decades  to come, Fairbanks  will see the mark of  Dr.                                                                 
     Wood,  a Midwest farm  boy, the sailor,  the scholar,  the                                                                 
     husband,   the  father,   the  teacher,   the  university                                                                  
     president,  the  mayor,  the statesman,  the  grandpa  who                                                                 
     chose to make Fairbanks home.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR WILKEN  noted that  at the March 3  funeral service  for Dr.                                                            
Wood, a letter  from Senator Stevens was read that  acknowledged Dr.                                                            
Wood's contributions.   Senator Wilken stated, "A community builds a                                                            
new airport  every hundred years.   Our good Lord makes a  Bill Wood                                                            
every hundred  years.  This is perfectly appropriate  for the people                                                            
that come  and go from  the City  of Fairbanks to  be reminded  on a                                                            
daily basis the value of  volunteerism, the value of vision that was                                                            
set forth by Dr. Wood."                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR.  KURT   PARKAN,  Deputy  Commissioner   of  the  Department   of                                                            
Transportation  and Public  Facilities (DOTPF),  said DOTPF  and the                                                            
Administration  support SB 119.  He pointed out that  Dr. Wood was a                                                            
very diligent  charter member  of the Airport  Community Council  in                                                            
Fairbanks.   DOTPF does not believe  this bill will have  any fiscal                                                            
impact as signage will  be taken care of in DOTPF's existing budget.                                                            
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  TAYLOR   moved  SB  119  from  committee  with   individual                                                            
recommendations  and then objected to his motion for  the purpose of                                                            
discussion.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR TAYLOR said he  received correspondence this week from about                                                            
six or seven people  in the Fairbanks area; two or  three support SB
119 and two or  three oppose it.  He wondered whether  any community                                                            
resolve is  forthcoming, perhaps from  the City of Fairbanks  or the                                                            
Fairbanks  North Star Borough.   He acknowledged  that SB 119  has a                                                            
long way to go  in the process and said he would follow  the lead of                                                            
the Fairbanks' delegation on this matter.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
CHAIRMAN COWDERY  noted a [sponsor] substitute to  SB 119 was before                                                            
the committee.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  WILKEN   informed  the  committee  that  next   Thursday  a                                                            
resolution  to rename  the  Fairbanks' airport  will  be before  the                                                            
Fairbanks Northstar Borough  Assembly.  He expects the resolution to                                                            
receive  overwhelming support  but he  noted some  concern has  been                                                            
expressed that  the airport should  be named after someone  from the                                                            
aviation  community.    He  said  he appreciates   Senator  Taylor's                                                            
comment but  he has not found anyone  in the aviation community  who                                                            
has given what  Bill Wood has given to the community  and the state.                                                            
He informed  those who  expressed concern  about SB  119 that  he is                                                            
open to suggestions,  but whomever  they suggest would have  to have                                                            
reached the level of participation that Bill Wood did.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  TAYLOR  moved  SSSB  119  from  committee  with  individual                                                            
recommendations to the next committee of referral.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
CHAIRMAN COWDERY  announced that hearing  no objections,  the motion                                                            
carried.                                                                                                                        

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